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Presidential transition of Barack Obama

The presidential transition of Barack Obama began when he won the United States presidential election on November 4, 2008, and became the president-elect. Obama was formally elected by the Electoral College on December 15, 2008. The results were certified by a joint session of Congress on January 8, 2009, and the transition ended when Obama was inaugurated at noon EST on January 20, 2009.[1][2]

Presidential transition of Barack Obama
Outgoing President George W. Bush (left) and President-elect Barack Obama (right) meet in the Oval Office of the White House as part of the presidential transition
Date of electionNovember 4, 2008
Inauguration dateJanuary 20, 2009
President-electBarack Obama (Democrat)
Vice president-electJoe Biden (Democrat)
Outgoing presidentGeorge W. Bush (Republican)
Outgoing vice presidentDick Cheney (Republican)
HeadquartersChicago, Illinois and Washington, D.C.
Executive Director
Chris Lu
Budget
$12 million
Staff
450
Websitehttp://change.gov/[dead link]

Organization of the transition edit

 
Living presidents George W. Bush, George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter, and President-elect Barack Obama at the White House Oval Office on January 7, 2009

The Obama transition organization was called the Obama-Biden Transition Project.[3] The transition team was convened during the height of the campaign, well before the outcome could be known, to begin making preparations for a potential administration. It was co-chaired by John Podesta, who was Bill Clinton's fourth and last White House chief of staff and the president/chief executive officer of the Center for American Progress,[4] Valerie Jarrett, who is one of Obama's longest-serving advisers,[5][6] and Pete Rouse, former Senate chief of staff for Tom Daschle who succeeded Rahm Emanuel as Obama's chief of staff.[7]

On November 5, the General Services Administration declared that Obama was the "apparent winner," making him eligible to receive transition funding and other government services, and granting him access to their 2008 presidential transition headquarters in Washington, D.C.[8] Podesta estimated that the transition would employ approximately 450 people and have a budget of about $12 million: $5.2 million would be paid by the federal government and the remaining $6.8 million would be funded by private sources, with each contribution limited to $5,000. The transition project would not accept money from political action committees or federal lobbyists.[9]

Transition team edit

On November 5, Obama announced his complete transition team, which was organized as a nonprofit tax-exempt organization under U.S. federal tax code 501(c)(4). The advisory board consisted of Carol Browner, William M. Daley, Christopher Edley, Michael Froman, Julius Genachowski, Donald Gips, Janet Napolitano, Federico Peña, Susan Rice, Sonal Shah, Mark Gitenstein and Ted Kaufman.[10]

 
General Services Administration letter to President-elect Barack Obama

Members of the transition team's senior staff included:[10]

Joshua Gotbaum and Michael Warren headed the transition team of the Treasury Department. In addition, Thomas Donilon and Wendy Sherman oversaw the transition of the State Department. Seth Harris oversaw the transition in all of the labor, education, and transportation agencies with Edward B. Montgomery leading the Labor Department agency review team, Mortimer Downey leading the Transportation Department agency review team, and Judith Sherman leading the Education Department agency review team. Finally, John P. White and Michele Flournoy led the transition of the Defense Department.[12]

Activities as the president-elect edit

Bush administration edit

 
President-elect Obama walking with President Bush during their November 10 meeting
 
Laura Bush meets with Michelle Obama.

In mid-October, the George W. Bush administration convened a fourteen-member council to coordinate with and brief the winning campaign's transition team.[5] The New York Times reported that White House chief of staff Joshua Bolten then planned to recruit his predecessor, Andrew Card, to oversee the activity.[5] On November 6, Obama received his first classified intelligence briefing from director of national intelligence John Michael McConnell and Central Intelligence Agency director Michael Hayden.[13]

President Bush invited Obama and his team to attend the 2008 G-20 Washington summit held between November 15 and 20 in order to introduce him to more than twenty world leaders who attended the event. However, Obama did not come, and his transition team instead sent former Republican Rep. Jim Leach and former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright to meet with the heads of state.[14][15] Obama was expected to address a United Nations global warming summit in Poland in December or allow a representative such as Al Gore to present his policies.[4]

On November 10, Obama traveled to the White House and met with President Bush to discuss transition issues while First Lady Laura Bush took his wife Michelle on a tour of the mansion. NBC News reported that Obama advanced his economic agenda with Bush, asking him to attempt to pass a stimulus package in a lame duck session of Congress before the inauguration. He also urged Bush to accelerate the disbursement of $25 billion in funds to bail out the automobile industry and expressed concern about additional Americans losing their homes as mortgage rates increase again.[16][17]

The Bush administration reportedly went out of its way to make the transition as seamless as possible for the incoming administration, earning accolades from Obama staff members and outside experts alike. According to nearly all accounts, the Bush administration streamlined the process for new officials to obtain security clearances and planned training exercises for the incoming national security team, to ensure that they would be ready to face a possible crisis on the first day in office. Part of this enhanced cooperation is required by laws passed at the behest of the 9/11 Commission, while part is attributed to the difficulty that the Bush administration had with its own transition, which lasted only five weeks and was felt to have had a deleterious effect on Bush's ability to govern. "I'm not sure I've ever seen an outgoing administration work as hard at saying the right thing," said Stephen Hess of the Brookings Institution. "This is really quite memorable."[18]

During the transition, the Bush administration had many important matters to address, even as a lame duck president. There was an ongoing financial crisis,[19] and this was the first presidential transition since the presidential transition of Richard Nixon to occur while the United States was at war.[20]

Resignation from Senate offices edit

At the time of their election, President-elect Obama and Vice President-elect Joseph Biden were incumbent U.S. senators from Illinois and Delaware respectively. In accordance with Article I, Section 6 of the United States Constitution, both were required to resign their respective Senate seats on or before January 20, 2009, in order to become president and vice president.

Obama Senate transition edit

 
During the transition period, Obama spoke from a lectern bearing the inscription "Office of the President Elect".

Obama resigned from the Senate effective November 16, 2008.[21][22] Initially, it was thought that his replacement would be named by Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich. Since the term for the seat expired in January 2011, it would come up for its normal election in 2010 with no special election necessary. Blagojevich was expected to name Obama's immediate successor in the Senate by January 3, 2009.[23] However, on December 9, 2008, the status of Obama's succession in the Senate was cast in doubt after Blagojevich was arrested on federal corruption charges, which included allegedly attempting to sell the appointment.[24] Although placed in federal custody and released on $4,500 bail,[25] as long as he remained governor Blagojevich continued to have sole authority to make the appointment.[26] Several Democrats, including Sen. Dick Durbin, asked the Illinois General Assembly to schedule a special election instead.[27]

Speaking through a surrogate, Obama called for Blagojevich's resignation on December 10.[28] Had Blagojevich resigned or been removed from office before making the appointment, the duty would have fallen to Illinois Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn, who would succeed Blagojevich as governor. However, Illinois Senate president Emil Jones said that he would call the Senate back into session to write a law that would result in Obama's replacement being determined in a special election.[29]

However, after the state legislature did not pass a law mandating a special election for the seat, on December 30, Blagojevich announced that he was appointing Roland Burris, a former Illinois Attorney General, Illinois Comptroller, and U.S. Treasury Department official, to the seat, citing his constitutional duty in the absence of a law requiring a special election.[30] Blagojevich, Burris, and Representative Bobby Rush urged the public to consider the qualifications of Burris as a public servant and not the scandals in which Blagojevich was embroiled.[31]

However, the Senate Democrats released a statement in which they reaffirmed that they would refuse to seat anyone appointed to the seat by Blagojevich, as that individual would be an ineffective representative of Illinois because of "questions of impropriety."[32]

Some members of the Congressional Black Caucus, including Rush, expressed their support for seating Burris, who would be the only African-American in the Senate; Rush compared a Senate rejection of Burris to a lynching.[33] However, President-elect Obama released a statement condemning the appointment and again calling on Blagojevich to resign.[34] In addition, the Illinois Secretary of State, Jesse White, reiterated that he would not certify any appointment made by Blagojevich, although at the time it was not clear whether this could prevent Burris from taking office.[35] Furthermore, the Senate might not actually have been able to refuse to seat Burris, as he met all constitutional requirements for the office and was not involved in the Blagojevich corruption scandal (per the U.S. Supreme Court decision Powell v. McCormack).[36]

On January 9, 2009, the Illinois Supreme Court ruled in the case Burris v. White that the appointment only required the signature of the governor to be valid, and not that of the Illinois Secretary of State, and that the state of Illinois is not required to use the Senate's recommended certification form, as it is only "recommended" under the Standing Rules of the United States Senate.[37][38] The Court further remarked that "no explanation has been given as to how any rule of the Senate, whether it be formal or merely a matter of tradition, could supersede the authority to fill vacancies conferred on the states by the federal constitution".[39] Following the ruling, White provided Burris with a certified copy of the appointment's registration, and Burris delivered that copy, that bears the State Seal, to the Secretary of the Senate.[40] His credentials declared valid, Burris was finally sworn in on January 15, 2009, by outgoing President of the Senate Dick Cheney.[41][42][43]

Biden Senate transition edit

Biden had indicated that he would remain in the Senate until he was sworn in as vice president on January 20, 2009.[44] Although he was sworn in for a seventh Senate term in early January 2009, he resigned from the seat on January 15, 2009, having served just over 36 years in the body.[45] He was Delaware's longest-serving senator.

On November 24, 2008, Delaware Gov. Ruth Ann Minner announced that Ted Kaufman would serve as Biden's appointed replacement.[46] Kaufman was sworn in on January 16, 2009.[47] A special election was held in November 2010, which elected Democratic candidate Chris Coons.

