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Trump picks billionaire and private astronaut Jared Isaacman to run NASA

Jared Isaacman
Jared Isaacman

Capitalism in space: In a decision that is certain to send shock waves throughout NASA and the established aerospace industry, President-elect Donald Trump today announced that he has chosen billionaire and private astronaut Jared Isaacman to be his nominee for NASA administrator.

Isaacman quickly accepted the nomination.

Besides being a jet pilot with extensive experience in the aerospace industry, Isaacman has also commanded two space missions, financed out of his own pocket. Both missions used SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket and Resilience capsule. Both also pointedly avoided any involvement with NASA, spending several days in free Earth orbit instead of docking with ISS. The second mission achieved several major engineering milestones, testing the first privately built spacesuit during a spacewalk while also flying farthest from Earth since the 1970s Apollo missions.

These flights were part of Isaacman’s own long term space program, dubbed Polaris, with two more missions already in planning stages. The first would be another Dragon orbital mission in which Isaacman had tried to get NASA to shape as a Hubble repair mission. NASA declined. The second is intended as a manned mission around the Moon using SpaceX’s Starship.

That program will now likely get folded into NASA’s Artemis program, which we can all expect Isaacman to force major changes. For one thing, this is another blow to the future of SLS and Orion. As a very successful businessman Isaacman will look with great skepticism at this boondoggle.

For another, Isaacman’s markedly different experiences working with SpaceX versus NASA will likely encourage major bureaucratic changes at the space agency. It is almost certain that Isaacman’s manned flights avoided ISS in order to avoid its Byzantine red tape, that would have likely also blocked use of SpaceX’s spacesuit on a private spacewalk. NASA’s decision to reject Isaacman’s proposal to do a simple but very necessary Hubble repair mission will also likely influence his management of the agency. Isaacman is going to force NASA to depend on the private sector more. He is also likely to reduce the agency’s risk adverse mentality that while often reasonable is many times very counter-productive.

Unlike many of Trump’s other radical nominees, I would be very surprised if Isaacman is not confirmed quickly and with little opposition.

Whether Isaacman will still fly his two remaining private Polaris manned missions is at this moment unknown. Practically it would make sense to cancel them, since he will have much bigger fish to fry at NASA. Emotionally and politically however it would be truly spectacular to have NASA’s administrator fly in space, on a mission using no taxpayer funds. That more than anything would demonstrate the ability of freedom and private enterprise to get things done.

Genesis cover

On Christmas Eve 1968 three Americans became the first humans to visit another world. What they did to celebrate was unexpected and profound, and will be remembered throughout all human history. Genesis: the Story of Apollo 8, Robert Zimmerman's classic history of humanity's first journey to another world, tells that story, and it is now available as both an ebook and an audiobook, both with a foreword by Valerie Anders and a new introduction by Robert Zimmerman.

 

The print edition can be purchased at Amazon. from any other book seller, or direct from my ebook publisher, ebookit. The ebook is available everywhere for $5.99 (before discount) at amazon, or direct from my ebook publisher, ebookit. If you buy it from ebookit you don't support the big tech companies and the author gets a bigger cut much sooner.


The audiobook is also available at all these vendors, and is also free with a 30-day trial membership to Audible.
 

"Not simply about one mission, [Genesis] is also the history of America's quest for the moon... Zimmerman has done a masterful job of tying disparate events together into a solid account of one of America's greatest human triumphs."--San Antonio Express-News

21 comments

  • To me, the biggest positive about Jared Isaacman’s appointment is that Jared is likely going to understand the significance of the Starship fleet in a way that more traditional, conservative people like Greg Autry wouldn’t. In a Planetary Society interview before the election, Autry said that the idea that Starship could replace SLS was a belief for the SpaceX fanboys. So, I’m pretty relieved that Jared has been nominated to that position.

  • F

    B-b-b-b-b-but does he know about the “dark” side of the moon, like the current head?

  • Ray Van Dune

    Dump SLS shares *

    * not investment advice

  • Mike

    Best nominee Trump has put forth, hands down.

    The biggest beef against him will be his accumulated wealth…

    Guys first private mission raised how much many millions for St Jude’s?

    Not your typical billionaire.

    Hoping to hear some other perspectives from you and your readers Bob.

  • geoffc

    Gee, wonder if he will allow himself to boost Hubble for free to NASA now?

  • sippin_bourbon

    “Unlike many of Trump’s other radical nominees…”

    But are they really that radical?

  • sippin_bourbon

    The only obstacle might be that they WANT him to commit to SLS before confirmation.
    It earned the nickname “Senate Launch System” for a reason.

