Wednesday, March 11, 2009 - 6:46 PM
Back in the 1970's, Henry Kissinger used to joke that, "When I want to call Europe, I cannot find a phone number."
In a cruel irony, the roles appear to be temporarily reversed, according to the Financial Times:
The US-European differences are casting a shadow over next month’s summit in London of leaders from the G20 group of advanced and emerging economies, an event to be attended by Barack Obama on his first visit to Europe as US president.
It also emerged that Gordon Brown, UK prime minister, was struggling to organise the summit. Britain’s most senior civil servant claimed it was hard to find anyone to speak to at the US Treasury. Sir Gus O’Donnell, cabinet secretary, blamed the “absolute madness” of the US system where a new administration had to hire new officials from scratch, leaving a decision-making vacuum.
“There is nobody there. You cannot believe how difficult it is,” he told a conference of civil servants.
This sounds like a familiar complaint. Oh, wait....
Is it normal for a new administration to take this long in appointing people to Treasury? There's a whole bunch of positions that he has to nominate there.
One would think this would be a top priority.
Wow, they lost another one at Treasury.
'After losing Annette Nazareth to potential criticism of her regulation efforts at the SEC and Caroline Atkinson to more tax problems, H. Rodgin Cohen has now departed as the designee for Deputy Treasury Secretary.'
http://blogs.abcnews.com/george/2009/03/another-top-tre.html
Maybe they need to hire people to do the vetting first.
Willem Buiter's post nicely shows how in fact the US system of political appointees is an anachronism.
Daniel W. Drezner is professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University.
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