From Rob Sanchez' newsletter:

<<<<< JOB DESTRUCTION NEWSLETTER No. 2010 -- 4/22/2009 >>>>>

In case you haven't heard, Obama appointed Aneesh Chopra to be the nation's
Chief Technology Officer (CTO). Now we have two Indian-Americans in two
positions that will make decisions about which government jobs are
outsourced to India, and which ones are displaced by H-1Bs. The other one
of course is Chief Information Officer (CIO) Vivek Kundra, who has been
mentioned several times in this newsletter. If Kundra's name doesn't ring a
bell go here to read about him:

http://www.capsweb.org/content.php?id=624&menu_id=8
Obama's "Kunundrum", By Rob Sanchez

I'm not sure why President Obama is bent on appointing Indians to key
technology positions so much. In politics it's always a good idea to follow
the money trail, and doing so might help to explain that Obama's
prejudicial hiring practices might have a lot to do with the enormous
amounts of cash and political influence that India is wielding in
Washington DC. Or, perhaps Obama just feels that non-Indians don't have the
right genomes to handle technological issues. It's an attitude that many
policy makers seem to have nowadays. If you can think of a better reason
for Obama's most recent appointment, then let me in on it.

The most likely alternative explanation for Obama's hiring behavior is that
he is cooperating with India's desire to plant their shills strategically
in places that will help them to take over our country's technological
infra-stucture. If that sounds like a far fetched conspiracy, keep reading
while I try to convince you that what is happening could turn into an
international conspiracy and scandal.

<<<<<>>>>>

These are just a few of the reasons that everyone should be concerned that
Chopra and Kundra are now the nation's new CIO and CTO:

* These two positions aren't trivial. Chopra and Kundra will have the
decision making authority to throw billions of dollars wherever they want.
They will also have a major role in determining which technology jobs are
outsourced to India, and which Americans will lose their jobs to H-1Bs from
India. Of course that will also give them power to determine which U.S.
tech companies will survive. They will also make decisions about our
education system even though neither one of them have technical career
backgrounds. Folks, this ain't good!

* All of you know how tough it is to get jobs. Employers nowadays
scrutinize everything about your education, experience, who you worked for
etc. You could meet 9 out of 10 requirements and still they won't hire you
because you didn't have the newest version of a technical skill they claim
they need.

So, how come Obama hired a CTO that has no technical experience at all?
Neither Chopra or Kundra are career technologists (although Kundra did get
a degree in IT, psychology, and political science). Chopra never received
an education in science, technology, engineering, or math. Chopra probably
doesn't know the difference between a transistor and a transformer, an
Apple and a PC, and he definitely has never written one line of computer
code. Chopra's claim to technical virtuosity is that he got a Masters in
Public Policy from Harvard University.

So, why did Obama shun the technical giants of Silicon Valley to hire these
unqualified cronies to lead our nation's technology? Could it be that most
of those that built Silicon Valley were non-Indian?

* Speaking of cronies, these two are very bad examples of political
cronyism in action. While Kundra served in Washington DC as the chief
technology officer (CTO), Chopra was Virginia?s Secretary of Technology.
They were friends and business partners, and they both worked very hard to
make sure that lucrative government contracts were sent offshore to India.
There are other connections -- like for instance Aneesh Chopra is a Harvard
project partner with Vivek Wadhwa. I won't dwell on Wadhwa in this
newsletter since I have mentioned him dozens of times before, and because I
have mixed feelings about who's side he is on. Go to this web page to see
one of the many Wadhwa projects that Chopra was involved in. It's not hard
to find them using by Google.

http://www.soc.duke.edu/GlobalEngineeri ... uthors.php

* TechAmerica hailed President Barack Obama for appointing Chopra. They
call it a "breakthrough for technology policy," In case you haven't heard
of TechAmerica -- they are a merger between some of the worst H-1B and
offshoring lobbyists in the history of the attack on American middle class
technology workers: AeA (formerly the American Electronics Association),
and Harris Miller's Information Technology Association of America (ITAA).
It's safe to assume that anybody they endorse is a champion of H-1B and
offshoring.

