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David Simas
David Simas
from Wikipedia

David Matos Simas[1][2] (born January 5, 1970)[2][1] is an American lawyer, former government official, and a former politician. He was the President of the Obama Foundation from 2021 to 2023,[3] having previously served as its CEO from 2016 to 2021[4][5] and served in Barack Obama's administration as the White House Director of Political Affairs from 2014 to 2016.[6][7]

Key Information

Early life and education

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Simas was born and raised in Taunton, Massachusetts, the son of Portuguese American immigrant parents, António and Deolinda Simas.[2] Deolinda lost two of her fingers in a faulty machine at the silver factory where she worked when David was a child. The Portuguese immigrant lawyer who worked on the case inspired David to become a lawyer.[5] He attended Coyle and Cassidy High School and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Stonehill College.[2] He later earned a Juris Doctor from the Boston College Law School in 1995.[6]

Career

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Simas began his political career working as an intern in Senator Edward M. Kennedy's office in 1989.[8] He was later elected to the Taunton School Board in 1993 and the Taunton City Council in 1997 and 1999.[8][9] He later served as president of the council and worked as an advisor to the mayor of Taunton.[9]

After leaving the city council he served as an assistant register of deeds for the Northern district office of the Bristol County Registry of Deeds.[10] He was later elected as the new Register of Deeds of the Northern district of Bristol County in 2004.[11] He won reelection in 2006 but later resigned to accept a position in Governor Deval Patrick's administration.[11]

He formerly served as deputy general counsel to the Massachusetts House of Representatives Post Audit and Oversight Bureau and practiced law with the law firm of Gay & Gay Associates, PC.[9][1]

He worked as deputy chief of staff to Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick from 2007 until 2009. In 2009, he joined the Obama White House as a deputy assistant to the president, working under Senior Advisor David Axelrod.

He worked as director of opinion research for President Obama's 2012 re-election campaign and then served as a liaison between the president and Democratic officials for two and a half years.[12]

Simas was appointed CEO of the Obama Foundation in December 2016.[4] In 2025, Simas was a fellow at the USC Center for the Political Future. [13]

Personal life

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Simas married his high school sweetheart, Shauna. They have two daughters and live in Los Angeles, CA.[2][5]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
David Simas is an American attorney, political advisor, and nonprofit executive who served as Assistant to the President and Director of the Office of Political Strategy and Outreach in the from 2014 to 2017. Born to Portuguese immigrant parents in , Simas graduated from with a B.A. in and earned a J.D. from . His early career included serving as Bristol County Register of Deeds and as Deputy to Governor before ascending to senior roles in the Obama presidential campaign and administration, where he advised on political outreach and strategy. After leaving the , Simas led the as Chief Executive Officer from 2016 and later as President until 2023, overseeing initiatives to advance and inspired by former President Obama. In this capacity, he directed the foundation's efforts to build the Obama Presidential in and expand global programs. Simas currently serves as Managing Director of Research and Impact at , focusing on research-driven initiatives for social and policy impact, and holds a fellowship at the USC for the Political Future.

Early life and education

Upbringing and family background

David Simas was born around 1970 in , to Antonio and Deolinda Simas, Portuguese immigrants who worked as factory laborers in the city's manufacturing sector. As first-generation Portuguese-Americans, the family resided in Portuguese Village, a working-class neighborhood characterized by modest housing, including Simas's childhood two-bedroom home where predominated over English until his entry into school. His parents possessed limited formal education, neither completing beyond the fourth grade, and supported the household through blue-collar employment amid Taunton's economy, which relied on silverware and other manufacturing industries facing decline from factory closures and deindustrialization trends in New England during the 1970s and 1980s. In 1974, his mother Deolinda sustained a severe injury at Sheridan Silversmiths, losing two fingers in an iron press malfunction, underscoring the hazardous conditions of local labor that defined many immigrant families' realities in the era. Despite these challenges, Simas later recalled a stable upbringing without hunger, supported by familial emphasis on books and affection within the tight-knit Portuguese community.

