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3 Takeaways from the President’s New Management Agenda

The White House issued its “new management agenda.” Cynics, of course, will note that the President is announcing a “new” management agenda in the fifth year of his presidency. And, in fact, there wasn’t much new in Monday’s announcement outside of saying that the new director of the Office of Management and Budget Sylvia Mathews Burwell to spearhead the initiative.

“We’ve made some good progress on all fronts, but now we need to do more. So today, I met with all my Cabinet, including a number of new Cabinet members, some of whom have extraordinary private sector experience, and I directed the Cabinet to develop an aggressive management agenda for my second term that delivers a smarter, more innovative, and more accountable government for its citizens. And we’re going to continue to adopt good ideas from the private sector,” President Obama said at the White House.

Obama said the management-agenda reboot will focus on three areas where the administration has already seen success:

Presidential Innovation Fellows Touts Success, Doubles Effort

In addition to announcing that the administration has a management agenda, Pres. Obama mentioned the second tranche of Presidential Innovation Fellows.

The White House chose a second class of 43 fellows late last month to work on nine different program areas that focus on bringing private- sector expertise to help solve public sector problems.

“These are Americans with vast private-sector technology expertise who have volunteered to come serve their country,” said Obama.

Obama Doubles Down on Executive Branch Reorg.

Obama also renewed his call for Congress to reorganize and consolidate executive branch agencies.

“Almost every President from Herbert Hoover to Ronald Reagan had this authority to redesign the federal government, the executive branch, to deliver services better — just like every business owner seeking to make sure that his or her company keep pace with the times. Currently, we do not have that capacity. And so I’m going to keep on doing what we can administratively, but we sure could use Congress’s help, particularly at a time when Congress is saying they want more efficient government — they give a lot of lip service to it — and we’re operating under severe fiscal constraints.”

Obama issued a proposal to Congress last January to merge six business- and trade-related agencies into a single entity, but the measure has languished in Congress since then, reports Federal News Radio.

“It makes sense for us to be able to redesign government so that it can deliver on the functions that the American people are looking for. We should all want a government that’s smarter, quicker, and more responsive to the needs of the American people.”

You can read the full text here.

What do you think of the new management agenda? More of the same? A new approach?

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