No Private Sector Experience Necessary
I’m not sure if this chart on the professional background of Obama’s cabinet appointments is a weird outlier or a telling indicator, but it’s pretty interesting nonetheless.
by Will on November 25, 2009
I’m not sure if this chart on the professional background of Obama’s cabinet appointments is a weird outlier or a telling indicator, but it’s pretty interesting nonetheless.
Democratic Renewal
I recently decided that I need to spend more time paying attention to and writing about politics in my own (Great White) backyard. As such, once again you’re going to see less of me around these parts as my writing will be focused on Canadian politics over at the Commons (where you can also read more Nova Scotia born commenter North).
Today; however, I posted an exchange with Dr. Alex Himelfarb on the need for democratic renewal in Canada that I thought might be of interested to readers of the League. read more... (4)
The Organized Labor-Neoconservative Nexus
There’s a lot of interesting stuff in this Nation article on the Progressive split over China policy, but Labor’s belligerent tone is pretty striking:
AAM’s Paul expressed grave concern about China’s efforts to enhance its military power. “The trade surplus is being used by China to build up a military. They want to build a blue-water navy in the Pacific, to develop sophisticated nuclear weapons, satellite-killing weapons. What does that say about peace?” he asks.read more... (3)
Beer Blogging: Are cans better?
Sacrilege, you say? Maybe not:
read more... (12)
Intervention and Moral Hazards
Michael Brendan Dougherty highlights an article suggesting that humanitarian interventions actually increase the likelihood of genocide and ethnic cleansing:
read more... (0)
Shoup Himself Responds to O'Toole
Donald Shoup has made a career out of studying the effects of government parking mandates on the way we drive and live. After a bit of a blogospheric kerfluffle about free parking, Shoup responds in detail to one of his most persistent and consistently wrong critics. (4)
Lomborg Recants
Well, this is interesting (via Grist):
The world’s most high-profile climate change sceptic is to declare that global warming is “undoubtedly one of the chief concerns facing the world today” and “a challenge humanity must confront,” in an apparent U-turn that will give a huge boost to the embattled environmental lobby.read more... (1)
Churchill on Appeasement
Quoting the same article twice is probably bad form, but I had to highlight one of Churchill’s lesser-known lines, which should be thrown back in the face of hawks every time the word “appeasement” is uttered in public:
read more... (2)
Patriotism Against Nationalism
From an excellent New Yorker article on Churchill:
read more... (2)
Master Plan to Destroy America
Endear yourself to the Mooslims: check.
I’m prepared to take bets on how long it will take the anti-Park51 crowd to start citing this new Gallup poll as yet more evidence that President Obama is really a radical Muslim Manchurian candidate and that the Cordona House Project must be stopped to save America. read more... (17)
The Unapology
I’m sorry, but does anyone other than Andrew Sullivan actually give a shit what Levi Johnston has to say about anything? (6)
This.
Timothy Lee identifies the problem with fusionist libertarianism. I agree in full with his conclusions. read more... (17)
Irshad Manji on Park51
What’s this? A thoughtful, non-demagogued, and thought-provoking piece on Park51? Heaven forfend! (5)
C4C Again
Here’s one thing I don’t think has been grasped by the dissenters in the C4C business. You could have had everything that was even arguably good out of Cash for Clunkers without destroying the cars. read more... (20)
Beer Blogging: Heavy Seas Hang Ten
Short Review: Quaffable, but not transcendent.
read more... (0)
Regime Change
It was a disaster, a quagmire, a nightmare, and the American government should have never gotten us involved… But, some short term goals have been met and now they’re getting ready to start pulling out, which is at least moderately good news… I speak, of course, of General Motors. (11)
How bad was the Deepwater Horizon spill?
At Master Resource, Paul Schwennesen takes on oil spill alarmism:
read more... (11)
Beer Blogging: The Godfather Comes Out of Retirement
If you’ve been following Erik’s debate over the origins of the craft brew movement, you might be interested in the story of Jack McAuliffe, a beer enthusiast who built the first modern microbrewery in 1976.
read more... (1)
Beer blogging: What makes a craft brew?
Interesting thoughts from The Washington City Paper on what makes a craft beer. Now that the industry is expanding, do numbers or quality distinguish between micro and macro brews? (1)
Bradbury at 90
Bill Kauffman just reminded me of his excellent Ray Bradbury remembrance (you’ve already caught Bradbury’s tirade against big guvmint, the Internets, and our lack of space travel, right?). (0)
"The Great Ghastly Rand"
NR’s latest on Ayn Rand is quite good. As a side note, I’m glad to know I’m not the only one who enjoyed The Fountainhead a lot more than Atlas Shrugged. (21)
I suppose this was inevitable
Philadelphia starts requiring bloggers to get $300 licenses (via):
read more... (14)
That's just going to make them angrier...
