Issue 29: Space

Jeff Foust || Editor, The Space Review

Jeff Foust

At the highest level, the Obama Administration is unlikely to make major changes in space policy. For the last five years NASA has been implementing the Vision for Space Exploration, the strategy announced by President Bush that calls for humans to return to the Moon by 2020 as a step towards eventual expeditions to Mars and elsewhere in the solar system, using a new generation of launch vehicles and spacecraft collectively known as Constellation. While Obama originally suggested delaying Constellation by five years to help pay for his early-education proposals, by last August the Obama campaign issued a detailed space policy document that explicitly supported the Vision.

However, there may be room for other changes within NASA. For example, there are indications Obama’s transition team is examining replacing the Ares 1, a new rocket under development to launch the Orion manned spacecraft, with versions of versions of existing rockets used to launch government and commercial satellites. There are also proposals to extend the life of the Space Shuttle beyond 2010 to address the five-year gap in human spaceflight between the Shuttle’s retirement and Constellation’s introduction. At the same time, there’s a broad expectation that the Obama Administration will seek to reverse cuts in NASA’s aeronautics and Earth sciences programs made in recent years.

In many cases these proposed changes come at a cost, while NASA today is struggling to carry out all its missions with its current budget. Will the Obama Administration seek to increase NASA’s budget to cover these initiatives, or take money from other parts of the agency? How the new president answers those questions will greatly determine whether the Vision for Space Exploration can become reality.

Jeff Foust is the editor and publisher of The Space Review - http://www.thespacereview.com - a weekly online journal of space issues, and blogs about space policy and related topics at Space Politics - http://www.spacepolitics.com

He works as a senior analyst at Futron Corporation, an aerospace and telecommunications consulting company headquartered in Bethesda, Maryland.

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Inaugural Insight

  • The inauguration for the first U.S. president, George Washington, was held on April 30, 1789 in New York City.
  • Should January 20 be a Sunday, the President is usually administered the oath of office in a private ceremony on that day, followed by a public ceremony the following day.
  • Immediately following the oath, the bands play four ruffles and flourishes and "Hail to the Chief", followed by a 21-gun salute from howitzers of the Presidential Salute Battery.
  • The inaugural celebrations usually last ten days, from five days before the inauguration to five days after.
  • Since Thomas Jefferson's second inaugural on March 4, 1805, it has become tradition for the president to parade down Pennsylvania Avenue from the Capitol to the White House.
  • According to tradition, in the first inaugural, President Washington added the words "so help me God" when reciting the oath, although there is no contemporary evidence of this.
  • In 1977, Jimmy Carter started a new tradition by walking from the Capitol to the White House, although subsequent presidents have only walked part of the way for security reasons.
  • The War of 1812 and World War II forced two swearing-ins to be held at other locations in Washington, D.C.
  • The new President assumes power at noon on January 20th, regardless of whether or not he has actually taken the oath of office.
  • There is no requirement that any book, or in particular a book of sacred text, be used to administer the oath, and none is mentioned in the Constitution.

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