* Mr. Aneesh Chopra is hailed as a leader of the Indian American community
and an active member of the USINPAC Leadership Committee. USINPAC is the
obvious connection all of these guys have to the big money bags in India.
If international conspiracy is involved, USINPAC is the U.S. command
center, while NASSCOM and CII in India are puppet masters. Chopra and
Kundra are their prized plants.

* Aneesh Chopra may not call himself a lobbyist for Indian offshoring, but
that's what he is. Read this, but don't be surprised:

Not surprisingly, he is an avid supporter of opportunities for
globalization and was well received when he led a Virginia
trade delegation to India in 2006.

*** If none of those reasons sway you, consider this: chances are Chopra is
involved in the fraud and bid rigging scheme being investigated by the FBI.
It's just a matter of time before Kundra is connected with the two accused
criminals Sushil Bansal and Yusuf Acar, and next in line would be Chopra.
Inviting Chopra to the administration just gives the FBI another big target
to investigate. If the FBI fingers either Kundra or Chopra, and it may be
just a matter of time before that happens, Obama is going to have a scandal
of epic proportions on his hands. Obama is taking a considerable political
risk by allowing these two to be associated with his administration. The
question is why?


REFERENCES:


http://www.usinpac.com/
US India Political Action Committee

http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_off ... t-Obama-Di
scusses-Efforts-to-Reform-Spending-Government-Waste-Names-Chief-Performance-
Officer-and-Chief-Technology-Officer/

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co ... 2009041801
980.html
Obama Picks Technology And Performance Officers

http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/04/17/ob ... ames-virgi
nias-secretary-of-technology-as-cto/#comment-2704047
Obama Spurns Silicon Valley Vets, Names Virginia?s Secretary of
Technology As CTO

http://www.techamerica.org/Pressroom/ch ... 041809.cfm
Tech Industry Hails Choice for CTO

http://www.technology.virginia.gov/Offi ... praBio.cfm
Aneesh Paul Chopra, Secretary of Technology, biography

http://www.usa.gov/Federal_Employees/US ... _0626.html
DotGov Spotlight: Aneesh P. Chopra, Secretary of Technology, Virginia

http://in.sys-con.com/node/164315
USINPAC Congratulates Mr. Aneesh Chopra for Being Appointed by
Governor-Elect Kaine as the Secretary of Technology for the Commonwealth of
Virginia


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http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_off ... t-Obama-Di
scusses-Efforts-to-Reform-Spending-Government-Waste-Names-Chief-Performance-
Officer-and-Chief-Technology-Officer/
THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

EMBARGOED UNTIL 6:00 AM ET, SATURDAY,
April 18, 2009

WEEKLY ADDRESS: President Obama Discusses Efforts to Reform Spending,
Government Waste; Names Chief Performance Officer and Chief Technology
Officer


WASHINGTON -- In his weekly address, President Barack Obama announced that
Jeffrey Zients, a CEO, management consultant and entrepreneur, will join
the administration as the Chief Performance Officer, and that Aneesh
Chopra, Virginia?s Secretary of Technology, will serve as the Chief
Technology Officer. Zients will also serve as Deputy Director for
Management of the Office of Management and Budget. He will work to
streamline processes, cut costs, and find the best practices throughout the
government. As Chief Technology Officer, Chopra will promote technological
innovation to help the country meet its goals from job creation, to
reducing health care costs, to protecting the homeland. Together with
Chief Information Officer Vivek Kundra, they will help give all Americans a
government that is effective, efficient, and transparent.

President Obama announced his appointments of the following individuals
today:

Jeffrey D. Zients
Zients has twenty years of business experience as a CEO, management
consultant and entrepreneur with a deep understanding of business strategy,
process reengineering and financial management. He served as CEO and
Chairman of the Advisory Board Company and Chairman of the Corporate
Executive Board. These firms are leading providers of performance
benchmarks and best practices across a wide range of industries.
Currently, he is the Founder and Managing Partner of Portfolio Logic, an
investment firm focused primarily on business and healthcare service
companies.

Aneesh Paul Chopra
Chopra serves as Virginia?s Secretary of Technology. He leads the
Commonwealth?s strategy to effectively leverage technology in government
reform, to promote Virginia?s innovation agenda, and to foster
technology-related economic development. Previously, he worked as Managing
Director with the Advisory Board Company, leading the firm?s Financial
Leadership Council and the Working Council for Health Plan Executives.

