`obama-administration/article_1671300b-4ae0-56df-985b-120f50458760.html
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`Google employees have enjoyed revolving door during Obama
`administration
`“If they have access to information on competitors and they go to Google…then you have to wonder if Google
`is getting an unfair advantage over others in their market,” he said.
`
`By Johnny Kampis Aug 8, 2016
`
`More than 250 people have moved from Google and related firms to the federal
`government or vice versa since President Barack Obama took office.
`
`The Google Transparency Project, the work of Campaign for Accountability, poured over
`reams of data to find 258 instances of “revolving door activity” between Google or its
`associated companies and the federal government, national political campaigns and
`Congress since 2009.
`
`Much of that revolving door activity took place at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, where 22
`former White House officials went to work for Google and 31 executives from Google and
`related firms went to work at the White House or were appointed to federal advisory
`boards by Obama. Those boards include the President’s Council on Science and
`Technology and the President’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness.
`
`Regulation watchdogs may be just as keen about the moves between Google and the
`Federal Communications Commission and Federal Trade Commission. Those government
`bodies regulate many of the programs that are at the heart of Google’s business, and there
`have been at least 15 moves between Google and its lobbying firms and those commissions.
`
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`The research also shows that 25 officials in national security, intelligence or the
`Department of Defense joined Google, and three Google executives went to work for the
`DOD.
`
`Eighteen former State Department officials became Google employees, and five Google
`staffers became employed at the State Department.
`
`The complete list can be downloaded via Excel file here.
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`Friends in high places
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`Former Google employees occupy several key slots in the federal government. These
`include:
`
`• Megan Smith, vice president new business development at Google 2003-12, vice president of
`Google 2012-14, chief technology officer at the Office of Science and Technology Policy 2014-
`present.
`• Alexander Macgillivray, deputy general counsel at Google 2003-09, general counsel at Twitter
`2009-13, deputy chief technology officer at OSTP 2014-present.
`• Nicole Wong, vice president and deputy general counsel at Google from 2004-11 and deputy chief
`technology officer at OSTP 2013-14.
`• Jannine Versi, product marketing manager in Middle East and North Africa for Google 2010-
`2012, White House National Economic Council 2013-14, chief of staff International Trade
`Administration at U.S. Department of Commerce 2014-present.
`• Michelle Lee, deputy general counsel at Google 2003-12, under secretary of commerce for
`intellectual property and director of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office 2012-present.
`• Mikey Dickerson, site reliability manager at Google 2006-13, administrator U.S. Digital Service
`2014-present. Dickerson also assisted with election day monitoring and modeling with Obama’s
`2012 re-election campaign and helped repair the broken HealthCare.gov website.
`
`At least 18 former Google employees work or have worked for the U.S. Digital Service and
`its General Services Administration sidekick, 18F. USDS operates under the Executive
`Office of the President, consulting on big federal information technology projects.
`
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`Scott Amey, general counsel for the Project on Government Oversight, a nonpartisan group
`that exposes abuses of power in government, said it’s hard to know for sure how more than
`250 people moving between Google and the federal government since 2009 compares to
`other corporations, but “it sounds like it’s a very significant number.”
`
`“It’s very hard to get information about the quantity of people who go in and out of
`government service,” Amey told Watchdog.org.
`
`Google didn’t return an email seeking comment for this story.
`
`Analysts at Google Transparency Project compiled the revolving-door data by using public
`information that includes lobby disclosure records, news stories, LinkedIn profiles and
`reports from Open Secrets. Campaign for Accountability notes the analysis is “an evolving
`representation of the scale of the revolving-door relationship between Google and
`government” rather than a comprehensive tally.
`
`In other words, the total could be higher.
`
`The project’s analysis included affiliates of Google, such as YouTube, as well as key law
`firms and lobbyists.
`
`It also includes Civis Analytics, whose sole investor is Eric Schmidt, executive chairman of
`Google parent company Alphabet Inc.
`
`At least 27 people who worked on Obama’s 2012 presidential re-election campaign went to
`work for Civis Analytics after the election. Google Transparency Project said “those
`employees are then deployed by the White House to work on President Obama’s top policy
`priorities.”
`
`
`
`Those policies include federal technology acquisition reform, national security matters and
`health care reform – Civis Analytics employees worked with Google engineers to fix the
`broken HealthCare.gov website in 2013, Campaign for Accountability reports.
