Less than a day after Rep. Tom Davis (R-Va.) decided not to run for reelection in 2008, the longtime procurement and technology advocate already had his successor in mind.
Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.), Davis’ choice, is unknown to most in the acquisition and technology community.
Davis said last week in an interview with Federal Computer Week that he tapped Issa as the one to fill his shoes after the current term ends. He said Issa understands the private sector and how it relates to government.
“He’s up to snuff,”Davis said, who announced Jan. 30 that he would not run for an eighth term.
Davis’ long-standing interest in procurement and technology issues made him a rare expert on Capitol Hill. Not many are attracted to those issues.Many in the acquisition community and the information technology industry couldn’t name anyone when asked who could replace Davis’ advocacy on their issues.
“I don’t see anyone filling his shoes immediately,” one senior acquisition official said.
Another senior acquisition official said, “It’s not that other members aren’t interested in acquisition. It’s that they don’t understand the process like he does.”
If other members seek to take up Davis’ slack, they will be in a tough position to try to gain standing in the acquisition community, officials say.
But Davis said he believes Issa will be a capable successor. Issa started his own company, Directed Electronics, which makes automobile security and convenience products, in 1982 in Cleveland. He then was the chairman of the Consumer Electronics Association and a member of the board of governors of the Electronics Industry Association.
“Congressman Issa, with his background in the technology sector, is keenly interested in how new technologies and procurement policies can make the federal government work more efficiently,” said Issa’s spokesman Frederick Hill.
Davis said he would introduce the little- known lawmaker to IT industry groups and the federal acquisition community.
Other members recognize the pressure Davis’ retirement places on their shoulders.
Rep. Christopher Shays (R-Conn.), who is next in line for the ranking member position or possibly chairmanship on the oversight committee, said he and other members will have to quickly study the minutiae of acquisition and procurement regulations.