The full audio of the address is HERE. The video can be viewed online at
www.whitehouse.gov.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co ... 2009041801
980.html

Obama Picks Technology And Performance Officers

By Michael D. Shear and Anita Kumar
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, April 19, 2009

President Obama has named Virginia Technology Secretary Aneesh P. Chopra to
be the nation's first chief technology officer.

The president announced the choice yesterday in his weekly radio and
Internet address, adding Chopra to a small group of advisers whose aim it
is to enhance and modernize the delivery of government services.

"Aneesh will promote technological innovation to help achieve our most
urgent priorities -- from creating jobs and reducing health-care costs to
keeping our nation secure," Obama said in the address.

The president also named Jeffrey Zients, a chief executive and former
management consultant, to be his chief performance officer. The position
was initially offered to Nancy Killefer, who withdrew after questions were
raised about her payment of taxes.

Chopra, appointed by Virginia Gov. Timothy M. Kaine (D) in 2006, had been
under consideration for months for a job in the Obama administration,
including technology chief at the Department of Health and Human Services.

Chopra had put in long hours in Washington helping Obama's transition team
get him ready for his first day as president on Jan. 20. He was one of
about 50 volunteers from across the nation serving on the transition team's
policy group on technology, innovation and government reform.

Chopra did not return messages for comment. He is a former managing
director with the Advisory Board Company, a for-profit health-care think
tank serving nearly 2,500 hospitals and health systems.

Earlier this decade, Zients played a key role in luring Major League
Baseball back to Washington. In a 2004 Washington Post profile, colleagues
said that as a boss he could be direct when unhappy but never disparaging.

Zients is the founder and managing partner of Portfolio Logic, an
investment firm focused primarily on business and health-care service
companies.

Chopra and Zients will work with Chief Information Officer Vivek Kundra,
formerly chief technology officer for the District, to make government work
more efficiently. When Kundra's job was announced, the chief technology
officer job was mentioned, but no exact job description was given. But
sources said the chief technology officer may focus more on overall
technology policy while the chief information officer handles day-to-day
spending and operations within agency projects.

"The goal is to give all Americans a voice in their government and ensure
that they know exactly how we're spending their money -- and can hold us
accountable for the results," Obama said.

The president also announced that he will ask all of his Cabinet members to
provide specific proposals for how they plan to cut their budgets in an
attempt to trim the cost of government.

Obama is under pressure to reduce government waste as he leads an
unprecedented increase in overall federal spending in a bid to spark an
economic recovery.

In his address, he reiterated his pledge to examine the federal budget
"line by line" to find instances of waste. He said that he will soon
eliminate programs that are deemed unnecessary.

"In this effort, there will be no sacred cows, and no pet projects. All
across America, families are making hard choices, and it's time their
government did the same," he said.


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http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/04/17/ob ... ames-virgi
nias-secretary-of-technology-as-cto/#comment-2704047

Obama Spurns Silicon Valley Vets, Names Virginia?s Secretary of
Technology As CTO
99 Commentsby Jason Kincaid on April 17, 2009

President Obama will be naming Aneesh Paul Chopra as his choice for CTO
during tomorrow?s weekly address, as first reported by the Washington
Post and confirmed in this press release posted to the White House?s
official web site. Chopra currently serves as Virginia?s Secretary of
Technology, and has previous acted as the Managing Director for the
Advisory Board Company, where he advised executives on health care
operations.

According to Virginia?s state website, Chopra was recently recognized by
Government Technology Magazine?s for excellent ?use of technology to
improve government?, and he was awarded Healthcare Information and
Management Systems Society?s 2007 State Leadership Advocacy Award.

The choice comes after months of speculation, during which many of Silicon
Valley?s most prominent figures, including Steve Ballmer, Jeff Bezos,
Bill Gates, and Eric Schmidt (among many others) were named as possible
candidates. Whether or not some of these people actually wanted the
position is another story, but obviously President Obama chose a different
route.

According to this article published in the Washington Post in 2005, Chopra
was not a career technologist before he became Virginia?s Secretary of
Technology, but he has extensive experience in policy making. He also
co-created a venture fund called Avatar Capital, which invested $11 million
in 18 companies (though these figures are likely dated).

