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    Transition Team Under Scrutiny    
    Sunday, November 16 2008 @ 10:31 PM GMT+4
    Contributed by: annikee

    PoliticsOur soon-to-be-new President Obama is putting potential members for his transition thru more scrutiny than any other president has. However, that bar is so low that it leaves a lot of leeway.

    Obama bars anyone serving on the transition team "from handling any issues in areas of policy where they have lobbied over the last 12 months or from seeking to influence the same agencies for the next 12 months.

    "The rules also bar officials from working on matters where family members or recent business associates may have a direct conflict of interest."*

    Sounds good so far. Except that it's virtually impossible to find someone who is useful and doesn't have those ties. Then there's the pesky qualifiers of "the last 12 months" and the same agencies they've lobbied to not being in their area on the transition team.

    Where does this lead us? To these kinds of selections:

    "Overseeing the Consumer Products Safety Commission is Pamela Gilbert, a former executive director of the agency who as recently as two years ago lobbied for a consumer advocacy group. Within the last year she has lobbied for the company Barr Laboratories, for an investor group, and for an antitrust enforcement group.

    "David J. Hayes, part of the 12-member group overseeing the transition and co-head of the team handling the areas of energy and natural resources, is the chairman of the environmental practice at the law and lobbying firm Latham & Watkins. He was personally registered as a lobbyist as recently as 2006, for clients including San Diego Gas and Electric.

    "Sally Katzen, another member of the supervisory group who is also on teams for the office of the president and government operations, was registered last year to lobby for the pharmaceutical company Amgen on Medicare reimbursements...Tom Wheeler, another of the 12, is on leave from a firm that invests in technology companies and before 2004 lobbied for the cable television and wireless industries.

    "John L. White, a former Clinton official charged with overseeing the new Defense Department, is a partner in a firm that invests in defense contractors.

    "Michael Warren, charged with overseeing Treasury, is chief operating officer of a firm that lobbies for clients including the U.S.-India Business Council. "*

    Many of those involved were formerly in the Clinton administration and have moved back to the private sector. Which is where much of the complications set in. Then we have:

    "Henry Rivera, a former Democratic commissioner on the Federal Communication Commission who was involved in planning for the agency's transition, has dropped out of that role because he had represented clients on communications policy in the last year, the newsletter Communications Daily reported Friday.

    "Instead, on the list that was made public on Friday, Mr. Rivera was listed on the team handling science, technology, space and the arts. The rules permit people who have lobbied in one area to join an Obama transition team in another. (With Mr. Rivera is Jim Kohlenberger, executive director of an advocacy group for Internet companies.)"*

    So the "not in the same area" clause applied in the end.

    Then there's my personal favorite:

    "One name on the transition list comes unencumbered by potential conflicts but instead by bad luck. Jami Miscik, leading a review of American intelligence agencies, was the head of intelligence analysis at the Central Intelligence Agency during its biggest embarrassment: the botched assessments about Iraq's weapons of mass destruction. Then she moved on to become a senior official managing risks in emerging markets for the investment bank Lehman Brothers, until its collapse this fall."

    I don't think I'd have the urge to hire her. My opinion here us that we need to outlaw lobbying. If we're at the point that every single qualified person in DC is corrupted via ties to lobbies, they need to go. We need qualified people, we don't need lobbyists and lobbies. Let's dump the cause of the problem, not work within lesser standards. I think it would be a sweeping reform. Some real change. C'mon, Barry, I triple-dog dare ya!

    * http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/15/us/politics/15transition.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin

     

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  • Transition Team Under Scrutiny | 10 comments | Create New Account
    The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they may say.
    Transition Team Under Scrutiny
    Authored by: SJD on Monday, November 17 2008 @ 12:17 AM GMT+4
    Don't hold your breath, it's business as usual, the old Potomac two step... Agree, let's have some real change!

    ---
    PC is a delusional doctrine by a illogical minority, and rabidly promoted by the MSM, who believe that it is possible to pick up a turd by the clean end.
    No Radical Departure?
    Authored by: paulgardner on Monday, November 17 2008 @ 10:20 AM GMT+4
    In my perfect world there would be lobbyists - lawyers and spokesmen for corporations and various groups.
    However, those people would never, ever be in government in any form - unless they wanted to be a janitor or something. That kind of firewall is unthinkable now as this article from the Times shows. These people ebb and flow through government and private sector work easily and naturally. They might make the case and a compelling one, that this is good for everyone no matter how it looks. The regulators need to know how the industries work in order to properly regulate them and what better way to know them than to work for them?