During his abbreviated final term in the Senate, Biden went on a diplomatic fact-finding trip to Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan, becoming the first vice-president-elect to undertake such a mission before entering office.[48]

Change.gov website edit

On November 5, 2008, the transition team launched , the official website of the transition.[49]

The website included a blog and jobs page.[50] It also had a section that allowed visitors to share stories or their visions for the country.[51] Visitors were able to comment on issues important to them using the Citizen's Briefing Book. Individuals applying for work within the Obama administration via this site were required to go through intensive consumer and criminal background checks performed by the ChoicePoint Corporation.[52] The website used a Creative Commons license.[53]

As part of their efforts towards transparency, on December 5 the transition team announced that "all policy documents from official meetings with outside organizations will be publicly available for review and discussion on Change.gov." After the inauguration, many of the functions of change.gov were transferred to a redesigned White House website.[54]

Administration appointments edit

Thirty-one of the appointments to the transition team had previously worked in the Clinton administration, including Podesta, chief of staff Rahm Emanuel, and Biden's chief of staff Ron Klain.[55]

Announcements edit

Obama held near-daily press conferences as president-elect to announce his administration nominees to the public.[56] He introduced the nominees and occasionally took questions from the press regarding issues such as economic difficulties and the war in Afghanistan.[57]

The appointments of Lawrence Summers and Timothy F. Geithner to key economic positions were criticized, on grounds that they had been prominently involved in creating many of the conditions that led to the financial crisis of 2007–2008, so "failure is being rewarded."[58] Summers was a leading advocate of the derivatives deregulation, together with Alan Greenspan and Robert Rubin,[59][60] and during his transition to Secretary of the Treasury, the act that kept commercial banks out of Wall Street, the Glass–Steagall Act, was repealed.[58] Geithner instead was criticized for his failure to pay $34,000 in income taxes.[61]

The appointment of Eric Holder for attorney general raised concerns, due to his role in the last-minute pardon issued by Bill Clinton for fugitive financier Marc Rich.[62]

During his first press conference as president-elect, on November 7, Obama remarked about former first lady Nancy Reagan holding seances in the White House, which gained widespread attention.[63][64][65][66] Termed his "first gaffe,"[67] Obama called Mrs. Reagan later that evening to apologize for what his spokesperson said was a "careless and off-handed remark."[68]

Cabinet and top advisors edit

There was one withdrawal, New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson, whom Obama had named Secretary of Commerce. Richardson's administration was, at the time, the subject of a federal corruption probe; while maintaining that his administration was responsible for no wrongdoing, he withdrew so as to prevent a lengthy confirmation process from hindering the work of the U.S. Department of Commerce.[78] The position was filled by Gary Locke.

Obama named Tim Kaine as new chairman of the Democratic National Committee, replacing Howard Dean who has clashed with Obama and his advisors in the past. Kaine served concurrently as Governor of Virginia until his term ended in January 2010.[79]

Obama named Aneesh Chopra for the new position of Chief Technology Officer of the United States, Vivek Kundra as Chief Information Officer and Jeffrey Zients Chief Performance Officer[80][81] and deputy director for management of the Office of Management and Budget[82]

Initial reaction to Obama's choice of Leon Panetta as CIA director was mixed, with some intelligence professionals expressing concern that Panetta lacked specific intelligence experience,[83] and others such as former Congressman and co-chair of the Iraq Study Group Lee H. Hamilton praising the choice.[84]

Domestic policy edit

Economic policy edit

Environment and energy edit

Foreign affairs and national security edit

Table edit

Proposed Obama administration personnel at the time of Inauguration January 20, 2009
Cabinet-level position
Position Designee
Senior Advisor to the President
  Assistant to the President for Intergovernmental Affairs
  Public Liaison
Valerie Jarrett
Senior Advisor to the President Pete Rouse
Deputy White House Chief of Staff Jim Messina
Staff Secretary Lisa Brown
Personal Secretary Katie Johnson
Cabinet Secretary Chris Lu
Chief of staff to the First Lady Jackie Norris
White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs
White House Social Secretary
  Special Assistant to the President
Desirée Rogers
Assistant to the President for Economic Policy
  (Director of the White House National Economic Council)
Lawrence
Summers
Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy
  (Director of the White House Domestic Policy Council)
Melody Barnes
Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change Carol Browner
Deputy Director of the Office of Management and Budget Rob Nabors
Chair of the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board Paul Volcker
Director of Speechwriting Jon Favreau
Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs
  (National Security Adviser)
Jim Jones
Director of Public Liaison Christina Tchen
Director of White House Office of Health Reform Nancy-Ann Min DeParle
Deputy Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change Heather Zichal
Co-chair of the President's Council of Advisers on
Science and Technology
Eric Lander
Deputy White House Counsel with a Focus on Domestic Policy and Ethics Cassandra Butts
Deputy Director of Legislative Affairs for the Senate Shawn Maher
Special Assistant to the President
  Director of Communications for the First Lady
Camille
Johnston
Deputy Press Secretary for the First Lady Semonti
Mustaphi
White House Director of Presidential Personnel Don Gips
Associate Counsel to the President Susan Sher
Position Designee
Assistant to the President for Legislative Affairs Phil Schiliro
Deputy White House Chief of Staff Mona Sutphen
Senior Advisor to the President David Axelrod
White House Counsel Greg Craig
Director of the White House Office of Political Affairs Patrick Gaspard
Assistant to the President for Communications
  (White House Director of Communications)
Ellen Moran
Deputy Assistant to the President for Communications
  (Deputy White House Director of Communications)
Dan Pfeiffer
Deputy Chief of Staff to the First Lady Melissa Winter
Director of the White House Council of Economic Advisers Christina Romer
Deputy Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy
  (deputy director of the White House Domestic Policy Council)
Heather
Higginbottom
White House Director of Scheduling and Advance Alyssa
Mastromonaco
Staff Director and Chief Economist of the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board
  Member of the White House Council of Economic Advisers
Austan
Goolsbee
Director of Intergovernmental Affairs Cecilia Muñoz
Director of the White House Military Office Louis Caldera
Chief of staff to the Assistant to the President for Intergovernmental Relations
  Public Liaison
Michael
Strautmanis
Deputy Director of White House Office of Health Reform Jeanne Lambrew
Chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality Nancy Sutley
Assistant to the President for Science and Technology
  (Director of the White House Office of Science
and Technology Policy
)
  Co-chair of the President's Council of Advisers on
Science and Technology
John Holdren
Co-chair of the President's Council of Advisers on
Science and Technology
Harold Varmus
Deputy Cabinet Secretary Liz Sears Smith
Deputy Director of Legislative Affairs for the House of Representatives Dan Turton
Press Secretary for the First Lady Katie
McCormick
Lelyveld
Director of the Office of Management and Administration Bradley Kiley
Chief Performance Officer
  deputy director for Management at the Office of Management and Budget
Jeffrey Zients
Director of White House Office of Urban Policy Adolfo Carrion*
 
Other
* Although identified by sources to the press, selection awaited official announcement by the office of the President Elect.
Position Designate
Chief of Staff to the Vice President Ron Klain
Counsel to the Vice President Cynthia Hogan
Counselor to the Vice President Mike Donilon
Assistant to the Vice President for Intergovernmental Affairs
  Public Liaison
Evan Ryan
Assistant to the Vice President
  Director of Communications
Jay Carney
Deputy Chief of Staff to the Vice President Alan Hoffman
Deputy National Security Adviser to the Vice President Brian McKeon
Director of Communications for the Second Lady Courtney O'Donnell
Position Designate
Chief of Staff to the Second Lady Catherine Russell
Director of Administration for the Office of the Vice President Moe Vela
Domestic Policy Adviser to the Vice President Terrell McSweeny
Chief Economist and Economic Policy Adviser to the Vice President Jared Bernstein
Press Secretary to the Vice President Elizabeth Alexander
Deputy Press Secretary to the Vice President Annie Tomasini
Director of Legislative Affairs Sudafi Henry
Residence Manager and Social Secretary for the Vice President and the Second Lady Carlos Elizondo
 

Emerging agenda edit

Obama's developing presidential agenda was divided into domestic and foreign policy issues. In most cases, this agenda involved addressing crises already underway. His principal strategic decisions concerned how quickly to move bills through Congress.[110] Some of his advisors suggested moving quickly, as Franklin D. Roosevelt did in 1933, under the belief that a more moderate approach would waste valuable time early in his presidency, when his political capital will be strongest. Others suggested moving more slowly, as Bill Clinton did before his attempt to enact a national healthcare program, based on the notion that rapid change could quickly wear down any bipartisan consensus. He was expected, in any case, to issue a series of executive orders within days of his inauguration, including a reversal of Bush-era executive orders restricting funding to family planning (including abortion) services and stem-cell research.[110] There was also a possibility that a new cabinet level advisory post would be created overseeing the Department of Energy, Department of the Interior and the Environmental Protection Agency.[111]

According to Podesta, the transition team planned to conduct an exhaustive review of Bush's executive orders in an effort to find quick changes that could be implemented on the first day in office. Podesta also says that there is a great deal that can be accomplished without waiting for Congress to act and that Obama wanted to move quickly once in office to restore "a sense that the country is working on behalf of the common good."[112]

Economic agenda edit

The economic agenda under development initially focused on short-term measures intended to hold off widespread economic losses so that a longer-term economic agenda could then be formulated. That approach subsequently shifted to a longer-term stimulus plan, with a goal of creating 2.5 million jobs over a two-year period. With a cost of $700 to $800 billion, the stimulus plan would cost more than a quarter million dollars per job created (divide 750 billion by 2,500,000 yielding $300,000).[113] In a nationally televised interview on December 7, he acknowledged that his agenda has changed over the past month, and that a short-term stimulus package had again become his first priority. He wanted to emphasize "shovel ready" infrastructure projects to create new jobs quickly.[114] Barack Obama said he hoped to sign the stimulus package into law soon after taking office on January 20.

