In an unprecedented display of commitment to job outsourcing, the White House announced Thursday that several of its own positions, including the vice presidency, would be outsourced starting in 2005. The declaration came as a shock at a time when the subject of job outsourcing has raised controversy about job loss in the United States.
Citing statistics showing increased profits and reduced overhead in outsourcing, and addressing the prominent issue of the growing multi-trillion national deficit, the Bush administration promised outsourcing key administrative positions, not only in the White House but Congress and the Supreme Court as well, to overseas companies would bring the federal budget back in line and produce “exciting, proactive solutions to government problems.”
White House press secretary Scott McClellan held a press conference Thursday and provided documentation from presidential advisors showing the many positions to eliminated domestically and re-staffed elsewhere, with India and China touted as very likely candidates. The press noted McClellan’s own position was listed among those being phased out, to which the press secretary responded, “Well, obviously this isn’t written in stone yet. Not all of them, like that one.”
Outsourcing has long been a way for companies to reduce overhead by sending work to be done in locations outside the country, where the cost of living and wages are much less, since they don’t have unions and a voice in government in such places. Until the last five years, however, outsourcing was prominently for blue-collar jobs too difficult to give to machines and yet too costly to pay Americans to do; only recently have the upper echelons of management realized white collar jobs basically fit the same pattern and can be done cheaper in other countries, meaning maximizing profit, assuming anybody is left employed to buy the products here.
Just how high a position can be outsourced? The White House says it can go all the way to the next-to-the-top. When asked what he thought of his role in the administration being given to someone else, Vice President Dick Cheney studied the memo and laughed nervously.
“That Georgie,” sighed Cheney, “he’s got a wicked sense of humor. Funny. Funny guy.”
At the press conference, McClellan insisted the vice presidency would be easy enough to train someone else to do.
“You’ve basically got one real job,” said McClellan, “casting the vote in the Senate if there’s a tie. Yeah, that happens a lot. Not something you can phone in from New Delhi, that’s for sure. It’s not like giving press conferences—that kind of thing has to be done daily, a never-ending job.”
Other positions being mentioned for outsourcing included White House speech writers, economic advising, secretary of defense, Department of Homeland Security (started as a joke anyway), and Central Intelligence. Among the more controversial choices was the selection of the Supreme Court for outsourcing. According to Legal History Professor Dunbar Gates, an expert on the Constitution from M.I.T., the legality of the move could be challenged.
“Bush may be setting himself up for a lawsuit to outsource positions of the government he didn’t appoint,” said Gates. “I’m no expert on the Constitution or anything, but he might want to check with a lawyer.”
Responded Bush Saturday to commune inquiries: “We’ll let the new Supreme Court decide that next year.”