Peter Jaworski holds an annual “Liberty Summer” event for fellow libertarians on his parents’ land in Orono, Ontario. This year, irony-loving Canadian government officials shut down the event by threatening to fine him up to $50,000 for using the property for “reasons unapproved by government“. No doubt, that’ll learn ‘em. (7)
ATTN: DC Beer Week
I hope Washington-area readers are taking advantage of DC beer week, which features some truly excellent activities. (0)
Beerblogging: Some Stats
The Czech Republic leads the world in per capita beer consumption. China wins on volume. Sad to say, the United States doesn’t even lead the western hemisphere. (5)
Our First Cyborg President
It’s almost hard to grasp how many things this guy gets wrong. But I’ll try. read more... (32)

12 comments
I’m old enough to remember when pundits praised Bush’s cabinet for having the highest percentage of CEO’s ever/or in a very long time. Perhaps you aren’t.
Will Reply:
November 25th, 2009 at 10:47 am
Hahaha that’s a pretty compelling rejoinder. In my defense, I was still in high school during Bush’s first term.
I’m not entirely convinced the selection of agencies represented in the sample is actually a useful barometer of “private sector relevant” areas anyway. For example, why State, Housing and Urban Development, Transportation or Interior? Treasury and Commerce I can see, but even with Energy…what’s good for existing private sector interests isn’t necessarily what’s good for the private sector writ large.
Although this chart only reflects the cabinet, I imagine a similar one with all political appointees would show a very similar disparity. While obviously not the whole explanation (I think a preference for academics over executives accounts for a good percentage), the combination of a lobbying ban and expanded registration requirements significantly affected the availability of private sector talent for the administration. Although there were a few highly publicized deviations from this ban (Bill Lynn as indispensable at DOD), the policy deterred a number of experienced Clinton-era types from pursuing positions, even if they had not been formally registered with the scarlet “L.” It is even more striking that in some of the most of the most business-intensive positions in the upper echelons of the administration- Commerce, USTR- you have a lawyer-turned-career-politician types.
This chart is useless without the definition of “private sector” the creator is using. Does that include non-profits? Think tanks? Academia? Public-private partnerships?
Will Reply:
November 25th, 2009 at 3:06 pm
Joe –
Not sure (there’s no link to the original report), but I assume the definition is consistent throughout every Administration. So I think you can use this as a visual comparison if nothing else.
AEI should have titled their blog post- When Snark Goes Horribly Wrong.
As already noted, GWB was touted as having the highest number of CEOs and managed the drive the economy over a fucking cliff and enter into an entirely misguided war. And there is no underlying information about where data even come from or the rationale for selecting these particular Cab Secs.
Then again, the hacks at AEI are not particularly noted for their intellectual rigor.
President Bush (43) was the worst and totally discredits private sector experience. Done.
/snark
I mean as compelling as the GWB rejoinder might have been, still his percentages are far, far, far closer to FDR and L. Johnson. Bush (43) is within 10% of every President in the last 100 years except Carter, Kennedy, Hoover, and TR; whereas, the Obama cabinet is within 10% of none and 20% away from the next closest should prove well absolutely nothing.
Without a correlation to which departments and a clear definition of what counts as private sector experience versus public sector, this chart is useless. Not to mention we’re comparing the first 10 months of the Obama presidency to 108 years of Cabinets…including Warren Harding’s.
That said, I would presume thinking people could agree that public nor private sector experience are reliable predictors of administrative excellence or failure. The most compelling argument would be for both, experience with the subjects ones department regulates or is tasked to work with as well as experience with the unique work environment that is the executive branch. The proof is in the pudding not the pedigree.
The chart’s useless without a lot of things. Since Eisenhower, we’ve added several departments: Transportation, Housing and Urban Development, Education, Veterans Affairs, Energy. For several of those, private sector experience might not be all that useful. But at energy, we have Steven Chu, who competed successfully in the world of research for many years. There is no tougher competition in any enterprise. Is that counted as private sector, since it’s not necessarily government?
In any case, this Obama bunch is as talented as any cabinet we’ve had in the past 120 years, maybe since Lincoln. I suppose if one is determined to find something to grouse about, one can find it. Few of them speak French fluently, for example. And there is a bias towards graduates of Ivy League schools. I don’t think any are graduates of community colleges, and I don’t think any of them have ever been plumbers.
For that matter, few of them are skilled cabinet makers. What is it you think really sticks in the craw of the American Enterprise Institute? Few of them are idiots? None of them have a history of Brown Shirt involvement? None of them have sucked on the sugar teat of the American Enterprise Institute? What?
I’m not done yet, but with the first three Obama cabinet members I checked — in order of succession — I’ve got 13.5% with prior business experience. . .[later] I’ve found two without business experience about halfway through . . . I think the chart is not an outlier, it’s just a liar.