While he may not be a lifelong coder, Chopra has previously stated that his
"primary understanding is from customer need, not bits and bytes". During
his time as Virginia?s SoT, he drove the state?s partnership with
Google to become sitemap compliant, and also partnered with Cox and Comcast
to broadcast free GED classes to Virginian citizens.

According to President Obama?s upcoming remarks, Chopra will "help
achieve our most urgent priorities ? from creating jobs and reducing
health care costs to keeping our nation secure. He will work closely with
Chief Performance Officer Jeffrey Zients (also being named tomorrow) and
recently-named CIO Vivek Kundra.

For another perspective on the news, check out Tim O?Reilly?s post Why
Aneesh Chopra is a Great Choice for Federal CTO.


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http://www.techamerica.org/Pressroom/ch ... 041809.cfm

Tech Industry Hails Choice for CTO


Washington, DC (April 18, 2009) - Calling the move a "breakthrough for
technology policy," TechAmerica hailed President Barack Obama for tapping
Aneesh Chopra to serve as the nation's first Chief Technology Officer
(CTO).

TechAmerica President Phil Bond said: "The Administration started with a
strong job description for fostering innovation in this country and then
went out and got the right person for the job. This President will be able
to view a whole range of important decisions through a paradigm of
innovation. The position and the priorities are the right ones: A direct
report to the President focused on policies that help create new markets,
more jobs and better government through technology and innovation.

"As Secretary of Technology for the Commonwealth of Virginia, Aneesh is
well known to the nation's technology community. He has championed policies
that enable better government and a stronger economy through use of
technology. Notably, his role in Virginia placed him in leadership in the
state with the highest concentration of tech workers, and a state that
added tech jobs for four consecutive years as of 2007," Bond continued,
citing TechAmerica's Cyberstates 2009 report, which provides 2008 national
tech trends on employment as well as the latest data on state employment,
wages, establishments, payroll, and research and development.

"Aneesh is singularly gifted in communicating the power and potential of
technology to improve government, national security and our economy. His
energy is boundless. It is a superb choice."

AeA and ITAA merged on January 1, 2009, to create TechAmerica.

- # # # -

About TechAmerica
TechAmerica is the leading voice for the U.S. technology industry, the
driving force behind productivity growth and jobs creation in the United
States and the foundation of the global innovation economy. Representing
approximately 1,500 member companies of all sizes from the public and
commercial sectors of the economy, it is the industry's largest advocacy
organization and is dedicated to helping members' top and bottom lines. It
is also the technology industry's only grassroots-to-global advocacy
network, with offices in state capitals around the United States,
Washington, D.C., Europe (Brussels) and Asia (Beijing). TechAmerica was
formed by the merger of AeA (formerly the American Electronics
Association), the Cyber Security Industry Alliance (CSIA), the Information
Technology Association of America (ITAA) and the Government Electronics &
Information Technology Association (GEIA). Learn more at
www.techamerica.org.


++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +

http://www.technology.virginia.gov/Offi ... praBio.cfm

Aneesh Paul Chopra, Secretary of Technology

Aneesh Chopra is currently Virginia?s Fourth Secretary of Technology
serving Governor Tim Kaine. In this capacity, he leads the Commonwealth?s
strategy to effectively leverage technology in government reform, promotes
Virginia?s innovation agenda, and fosters technology-related economic
development with a special emphasis on entrepreneurship.

For the Governor, Secretary Chopra chairs the Solutions Committee of the IT
Investment Board, the Effectiveness and Efficiency Committee of the Council
on Virginia?s Future, and co-chairs the Healthcare IT Council with Health
Secretary Marilyn Tavenner.

Secretary Chopra was awarded the Healthcare Information and Management
Systems Society?s (HIMSS) 2007 State Leadership Advocacy Award, and was
also recently named to Government Technology magazine?s Top 25 in their
Doers, Dreamers, and Drivers issue, which recognizes the 25 individuals
they believe help set the standard for using technology to improve
government.

Prior to joining Governor Kaine?s cabinet, Aneesh served as Managing
Director with the Advisory Board Company, a publicly-traded health care
think tank serving nearly 2,500 hospitals and health systems. He led the
firm?s Financial Leadership Council and the Working Council for Health
Plan Executives, as well as assisted the launch of the firm?s first
business intelligence software solution, Compass.

