Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Trump’s top science adviser confirmed
WASHINGTON — Senate lawmakers have confirmed Kelvin Droegemeier, an extreme-weather expert, as the White House’s top science and tech adviser, filling a critical administration role that had been vacant for nearly two years under President Donald Trump. Droegemeier, who had served as a top meteorologist at the University of Oklahoma, is set to become leader of the Office of Science and Technology Policy, an arm of the White House that helps guide federal research spending and informs the government’s policies in areas such as artificial intelligence, climate change, precision medicine and online privacy. Before the Senate confirmed Droegemeier by voice vote late Wednesday, the vacancy at the science and technology under Trump had set a record: Never before had a modern president waited so long to install an administrator in that office. The delay had drawn sharp criticism from lawmakers and academics, who said the president had erred by forging ahead with his policy agenda — including his 2017 decision to leave a key international carbon-reduction pact — without a top science adviser in place. But Trump’s decision in July to nominate Droegemeier — who previously helped guide federal science research under both Democratic and Republican presidents — earned widespread accolades from the research community. Droegemeier is the first meteorologist to hold this position. Many researchers expressed hope that Droegemeier might give them a louder voice in Trump’s decision-making process. He did not face significant opposition.