`
`White House visitor logs showed that Civis Analytics executives met with White House
`officials at least 51 times since Obama took office.
`
`RELATED: Visitor logs show Google’s unrivaled White House access
`
`The company received more than $3.5 million in payments from Democratic campaigns in
`the last two presidential election cycles, Campaign for Accountability found.
`
`Going from government to Google
`
`The door has swung open the other way, as well, with prominent federal employees taking
`high-ranking positions at Google. These include:
`
`• Caroline Atkinson, head of global public policy for Google beginning this year, previously White
`House economic affairs adviser.
`• Sameer Bhalotra, cybersecurity at Google in 2014, senior director for cybersecurity at White
`House, 2010-2012.
`• Will Hudson, senior advisor for international policy at Google 2015-present, director for
`international cyber policy at National Economic Council, 2014-15. Hudson previously served as a
`counsel advising government clients on cyber law.
`• Regina Duncan, head of Google’s advanced technology and products division 2012-present,
`director of Defense Advance Research Projects Agency, 2009-12.
`• Michele Weslander Quaid, chief technology office for public sector at Google 2011-15, chief
`technology officer at National Reconnaissance Office, 2009-11.
`
`Then there is the curious case of the FTC. Joshua Wright, senior counsel at Wilson Sonsini
`Goodrich & Rosati (Google’s most trusted antitrust law firm) since January, served as FTC
`commissioner from 2013-15 after being appointed by Obama.
`
`But Wright had to recuse himself from deciding on issues related to Google while on the
`FTC because he had co-authored papers urging the commission to not file suit against the
`company. Those papers were indirectly funded by Google.
`
`
`
`The FTC previously investigated allegations that Google manipulated search results to
`benefit its own companies, but the FTC ruled in 2013 that wasn’t the case. This, despite
`FTC staff saying Google’s practices cause “real harm to consumers and to innovation.”
`
`Meanwhile, the European Commission is expected to slap a record fine on Google for the
`same allegations the FTC dismissed.
`
`RELATED: Google could face record fine in Europe after skating by in U.S.
`
`“Google loses its friend at the FTC,” Fortune wrote when Wright decided to take a job as
`professor of law at George Mason University, a position he still holds.
`
`Wright is just one of several former high-ranking FTC officials who have since been
`employed at Google or its law firms. Others include former commissioner Julie Brill, who
`went to work for Hogan Lovells as partner and co-director of privacy and cybersecurity in
`March. That law firm has represented Google on a variety of issues.
`
`Matthew Bye, who advised the FTC on antitrust issues, went to work for Wilson Sonsini
`Goodrich & Rosati before moving to Google. He has been the company’s director of legal
`competition since November 2015.
`
`In late 2012, months before the FTC settled with Google in its antitrust investigation, FTC
`Office of General Counsel attorney Robert Mahini took a job as Google’s senior policy
`counsel.
`
`Some key FCC officials have moved from the commission to Google or its associate law
`firms, or vice versa. Johanna Shelton, who has visited the White House 128 times since
`Obama took office, was an FCC attorney from 1998 to 2001.
`
`Renata Hesse, a member at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosata from 2006-11, became
`senior counsel to the chairman for transactions at the FCC later in 2011. She is now a
`deputy assistant attorney general in the Department of Justice’s antitrust division.
`
`Austin Schlick has been Google’s director of communications law since 2012. Before that,
`
`
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`he was general counsel at the FCC from 2009-12.
`
`The 18 people involved in the revolving door listed in this story are just the tip of the 251-
`plus name iceberg, though in some cases people among that 251 are low-level employees.
`
`Amey said he’s not as concerned about programmers moving over – and quite a few data
`engineers who worked on Obama’s re-election campaign have ended up in White House
`jobs – but top level executives changing jobs can raise “red flags.”
`
`“If they have access to information on competitors and they go to Google … then you have
`to wonder if Google is getting an unfair advantage over others in their market,” he said.
`
`Campaign for Transparency notes Google hiring former bureaucrats “gives it valuable
`insights into the inner workings of government and politics,” while having its former
`employees ensconced in federal offices “gives it a formidable conduit to influence policy
`making on a variety of issues affecting its interests.”
`
`Johnny Kampis
`Johnny Kampis is a freelance writer, and has been published in The New York Times, Time.com,
`FoxNews.com and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
`
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