Obama's most immediate concern was an economic stimulus proposal that some Congressional Democrats had advocated. Like previous stimulus packages, that proposal was demand-side (Keynesian) in nature. It would likely consist of increased funding for unemployment benefits, the Food Stamp Program, and infrastructure projects, rather than tax rebates.[115] In fact, Obama claimed to be planning "the largest infrastructure program in roads and bridges and other traditional infrastructure since the building of the Interstate Highway System in the 1950s."[116] However, he also emphasized his plans to "green" the federal government by updating heating and lighting systems in federal buildings, as well as significant investment in technology initiatives such as mandatory electronic medical records, improved computers in schools, and universal availability of broadband Internet access.[117]

Additional funding for Medicaid was also being considered. A similar stimulus bill was passed by the House of Representatives on September 26, 2008, but never approved by the Senate.[115] Obama promised to promote a stimulus bill early in his presidency if one was not passed before his inauguration on January 20, 2009.[115] In addition, Obama considered the request of the U.S. automotive industry for a cash infusion of $50 billion in addition to the $25 billion that had already been approved, but emphasizing that his support is "conditioned on them making significant adjustments."[114]

Obama also planned to push for a program to spend $150 billion over 10 years to develop new renewable energy sources. This money would also be used to encourage energy conservation and help the auto industry develop fuel-efficient vehicles. However, Mother Jones reported that the Windfall Profits Tax on oil companies, which he frequently cited during the campaign, had been dropped from the agenda early in the transition.[110][118]

According to the transition's website, Obama also hoped to rekindle volunteerism by expanding AmeriCorps and the Peace Corps and also creating a new Classroom Corps. Other volunteer efforts reportedly include a Health Corps, Clean Energy Corps, and Veterans Corps. Middle and high school students would be asked to do 50 hours of community service work a year. College students would be eligible for $4,000 in tuition tax credits in exchange for community service work. Improved volunteerism programs aimed at senior citizens were projected, as well as augmented Youth Build and Head Start programs.[119]

Agenda on healthcare edit

On December 5, Tom Daschle, who was designated to lead Obama's efforts for health care reform, announced a month-long campaign to solicit public input on the shape of that reform. People were encouraged to hold community meetings to discuss the issue, and to post their thoughts on www.change.gov, where over 10,000 comments had already been posted. Although Democratic leaders had met in private for several months to prepare a legislative package for unveiling in January, Daschle was anxious to avoid the appearance that the transition was working behind closed doors to create a sweeping agenda for change.

This technique, developed by grass roots organizations like MoveOn.org, was designed to reinforce the notion that Obama intended to aggressively pursue his health care reform agenda despite the worsening economy. "President-elect Obama has made health reform one of his top priorities, and I'm here to tell you that his commitment to changing the healthcare system remains strong and focused", said Daschle.[120]

During a news conference on December 11, 2008, Obama linked health care reform to the upcoming economic stimulus package, noting that "It's not something that we can sort of put off because we're in an emergency." "This is part of the emergency." He expected the stimulus legislation to include a $40 billion increase in Medicaid spending over two years, plus a massive investment in health information management technology. Consideration was also being given to funding for retraining medical workers, expansion of the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), and expansion of the COBRA provisions, which allow unemployed workers to purchase health insurance through their previous employer's plan.[121]

Foreign policy agenda edit

One of the principal foreign policy issues that Obama ran on during the presidential campaign was his promise to withdraw most American troops from the Iraq War within sixteen months of his inauguration.[122] Another issue concerned the three areas that President Bush had been focusing on during the final months of his term: Iran's nuclear development, North Korea's nuclear arsenal, and the Israeli-Palestinian peace talks. In all three cases, a diplomatic structure had already been established, although some of the Bush administration's goals differ from those Obama that would adopt as president.[122]

 
The Annapolis Conference gathers in November 2007.

In the Middle East, Bush began a new approach to the peace process, the so-called Annapolis process, which attempted to encourage Israeli and Palestinian leaders to agree on the outlines of a peace accord. Although both sides cited some success in these discussions, critics believed the talks unduly ignored Hamas, which has been labeled by the United States as a terrorist organization, despite the fact that it had held an enormous amount of political power in the region.[122] Obama had not specified what his approach would be, although it was considered likely that he would appoint a high-level Middle East envoy, in part to free his Secretary of State so that other matters can also be addressed.[122] Hamas expressed a willingness to talk to Obama, who has said that he would reciprocate only if it renounced terrorism, recognized Israel's right to exist, and agreed to abide by past agreements.[123] The Hamas leader in Gaza, Ismail Haniyeh, said the Hamas government would accept a Palestinian state that followed the Green Line and would offer Israel a long-term truce if Israel recognised the Palestinians' national rights.[124]

During his second term, Bush pursued an agreement with North Korea to end its nuclear weapons programs. To that end, Bush agreed to remove North Korea from the State Department's list of State Sponsors of Terrorism, which Obama supported.[122] Obama had criticized Bush for taking so long to engage with North Korea, and indicated he would be eager to engage in a more proactive manner in order to reach an agreement. A senior North Korean official recently[when?] told reporters that "we are ready to deal" with the incoming Obama administration.[122]

Obama also deliberated on how to deal with Iran. Outgoing Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had assembled a coalition of six states—all five members of the United Nations Security Council plus Germany—to confront Iran.[122] While the group won approval from the United Nations, Iran largely ignored its demands. While Obama had previously advocated carefully planned direct talks with Iran, he was now being seen as likely to build on the current coalition to broker an agreement with Iran.[122]

In addition, Obama formulated a policy to deal with the U.S. missile defense shield that was under construction in Poland. He discussed the matter with both Polish President Lech Kaczyński and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev. While his advisors were working on a missile shield policy, his position at that time was simply that one might be deployed if and when it has been "proved to be workable".[125]

Obama also planned to revoke a series of executive orders enacted by Bush that authorized enhanced interrogation techniques which many critics have labeled as torture against "detainees."[110] The revocations would have the effect of requiring the CIA to abide by the Army Field Manual when it interrogated prisoners. Resistance was expected, however, from some in the Intelligence Community, regarding the practicality of a complete revocation of these orders. Obama also hoped to close the detention camp at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba, although issues were expected to arise because many of the detainees had been held without evidence or had been coerced in their confessions, which would not be admissible in a federal court.[110]

A November 20, 2008, Los Angeles Times article stated, "Antiwar groups and other liberal activists are increasingly concerned at signs that Barack Obama's national security team will be dominated by appointees who favored the Iraq invasion... 'It's astonishing that not one of the 23 senators or 133 House members who voted against the war is in the mix,' said Sam Husseini of the liberal group Institute for Public Accuracy."[126]

National defense edit

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, who was retained in the Obama Administration, outlined an agenda for reform of the Department of Defense. His ideas centered on a perceived need to shift purchasing priorities away from costly high tech weapons, and toward lower cost alternatives that are more appropriate for the wars the U.S. was currently fighting, as well as those he believed might lie in the immediate future. He noted that there are limits to U.S. military power, and believed that the emphasis should be shifted away from fighting, and toward training, advising and equipping allied forces to fight.[127]

Specific areas Gates and Obama agreed on were said to include:

Energy policy edit

Obama made energy policy one of his topmost priorities in his 2008 campaign.[129] Towards his energy goals of United States energy independence through investment in alternative energy production he has set the following objectives:

  • Within ten years save more oil than current imports from the Middle East and Venezuela combined.
  • By 2015 put one million plug-in hybrid vehicles on the road.
  • By 2012, 10% of U.S. electricity shall come from renewable sources and 25% by 2025.
  • By 2050, 80% of currently emitted greenhouse gases shall be eliminated.

To achieve these objectives, Obama proposed the following measures[130]

Appointees recruited by Obama with experience on energy policy included Peter Orszag, an expert on cap and trade programs, who was named as director of the Office of Management and Budget. John Podesta, transition chief, was an early advocate of Detroit's refocus on using lower carbon alternatives to gasoline.[132]

Secret Service preparations edit

 
Barack Obama being sworn in as the 44th president of the United States.
 
George W. Bush departing in a Marine Corps helicopter as he looks at U.S. Capitol after the Inauguration of Barack Obama.

The Secret Service, of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, was the lead agency for both security and logistics for the Inaugural Ceremony. Their plan was to open the event to as many spectators as possible. Security was expected to be strict, and vast portions of downtown Washington would be closed to all traffic. Initially, it was thought that up to 4 million people would descend upon the area of the National Mall, but later reports from the Secret Service suggested that the number might not be that high. Arrangements for 8000 police officers were made, however, and parking for up to 10,000 tour buses was arranged. A Metro spokesperson warned that the subway system "will be utterly overwhelmed." Camping was not permitted on the mall.[133][134]

On November 13, 2008, the Secret Service announced that Obama's codename would be "Renegade". In addition, his wife's is "Renaissance" and his daughters' are "Rosebud" and "Radiance".[135]

Residential transition edit

 
In keeping with tradition, President Bush left a letter (shown here on the Resolute desk) to Obama in the Oval Office.

