Fed Page   |  Column Archive  |    RSS   |   Daily Politics Q&A
Page 2 of 2   <      

Take Two Bailouts and Call Me in the Morning

Send This Guy Your Application

Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.

Attention, administration job seekers! Meet the most popular guy in Washington. No, not Barack Obama. It's Don Gips, the new director of presidential personnel. Gips, a transition team adviser who helped Obama assemble his Senate staff, will oversee White House staffing. Gips, who was chief domestic policy adviser to Al Gore when Gore was vice president, is on leave from a communications firm, where he is chief strategy officer and leads merger and acquisition efforts.

Bradley J. Kiley was named director of the office of management and administration, where he will oversee White House operations, including travel. Kiley, a deputy in that office in the Clinton administration, is operations director for the transition team. Meanwhile, Susan Sher, a vice president and general counsel at the University of Chicago Medical Center, will serve as associate counsel to the president, a position in which she will provide legal advice to first lady Michelle Obama.

Other appointments announced yesterday include Pete Souza, a veteran photographer who was formerly the Washington-based national photographer for the Chicago Tribune, as chief White House photographer, and Brian McKeon, a longtime aide to Vice President-elect Joseph Biden, as deputy national security adviser to the vice president.

All Donors Big and Small

Obama raised more than $3.8 million from private donors in the six weeks after the November election to help pay for his transition activities, according to figures released today.

As of Dec. 15, about 53,853 donors have contributed to the Obama-Biden Transition Project, which is well on its way to meeting its fundraising goal by the Jan. 20 inauguration. The transition team set a budget of $12 million to cover salaries, office rent and other expenses until Obama moves to the White House. Nearly half of that budget, $5.2 million, is covered by the government, while the remainder must be covered by private donors, who are allowed to contribute up to $5,000.

About 219 people donated the maximum amount, many of them leading business executives, including Google CEO Eric Schmidt and Warner Music Group CEO Edgar Bronfman.

But the average donation was $70.62, according to the transition team, and several thousand people gave just $10.

The transition team is refusing contributions from registered lobbyists, corporations, labor unions and other interest groups, and it has been releasing the names of donors monthly. Contributions to the transition team are separate from donations to pay for inauguration festivities.

Aisle? What Aisle?

Ah, bipartisanship, the mother's milk of the nation's progress. And so it was heartening to read in yesterday's Washington Post an op-ed by Democratic Sen. Kent Conrad and Republican Sen. Judd Gregg, the top members of their chamber's budget panel. The piece outlined their common views on the need for action now on an economic recovery package and, more important, on long-term fixes.

Also yesterday, in the Wall Street Journal, there was an op-ed by Gregg, who began one sentence: "Although I hold out little hope that my Democratic colleagues in the House will take heed of my thoughts . . ."

Well, Conrad will.

With Philip Rucker


<       2


© 2009 The Washington Post Company