Academic and early professional preparation

David Simas earned a B.A. in from in , graduating in 1992. He subsequently attended , receiving a J.D. in 1995. During law school, Simas entered local politics by winning election to the Taunton School Committee in 1993. After graduation, he opened a practice in his hometown of and worked as to the . In 1997, he was elected to the Taunton City Council, serving in municipal governance roles that involved policy oversight and community engagement. These positions marked his initial foray into elected office and legislative support, building practical experience in Democratic operations at the local and state levels.

Career

Pre-Obama political roles

David Simas entered local in , where he was elected to the Taunton School Committee in 1993 at the age of 23, following a campaign that involved with family members and community outreach. This role marked his initial foray into public service, emphasizing direct voter engagement in a working-class district. Simas advanced to the Taunton City Council, securing election in 1997 and 1999, during which he served as council president. In this capacity, he focused on municipal issues, including organizing a large-scale community protest in Taunton to advocate for expanded -language media access, reflecting his roots in a Portuguese immigrant family and commitment to local advocacy. Following his city council tenure, Simas was elected Register of Deeds for Northern Bristol County in the mid-2000s, a position involving oversight of property records and in the region encompassing . From this elected office, he supported Deval Patrick's 2006 gubernatorial campaign, leveraging local networks to aid the Democratic nominee's successful bid. In early 2007, shortly after Patrick's as Massachusetts governor, Simas was appointed deputy , where he handled operational and strategic duties, including serving as a debate preparation partner during Patrick's transition period. This state-level role provided experience in executive governance and policy coordination within Democratic infrastructure, building on his prior local electoral successes.

Service in the Obama administration

David Simas joined the Obama administration in 2009 as Deputy Assistant to the President, collaborating with senior advisors and on strategic messaging and outreach. In this capacity, he contributed to integrating polling data with policy communications, emphasizing empirical voter insights to refine narratives amid economic recovery efforts following the . From 2011 to 2012, Simas served as Director of Opinion Research for Obama for America, overseeing polling, focus groups, and data analytics that informed campaign strategy. His team conducted extensive surveys tracking voter sentiment in key states, enabling targeted resource allocation that correlated with Obama's re-election victory on November 6, 2012, securing 51.1% of the popular vote and 332 electoral votes. This data-driven approach integrated with ground operations, though subsequent analyses highlighted potential over-reliance on predictive models that underestimated shifts in dynamics observed in later cycles. Following the 2012 election, Simas returned to the in January 2013 as Assistant to the President and Deputy Senior Advisor for Operations, managing operational coordination for political strategy. In January 2014, he was appointed Director of the Office of Political Strategy and Outreach, serving until 2016, where he directed efforts to mobilize Democratic base support and counter Republican opposition. During this period, Simas played a key role in promoting the amid its October 2013 website launch failures, which affected initial enrollments and drew public criticism; internal communications from Simas emphasized long-term benefits like coverage expansions for 20 million individuals by 2016, despite early technical setbacks. Empirical data later showed enrollment stabilizing, with 12.7 million sign-ups by the end of the 2016 open enrollment period, though causal factors included mandatory penalties and subsidies rather than seamless rollout alone.

Leadership at the Obama Foundation

David Simas was appointed of the on December 19, 2016, following his service in the Obama . In this role, he oversaw the planning and development of the Obama Presidential Center in Chicago's Jackson Park, including securing project management teams in April 2017 and navigating approvals from the Chicago Plan Commission in May 2018 and the City Council in October 2018 with a 48-0 vote. Simas directed programs, such as the Obama Foundation Leaders initiative, which trained young adults aged 18-25 in community problem-solving, and the Obama Foundation Scholars program at , selecting cohorts of 11-12 international leaders annually starting in 2018 for policy-focused studies. He also expanded global efforts, including a 2018 program to support 200 emerging African leaders through one-year civic training. In 2021, Simas was elevated to President of the Foundation, guiding operations amid the while advancing the Presidential Center's construction, which by 2023 had exceeded $600 million in costs against initial estimates. Under his leadership, the organization reported program outputs like multiple scholar cohorts and youth workforce training via partnerships, such as the Obama Youth Jobs Corps launched with Urban Alliance for high schoolers, though comprehensive independent evaluations of long-term civic impact remain limited, with self-reported metrics emphasizing inspiration over empirically validated societal changes. grew significantly, with 2022 contributions reaching $311.4 million—a record driven by major donors including and CEO —supporting an operating budget that included Simas's compensation of $695,712 that year. Simas departed the Foundation in April 2023 after seven years, having steered legacy-building activities focused on Obama-era themes of and democracy promotion, primarily through aligned philanthropic networks rather than diverse empirical benchmarks for broad efficacy. While initiatives enrolled hundreds in targeted programs, critics have noted the Foundation's outputs often prioritize narrative continuity over rigorous, cross-ideological validation of scalable civic outcomes, reflecting institutional biases in donor-driven nonprofits.