Aneesh graduated with a Masters in Public Policy from Harvard
University?s John F. Kennedy School of Government in 1997. He graduated
with a B.A. from The Johns Hopkins University in 1994.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +

http://www.usa.gov/Federal_Employees/US ... _0626.html

DotGov Spotlight: Aneesh P. Chopra, Secretary of Technology, Virginia


Aneesh Chopra, with his ready smile and gentle manner, is immediately
identifiable as a pleasant fellow. His face glows when he talks about his
new baby daughter. At a recent American Council for Technology conference
in Richmond, he agreeably delayed his keynote speech to accommodate another
speaker.

The glow of the spotlight, however, reveals a public servant with a very
large presence in Virginia and with apparent great potential to have an
impact on government nationwide.

Having not quite reached middle age, Aneesh Chopra has already accomplished
more than many of us in our careers. A graduate of Johns Hopkins University
in public health, with a Masters degree from the Kennedy School of
Government at Harvard, he has been a venture capitalist, managing director
of a large healthcare think tank, appointee of two governors to high-level
committees, and the elected head of groups of entrepreneurs.

In 2006, despite his lack of formal IT training, he was appointed as the
Commonwealth of Virginia's Secretary of Technology at age 33. He was
expected to "expand our internal use of technology to better serve our
citizens" and "effectively promote Virginia's business-friendly climate to
technology companies," Governor Tim Kaine said in announcing the
appointment.

Chopra is the first person of Indian heritage to serve in the Virginia
Cabinet. Well-connected in the Washington-area Indian community, he has
served as co-president of The Indus Entrepreneurs-Washington, DC Chapter.
TiE-DC is part of a global organization committed to innovation and
business ties between the United States and India, which claims to have
created $250 billion in wealth by encouraging start-up businesses.

Not surprisingly, he is an avid supporter of opportunities for
globalization and was well received when he led a Virginia trade delegation
to India in 2006. He is sensitive to "what's happening to e-governance
around the world that can be imported to help us," and poised to help find
ways to benefit the state. "We should look to global markets for scale and
bring it back to Virginia for marginal costs," he says.

An entrepreneur himself, he is co-founder of Avatar Capital, an $11 million
venture capital network investment fund that invested in 18 start-ups
during the dot-com boom. Although some of those ventures never took off,
his interest in entrepreneurship remains strong.

At the Advisory Board Company, a publicly traded health care think tank
serving nearly 2,500 hospitals and health systems, he helped launch the
company's first technology-based product. It married a strong business
intelligence platform with a consortium of hospitals willing to share their
revenue analytics. In less than a year, this collaborative model attracted
nearly 150 members willing to pay six-figure annual fees for
business-intelligence capabilities. It still serves him as a model of the
exceptional achievement that is possible through consortium-building.

It was his link to Indian-American technology entrepreneurs -- business
associates of former Governor Mark Warner -- that brought Aneesh Chopra to
government. Warner appointed him to Virginia's Board of Medical Assistance
Services, to the state's Electronic Health Records Task Force, and to the
Southern Technology Council, a 14-state regional, technology-based,
economic development organization, which he eventually co-chaired.

Aneesh Chopra's wide range of accomplishments enables him to see the big
picture and envision how to bring technology to bear to solve the state's
pressing problems. He has a knack for bringing business, technology and
program expertise together in an analytical approach to thorny government
problems.

While he admits to having little knowledge of the inner workings of
information technology systems, he says he is "a geek who likes
technological devices." More importantly, he understands how to assess the
capabilities of new technologies and how they can be applied to advance
program objectives. "I focus on the root cause of the business problems
that we are trying to solve and then seek the best technology approach to
achieve my objective. It's not about automation, it's about value."

Chopra views innovative technology and Virginia's reputation as a
technology-friendly state as essentials for economic development. He often
speaks about ways to use technology as a tool for economic development --
and not just in the sense of attracting high-tech industry to the state,
but also to improve the lives of its citizens. "There is a global call for
innovations to service the world's poor profitably," he says. "Why can't
service-sector globalization lift up Virginia's poor?"