The first family visited both Sidwell Friends School and Georgetown Day School before deciding on Sidwell.[136][137] The residential transition began with the first of two interim stops at the Hay-Adams Hotel on January 4.[138] The second interim stop was a move to Blair House on January 15, the traditional interim move date for residents-elect.[139] The residential transition began earlier than for most incoming presidents because the daughters began school at Sidwell on January 5.[139][140] During the campaign, Michelle Obama had stated that the residential transition would be planned to be as unified as possible for all members of the family.[141] Michelle's mother, Marian Robinson, made plans to move into the White House to assist with child care.[142] In the current real estate market, the Obamas did not intend to sell their South Side Chicago home that sits on the border between the Hyde Park and Kenwood community areas.[143]

Jenna and Barbara Bush had much advice for Malia and Sasha Obama. The Bush twins sent the Obama daughters an open letter that was published in The Wall Street Journal.[144][145]

The outgoing Bush family did not take much with them as they left the White House. Among the items they left behind was their official state china service, a Lenox gilt-edged style with a green basket weave border, estimated to be worth $492,798. However, what they did not take with them can be included in the collection of the presidential library.[146]

Vice President Dick Cheney was injured moving out of his residence just before the inauguration and used a wheelchair during the ceremony.[147]

Assessment of the transition edit

Experts have given the transition high praise. Numerous experts have referred to the transition between Bush and Obama as the "gold standard" for presidential transitions.[148][149][150][151][152] Both the Bush and Obama ends of the transition have been praised.[20]

The transition has been praised as "seamless", in part, for its adherence to Obama's insistence that there be "one president at a time", with Obama largely avoiding giving comment during the transition on matters Bush was handling, such as the ongoing financial crisis.[20][19]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Nagourney, Adam (November 4, 2008). "Obama Wins Election". The New York Times. Retrieved November 5, 2008.
  2. ^ Barr, Andy (December 15, 2008). "Electoral College weighs in for Obama". Politico. Retrieved December 15, 2008.
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Further reading edit

  • Halchin, L. Elaine (November 25, 2008). "Presidential Transitions: Issues Involving Outgoing and Incoming Administrations" (PDF). Congressional Research Service. Retrieved January 14, 2009.
  • "Transcript: President-Elect Obama's First News Conference". The New York Times. November 7, 2008. Retrieved November 7, 2008.
  • Sweet, Lynn (November 5, 2008). . Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on December 10, 2008. Retrieved November 5, 2008.
  • Baker, Peter; Jeff Zeleny (November 5, 2008). "For Obama, No Day to Bask as He Starts to Build His Team for Transition". The New York Times. Retrieved November 5, 2008.
  • Baker, Peter (November 4, 2008). "No Time for Laurels; Now the Hard Part". The New York Times. Retrieved November 5, 2008. (Initial likely appointments to the transition team.)
  • "Possible Presidential Appointments". The New York Times. October 25, 2008. Retrieved November 5, 2008.
  • Espo, David (October 17, 2008). . Associated Press. Archived from the original on October 21, 2008. Retrieved November 5, 2008. (Pre-election meeting of the Obama transition team.)

