Orlando Sentinel

NASA head Bridenstin­e gives farewell speech, calls for ‘eliminatin­g divisions’

- By Richard Tribou

NASA Administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e gave an emotional farewell speech in which he thanked the NASA workforce and space industry, but called for unity moving forward.

“The amazing people at NASA, you can’t be replaced. You’re the best, and I’m ... I’m just so grateful for all of the great experience­s, the hard times but also the great accomplish­ments and the things that we were able to achieve together,” he said in the video posted to NASA’s Twitter account.

Bridenstin­e, a former Oklahoma congressma­n who had a contentiou­s confirmati­on to the NASA position when nominated in 2017 by President Donald Trump, became the 13th administra­tor for the space agency in April 2018. He had said he would step down on Jan. 20 to make way for a new administra­tor as President Joe Biden took office.

“So with that I say farewell, and I’ll tell you when a new team comes in, give them all your support because they need it. They deserve it. And of course what we’re trying to do again, we’re not only crossing multiple administra­tions, but multidecad­e and multigener­ational. So again they’ll have all my support and I hope they have all your support. So go get’em. Go NASA. Ad astra.”

He called for a bipartisan approach to national space efforts, but also encouraged a continued internatio­nal and commercial partnershi­ps for the benefit of humanity.

“You know I think it’s really important as we move forward as an agency that we think about what enables success,” he said. “And I’ll tell you what we’ve been working on since I’ve been working here is eliminatin­g divisions. And if we eliminate divisions and we can get the bipartisan, apolitical consensus with commercial partners

and internatio­nal partners, I think it sets us up in a great position to move forward in a meaningful way.”

He put emphasis on the Trump administra­tion’s push with the Artemis program, which is still slated to launch what would be the biggest rocket ever to leave

Earth on an uncrewed mission this November. The administra­tion had been pushing to land back on the moon by 2024, and this time with the first woman to set foot on its surface.

“This was a job of a lifetime. I don’t know how I will match it again for all of my years,” he said.

 ?? COURTESY ?? NASA Administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e during a farewell speech posted on Wednesday.
COURTESY NASA Administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e during a farewell speech posted on Wednesday.

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