    Is the money allocated tied to the project via legislation?

  • David Eastman

    I wonder how much input Elon had on this selection. I imagine Trump must have consulted him. It’s an outstanding choice, I’m excited.

  • Dick Eagleson

    Just the latest in a sterling line of nominations by Trump and one obviously informed by consultation with Elon. So Jared will get to be addressed by the title ‘Administrator’ before taking on the title of ‘Commodore’ when the first human settlement mission to Mars departs LEO parking orbit. Like the fighter pilot he is, Administrator Isaacman will lead from in front.

  • Richard M

    Hello Doug,

    Interesting that bit about Autry. I clearly need to track that interview down. Disappointing, if true.

    But yes, this makes Isaacman a superior pick. Now he just needs a good, experienced hatchet man as his deputy: someone who knows policy and knows where the bodies are buried.

  • Richard M

    I just can’t imagine Trump picking Isaacman without Elon being in his ear everyday. Space just isn’t an area Trump is plugged into. That said, the process for picking him could be more complex than we might think. Elon may have proposed multiple names. There could have been a lot of back and forth with the staff. Eric Berger apparently heard a rumor about it a week ago.

    It’s striking, too, that Trump makes this pick in the first week of December. Invariably, a NASA chief is a second tier appointment that Presidents don’t get around to until at least a month or two into their term. Look how long it was before Bridenstine got nominated. Elon surely accelerated this appointment!

    But either way, Elon has to be pretty darned happy today.

  • Patrick Underwood

    I was blown away when I read the news. Richard M, absolutely right, this is Elon’s influence. Awesome.

    If you’re up for some indigestion, check out the comments to Stephen Clark’s article over at Ars technica. Holy…

  • Dick Eagleson

    Elon has a lot of company in that respect. Even out here in sunny SoCal we aren’t too far distant to hear the sounds of heads exploding by the dozen in Huntsville and DC.

  • Richard M

    Patrick,

    LOL I was just over there. 5 pages of comments later it seems to tally up, roughly:

    60% “Fascist billionaire oligarchy, here we come”
    20% “Hey, it could have been worse”
    20% “Say, he might actually do some good there”

    What gives me hope is how many of the really deranged ones in Category 1 got downvoted to oblivion. These people are, literally, the anti-Bob Zimmerman.

    I really don’t think Jared will have a hard time getting confirmed, so long as he doesn’t publicly promise to personally burn Michoud or MSFC to the ground over the next 12 weeks. He’s likable, articulate, has no political background, and has no known skeletons, and there are spicier picks ahead of him to draw the heavy fire. No, the hard part will come when he tries to start cancelling stuff.

  • Patrick Underwood

    And now there’s at least one antisemitic rant on Spacenews that’s still up as of a couple minutes ago. My goodness. These are SPACE sites. (Well; Ars is more of a generic GenZ “we’re-all-gonna-die” global warming etc. science/tech site, but… still.)

    I like the sanity over here. Thanks for making it all possible, Mr. Zimmerman. Thinking about it, I need to make a very belated donation.

  • wayne

    F–
    He’s blabbing, all about Mars!

    Total Recall (1990)
    “You Blabbed….”
    https://youtu.be/R_A0EEdVGAQ
    1:46

    *Language Alert*

  • Richard M

    And now there’s at least one antisemitic rant on Spacenews that’s still up as of a couple minutes ago.

    That chap is a Russian troll. Comes with the territory.

    Speaking of which….won’t Isaacman be the first Jewish NASA Administrator we’ve had?

    No, wait…Robert Frosch, Carter’s NASA Administrator, apparently was Jewish. I guess that makes two now!

    But Jared will definitely be the *youngest* NASA Administrator we have had.

  • Richard M

    By the way, Joey Roulette reports some of the other names that were being considered for the post: Kathy Lueders, who we all know, and Mike Garcia, the departing congressman for the 27th California congressional district. Garcia narrowly lost reelection last month. He’s a former Navy pilot, was on NASA’s House oversight committee.

    Probably just as well for Kathy. I am sure she’d have to take a big pay cut.

    That said, we now must wait to see who Trump names as the Deputy Administrator. Given Isaacman’s lack of first-hand experience with NASA, that job will be very important.

  • Patrick Underwood

    Richard M, I flagged him, for whatever good that does.

    I wonder if Trump would be open to Lori Garver. I wonder if Garver would be open to working for Trump.

  • Jeff Wright

    I had no idea Mr. Eagleson was such a a fan of SCANNERS :)

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