External links edit

presidential, transition, barack, obama, presidential, transition, barack, obama, began, when, united, states, presidential, election, november, 2008, became, president, elect, obama, formally, elected, electoral, college, december, 2008, results, were, certif. The presidential transition of Barack Obama began when he won the United States presidential election on November 4 2008 and became the president elect Obama was formally elected by the Electoral College on December 15 2008 The results were certified by a joint session of Congress on January 8 2009 and the transition ended when Obama was inaugurated at noon EST on January 20 2009 1 2 Presidential transition of Barack ObamaOutgoing President George W Bush left and President elect Barack Obama right meet in the Oval Office of the White House as part of the presidential transitionDate of electionNovember 4 2008Inauguration dateJanuary 20 2009President electBarack Obama Democrat Vice president electJoe Biden Democrat Outgoing presidentGeorge W Bush Republican Outgoing vice presidentDick Cheney Republican HeadquartersChicago Illinois and Washington D C Executive DirectorChris LuBudget 12 millionStaff450Websitehttp change gov dead link Contents 1 Organization of the transition 1 1 Transition team 2 Activities as the president elect 2 1 Bush administration 2 2 Resignation from Senate offices 2 2 1 Obama Senate transition 2 2 2 Biden Senate transition 2 3 Change gov website 3 Administration appointments 3 1 Announcements 3 2 Cabinet and top advisors 3 2 1 Domestic policy 3 2 2 Economic policy 3 2 3 Environment and energy 3 2 4 Foreign affairs and national security 3 3 Table 4 Emerging agenda 4 1 Economic agenda 4 2 Agenda on healthcare 4 3 Foreign policy agenda 4 4 National defense 4 5 Energy policy 5 Secret Service preparations 5 1 Residential transition 6 Assessment of the transition 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Further reading 10 External linksOrganization of the transition edit nbsp Living presidents George W Bush George H W Bush Bill Clinton Jimmy Carter and President elect Barack Obama at the White House Oval Office on January 7 2009The Obama transition organization was called the Obama Biden Transition Project 3 The transition team was convened during the height of the campaign well before the outcome could be known to begin making preparations for a potential administration It was co chaired by John Podesta who was Bill Clinton s fourth and last White House chief of staff and the president chief executive officer of the Center for American Progress 4 Valerie Jarrett who is one of Obama s longest serving advisers 5 6 and Pete Rouse former Senate chief of staff for Tom Daschle who succeeded Rahm Emanuel as Obama s chief of staff 7 On November 5 the General Services Administration declared that Obama was the apparent winner making him eligible to receive transition funding and other government services and granting him access to their 2008 presidential transition headquarters in Washington D C 8 Podesta estimated that the transition would employ approximately 450 people and have a budget of about 12 million 5 2 million would be paid by the federal government and the remaining 6 8 million would be funded by private sources with each contribution limited to 5 000 The transition project would not accept money from political action committees or federal lobbyists 9 Transition team edit On November 5 Obama announced his complete transition team which was organized as a nonprofit tax exempt organization under U S federal tax code 501 c 4 The advisory board consisted of Carol Browner William M Daley Christopher Edley Michael Froman Julius Genachowski Donald Gips Janet Napolitano Federico Pena Susan Rice Sonal Shah Mark Gitenstein and Ted Kaufman 10 nbsp General Services Administration letter to President elect Barack ObamaMembers of the transition team s senior staff included 10 Chris Lu Executive Director Dan Pfeiffer Communications Director Stephanie Cutter Chief Spokesperson Robert Gibbs Press Secretary 11 Cassandra Butts General Counsel Jim Messina Personnel Director Patrick Gaspard Associate Personnel Director Christine A Varney Personnel Counsel Melody Barnes Co director of Agency Review Lisa Brown Co director of Agency Review Phil Schiliro Director of Congressional Relations Michael Strautmanis Director of Public Liaison and Intergovernmental Affairs Katy Kale Co director of Operations Brad Kiley Co director of OperationsJoshua Gotbaum and Michael Warren headed the transition team of the Treasury Department In addition Thomas Donilon and Wendy Sherman oversaw the transition of the State Department Seth Harris oversaw the transition in all of the labor education and transportation agencies with Edward B Montgomery leading the Labor Department agency review team Mortimer Downey leading the Transportation Department agency review team and Judith Sherman leading the Education Department agency review team Finally John P White and Michele Flournoy led the transition of the Defense Department 12 Activities as the president elect editBush administration edit nbsp President elect Obama walking with President Bush during their November 10 meeting nbsp Laura Bush meets with Michelle Obama In mid October the George W Bush administration convened a fourteen member council to coordinate with and brief the winning campaign s transition team 5 The New York Times reported that White House chief of staff Joshua Bolten then planned to recruit his predecessor Andrew Card to oversee the activity 5 On November 6 Obama received his first classified intelligence briefing from director of national intelligence John Michael McConnell and Central Intelligence Agency director Michael Hayden 13 President Bush invited Obama and his team to attend the 2008 G 20 Washington summit held between November 15 and 20 in order to introduce him to more than twenty world leaders who attended the event However Obama did not come and his transition team instead sent former Republican Rep Jim Leach and former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright to meet with the heads of state 14 15 Obama was expected to address a United Nations global warming summit in Poland in December or allow a representative such as Al Gore to present his policies 4 On November 10 Obama traveled to the White House and met with President Bush to discuss transition issues while First Lady Laura Bush took his wife Michelle on a tour of the mansion NBC News reported that Obama advanced his economic agenda with Bush asking him to attempt to pass a stimulus package in a lame duck session of Congress before the inauguration He also urged Bush to accelerate the disbursement of 25 billion in funds to bail out the automobile industry and expressed concern about additional Americans losing their homes as mortgage rates increase again 16 17 The Bush administration reportedly went out of its way to make the transition as seamless as possible for the incoming administration earning accolades from Obama staff members and outside experts alike According to nearly all accounts the Bush administration streamlined the process for new officials to obtain security clearances and planned training exercises for the incoming national security team to ensure that they would be ready to face a possible crisis on the first day in office Part of this enhanced cooperation is required by laws passed at the behest of the 9 11 Commission while part is attributed to the difficulty that the Bush administration had with its own transition which lasted only five weeks and was felt to have had a deleterious effect on Bush s ability to govern I m not sure I ve ever seen an outgoing administration work as hard at saying the right thing said Stephen Hess of the Brookings Institution This is really quite memorable 18 During the transition the Bush administration had many important matters to address even as a lame duck president There was an ongoing financial crisis 19 and this was the first presidential transition since the presidential transition of Richard Nixon to occur while the United States was at war 20 Resignation from Senate offices edit At the time of their election President elect Obama and Vice President elect Joseph Biden were incumbent U S senators from Illinois and Delaware respectively In accordance with Article I Section 6 of the United States Constitution both were required to resign their respective Senate seats on or before January 20 2009 in order to become president and vice president Obama Senate transition edit nbsp During the transition period Obama spoke from a lectern bearing the inscription Office of the President Elect Obama resigned from the Senate effective November 16 2008 21 22 Initially it was thought that his replacement would be named by Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich Since the term for the seat expired in January 2011 it would come up for its normal election in 2010 with no special election necessary Blagojevich was expected to name Obama s immediate successor in the Senate by January 3 2009 23 However on December 9 2008 the status of Obama s succession in the Senate was cast in doubt after Blagojevich was arrested on federal corruption charges which included allegedly attempting to sell the appointment 24 Although placed in federal custody and released on 4 500 bail 25 as long as he remained governor Blagojevich continued to have sole authority to make the appointment 26 Several Democrats including Sen Dick Durbin asked the Illinois General Assembly to schedule a special election instead 27 Speaking through a surrogate Obama called for Blagojevich s resignation on December 10 28 Had Blagojevich resigned or been removed from office before making the appointment the duty would have fallen to Illinois Lt Gov Pat Quinn who would succeed Blagojevich as governor However Illinois Senate president Emil Jones said that he would call the Senate back into session to write a law that would result in Obama s replacement being determined in a special election 29 However after the state legislature did not pass a law mandating a special election for the seat on December 30 Blagojevich announced that he was appointing Roland Burris a former Illinois Attorney General Illinois Comptroller and U S Treasury Department official to the seat citing his constitutional duty in the absence of a law requiring a special election 30 Blagojevich Burris and Representative Bobby Rush urged the public to consider the qualifications of Burris as a public servant and not the scandals in which Blagojevich was embroiled 31 However the Senate Democrats released a statement in which they reaffirmed that they would refuse to seat anyone appointed to the seat by Blagojevich as that individual would be an ineffective representative of Illinois because of questions of impropriety 32 Some members of the Congressional Black Caucus including Rush expressed their support for seating Burris who would be the only African American in the Senate Rush compared a Senate rejection of Burris to a lynching 33 However President elect Obama released a statement condemning the appointment and again calling on Blagojevich to resign 34 In addition the Illinois Secretary of State Jesse White reiterated that he would not certify any appointment made by Blagojevich although at the time it was not clear whether this could prevent Burris from taking office 35 Furthermore the Senate might not actually have been able to refuse to seat Burris as he met all constitutional requirements for the office and was not involved in the Blagojevich corruption scandal per the U S Supreme Court decision Powell v McCormack 36 On January 9 2009 the Illinois Supreme Court ruled in the case Burris v White that the appointment only required the signature of the governor to be valid and not that of the Illinois Secretary of State and that the state of Illinois is not required to use the Senate s recommended certification form as it is only recommended under the Standing Rules of the United States Senate 37 38 The Court further remarked that no explanation has been given as to how any rule of the Senate whether it be formal or merely a matter of tradition could supersede the authority to fill vacancies conferred on the states by the federal constitution 39 Following the ruling White provided Burris with a certified copy of the appointment s registration and Burris delivered that copy that bears the State Seal to the Secretary of the Senate 40 His credentials declared valid Burris was finally sworn in on January 15 2009 by outgoing President of the Senate Dick Cheney 41 42 43 Biden Senate transition edit Biden had indicated that he would remain in the Senate until he was sworn in as vice president on January 20 2009 44 Although he was sworn in for a seventh Senate term in early January 2009 he resigned from the seat on January 15 2009 having served just over 36 years in the body 45 He was Delaware s longest serving senator On November 24 2008 Delaware Gov Ruth Ann Minner announced that Ted Kaufman would serve as Biden s appointed replacement 46 Kaufman was sworn in on January 16 2009 47 A special election was held in November 2010 which elected Democratic candidate Chris Coons During his abbreviated final term in the Senate Biden went on a diplomatic fact finding trip to Iraq Afghanistan and Pakistan becoming the first vice president elect to undertake such a mission before entering office 48 Change gov website edit On November 5 2008 the transition team launched change gov the official website of the transition 49 The website included a blog and jobs page 50 It also had a section that allowed visitors to share stories or their visions for the country 51 Visitors were able to comment on issues important to them using the Citizen s Briefing Book Individuals applying for work within the Obama administration via this site were required to go through intensive consumer and criminal background checks performed by the ChoicePoint Corporation 52 The website used a Creative Commons license 53 As part of their efforts towards transparency on December 5 the transition team announced that all policy documents from official meetings with outside organizations will be publicly available for review and discussion on Change gov After the inauguration many of the functions of change gov were transferred to a redesigned White House website 54 Administration appointments editSee also Confirmations of Barack Obama s Cabinet Thirty one of the appointments to the transition team had previously