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Obama has more czars than the Romanovs

McCain says Obama has more czars than the Romanovs. How many czars does it take to run the federal government? More and more, it seems.

First of all, yes, John McCain, the guy criticized during the presidential campaign for being computer illiterate, is tweeting.

In a Twitter message on May 30, 2009, Sen. John McCain took this poke at the Obama administration:

“Obama has more czars than the Romanovs – who ruled Russia for 3 centuries. Romanovs 18, cyberczar makes 20.”

But what about the Obama czars?

It sure seems like we keep reading about one czar after another being appointed to oversee the auto industry, the Great Lakes, and the closure of Gitmo, and we wondered: Just how many czars does the Obama administration actually have?

First off, the Obama administration doesn’t usually call any of these people czars. We only found two instances of President Obama using the term, once in an April 15, 2009, interview with CNN En Espanol when he talked about the role of his “border czar,” and once during the campaign when he promised to appoint an “autism czar” to coordinate a nationwide autism effort (he hasn’t yet). And in announcing Obama’s nomination of Gil Kerlikowske as director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy, Vice President Joe Biden referred to the position as “our nation’s drug czar.”

We’re sure there are more, but the point is that, by and large, you don’t often hear the administration talking about its czars.

In fact, the administration has at times gone to some lengths to avoid the moniker, as was the case in this somewhat humorous (in an inside-the-Beltway sorta way) exchange between a reporter and White House spokesman Robert Gibbs on June 10, 2009:

Reporter: On Ken Feinberg, I think that he’s maybe the 20th czar-type position you’ve named.

Gibbs: No, I think the title is “special master.”

So who exactly qualifies as a czar? As best we can tell, it’s whenever someone in the media says so. You can identify a guy as “Assistant to the President for Science and Technology, Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, and Co-Chair of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology,” but it’s a lot easier on everyone to just say “Science Czar.” And “Special Master” sounds like Richie Rich’s best friend.

So the title of czar is largely arbitrary media shorthand for “It’s this person’s job to make sure (blank) goes right.” And we think everyone can agree that “Terrorism Czar” sounds way cooler than “Deputy National Security Advisor for Homeland Security.”


Czar WarsHow did a term for Russian royalty work its way into American government?

When Benjamin Franklin wanted to describe our national indifference to royal pomp and circumstance, he would compare Americans to a London porter whose heavy load once jostled Czar Peter the Great. When told he had just bumped into the czar, the porter responded: “Poh! We are all czars here!”

Franklin’s porter could have been describing the incoming Obama administration. Already Tom Daschle has been tapped for “health czar” and Carol Browner for “climate czar.” Adolfo Carrión is expected to be the “urban affairs czar.” There’s also been talk of a “technology czar” and a “copyright czar.” Plans for a “car czar” recently fell apart on Capitol Hill, but Obama and the incoming Congress will try, try again in the new year.

This efflorescence of czars—those interagency point people charged with cutting through red tape to coordinate policy—has people wondering: Why do we use a term from imperial Russia to describe bureaucratic troubleshooters?

Czar first entered English back in the mid-16th century, soon after Baron Sigismund von Herberstein used the word in a Latin book published in 1549. The more correct romanization, tsar, became the standard spelling in the late 19th century, but by that time czar had caught on in popular usage, emerging as a handy label for anyone with tyrannical tendencies.

On the American scene, czar was first bestowed on one of Andrew Jackson’s foes: Nicholas Biddle, president of the Bank of the United States. Jackson vehemently opposed the centralized power of the bank, which he called a “hydra of corruption,” and his clash with Biddle exploded into the “Bank War” of 1832-36. One of Jackson’s staunchest allies in this fight, Washington Globe Publisher Frank Blair, dubbed Biddle “Czar Nicholas”—a potent image at a time when Russia’s Nicholas I was at the height of his repressive nationalist regime. (Jackson’s opponents fought fire with fire, calling him King Andrew I.)

After the Civil War, journalist David Ross Locke (writing under the moniker “Petroleum V. Nasby”) lampooned Andrew Johnson’s mishandling of Reconstruction, anointing him “the Czar uv all the Amerikas.” But it wasn’t until 1890 that the “czar” label became an American political staple. Republican House Speaker Thomas Reed incensed Democrats by disallowing a favored stalling tactic of the minority party: not responding to a quorum call. When Reed pushed through a rule that allowed the speaker to count members as present for the quorum even if they didn’t respond, Democratic congressmen erupted with cries of “Czar! Despot! Tyrant!”

The “Czar Reed” image stuck; the speaker would be known as “czar” for the rest of his career, after which time an even more potent House speaker, Joe Cannon, would inherit the title. As Reed’s biographer William A. Robinson observed, the nickname “had no pleasant connotations” at the time. “In 1890, it brought to the mind the Russian autocrat himself,” along with images of “the Cossacks, Siberia, and the knout” (a whip used for flogging).

That would all change after the Russian Revolution deposed the last real-life czar in 1917; painful images of imperial repression quickly faded to the background and Communist leaders became the new dictatorial icons. Accordingly, kinder, gentler “czars” made their way into American public life. When Kenesaw Mountain Landis became the first commissioner of baseball in 1920, “czar of baseball” worked just fine for the headline writers. New York had its “boxing czar” (Athletic Commission Chairman William Muldoon) and its “beer czar” (Alcoholic Beverage Control Board Chairman Edward Mulrooney). And when Nicholas Longworth served as House speaker in the late ’20s, he distinguished himself from his predecessors Reed and Cannon as the “genial czar.”