Post-Foundation professional engagements

Following his tenure at the Obama Foundation, which concluded in 2023, David Simas joined Emerson Collective as Managing Director of Research and Impact. In this capacity, he oversees the development of in-depth research projects aimed at generating actionable insights, with a focus on distributing findings to influence policy, education, and civic initiatives. Simas's efforts at emphasize intersections of technology, society, and governance, including analyses of artificial intelligence's implications for democratic processes and frameworks for "civic coding" in . On July 22, 2024, he delivered the opening keynote at the WeAreDevelopers World Congress in , , where he outlined "Civic Coding" as a to align technological innovation with democratic values, urging developers to prioritize societal safeguards in AI and digital tools. He has also contributed to wellbeing-focused research, supporting initiatives that integrate empirical data on human flourishing into policy recommendations. In September 2024, Simas engaged in public discourse on electoral dynamics at the Concordia Annual Summit, discussing key insights into the U.S. presidential election alongside Matthew Swift, president and CEO of Concordia. These activities reflect Emerson Collective's mission under founder to drive impact through evidence-based strategies in areas like and , without direct involvement in partisan advocacy.

Controversies and criticisms

2014 House Oversight subpoena defiance

In July 2014, the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, chaired by Rep. (R-CA), issued a to David Simas, director of the White House Office of Political Strategy and Outreach (OPSO), requiring his appearance for testimony on July 16 regarding the office's operations and potential violations of the . The stemmed from an investigation into whether OPSO, reinstated by President Obama in January 2014, was improperly coordinating fundraising and get-out-the-vote efforts with allied Democratic organizations, activities prohibited for federal employees under the . On July 15, 2014, W. Neil Eggleston informed Issa that Simas was absolutely immune from the , citing longstanding executive branch positions on testimonial immunity for senior presidential advisers in their official capacities. Simas did not appear at the scheduled hearing, prompting the to proceed without his and later issue a resolution on July 24 rejecting the immunity claim as an overreach that undermined . The committee voted 19-14 along party lines on July 25, 2014, to formally reject the White House's assertion of immunity, arguing it set a allowing the executive branch to evade for alleged politicization of federal resources. No contempt proceedings or judicial enforcement followed, leaving the dispute unresolved and exemplifying broader tensions between Republican-led congressional probes into executive actions and White House assertions of privilege during the Obama administration.

Scrutiny over White House political operations

David Simas served as director of the White House Office of Political Strategy and Outreach (OPSO), established in January 2014 to coordinate policy implementation with external advocates and Democratic allies ahead of the 2014 midterm elections. Critics, including House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Chairman Darrell Issa, alleged that OPSO blurred the lines between legitimate policy outreach and partisan political activities by leveraging federal resources to bolster Democratic electoral prospects, such as through event coordination and stakeholder engagements that effectively served campaign objectives. In a March 2014 letter to White House Chief of Staff Denis McDonough, Issa highlighted specific concerns over OPSO's interactions with the Democratic National Committee (DNC) and advocacy groups in 2013–2014, claiming these efforts improperly advanced partisan goals under the guise of policy promotion, potentially violating the Hatch Act's prohibitions on using government positions for electoral influence. For instance, OPSO facilitated outreach events and messaging strategies that aligned administration policy wins, like Affordable Care Act (ACA) implementation, with Democratic turnout efforts, despite the ACA's public rollout failures including website crashes and enrollment shortfalls that contradicted internal administration optimism. Such activities were critiqued in congressional records for embedding electoral strategy into core executive functions, prioritizing midterm gains over neutral governance. The U.S. Office of Special Counsel (OSC), tasked with Hatch Act enforcement, reviewed OPSO operations and concluded in July 2014 that the office appeared to function within legal bounds, finding no evidence of prohibited partisan activity by federal employees. White House defenders maintained that OPSO's role in synchronizing policy advocacy with allied groups was a standard coordination mechanism, not electoral interference. Nonetheless, the scrutiny underscored a broader normalization of partisan priorities within administrative operations, where policy outreach causally reinforced electoral embedding, as evidenced by OPSO's explicit midterm focus despite formal separations of duties.

