Finding and defining Obama’s CTO should be higher priority

It has never been clear how a “chief technology officer” would actually fit into president-elect Barack Obama’s administration, organizationally speaking. Given the long list of items on the Obama tech platform — and the many competing politicians and bureaucrats in Washington, D.C. — making substantial changes will be a tall order no matter what. Especially when the idea of using technology to make the government more accessible to citizens is at the top of that list.

That is why I’m increasingly concerned about the administration’s apparent lack of focus right now on both filling the CTO position and explaining how it fits in with the rest of the government. Instead, news reports are all about who will be secretary of this or that department.

Is the next Treasury Secretary, for example, really going to care about publishing detailed information about which financial institution is getting what bailout money under what terms just because the new CTO says they somehow should, six months from now, for the sake of transparency in government?

Obama has done an amazing job of using the internet to create interest and raise money for his campaign. He built strategies for using the web into the campaign from its early days, and benefited in the long-term through prolific exposure on sites like YouTube and Facebook, and hundreds of millions in campaign dollars.

Now is the time for him to build the innovative tech ideas he cares about most into his cabinet.

Of course, he has been president-elect for exactly one week — and he’s already moving faster to fill positions than previous presidents have. But this is a time of national crisis and such fast action is necessary. If the ideas in the tech platform, like government openness, are serious components of the change, they can’t wait until these positions are filled. They need to be part of the mandate that new cabinet members have to follow as soon as they join.

The latest issue, maybe: A leaked flow-chart of the short-listed names for cabinet positions has been making the rounds in political circles today (see above). The source is unknown — and likely unofficial, if not inaccurate — but it corresponds to many news reports about who might get what big government job. The proposed secretaries of the Treasury mentioned in it include Larry Summers and Timothy Geithner, for example, names that match numerous news reports.

So, on the off-chance this document really is Obama’s plan, seeing it is depressing for those of us who think technology innovation has been and will continue to be the key to this country’s prosperity.

The document is full of big political celebrities for big bureaucracies: Al Gore in a new position called “Climate ‘Czar’”, Caroline Kennedy as ambassador to the United Nations, Howard Dean for the Department of Health and Human Services , etc….

Not even a mention of a CTO position, and where it might fit in. Not even potential candidates for the position of Under-Secretary for Science & Technology (which, sadly, has been a backwater of a post in past administrations). Meanwhile, there’s been no news of bold reorganizing around technology, no intentional leaks about who might be the new CTO — as opposed to what has been happening around the Treasury job, for instance.

I was hoping for a bolder focus on technology versus bureaucracy. If the administration isn’t redefined from the outset, I have to wonder if it ever will be. Instead, bureaucratic inertia and turf wars will likely set in.

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About the Author, Eric Eldon

Eric currently covers digital media technology and business, especially what's happening on social networks and their platforms. He writes and edits stories about lots of other stuff, too. He started at VentureBeat in the spring of 2007, half a year or so after Matt Marshall left his reporting job at the San Jose Mercury News to found the site. Eric previously cofounded a now-failed startup called Writewith, that was building editorial software for newspapers and other groups of writers.

  • Barrett
    1. I call fake. Obama's staff runs an extraordinarily tight ship, and I'd be shocked if they let such a detailed slide presentation slip through their grasp. Besides, why would put together such an extensive list? It doesn't contain many surprises, and those who need to know probably have this information in their heads already.

    2. Even if it's real, I'm optimistic that the lack of a CTO mention doesn't presage bad things. Obama will have to go to Congress to get a budget and authority for a CTO position, I believe, so it might be early to be thinking about who will fill it.

    But I agree that this is more important now than ever before, given light of the economic situation and the phenomenal disbursal of government cash.
  • hawk
    Only energy guys up there? I sure this isn't John Doerr's fault. :(
  • Stephen Fox
    I don't care who is Energy Secretary.

    It is clear to be that New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson would be a better Secretary of State than Al Gore, to respond to yesterday's Washington Post columnist's piece.

    Regarding Howard Dean, if you had any idea how much neurodegenerative damage is done by junk food, additives, sweeteners like aspartame, etc., you might appreciate the concept of having Dr. Dean overhaul the FDA and do for American Health what he did with the 50 state strategy for bringing the Democratic party back from the shambles after Kerry's "defeat."

    I like so much the idea of having a Nobel Laureate like Krugman for the Treasury position.

    The next AG must have some sense of rebuilding the legal structure of our American Democracy, little things like restoring habeas corpus, that legal nuisance Bush got rid of even though it has been one of the strongest points of Western law since 1215 A.D. I like Janet Napolitano and I like Senator Leahy, although why would he want to leave the Senate for a Cabinet position, unless he too saw the need for a legalistic overhaul similar to what is needed at the FDA!

    I don't think Colin Powell should be in Obama's Cabinet at all. If there is to be one conciliatory Republican based on merit and reliability, it should be former Nebraska Senator Chuck Hagel, one of their brightest, who jumped ship for Obama very early on, and actively campaigned for him in many states. He happens to be the most talented and most trustworthy of all of the Defense Secretary contenders from either party.

    Personally, I want to see Caroline Kennedy as UN Ambassador (think what that would mean to most of the world!) and I certainly believe Susan Eisenhower deserves some important policy-making position, if not a Cabinet Post. She is bright and dumped the GOP after McCain's Rovian tactics made that obligatory to her. That shows verifiable integrity.

    Stephen Fox
    Contributing Editor, New Mexico Sun News