Skip to main content

Uber’s Plouffe delivers closing keynote speech at ITS America annual meeting

David Plouffe, Senior Vice President for Policy and Strategy at Uber Technologies, and widely referred to as the architect of President Barack Obama’s two presidential campaign victories, will deliver the closing keynote speech at the ITS America 25th Annual Meeting and Exposition on Wednesday, June 3, 2015.
May 1, 2015 Read time: 2 mins
David Plouffe

David Plouffe, Senior Vice President for Policy and Strategy at Uber Technologies, and widely referred to as the architect of President Barack Obama’s two presidential campaign victories, will deliver the closing keynote speech at the ITS America 25th Annual Meeting and Exposition on Wednesday, June 3, 2015.

While holding senior positions in the White House and as a close adviser to President Obama, Plouffe won plaudits for the use of technology, his message development and competitiveness.

In 2010, Plouffe was number 4 on Newsweek’s list of “New Thought Leaders,” and The Daily Beast named him as one of the “25 Smartest People of the Decade.” GQ named Plouffe in 2012 the third most powerful person in Washington.

Plouffe joined Uber, one of the nation’s fastest growing transportation technology firms last September. Since its founding in 2009, Uber has seamlessly connected millions of riders to drivers through their apps, making cities more accessible to riders and opening up an entirely new business opportunity for drivers.

ITS America announced recently that Uber had joined the ITS America Leadership Circle, a prestigious group featuring 40 private, public and academic sector organizations whose mission is to advance transportation through innovation and technology. The group recently released A Road Map for 2015 outlining six key priorities.

Related Content

  • EU traffic police chiefs welcome new focus on serious injuries in road crashes
    October 1, 2013
    Europe’s senior traffic police officers gather in Manchester today for the annual conference of Tispol, the European traffic police network. A priority will be to review the techniques that will always be effective in reducing road traffic deaths and serious injuries, and also to consider new ways of dealing with familiar challenges. The theme of the conference is ‘Improving Road Safety – Solutions that work’ and the event includes presentations from the head of road safety at the European Commission an
  • Vulnerable road users face safety problems
    May 18, 2012
    Concern is growing in Europe over the safety standards for vulnerable road users such as pedestrians, cyclists and powered two wheeler riders. A total of 169,000 pedestrians, cyclists and users of powered two-wheeled vehicles (PTW) have been killed on European roads since 2001; 15,300 of them in 2009. The figures have been published in the new Road Safety Performance Index (PIN) report and reveal a decrease in the number of deaths by 34% for pedestrians and cyclists, and just 18% for PTW riders compared to
  • Scooter pioneer Bird Global files for bankruptcy in US court
    December 20, 2023
    Bird Canada and Bird Europe are not part of the filing, which is part of restructuring
  • Counting the cost of road crashes
    April 10, 2017
    Annual research just released by the New Zealand Ministry of Transport estimates that the total social cost of fatal and injury crashes rose from US$2.5 billion (NZ$3.53 billion) in 2014 to US$2.6 billion (NZ$3.79 billion) in 2015. Over 300 New Zealanders lost their lives on the country’s roads last year, and about 2,500 were seriously injured. According to associate transport minister David Bennett, in 40 per cent of the crashes where people were killed or seriously injured, the driver had drunk more