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Message to DC Bureaucrats: People Want Innovation

Message to DC Bureaucrats: People Want Innovation

White Hose Senior Adviser Jared Kushner, in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House complex in Washington, D.C. (Pablo Martinez Monsivais/AP)

By    |   Monday, 03 April 2017 01:07 PM EDT

I love talking with listeners on my SiriusXM 126 nightly 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. radio show or those who watch my local and national TV programs.

The questions I get more than any other are:

"Gosh, is it really that bad in Washington, D.C.?"

"Can folks really get nothing down up there, even with a President such as Trump?"

Then I come back to the federal city. I hear from my colleagues and friends in the world of journalism, and I’m led to believe that Trump is single-handedly dismantling the federal government.

The reality is activity is occurring in this city, and that activity signifies progress.

That scares people, especially the bureaucrats in the machine that turn the gears and cogs of government.

I get it. Sometimes fresh ideas still stink, no matter how well-intentioned or well-meaning they are. We are, after all, talking about taking steps that can and will impact the lives of millions.

One thing I always give credit to on both sides of the political spectrum, however, is each wants see the country adapt, change, and succeed.

I can’t always say that about opponents of the president — and that’s unfortunate.

One idea introduced last week is teeming with promise. The White House’s proposed plan to overhaul the federal bureaucracy. Taking a hard, scrutinizing look at the way this town governs is long overdue. It's an idea worth pursuing with extreme vigor.

Set aside the rhetorical promise to "change Washington as we know it."

We’ve all heard that before. It scores political points on the campaign trail, yet traditionally, it leads to nothing else.

But the proposed Office of American Innovation to be led by Jared Kushner (the president’s son-in-law) has the makings of pure genius.

There are signifcant, key reasons for this optimism:

  • This office will exist among the highest echelons of public oversight. Speed is the new currency in this information and digital age. And a bureaucracy that is slow to change drags even industry down around it. Kushner appreciates that aspect and need more than anything else. He knows how to use both power and authority to push ideas beyond the blueprint phase; to give them a chance even in an incubation stage. That’s notable, and worth someone taking the time to focus on it.

  • In some small yet smart fashion, that’s the idea behind new innovations in Medicare through pushing payments based on clinical outcomes versus just the federal payer reimbursing per test performed on beneficiaries. That’s smart medicine, and while it’s not nationwide, experts see the promise in it. If Mr. Kushner can bring the best and brightest and test ideas in small, workable ways, then chances are they could work on far larger, macro scales. But you need the nimbleness of an office in the White House to push that.

  • Expect experts from the financial and business worlds to participate. It’s ironic how factions line up on either side to argue that government can’t be run like a business. But I know for a fact that government can benefit from bedrock principles of business such as balanced budgeting, efficiencies, economies of scale, creative design, and so on. President Trump and Mr. Kushner appreciate these aspects. Why not try them? If every other public solution has failed abysmally to make government more efficient and effective, the American people deserve better. They’re not dumb, and they’re willing to try different approaches because, quite frankly, the status quo is unacceptable. We fail ourselves if we look at every idea that we don’t develop with disdain, before they are even explored. And I hope some fail, because that will mean Kushner’s team is stretching traditional roles — determining what’s in the realm of the possible.

  • The final reason is that the current system is broken. It’s no accident that Kushner wants to target the Veterans Affairs Department. They need help. And his simple mantra of demanding "excellence in government" isn’t too much to ask. Further, by focusing on innovation, the White House is hanging out a help wanted sign to bring in the best and brightest of America’s tech sector to offer their expertise.

Is the White House plan ambitious? You bet. This country is tired of timidity.

Armstrong Williams is the author of "Reawakening Virtues." He is a political commentator who writes a conservative newspaper column, hosts a nationally syndicated TV program called "The Right Side," and hosts a daily radio show on Sirius/XM Power 128 (6-7 p.m. and 5-6 a.m.) Monday through Friday. He also is owner of Howard Stirk Holdings Broadcast TV stations. Read more reports from Armstrong Williams — Click Here Now.

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ArmstrongWilliams
One idea introduced last week by the Trump White House teems with promise. It's the proposed plan to overhaul federal bureaucracy. It's an idea worth pursuing with extreme vigor. Is the White House plan ambitious? You bet. This country is tired of timidity.
office of american innovation, white house
771
2017-07-03
Monday, 03 April 2017 01:07 PM
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