worked in the Clinton administration including Podesta chief of staff Rahm Emanuel and Biden s chief of staff Ron Klain 55 Announcements edit Obama held near daily press conferences as president elect to announce his administration nominees to the public 56 He introduced the nominees and occasionally took questions from the press regarding issues such as economic difficulties and the war in Afghanistan 57 The appointments of Lawrence Summers and Timothy F Geithner to key economic positions were criticized on grounds that they had been prominently involved in creating many of the conditions that led to the financial crisis of 2007 2008 so failure is being rewarded 58 Summers was a leading advocate of the derivatives deregulation together with Alan Greenspan and Robert Rubin 59 60 and during his transition to Secretary of the Treasury the act that kept commercial banks out of Wall Street the Glass Steagall Act was repealed 58 Geithner instead was criticized for his failure to pay 34 000 in income taxes 61 The appointment of Eric Holder for attorney general raised concerns due to his role in the last minute pardon issued by Bill Clinton for fugitive financier Marc Rich 62 During his first press conference as president elect on November 7 Obama remarked about former first lady Nancy Reagan holding seances in the White House which gained widespread attention 63 64 65 66 Termed his first gaffe 67 Obama called Mrs Reagan later that evening to apologize for what his spokesperson said was a careless and off handed remark 68 Chief of staff Representative Rahm Emanuel of Illinois was selected by President elect Obama on November 6 two days after the election 69 Deputy Chiefs of Staff Jim Messina current director of personnel for the Obama Transition team and former chief of staff to Senator Max Baucus and Mona Sutphen a former career foreign service officer who worked for President Clinton s National Security Council 70 Senior Advisors to the President Campaign strategist David Axelrod 71 and Pete Rouse who has been serving as Obama s Senate chief of staff 70 Senior Advisor and Assistant to the President for Intergovernmental Relations and Public Liaison Valerie Jarrett a lawyer who served as Chicago s planning commissioner and later was chairperson of the Chicago Transit Authority In 1995 Jarrett left public service to join the Habitat Corporation a Chicago real estate management company 72 Assistant to the President for Legislative Affairs Phil Schiliro 73 White House Counsel Greg Craig 74 Cabinet Secretary Chris Lu former legislative director of Obama s Senate office Staff Secretary Lisa Brown executive director of the American Constitution Society 75 Press Secretary Robert Gibbs announced on November 22 76 Communications Director Ellen Moran 76 Deputy Director of Communications Dan Pfeiffer 76 Chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality Nancy Sutley a well known member of the LGBT community and Deputy Mayor of Los Angeles Deputy Director of White House Office of Health Reform Jeanne Lambrew White House photographer Pete Souza 77 Cabinet and top advisors edit There was one withdrawal New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson whom Obama had named Secretary of Commerce Richardson s administration was at the time the subject of a federal corruption probe while maintaining that his administration was responsible for no wrongdoing he withdrew so as to prevent a lengthy confirmation process from hindering the work of the U S Department of Commerce 78 The position was filled by Gary Locke Obama named Tim Kaine as new chairman of the Democratic National Committee replacing Howard Dean who has clashed with Obama and his advisors in the past Kaine served concurrently as Governor of Virginia until his term ended in January 2010 79 Obama named Aneesh Chopra for the new position of Chief Technology Officer of the United States Vivek Kundra as Chief Information Officer and Jeffrey Zients Chief Performance Officer 80 81 and deputy director for management of the Office of Management and Budget 82 Initial reaction to Obama s choice of Leon Panetta as CIA director was mixed with some intelligence professionals expressing concern that Panetta lacked specific intelligence experience 83 and others such as former Congressman and co chair of the Iraq Study Group Lee H Hamilton praising the choice 84 Domestic policy edit nbsp Kathleen SebeliusSecretary of Health and Human Services announced February 28 2009 85 nbsp Shaun DonovanSecretary of Housing and Urban Development announced December 13 2008 86 nbsp Eric ShinsekiSecretary of Veterans Affairs announced December 7 2008 87 nbsp Arne DuncanSecretary of Education announced December 16 2008 88 nbsp Tom VilsackSecretary of Agriculture announced December 17 2008 89 nbsp Ray LaHoodSecretary of Transportation announced December 19 2008 90 nbsp Hilda SolisSecretary of Labor announced December 19 2008 91 92 nbsp Melody BarnesDirector Domestic Policy Council announced November 24 2008 93 nbsp Gil KerlikowskeDirector National Drug Control Policy announced February 10 2009 94 Economic policy edit nbsp Timothy GeithnerSecretary of the Treasury announced November 24 2008 93 nbsp Gary LockeSecretary of Commerce announced February 25 2009 95 nbsp Christina RomerChairwoman Council of Economic Advisers announced November 24 2008 93 nbsp Lawrence SummersAssistant to the President for Economic PolicyDirector National Economic Council announced November 24 2008 93 nbsp Paul VolckerChairman Economic Recovery Advisory Board announced November 26 2008 96 nbsp Peter R OrszagDirector Office of Management and Budget announced November 25 2008 97 nbsp Ron KirkUnited States Trade Representative announced December 19 2008 Environment and energy edit nbsp Steven ChuSecretary of Energy announced December 15 2008 98 nbsp Ken SalazarSecretary of the Interior announced December 17 the nomination was given a Saxbe fix 92 99 nbsp Lisa P JacksonAdministrator of the EPA announced December 15 2008 100 nbsp Nancy SutleyChair of the Council on Environmental Quality announced December 15 2008 101 nbsp Carol BrownerAssistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change announced December 15 2008 102 Foreign affairs and national security edit nbsp Hillary ClintonSecretary of State announced December 1 103 the nomination was given a Saxbe fix 104 105 106 107 108 nbsp Robert Gates Secretary of Defense continuation of previous administration s appointment announced December 1 103 nbsp Eric HolderAttorney General announced December 1 2008 103 nbsp Janet NapolitanoSecretary of Homeland Security announced December 1 103 nbsp James L JonesAssistant to the President for National Security Affairs announced December 1 103 nbsp Dennis BlairDirector of National Intelligence announced January 2009 nbsp Leon PanettaDirector of the Central Intelligence Agency announced January 2009 nbsp Susan RiceU S Ambassador to the United Nations announced December 1 109 Table edit Proposed Obama administration personnel at the time of Inauguration January 20 2009Cabinet and cabinet levelPosition DesignateWhite House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel Director of the Office of Management and Budget Peter Orszag Secretary of Defense Robert GatesSecretary of Commerce Gary LockeSecretary of Veterans Affairs Eric ShinsekiSecretary of Housing and Urban Development Shaun DonovanAdministrator of the Environmental Protection Agency Lisa Jackson Secretary of the Interior Ken SalazarSecretary of Transportation Ray LaHoodSecretary of Labor Hilda SolisPosition DesignateSecretary of the Treasury Timothy GeithnerSecretary of State Hillary ClintonAttorney General Eric HolderSecretary of Homeland Security Janet NapolitanoAmbassador to the United Nations Susan Rice Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen SebeliusSecretary of Energy Steven ChuSecretary of Education Arne DuncanSecretary of Agriculture Tom VilsackTrade Representative Ronald Kirk Cabinet level positionExecutive Office of the PresidentPosition DesigneeSenior Advisor to the President Assistant to the President for Intergovernmental Affairs Public Liaison Valerie JarrettSenior Advisor to the President Pete RouseDeputy White House Chief of Staff Jim MessinaStaff Secretary Lisa BrownPersonal Secretary Katie JohnsonCabinet Secretary Chris LuChief of staff to the First Lady Jackie NorrisWhite House Press Secretary Robert GibbsWhite House Social Secretary Special Assistant to the President Desiree RogersAssistant to the President for Economic Policy Director of the White House National Economic Council LawrenceSummersAssistant to the President for Domestic Policy Director of the White House Domestic Policy Council Melody BarnesAssistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change Carol BrownerDeputy Director of the Office of Management and Budget Rob NaborsChair of the President s Economic Recovery Advisory Board Paul VolckerDirector of Speechwriting Jon FavreauAssistant to the President for National Security Affairs National Security Adviser Jim JonesDirector of Public Liaison Christina TchenDirector of White House Office of Health Reform Nancy Ann Min DeParleDeputy Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change Heather ZichalCo chair of the President s Council of Advisers onScience and Technology Eric LanderDeputy White House Counsel with a Focus on Domestic Policy and Ethics Cassandra ButtsDeputy Director of Legislative Affairs for the Senate Shawn MaherSpecial Assistant to the President Director of Communications for the First Lady CamilleJohnstonDeputy Press Secretary for the First Lady SemontiMustaphiWhite House Director of Presidential Personnel Don GipsAssociate Counsel to the President Susan SherPosition DesigneeAssistant to the President for Legislative Affairs Phil SchiliroDeputy White House Chief of Staff Mona SutphenSenior Advisor to the President David AxelrodWhite House Counsel Greg CraigDirector of the White House Office of Political Affairs Patrick GaspardAssistant to the President for Communications White House Director of Communications Ellen MoranDeputy Assistant to the President for Communications Deputy White House Director of Communications Dan PfeifferDeputy Chief of Staff to the First Lady Melissa WinterDirector of the White House Council of Economic Advisers Christina RomerDeputy Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy deputy director of the White House Domestic Policy Council HeatherHigginbottomWhite House Director of Scheduling and Advance AlyssaMastromonacoStaff Director and Chief Economist of the President s Economic Recovery Advisory Board Member of the White House Council of Economic Advisers AustanGoolsbeeDirector of Intergovernmental Affairs Cecilia MunozDirector of the White House Military Office Louis CalderaChief of staff to the Assistant to the President for Intergovernmental Relations Public Liaison MichaelStrautmanisDeputy Director of White House Office of Health Reform Jeanne LambrewChair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality Nancy SutleyAssistant to the President for Science and Technology Director of the White House Office of Scienceand Technology Policy Co chair of the President s Council of Advisers onScience and Technology John HoldrenCo chair of the President s Council of Advisers onScience and Technology Harold VarmusDeputy Cabinet Secretary Liz Sears SmithDeputy Director of Legislative Affairs for the House of Representatives Dan TurtonPress Secretary for the First Lady KatieMcCormickLelyveldDirector of the Office of Management and Administration Bradley KileyChief Performance Officer deputy director for Management at the Office of Management and Budget Jeffrey ZientsDirector of White House Office of Urban Policy Adolfo Carrion OtherPosition DesigneeChair of the Securities and Exchange Commission Mary SchapiroMember of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Daniel TarulloUnder Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere Administrator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration JaneLubchencoSolicitor General Elena KaganAssistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel Dawn JohnsenDirector of National Intelligence Dennis BlairDirector of the Central Intelligence Agency Leon PanettaPosition DesigneeChair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission Gary GenslerAdministrator of the Small Business Administration Karen MillsDeputy Attorney General David OgdenAssociate Attorney General Tom PerrelliSurgeon General Regina BenjaminDeputy Secretary of State James SteinbergJacob LewSpecial Assistant to the President Eugene Kang Although identified by sources to the press selection awaited official announcement by the office of the President Elect Office of the Vice PresidentPosition DesignateChief of Staff to the Vice President Ron KlainCounsel to the Vice President Cynthia HoganCounselor to the Vice President Mike DonilonAssistant to the Vice President for Intergovernmental Affairs Public Liaison Evan RyanAssistant to the Vice President Director of Communications Jay CarneyDeputy Chief of Staff to the Vice President Alan HoffmanDeputy National Security Adviser to the Vice President Brian McKeonDirector of Communications for the Second Lady Courtney O DonnellPosition DesignateChief of Staff to the Second Lady Catherine RussellDirector of Administration for the Office of the Vice President Moe VelaDomestic Policy Adviser to the Vice President Terrell McSweenyChief Economist and Economic Policy Adviser to the Vice President Jared BernsteinPress Secretary to the Vice President Elizabeth AlexanderDeputy Press Secretary to the Vice President Annie TomasiniDirector of Legislative Affairs Sudafi HenryResidence Manager and Social Secretary for the Vice President and the Second Lady Carlos Elizondo Emerging agenda editObama s developing presidential agenda was divided into domestic and foreign policy issues In most cases this agenda involved addressing crises already underway His principal strategic decisions concerned how quickly to move bills through Congress 110 Some of his advisors suggested moving quickly as Franklin D Roosevelt did in 1933 under the belief that a more moderate approach would waste valuable time early in his presidency when his political capital will be strongest Others suggested moving more slowly as Bill Clinton did before his attempt to enact a national healthcare program based on the notion that rapid change could quickly wear down any bipartisan consensus He was expected in any case to issue a series of executive