Michael Gallagher (US politician)

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Michael D. Gallagher is the Assistant Secretary for Commerce and Information in the United States Department of Commerce and Administrator of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration. He is the chief technology advisor to President George W. Bush.

Gallagher was installed into office on October 14, 2003, via a recess appointment, bypassing Senate approval. He has since been approved by the Senate.

Before joining the Department of Commerce, Gallagher was vice president for state public policy at Verizon Wireless. Prior to that, he was managing director for government relations at AirTouch Communications, which was merged with Verizon.

Gallagher previously served as administrative assistant to Washington Congressman Rick White and co-chaired the government relations practice group at the the law firm of Perkins Coie.

Gallagher received his B.A. from the University of California, Berkeley and his J.D. from the University of California, Los Angeles.

On May 17, 2007 the Entertainment Software Association announced Gallagher, former assistant secretary of commerce for communications and chief telecommunications and policy advisor to the Bush administration, would replace founder Doug Lowenstein as president.[1]

[edit] Internet governance

Gallagher has opposed the proposals by the United Nations' Working Group on Internet Governance to remove the Internet and the Domain Name System (DNS) from the United States' control. The proposals will be discussed at the World Summit on the Information Society in November 2005. Gallagher believes in private sector control of DNS.

[edit] References

Portions of this biography were taken from the White House's biography of Gallagher.

  1. ^ ESA selects new president by Brendan Sinclair, GameSpot, 2007-05-17