The newly benign term evolved again during World War II, when Roosevelt expanded the government rapidly and appointed a host of brand-new federal overseers. The Washington Post reported in 1942 on the sudden rush of “executive orders creating new czars to control various aspects of our wartime economy,” and a cartoon from that year shows “czar of prices” Leon Henderson, “czar of production” Donald Nelson, and “czar of ships” Emory S. Land all cramming onto one throne.

In the postwar era, the rise of the “czar” has accompanied the expanding role of the executive office in promoting policy initiatives; the term tends to be used when presidents create special new posts for the individuals charged with pushing those initiatives through. Nixon succumbed to czarmania, appointing the first “drug czar,” Jerome Jaffe, in 1971 (long before William Bennett took the mantle in 1988). But it was the title of “energy czar” that got the most attention during those days of OPEC embargoes and gas rationing. Though John A. Love first held the title in 1973, his more powerful successor William E. Simon really got the “czar” ball rolling. Doonesbury cartoonist Garry Trudeau found the “czar” title fitting, depicting Simon imperiously asking for his “signet ring and hot wax.” Simon, for his part, enjoyed the sendup and took pleasure in colleagues calling him “your czarship.”

When Nixon offered him the job, Simon would later recall, the president himself used the term energy czar and discomfitingly likened the role to that of Hitler’s minister of armaments, Albert Speer. Subsequent presidents, however, have shied away from the C-word and its domineering, anti-democratic connotations. Most recently, President Bush has been careful not to call Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute his “war czar,” even though he’s universally labeled that in the press. It’s sure a lot easier than saying his official title: assistant to the president and deputy national security adviser for Iraq and Afghanistan.

Now we hear that the Obama team doesn’t like czar either. No wonder: Even now, the word evokes either old-fashioned despotism or latter-day caricatures of tin-pot tyrants. But it’s safe to say it’s not going anywhere, as long as that compact word keeps doing its job, glibly condensing bureaucratic mouthfuls.



Obama Pondering his Blessed Czars

Message from the Owner of President-Barack-Obama.com

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Obamas Czars

Emperor Nicholas I of Russia, a true czar


Below, we have compiled a wildly unscientific list of Obama administration ?czars.? But we?re not the first. Talking Points Memo has a slideshow of Obama?s ?czars.? They count 23. And ForeignPolicy.com came up with at least 18. We?ve got 28.

Some of these ?czars? are carryover positions from previous administrations. And ?czars? go way back in presidential history. Roosevelt had a slew of so-called czars. But to the extent that Obama has created a number of new positions to oversee various issues and to cut through bureaucratic red tape, he seems to have a lot more czars than his predecessors. Or you could argue that the media has just seized on a new buzzword it likes. We?re not going to wade into the debate about whether having more czars is a good idea, but Fox ran a story about concerns some lawmakers have with it.

We?re just fact-checking McCain?s claim that Obama has more czars than the Romanovs. According to the World Book Encyclopedia, there were, as McCain said, 18 Romanov czars, starting with Michael Romanov in 1613 and ending with Nicholas II, who was killed by the Bolsheviks in 1917.

As for Obama?s czars, we?ve got 28 who have been referred to as a czar ? somewhere. Undoubtedly some will take issue with some of the ?czars? on our list, but we think McCain is on solid ground. He earns a True.

Name Czar Title Actual (boring) Title

Herb Allison TARP Czar Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Financial Stability

Alan Bersin Border Czar Assistant Secretary for International Affairs and Special Representative for Border Affairs

Dennis Blair Intelligence Czar Director of National Intelligence

John Brennan Terrorism Czar Deputy National Security Advisor for Homeland Security

Carol Browner Energy Czar Assistant to the President for Energy and Climate Change

Adolfo Carrion, Jr Urban Affairs Czar Director of the White House Office of Urban Affairs

Ashton Carter Weapons Czar Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics

Aneesh Chopra Technology Czar Chief Technology Officer

Jeffrey Crowley AIDS Czar Director of the Office of National AIDS Policy

Cameron Davis Great Lakes Czar Special advisor to the U.S. EPA overseeing its Great Lakes restoration plan

Nancy-Ann DeParle Health Czar Director of the White House Office of Health Reform

Earl Devaney Stimulus Accountability Czar Chair of the Recovery Act Transparency and Accountability Board

Joshua DuBois Faith-based Czar Director of the Office of Faith Based and Neighborhood Partnerships

Kenneth Feinberg Pay Czar Special Master on executive pay

Danny Fried Guantanamo Closure Czar Special envoy to oversee the closure of the detention center at Guantanamo Bay

J. Scott Gration Sudan Czar Special Envoy to Sudan

Richard Holbrooke Afghanistan Czar Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan

John Holdren Science Czar Assistant to the President for Science and Technology, Director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, and Co-Chair of the

President?s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology

Van Jones Green Jobs Czar Special Advisor for Green Jobs, Enterprise and Innovation at the White House Council on Environmental Quality

Gil Kerlikowske Drug Czar Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy

Vivek Kundra Information Czar Federal Chief Information Officer

George Mitchell Mideast Peace Czar Special Envoy to the Middle East

Ed Montgomery Car Czar Director of Recovery for Auto Communities and Workers

Dennis Ross Mideast Policy Czar Special Advisor for the Persian Gulf and Southwest Asia

Gary Samore WMD Czar Coordinator for the Prevention of WMD Proliferation and Terrorism

Todd Stern Climate Czar Special Envoy for Climate Change

Cass Sunstein Regulatory Czar Director of the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs

Paul Volcker Economic Czar Chairman of the Economic Recovery Advisory Board

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DragonLords
Comment By: DragonLords
Date: Jun 13, 2009 05:29:51

I'm looking forward to see how his leadership will benefit the U.S.

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