    Glad you asked.
    Here's my idea: we copy the French.
    Before you reach for your barf bag, please hear me out. In France they have an Ecole du Government (pardon my French) where aspiring bureacrats and agency heads can go to learn the tricks of the government trade (I'm generalizing here - they do have a government school, but I'm not 100% sure what they do learn there). We should be grooming our higher level civil servants in the same way. For the higher level people where party affiliation matters - that's where the trick is. Now when your party is out of power, you're dumped out on the street to fend for yourself - hence the private sector jobs. Instead of doing that, keep these people employed as teachers in the School of Government system, in party related think tanks and in parallel agencies.
    So for example, now the Republican civilian heads of the Pentagon are getting ready to go back to private sector jobs. Instead some of them could be going to government run think tanks where they wopuld spend the next 4 years writing papers and studies and analyses about the situations they faced during the Bush years and come up with various recommendations based on that that would be available to the Dems in office to inform their current work. In additon these think tankers would follow the new people as they react to new situations as provide parallel responses which could be available to top decision makers as a foil to their own party's recommendations.
    This way also, when transition comes you have a pool of folks who are virtually at the same speed, knowledgewise as the outgoing ones.
    Transition Team Under Scrutiny
    Authored by: Christian Avard on Monday, November 17 2008 @ 11:23 AM GMT+4
    Some things never change. Good summary Annikee.

    ---

    "A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory." - Steven Wright, comedian

    Bushies Burrowing In.
    Authored by: paulgardner on Tuesday, November 18 2008 @ 10:27 AM GMT+4
    In the days after the Nov. 4 election Bush made some friendly statements about helping Obama come in to office.

    Anybody who has paid attention to the man for 8 years was immediately reaching for their wallet: "what's the old thief going to take now?" is how I looked at it.

    A day or two later we learned the White House had initiated a new set of rules governing emission controls and taxation and a bunch of other corporate friendly changes that will gain the force of law about the time (give or take a day or two) when Obama takes the oath of office.
    Now this:

    "Just weeks before leaving office, the Interior Department's top lawyer has shifted half a dozen key deputies -- including two former political appointees who have been involved in controversial environmental decisions -- into senior civil service posts.

    The transfer of political appointees into permanent federal positions, called "burrowing" by career officials, creates security for those employees, and at least initially will deprive the incoming Obama administration of the chance to install its preferred appointees in some key jobs."

    These "burrowing" political people are going to be blocking attempts by the Obama people to make the changes we hired them to make.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/17/AR2008111703537_pf.html

    My advice to the president elect: when the Bush team leaves the White House have the place fumigated and rewired, replace the staff, the computers, phones everything. I'm generally a trusting guy, but when someone demonstrates over and over that party is all that matters to them, then you can't trust 'em.
    Bushies Burrowing In.
    Authored by: paulgardner on Tuesday, November 18 2008 @ 11:37 AM GMT+4
    This old Times article amplifies the above.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/31/washington/31capital.html
    Clintonistas Burrowed in too.
    Authored by: paulgardner on Thursday, November 20 2008 @ 10:52 AM GMT+4
    My wife tells me NPR reported that twice as many Clinton people "burrowed in" (back in 2000) as Bushies now. The difference would be the Bush insistence on political hirees of an extremist pro-corporate/anti-government, win at all costs philosophy. These people will very hard for their superiors and subordinates to trust and work with.
    Latest transition news from NYT
    Authored by: paulgardner on Wednesday, November 19 2008 @ 08:21 AM GMT+4
    Latest transition news from NYT
    Authored by: annikee on Wednesday, November 19 2008 @ 02:45 PM GMT+4
    Thanks for the links, Paul. This is all veeery interesting.

    ---
    "Landlord say your rent is late; he may have to litigate! Don't worry, Be Happy."-Bobby McFerrin
    President Elect Website
    Authored by: paulgardner on Saturday, November 22 2008 @ 12:16 PM GMT+4
    This is Obama's own transition website with the best info:

    www.change.gov
    Secretary of Education to unqualified candidate?
    Authored by: paulgardner on Thursday, December 11 2008 @ 09:32 AM GMT+4
    This chilling piece from Greg Palast - Obama wouldn't really go this way would he?



    Obama's "Way-to-Go, Brownie!" Moment?
    by Greg Palast
    for the Huffington Post

    Has Barack Obama forgotten, "Way-to-go, Brownie"? Michael Brown was that guy from the Arabian Horse Association appointed by George Bush to run the Federal Emergency Management Agency. Brownie, not knowing the south shore of Lake Pontchartrain from the south end of a horse, let New Orleans drown. Bush's response was to give his buddy Brownie a "way to go!" thumbs up.

    We thought Obama would go a very different way. You'd think the studious Senator from Illinois would avoid repeating the Bush regime's horror show of unqualified appointments, of picking politicos over professionals.

    But here we go again. Trial balloons lofted in the Washington Post suggest President-elect Obama is about to select Joel Klein as Secretary of Education. If not Klein, then draft-choice number two is Arne Duncan, Obama's backyard basketball buddy in Chicago.

