Graves Would Be A Great DOT Secretary: Too Bad
He Probably Won’t Get It
Republican Rep. Sam Graves, center,
brought Democratic Rep. Rick Larsen to NBAA-BACE and took part in a session
with NBAA President Ed Bolen, left.
Updated Nov 18, 2024 4:02 AM EST
Rep. Sam Graves, the self described
airplane nut who also chairs the House Transportation and Infrastructure
Committee is apparently in the running to be the next Transportation Secretary
and regardless of your politics, it would be tough to find a more qualified or
more passionate choice. Too bad he's not Elon Musk's favorite for the job.
In a government portfolio that
sorely needs the kind of experience, background and sheer commitment to the job
that Graves will bring, several publications are suggesting the inside track is
going to a guy named Emil Michael, a former Uber executive who left in 2017
amid controversy over his plan to investigate the private lives of journalists
who wrote unflattering stories about Uber. He's had a few tech jobs since but
his principal qualifications seem to be that he's pals with Musk, a SpaceX
investor and Trump campaign donor.
Yeah, yeah, I know. This is the
world we live in and we should make the best of it but I thought the fact that
the DOT pick had slipped to the second week of Trump's dream team compilation
meant that merit might play a role.
Graves' long list of bipartisan
accomplishments in his current role as head of the committee and as former
ranking member should make him a shoo-in. He was at NBAA-BACE a month ago
shepherding the new rules for advanced air mobility into reality with a signing
ceremony that led the news out of the show.
He brought Rep. Rick Larsen, the
Washington State Democrat and ranking member on the committee with him in a
classy display of bipartisan getting-stuff-done. Larsen and Graves worked on
the file together and considering their Venus and Mars positions on practically
everything else, well, you know. I'll bet Larsen would be the first to endorse
Graves for the job.
The Uber guy worked on mergers,
acquisitions and "fundraising" at Uber. I wonder if he was behind
surge pricing before he left and then cozied up to tech bigwigs like Musk. But
here's the ultimate irony. You would be hard pressed to find a more staunch
Republican than Graves. Before Uber, Michael was a White House Fellow under the
Obama administration.
But while I lament the wasted
opportunity that the selection of Graves would have presented, it is supplanted
by the terror with which I view Michael's likely appointment and the effect it
could have on our little corner of the big picture. About the only thing that
would be worse is if Musk himself had been appointed as DOT Secretary.
As a reminder, I have defended Musk
in his dealings with the FAA. I have opined that his unorthodox
blow-them-up-until-you-get-it-right approach to flight testing might be
uncomfortable for the conservative and safety-obsessed agency but it deserves a
chance. But when you coat an entire city in potentially toxic dust it's good
there's someone in charge to rein you in, I think.
As you have heard, Musk has been
appointed along with fellow Trump loyalist Vivek Ramaswamy to head something
called the Department of Government Efficiency. The department has a broad
mandate but little actual power. Theirs are not cabinet appointments. They are
merely advisors to Trump. How much clout they and their shiny new public policy
bauble will have only time will tell. I suspect it won't amount to much.
But Musk's disdain for the FAA is
well known and if he can't have direct power over the agency then having a
stooge in place is certainly the next best thing. Musk's public battles with
the FAA over issues with SpaceX are well chronicled so it's likely one of the
targets of his new side hustle.
Someone like Graves, a successful
farmer and businessman, accomplished pilot (ATP) and battle-hardened politician
would chew someone like Musk up and spit him out if he came after the agency
with a wrecking ball. To wreak havoc on the FAA, Musk needs a puppet in the
Secretary job.
Let's hope I'm reading all this
wrong and take some comfort in the fact that even if he doesn't have the
Cabinet job, Graves' committee post is certainly the next best thing and might
even be better. It has some powers that Musk hasn't contemplated, I'll bet.
Retribution can be a two-way street
and turnabout can be a real bitch in that environment.
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