orders within days of his inauguration including a reversal of Bush era executive orders restricting funding to family planning including abortion services and stem cell research 110 There was also a possibility that a new cabinet level advisory post would be created overseeing the Department of Energy Department of the Interior and the Environmental Protection Agency 111 According to Podesta the transition team planned to conduct an exhaustive review of Bush s executive orders in an effort to find quick changes that could be implemented on the first day in office Podesta also says that there is a great deal that can be accomplished without waiting for Congress to act and that Obama wanted to move quickly once in office to restore a sense that the country is working on behalf of the common good 112 Economic agenda edit Further information American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan The economic agenda under development initially focused on short term measures intended to hold off widespread economic losses so that a longer term economic agenda could then be formulated That approach subsequently shifted to a longer term stimulus plan with a goal of creating 2 5 million jobs over a two year period With a cost of 700 to 800 billion the stimulus plan would cost more than a quarter million dollars per job created divide 750 billion by 2 500 000 yielding 300 000 113 In a nationally televised interview on December 7 he acknowledged that his agenda has changed over the past month and that a short term stimulus package had again become his first priority He wanted to emphasize shovel ready infrastructure projects to create new jobs quickly 114 Barack Obama said he hoped to sign the stimulus package into law soon after taking office on January 20 Obama s most immediate concern was an economic stimulus proposal that some Congressional Democrats had advocated Like previous stimulus packages that proposal was demand side Keynesian in nature It would likely consist of increased funding for unemployment benefits the Food Stamp Program and infrastructure projects rather than tax rebates 115 In fact Obama claimed to be planning the largest infrastructure program in roads and bridges and other traditional infrastructure since the building of the Interstate Highway System in the 1950s 116 However he also emphasized his plans to green the federal government by updating heating and lighting systems in federal buildings as well as significant investment in technology initiatives such as mandatory electronic medical records improved computers in schools and universal availability of broadband Internet access 117 Additional funding for Medicaid was also being considered A similar stimulus bill was passed by the House of Representatives on September 26 2008 but never approved by the Senate 115 Obama promised to promote a stimulus bill early in his presidency if one was not passed before his inauguration on January 20 2009 115 In addition Obama considered the request of the U S automotive industry for a cash infusion of 50 billion in addition to the 25 billion that had already been approved but emphasizing that his support is conditioned on them making significant adjustments 114 Obama also planned to push for a program to spend 150 billion over 10 years to develop new renewable energy sources This money would also be used to encourage energy conservation and help the auto industry develop fuel efficient vehicles However Mother Jones reported that the Windfall Profits Tax on oil companies which he frequently cited during the campaign had been dropped from the agenda early in the transition 110 118 According to the transition s website Obama also hoped to rekindle volunteerism by expanding AmeriCorps and the Peace Corps and also creating a new Classroom Corps Other volunteer efforts reportedly include a Health Corps Clean Energy Corps and Veterans Corps Middle and high school students would be asked to do 50 hours of community service work a year College students would be eligible for 4 000 in tuition tax credits in exchange for community service work Improved volunteerism programs aimed at senior citizens were projected as well as augmented Youth Build and Head Start programs 119 Agenda on healthcare edit On December 5 Tom Daschle who was designated to lead Obama s efforts for health care reform announced a month long campaign to solicit public input on the shape of that reform People were encouraged to hold community meetings to discuss the issue and to post their thoughts on www change gov where over 10 000 comments had already been posted Although Democratic leaders had met in private for several months to prepare a legislative package for unveiling in January Daschle was anxious to avoid the appearance that the transition was working behind closed doors to create a sweeping agenda for change This technique developed by grass roots organizations like MoveOn org was designed to reinforce the notion that Obama intended to aggressively pursue his health care reform agenda despite the worsening economy President elect Obama has made health reform one of his top priorities and I m here to tell you that his commitment to changing the healthcare system remains strong and focused said Daschle 120 During a news conference on December 11 2008 Obama linked health care reform to the upcoming economic stimulus package noting that It s not something that we can sort of put off because we re in an emergency This is part of the emergency He expected the stimulus legislation to include a 40 billion increase in Medicaid spending over two years plus a massive investment in health information management technology Consideration was also being given to funding for retraining medical workers expansion of the State Children s Health Insurance Program SCHIP and expansion of the COBRA provisions which allow unemployed workers to purchase health insurance through their previous employer s plan 121 Foreign policy agenda edit Further information Foreign policy of the Barack Obama administration One of the principal foreign policy issues that Obama ran on during the presidential campaign was his promise to withdraw most American troops from the Iraq War within sixteen months of his inauguration 122 Another issue concerned the three areas that President Bush had been focusing on during the final months of his term Iran s nuclear development North Korea s nuclear arsenal and the Israeli Palestinian peace talks In all three cases a diplomatic structure had already been established although some of the Bush administration s goals differ from those Obama that would adopt as president 122 nbsp The Annapolis Conference gathers in November 2007 In the Middle East Bush began a new approach to the peace process the so called Annapolis process which attempted to encourage Israeli and Palestinian leaders to agree on the outlines of a peace accord Although both sides cited some success in these discussions critics believed the talks unduly ignored Hamas which has been labeled by the United States as a terrorist organization despite the fact that it had held an enormous amount of political power in the region 122 Obama had not specified what his approach would be although it was considered likely that he would appoint a high level Middle East envoy in part to free his Secretary of State so that other matters can also be addressed 122 Hamas expressed a willingness to talk to Obama who has said that he would reciprocate only if it renounced terrorism recognized Israel s right to exist and agreed to abide by past agreements 123 The Hamas leader in Gaza Ismail Haniyeh said the Hamas government would accept a Palestinian state that followed the Green Line and would offer Israel a long term truce if Israel recognised the Palestinians national rights 124 During his second term Bush pursued an agreement with North Korea to end its nuclear weapons programs To that end Bush agreed to remove North Korea from the State Department s list of State Sponsors of Terrorism which Obama supported 122 Obama had criticized Bush for taking so long to engage with North Korea and indicated he would be eager to engage in a more proactive manner in order to reach an agreement A senior North Korean official recently when told reporters that we are ready to deal with the incoming Obama administration 122 Obama also deliberated on how to deal with Iran Outgoing Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had assembled a coalition of six states all five members of the United Nations Security Council plus Germany to confront Iran 122 While the group won approval from the United Nations Iran largely ignored its demands While Obama had previously advocated carefully planned direct talks with Iran he was now being seen as likely to build on the current coalition to broker an agreement with Iran 122 In addition Obama formulated a policy to deal with the U S missile defense shield that was under construction in Poland He discussed the matter with both Polish President Lech Kaczynski and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev While his advisors were working on a missile shield policy his position at that time was simply that one might be deployed if and when it has been proved to be workable 125 Obama also planned to revoke a series of executive orders enacted by Bush that authorized enhanced interrogation techniques which many critics have labeled as torture against detainees 110 The revocations would have the effect of requiring the CIA to abide by the Army Field Manual when it interrogated prisoners Resistance was expected however from some in the Intelligence Community regarding the practicality of a complete revocation of these orders Obama also hoped to close the detention camp at Guantanamo Bay Naval Base in Cuba although issues were expected to arise because many of the detainees had been held without evidence or had been coerced in their confessions which would not be admissible in a federal court 110 A November 20 2008 Los Angeles Times article stated Antiwar groups and other liberal activists are increasingly concerned at signs that Barack Obama s national security team will be dominated by appointees who favored the Iraq invasion It s astonishing that not one of the 23 senators or 133 House members who voted against the war is in the mix said Sam Husseini of the liberal group Institute for Public Accuracy 126 National defense edit Secretary of Defense Robert Gates who was retained in the Obama Administration outlined an agenda for reform of the Department of Defense His ideas centered on a perceived need to shift purchasing priorities away from costly high tech weapons and toward lower cost alternatives that are more appropriate for the wars the U S was currently fighting as well as those he believed might lie in the immediate future He noted that there are limits to U S military power and believed that the emphasis should be shifted away from fighting and toward training advising and equipping allied forces to fight 127 Specific areas Gates and Obama agreed on were said to include Improved coordination and cooperation between the military and the State Department as well as other civilian agencies Improving the security capacity of US allies to allow them to increase their participation in the War on Terrorism Being attentive to the risk from conventional military forces as well as insurgencies Shifting troops and other resources from Iraq to Afghanistan Continued expansion of the Army and Marine Corps Overhaul of the Pentagon s procurement system 128 Energy policy edit Obama made energy policy one of his topmost priorities in his 2008 campaign 129 Towards his energy goals of United States energy independence through investment in alternative energy production he has set the following objectives Within ten years save more oil than current imports from the Middle East and Venezuela combined By 2015 put one million plug in hybrid vehicles on the road By 2012 10 of U S electricity shall come from renewable sources and 25 by 2025 By 2050 80 of currently emitted greenhouse gases shall be eliminated To achieve these objectives Obama proposed the following measures 130 Over 10 years invest 150 billion for energy development with a lower CO2 emissions including Transition to a digital electricity grid Create a Grid Modernization Commission to facilitate adoption of smart grid practices 131 Accelerate commercialization of plug in hybrid technology Create 5 million green collar jobs involved in projects such as in construction retrofitting buildings to make them more energy efficient or to generate their own power Develop and deploy clean coal technology Establish a national low carbon fuel standard Weatherize one million homes annually Increase CAFE fuel efficiency standards for vehicles Set construction of the Alaska natural gas pipeline as a high priority Establish a use it or lose it approach to existing oil and gas leases granted for federal land Establish an economy wide cap and trade program Appointees recruited by Obama with experience on energy policy included Peter Orszag an expert on cap and trade programs who was named as director of the Office of Management and Budget John Podesta transition chief was an early advocate of Detroit s refocus on using lower carbon alternatives to gasoline 132 Secret Service preparations edit nbsp Barack Obama being sworn in as the 44th president of the United States nbsp George W Bush departing in a Marine Corps helicopter as he looks at U S Capitol after the Inauguration of Barack Obama The Secret Service of the U S Department of Homeland Security was the lead agency for both security and logistics for the Inaugural Ceremony Their plan was to open the event to as many spectators as possible Security was expected to be strict and vast portions of downtown Washington would be closed to all traffic Initially it was thought that up to 4 million people would descend upon the area of the National Mall but later reports from the Secret Service suggested that the number might not be that high Arrangements for 8000 police officers were made however and parking for up to 10 000 tour buses was arranged A Metro spokesperson warned that the subway system will be utterly overwhelmed Camping was not permitted on the mall 133 134 On November 13 2008 the Secret Service announced that Obama s codename would be Renegade In addition his wife s is Renaissance and his daughters are Rosebud and Radiance 135 Residential transition edit nbsp In keeping with tradition President Bush left a letter