    Say it ain't so, President O.

    Let's begin with Joel Klein. Klein is a top notch anti-trust lawyer. What he isn't is an educator. Klein is as qualified to run the Department of Education as Dick Cheney is to dance in Swan Lake. While I've never seen Cheney in a tutu, I have seen Klein fumble about the stage as Chancellor of the New York City school system.

    Klein, who lacks even six minutes experience in the field, was handed management of New York's schools by that political Jack-in-the-Box, Mayor Michael Bloomberg. The billionaire mayor is one of those businessmen-turned-politicians who think lawyers and speculators can make school districts operate like businesses.

    Klein has indeed run city schools like a business - if the business is General Motors. Klein has flopped. Half the city's kids don't graduate.

    Klein is out of control. Not knowing a damn thing about education, rather than rely on those who actually work in the field (only two of his two dozen deputies have degrees in education), Klein pays high-priced consultants to tell him what to do. He's blown a third of a billion dollars on consultant "accountability" projects plus $80 million for an IBM computer data storage system that doesn't work.

    What the heck was the $80 million junk computer software for? Testing. Klein is test crazy. He has swallowed hook, line and sinker George Bush's idea that testing students can replace teaching them. The madly expensive testing program and consultant-fee spree are paid for by yanking teachers from the classroom.

    Ironically, though not surprisingly, test scores under Klein have flat-lined. Scores would have fallen lower, notes author Jane Hirschmann, but Klein "moved the cut line," that is, lowered the level required to pass. In other words, Klein cheats on the tests.

    Nevertheless, media poobahs have fallen in love with Klein, especially Republican pundits. The New York Times' David Brooks is championing Klein, hoping that media hype for Klein will push Obama to keep Bush schools policies in place, trumping the electorate's choice for change.

    Brooks and other Republicans (hey, didn't those guys lose?) are pushing Klein as a way for Obama to prove he can reach across the aisle to Republicans like Bloomberg. (Oh yes, Bloomberg's no longer in the GOP, having jumped from the party this year when the brand name went sour.)

    Choosing Klein, says Brooks, would display Obama's independence from the teacher's union. But after years of Bush kicking teachers in the teeth, appointing a Bush acolyte like Klein would not indicate independence from teachers but their betrayal.

    Hoops versus Hope

    The anti-union establishment has a second stringer on the bench waiting in case Klein is nixed: Arne Duncan. Duncan, another lawyer playing at education, was appointed by Chicago's Boss Daley to head that city's train-wreck of a school system. Think of Duncan as "Klein Lite."

    What's Duncan's connection to the President-elect? Duncan was once captain of Harvard's basketball team and still plays backyard round-ball with his Hyde Park neighbor Obama.

    But Michelle has put a limit on their friendship: Obama was one of the only state senators from Chicago to refuse to send his children into Duncan's public schools. My information is that the Obamas sent their daughters to the elite Laboratory School where Klein-Duncan teach-to-the-test pedagogy is dismissed as damaging and nutty.

    Mr. Obama, if you can't trust your kids to Arne Duncan, why hand him ours?

    Lawyer Duncan is proud to have raised test scores by firing every teacher in low-scoring schools. Which schools? There's Collins High in the Lawndale ghetto with children from homeless shelters and drug-poisoned 'hoods. They don't do well on tests. So Chicago fired all the teachers. They brought in new ones - then fired all of them too: the teachers' reward for volunteering to work in a poor neighborhood.

    It's no coincidence that the nation's worst school systems are run by non-experts like Klein and Duncan.

    Obama certainly knows this. I know he knows because he's chosen, as head of his Education Department transition team, one of the most highly respected educators in the United States: Professor Linda Darling-Hammond of Stanford University.

    So here we have the ludicrous scene of the President-elect asking this recognized authority, Dr. Darling-Hammond, to vet the qualifications of amateurs Klein and Duncan. It's as if Obama were to ask Michael Jordan, "Say, you wouldn't happen to know anyone who can play basketball, would you?"

    Classroom Class War

    It's not just Klein's and Duncan's empty credentials which scare me: it's the ill philosophy behind the Bush-brand education theories they promote. "Teach-to-the-test" (which goes under such pre-packaged teaching brands as "Success for All") forces teachers to limit classroom time to pounding in rote low-end skills, easily measured on standardized tests. The transparent purpose is to create the future class of worker-drones. Add in some computer training and - voila! - millions trained on the cheap to function, not think. Analytical thinking skills, creative skills, questioning skills will be left to the privileged at the Laboratory School and Phillips Andover Academy.

    We hope for better from the daddy of Sasha and Malia.

    Educationally, the world is swamping us. The economic and social levees are bursting. We cannot afford another Way-to-go Brownie in charge of rescuing our children.

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