FORMER SENATOR EYED FOR NASA ADMINISTRATOR
Nelson flew on shuttle, oversaw space programs
The Biden administration is expected to nominate former Sen. Bill Nelson to be the next administrator of NASA, according to multiple people with knowledge of the matter.
If approved by the Senate, Nelson would be the second consecutive NASA chief to come from Congress and would give NASA a leader with close ties to the Oval Office. Nelson was a key Biden supporter during the campaign and has a long personal relationship with the president.
The announcement could come as early as Friday, according to the people briefed on the matter who were not authorized to speak publicly ahead of the official announcement.
Nelson flew to space on the space shuttle in 1986 and oversaw NASA’s space programs while in Congress. He is knowledgeable and enthusiastic about space and NASA, an agency he has long cherished. But the choice is disappointing to many who were hopeful the next NASA administrator would be the first woman to serve in the top position.
Nelson, a Democrat from Florida, has long been an advocate for space — a rarity among members of Congress. NASA and its contractors have long been an important source of jobs in Florida, where the Kennedy Space Center is located. Huge crowds have flocked to the state for decades to watch launches.
While in the Senate, Nelson was a staunch supporter of NASA’s Space Launch System, the troubled heavy-lift rocket that Congress mandated after the Obama administration canceled a previous rocket and spacecraft program, called Constellation, that was way over budget and behind schedule. Like its predecessor, the SLS rocket is years behind schedule and over budget, and has yet to fly.
That stance has made proponents of the commercialization of space wary at a time when NASA has embraced the expanding capabilities of the private sector. NASA relies on SpaceX, for example, to fly its astronauts to and from the International Space Station under NASA’s “commercial crew” program and is looking to the private sector to help in its quest to return to the moon.
While Nelson, 78, is a wellknown champion for NASA, many were hoping for a new generation of leadership to carry the agency into a new era. “It’s time for a female administrator,” Wayne Hale, a former NASA space shuttle program manager who was the flight director for 40 missions, wrote on Twitter. “Plenty of qualified candidates.”
But since then the commercial sector has gone a long way toward changing the minds of officials who were once skeptical, and people close to Nelson have said he is enthusiastic about the promise of the commercial industry.
The nomination comes at a critical time for NASA. It recently landed the Perseverance rover on Mars, and it is pushing to return astronauts to the moon for the first time since the last Apollo mission landed there in 1972.
Recently, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the Biden administration supports the effort, known as Artemis, continuing a signature Trump administration program that Nelson would now oversee.
As a key member of the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, which oversees NASA, Nelson took aim at then-President Donald Trump’s nominee for NASA administrator, arguing that Jim Bridenstine, a former Republican congressman from Oklahoma, was not qualified in part because of his political ties.
“The NASA administrator should be a consummate space professional, who is technically and scientifically competent, and is a skilled executive,” he said during Bridenstine’s confirmation hearing. “This committee has heard me say many times: NASA is not political. The leader of NASA should not be political. The leader of NASA should not be bipartisan.”
After Bridentstine was confirmed by a narrow partyline vote, he worked diligently with Democrats and Republicans alike. And he appointed Nelson to a NASA advisory committee, calling him a “true champion for human spaceflight.”
In 1986, as NASA was gearing up to fly civilians on the space shuttle — first a teacher, then a journalist — Nelson, then a member of the House, was able to fly first, joining the crew of NASA astronauts.