shown here on the Resolute desk to Obama in the Oval Office The first family visited both Sidwell Friends School and Georgetown Day School before deciding on Sidwell 136 137 The residential transition began with the first of two interim stops at the Hay Adams Hotel on January 4 138 The second interim stop was a move to Blair House on January 15 the traditional interim move date for residents elect 139 The residential transition began earlier than for most incoming presidents because the daughters began school at Sidwell on January 5 139 140 During the campaign Michelle Obama had stated that the residential transition would be planned to be as unified as possible for all members of the family 141 Michelle s mother Marian Robinson made plans to move into the White House to assist with child care 142 In the current real estate market the Obamas did not intend to sell their South Side Chicago home that sits on the border between the Hyde Park and Kenwood community areas 143 Jenna and Barbara Bush had much advice for Malia and Sasha Obama The Bush twins sent the Obama daughters an open letter that was published in The Wall Street Journal 144 145 The outgoing Bush family did not take much with them as they left the White House Among the items they left behind was their official state china service a Lenox gilt edged style with a green basket weave border estimated to be worth 492 798 However what they did not take with them can be included in the collection of the presidential library 146 Vice President Dick Cheney was injured moving out of his residence just before the inauguration and used a wheelchair during the ceremony 147 Assessment of the transition editExperts have given the transition high praise Numerous experts have referred to the transition between Bush and Obama as the gold standard for presidential transitions 148 149 150 151 152 Both the Bush and Obama ends of the transition have been praised 20 The transition has been praised as seamless in part for its adherence to Obama s insistence that there be one president at a time with Obama largely avoiding giving comment during the transition on matters Bush was handling such as the ongoing financial crisis 20 19 See also editBarack Obama 2008 presidential campaign Barack Obama election victory speech 2008 First inauguration of Barack ObamaNotes edit Nagourney Adam November 4 2008 Obama Wins Election The New York Times Retrieved November 5 2008 Barr Andy December 15 2008 Electoral College weighs in for Obama Politico Retrieved December 15 2008 Sweet Lynn November 5 2008 Jarrett Podesta Rouse to lead Obama transition Bill Daley co chair Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on December 10 2008 Retrieved November 11 2008 a b Murray Shailagh November 5 2008 Early Transition Decisions to Shape Obama Presidency The Washington Post Retrieved November 5 2008 a b c Baker Peter Jackie Calmes October 24 2008 Building a White House Team Before the Election Is Decided The New York Times Retrieved November 5 2008 Obama looking to make impact quickly aides say CNN November 9 2008 Retrieved November 9 2008 Obama Picks William Daley As Chief Of Staff NPR January 6 2011 Baker Peter November 5 2008 GSA Turns Over Transition HQ to New Administration General Services Administration Archived from the original on January 12 2009 Retrieved November 21 2008 Cooper Helene Jeff Zeleny November 11 2008 Obama s Transition Team Restricts Lobbyists Role The New York Times Retrieved November 11 2008 a b Obama Names Transition Team Retrieved November 6 2008 Open for Questions Round 2 Response Change gov The Obama Biden Transition Team Change gov January 9 2009 Archived from the original on April 20 2009 Retrieved August 7 2010 Kirkpatrick David November 12 2008 Clinton Officials to Lead 3 Departments Transition The New York Times Retrieved November 14 2008 Warrick Joby November 7 2008 Obama Gets First In Depth Intelligence Briefing The Washington Post Retrieved November 7 2008 President elect Obama taps bipartisan representatives to be available at G 20 Conference Newsroom Press release Office of the President elect November 12 2008 Archived from the original on November 12 2008 Retrieved November 30 2008 Sargent Greg November 12 2008 Obama Dispatches Bipartisan Reps To G 20 Summit Talking Points Memo Archived from the original on March 15 2011 Retrieved November 30 2008 Knowlton Brian November 10 2008 As Transfer of Power Begins Obamas Visit White House The New York Times Retrieved November 10 2008 Mitchell Andrea November 10 2008 The Details on Today s Meeting MSNBC NBC News Archived from the original on January 3 2013 Retrieved November 10 2008 Barnes Robert Dan Eggen Anne E Kornblut November 9 2008 Preparing for the Obama Era Bush Officials and President Elect Working Together On Pressing Issues The Washington Post p A01 Retrieved November 10 2008 a b Nicholas Peter Lee Carol E December 31 2016 Transition From Barack Obama to Donald Trump Turns Tense Wall Street Journal Retrieved May 21 2021 a b c Burke John P 2009 The Contemporary Presidency The Obama Presidential Transition An Early Assessment Presidential Studies Quarterly 39 3 574 604 doi 10 1111 j 1741 5705 2009 03691 x ISSN 0360 4918 JSTOR 41427379 Letter of resignation from Barack Obama to Richard Cheney November 18 2008 published in the Congressional Record November 19 2008 page S10609 Communication from the Honorable Barack Obama permanent dead link Obama sets date to leave Senate BBC News November 13 2008 Retrieved November 14 2008 Blagojevich Won t Rush to Senate Appointment Elections WIFR CBS November 5 2008 Archived from the original on December 26 2008 Retrieved November 30 2008 Feds Blagojevich Put Obama Seat Up For Sale WBBM TV December 9 2008 Archived from the original on December 11 2008 Blagojevich free on 4 500 bail after arrest CNN December 9 2008 Retrieved May 22 2010 Blagojevich could pick Obama successor from prison CNN December 9 2008 Retrieved May 22 2010 Democrats urge special election in Illinois NBC News Associated Press Obama calls on Illinois governor to resign CNN December 10 2008 Retrieved May 22 2010 Davey Monica Healy Jack December 9 2008 Illinois Governor in Corruption Scandal The New York Times Retrieved May 22 2010 Blagojevich surprises many with Senate appointment Yahoo News Archived from the original on December 31 2008 Retrieved January 15 2017 Blagojevich snubs Senate taps Burris for seat Chicago Breaking News December 30 2008 Retrieved August 7 2010 David Kurtz December 30 2008 Blago Appointment Will Not Stand Talking Points Memo Archived from the original on April 5 2009 Retrieved August 7 2010 Rep Rush Invokes Race in Defending Blagojevich Senate Appointment Fox News Channel April 7 2010 Retrieved August 7 2010 Obama issues statement on Burris appointment CHICAGO SUN TIMES Gov Blagojevich Chicago Sun Times December 30 2008 Archived from the original on January 3 2009 Retrieved August 7 2010 White will try to reject Blagojevich Senate pick Wthitv com December 30 2008 Archived from the original on May 3 2010 Retrieved August 7 2010 Hulse Carl December 31 2008 Democrats Seek to Block Appointee to Obama s Seat The New York Times Retrieved May 22 2010 Ill Court says Burris does not need 2nd signature Yahoo News Associated Press January 9 2009 Archived from the original on January 19 2009 Burris v White Illinois Supreme Court January 9 2009 PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 14 2009 Retrieved January 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Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on December 3 2008 Retrieved August 7 2010 Economic crisis dominates Obama s first press conference ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Australian Broadcasting Corporation November 8 2008 Retrieved August 7 2010 a b Canova Timothy November 25 2008 Obamanomics Is this real change The Real News Archived from the original on November 11 2009 Retrieved December 13 2008 Goodman Peter S October 8 2008 Taking Hard New Look at a Greenspan Legacy The New York Times Faiola Anthony Ellen Nakashima and Jill Drew October 15 2008 The Crash Risk and Regulation What Went Wrong The Washington Post Political Bulletin Thursday January 15 2009 USNews com January 15 2009 Archived from the original on September 3 2010 Retrieved August 7 2010 Perez Evan January 15 2009 Holder Vows to Restore Credibility at Justice Department The Wall Street Journal Retrieved August 7 2010 Obama apologizes to Nancy Reagan for seance remark CNN November 7 2008 Retrieved 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accept Palestinian state with 1967 borders The National November 10 2008 Archived from the original on January 8 2009 Retrieved November 12 2008 Obama adviser No commitment on defense shield CNN November 8 2008 Retrieved November 8 2008 Antiwar groups fear Barack Obama may create hawkish Cabinet Los Angeles Times November 20 2008 Kaplan Fred December 5 2008 Gates Plan To Fix the Pentagon Slate Archived from the original on December 8 2008 Retrieved December 7 2008 Burns Robert December 7 2008 Analysis Obama defense agenda resembles Gates Associated Press Archived from the original on December 10 2008 Retrieved December 12 2008 Transcript of first presidential debate CNN October 14 2008 Retrieved November 27 2008 But there s no doubt that we re not going to be able to do everything that I think needs to be done There are some things that I think have to be done We have to have energy independence so I ve put forward a plan to make sure that in 10 years time we have freed ourselves from dependence on Middle Eastern oil by increasing production at home but most importantly by starting to invest in alternative energy solar wind biodiesel making sure that we re developing the fuel efficient cars of the future right here in the United States in Ohio and Michigan instead of Japan and South Korea Note that Obama listed energy goals before all others as a policy area that would not be scaled back in response to Lehrer s question The Agenda Energy and Environment Change gov website The Office of the President Elect Archived from the original on November 16 2008 Retrieved November 27 2008 The Agenda Homeland Security Change gov website The Office of the President Elect Archived from the original on November 16 2008 Retrieved November 27 2008 Save the Economy and the Planet The New York Times November 26 2008 Retrieved November 27 2008 Stewart Nikita Ruane Michael E November 18 2008 Can Mall Be Filled For an Inauguration 4 Million May Try It The Washington Post Retrieved 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Richard November 5 2008 Michelle On The Move The First Lady readies her family for Washington Newsweek Newsweek Inc Retrieved January 9 2009 Erbe Bonnie November 7 2008 Michelle Obama Slights Working Women U S News amp World Report U S News amp World Report LP Retrieved January 10 2009 Bellantoni Christina November 22 2008 Obama not selling Chicago home The Huffington Post HuffingtonPost com Inc Retrieved January 9 2009 Feinstein plays key role U T San Diego Copley News Service January 21 2009 Archived from the original on February 12 2009 Retrieved February 13 2009 Bush twins offer advice for Sasha Malia Enjoy it all they say while also urging girls to be protective of dad NBC News January 20 2009 Retrieved February 13 2009 Bush Family to Leave Many Treasured Items Inside White House Fox News Channel January 19 2009 Retrieved February 1 2009 Cheney pulls muscle moving in wheelchair politicalticker com January 19 2009 Retrieved February 1 2009 HOW BUSH AND OBAMA CREATED A GOLD STANDARD TRANSITION PDF presidentialtransition org Center for Presidential Transitions Retrieved May 21 2021 Sonne Paul November 11 2020 Chaotic presidential transition brings vulnerability security risks to nation Washington Post Retrieved May 21 2021 Gray Amanda March 15 2021 Law School event focuses on unprecedented presidential transition The Law School University of Notre Dame law nd edu Notre Dame Law School Retrieved May 21 2021 Balcerski Opinion by Thomas November 17 2020 Opinion Three terrible presidential transitions that hurt America CNN Retrieved May 21 2021 Puzzanghera Jim December 22 2020 A tale of two transitions amid crisis Bush smoothed the path for Obama while Trump creates chaos for Biden The Boston Globe BostonGlobe com Boston Globe Retrieved May 21 2021 Further reading editHalchin L Elaine November 25 2008 Presidential Transitions Issues Involving Outgoing and Incoming Administrations PDF Congressional Research Service Retrieved January 14 2009 Transcript President Elect Obama s First News Conference The New York Times November 7 2008 Retrieved November 7 2008 Sweet Lynn November 5 2008 Jarrett Podesta Rouse to lead Obama transition Bill Daley co chair Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on December 10 2008 Retrieved November 5 2008 Baker Peter Jeff Zeleny November 5 2008 For Obama No Day to Bask as He Starts to Build His Team for Transition The New York Times Retrieved November 5 2008 Baker Peter November 4 2008 No Time for Laurels Now the Hard Part The New York Times Retrieved November 5 2008 Initial likely appointments to the transition team Possible Presidential Appointments The New York Times October 25 2008 Retrieved November 5 2008 Espo David October 17 2008 Obama s transition team meets candidate pushes on Associated Press Archived from the original on October 21 2008 Retrieved November 5 2008 Pre election meeting of the Obama transition team External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Presidential transition of Barack Obama Presidential Transition Resource official General Services Administration GSA National Archives and Records Administration NARA website Change gov archive of the Obama Biden presidential transition project Obama s Presidency from BBC News The Obama Transition from the Financial Times Lost in Transition from the National Journal The Presidential Transition from the IBM Center for the Business of Government The New Team from The New York Times profiles of potential members of the Obama administration HLS and the new administration Whom will Obama choose from the Harvard Law Record November 13 2008 Joint Session of the 111th Congress for the purpose of certifying the Electoral College ballot count January 9 2009 C Span video Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Presidential transition of Barack Obama amp oldid 1212894927 Transition team, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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