He believes Virginia can tap into the passion of engineering students in
vocational-technical schools to "turbo-charge" their careers and the
technical vocation field. "This is where I'll be spending my efforts in the
future," he says. He also wants to improve training for state employees to
help them develop new skill sets and to create an environment of
interoperability and collaboration.

The Secretary of Technology is in the forefront of Virginia's efforts to
expand broadband service to reach businesses in the rural areas of the
state, and proud of the public/private partnerships (with CGI and Northrop
Grumman) to implement an enterprise applications program and improve the
state IT infrastructure that together will create over 700 jobs in the
southwest region of the state.

Chopra is excited about the potential in supporting companies exploring
emerging technologies such as nanotechnology and biotechnology, but he
lights up when he talks about improving government by encouraging
innovation.

In April, he entered an agreement with Google that will make government
information more accessible to search engines -- particularly data in the
state's many databases, e.g., licensing records, consumer complaints and
financial transactions. One of four states to adopt this partnering
strategy, Virginia is now working with Michigan and Oregon to share its
experience, insights and lessons learned.

"We need to create an environment in which our contractors create features
that are shareable with other states. Why the heck are we all developing
our own systems?" he asks.

With his collaborative instincts, enthusiasm, credentials, experience, and
willingness to push the boundaries of possibility, Aneesh Chopra is leading
the way in innovative technology practices and applications. The IT
community in both the public and private sectors would do well to keeps its
eyes on the Commonwealth of Virginia.


++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +

http://in.sys-con.com/node/164315

USINPAC Congratulates Mr. Aneesh Chopra for Being Appointed by
Governor-Elect Kaine as the Secretary of Technology for the Commonwealth of
Virginia

WASHINGTON, Dec. 15 /PRNewswire/ -- Governor-Elect Tim Kaine of Virginia
has appointed Mr. Aneesh Chopra, a leader of the Indian American community
and an active member of the USINPAC Leadership Committee, as the first
Indian American Secretary of Technology for the Commonwealth of Virginia.
USINPAC congratulates Mr. Chopra on his appointment.

Governor-Elect Tim Kaine commenting on his appointment of Aneesh Chopra as
Secretary of Technology said, "I am proud to appoint Aneesh Chopra as
Secretary of Technology. The opportunity to make an appointment with the
historic distinction this one holds is truly an honor. I look forward to
working with Aneesh and know that the people of the Commonwealth will be
well- served by his inclusion in my cabinet."

"The appointment of Aneesh Chopra as Secretary of Technology is a milestone
achievement for the Indian American community," said Sanjay Puri, Chairman
of USINPAC and a member of the Governor-Elect's Transition Team which
recommends individuals to serve in the Kaine administration.

"Mr. Chopra's appointment is a direct result of the Indian American
community being actively involved in local Virginia politics," Mr. Puri
continued, "and this is one of the missions of USINPAC and a model that
USINPAC will follow in order to urge the appointment of Indian Americans
throughout the country."

In fact, USINPAC successfully used this model in 2004 for Steve Rao,
Information Technology Advisory Board for the State of North Carolina. As
Mr. Rao said, "USINPAC is an outstanding organization which helped me reach
out and share my vision with leaders in North Carolina. My appointment was
a result of the hard work and efforts of USINPAC, an outstanding
organization."

About his new appointment, Mr. Chopra said, "I am honored to serve
Governor-Elect Tim Kaine as his Secretary of Technology. In addition, I
thank Mr. Puri and USINPAC for working tirelessly to bring about my
appointment, and I commend them for the work they are doing on behalf of
the Indian American community."

Mr. Chopra is currently the Managing Director of the Advisory Board Company
which advises 2,500 health systems and medical centers. Mr. Chopra
graduated with a BA from Johns Hopkins University and a Masters in Public
Policy from Harvard University. Mr. Chopra was also appointed by Governor
Warner to serve on Virginia's Board of Medical Regents.

About USINPAC

USINPAC is a united, strong and clear voice representing the Indian
American community on Capitol Hill, the White House and the State Capitols.
We promote issues that are shaped by the emerging concerns of our
community. Our mission is to ensure effective representation on issues of
concern to Indian Americans. To that end, we provide bipartisan support to
candidates for public office who address the community's concerns. For
additional information about USINPAC please visit the website at
http://www.usinpac.com/.

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