Education
He graduated from the University of South Dakota (Bachelor of Science 1974) and Ohio State University (Master of Arts 1976. Doctor of Philosophy 1981).
He graduated from the University of South Dakota (Bachelor of Science 1974) and Ohio State University (Master of Arts 1976. Doctor of Philosophy 1981).
He is a former Director of the and Assistant to the President for Ronald Reagan. Crippen most recently served on National Aeronautics and Space Administration"s Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel. From 1981-1985 Crippen served as chief counsel and economic policy advisor for Senate Minority Leader Howard Baker.
Republicans hoped that Crippen would be a strong proponent of Reagan"s appropriations bills and that he could mend relations with Congress.
He was Director of the from 1999-1902-01 to 2003. A 2003 Wall Street Journal article suggested that he may have lost his chance at reappointment for failing to support dynamic scoring, a practice inspired by supply-side economics.
On July 28, 2004 National Aeronautics and Space Administration Administrator Sean O"Keefe selected him to serve on National Aeronautics and Space Administration"s Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel (ASAP). In February 2005, he was briefly mentioned as a possible National Aeronautics and Space Administration Administrator.
Crippen still works in the private sector, largely focusing on healthcare issues, and does some public speaking.
In a 2005 Washington Post editorial, Crippen called for increased use of technology to reduce healthcare costs, altering the service structure by delegating more services to nurses and other hospital staff, and studying the subset of the Medicare population which uses the majority of the resources. Crippen serves on the board of directors of Eclipsys. In early 2011, Crippen was named executive director of the National Governors Association.
When Baker became President Reagan"s Chief of Staff in 1987, Crippen followed Baker to the White House as Deputy Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy from 1987-1988 and Domestic Policy Advisor and Assistant to the President for Domestic Policy from 1988-1989. After Reagan left office in 1989, Crippen turned to the private sector, as a principal of Washington Counsel (1996-1999), a law and lobbying firm. Merrill Lynch as an executive director And the Duberstein Group, a public relations consulting firm, as founder and vice president
Republican leaders selected Crippen as a somewhat moderate candidate, drawing the ire of members of both parties, who sought a more ideological director He was also a member of the Stafford-Covey Return to Flight Task Group, which helped set policies to return the space shuttle to flight after the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster.