Skip to main content

'New voice' Buttigieg is US transport secretary

Former presidential hopeful will succeed current incumbent Elaine Chao in January 2021
By Adam Hill December 16, 2020 Read time: 1 min
Buttigieg: 'Historic opportunity' (© Andrew Cline | Dreamstime.com)

Pete Buttigieg is to succeed Elaine Chao as US transportation secretary.

In a TV address, president-elect Joe Biden called him "a new voice with new ideas".

He described the US Department of Transportation as having "a critical mission with critical responsibilities".

"We need someone who knows how to work with state, local and federal agencies."

Biden outlined infrastructure challenges such as roads and bridges in poor repair and talked about the importance of clean energy in transport.

He said that work to combat climate change would create good jobs and that a better transportation system would increase equity.

Buttigieg would be "at the intersection of some of our most ambitious plans to build back better", Biden said.

Buttigieg himself said the new administration had a "historic opportunity".

The former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, Buttigieg had his own tilt at the Democratic nomination for president, before pulling out and endorsing Biden.

He will take up his new post when Biden is sworn in on 20 January.

Related Content

  • July 19, 2012
    Align transport infrastructure needs with ITS offerings
    Kallistratos Dionelis, General Secretary of ASECAP, ponders the absence of creativity and innovation in the road management sector. 'Traditional' road managers and ITS specialists share many of the same ultimate goals and yet, he says, a common understanding of what technology can achieve is still conspicuously absent.
  • July 19, 2012
    Align transport infrastructure needs with ITS offerings
    Kallistratos Dionelis, General Secretary of ASECAP, ponders the absence of creativity and innovation in the road management sector. 'Traditional' road managers and ITS specialists share many of the same ultimate goals and yet, he says, a common understanding of what technology can achieve is still conspicuously absent.
  • July 19, 2012
    Align transport infrastructure needs with ITS offerings
    Kallistratos Dionelis, General Secretary of ASECAP, ponders the absence of creativity and innovation in the road management sector. 'Traditional' road managers and ITS specialists share many of the same ultimate goals and yet, he says, a common understanding of what technology can achieve is still conspicuously absent.
  • June 5, 2018
    MaaS must be seamless and invisible - or forget it
    MaaS experts from around the world converged on ITS International’s MaaS Market Atlanta conference to talk about how MaaS can be implemented in the US. Andrew Bardin Williams had a front row seat. Transportation experts from around the world gathered in the US earlier this month to discuss the future of Mobility as a Service (MaaS) and how it could be deployed in the US market. While most attendees at ITS International’s MaaS Market Atlanta conference were familiar with the MaaS concept, the US’s highly