Public influence and views

Expressed political philosophies

Simas has emphasized as fundamental to the functioning of pluralistic democracies, arguing that it transcends mere activity and directly sustains democratic processes. In a December 2016 address at , he advocated for "true listening" to understand the underlying motivations of voters across ideological lines, rather than categorizing them dismissively as supporters of specific candidates, to mitigate polarization. This approach incorporates data-driven insights, such as findings revealing widespread public skepticism toward factual reporting, to inform strategies for bridging divides. He has critiqued the role of technology and in exacerbating divisions by fostering echo chambers that undermine shared notions of truth, stating that environments where "nothing is true... everything is true" erode objectivity. Simas's outlook reflects an unrelenting positivity, particularly in assessments of policy outcomes, as evidenced by his assertion that the improved "by every single measure" during the Obama administration. Critics from conservative perspectives have questioned the efficacy of empathy-focused strategies like those Simas promotes, viewing them as potentially overlooking entrenched structural incentives that perpetuate partisan entrenchment over principled reasoning. Empirical trends in U.S. civic participation underscore these doubts: despite initiatives aimed at renewal, overall engagement has declined over decades, with volunteer hours per participant continuing to drop even as formal rebounds post-COVID-19, and voting turnout falling 20% from to levels. Such data suggest that appeals to cross-divide may yield limited measurable gains in countering broader erosion of community involvement.

Recent public appearances and commentary

In July 2024, Simas delivered the opening keynote address at the WeAreDevelopers World Congress in , , titled "Civic Coding: A Framework for Democratic Tech," in which he argued that developers' code not only builds products but also influences democratic structures by embedding values into technological infrastructure. He further participated in a on "The Impact of Technology on Democracy," highlighting empirical correlations between rising video consumption and shifts in voter mobilization patterns. These sessions, attended by thousands of developers, underscored potential risks of AI-driven polarization without corresponding safeguards for . Simas appeared at the Concordia Annual Summit on September 24, 2024, for a fireside chat on "Key Insights on the Upcoming U.S. Elections," where he assessed the competitive dynamics of the 2024 presidential race, including projections and the influence of economic indicators on swing-state outcomes. The discussion, moderated by Concordia's Matthew Swift, drew on Emerson Collective's ongoing research into public sentiment data, though it avoided direct endorsements amid a landscape marked by institutional distrust evidenced by stagnant trust metrics in national surveys. At the Planetiers World Gathering in Aveiro, Portugal, on October 28, 2024, Simas participated in a fireside chat titled "Finding Equilibrium: Navigating Personal and Societal Balance in a Shifting World," focusing on strategies for mitigating societal polarization through evidence-based approaches to sustainability and civic engagement. He linked these themes to broader voter behavior research at Emerson Collective, noting how unchecked ideological divides exacerbate governance challenges without addressing underlying causal factors like economic dislocation. Post-2024 U.S. elections, Simas reflected on campaign messaging efficacy in an Edelman Trust Institute podcast, attributing Democratic shortfalls to failures in connecting policy substance to voter-perceived realities, based on Emerson Collective's analysis of polling aggregates and focus group data. This commentary indirectly critiqued populist appeals—such as those associated with Trump-era platforms—by emphasizing the need for data-driven narratives over reactive polarization, though reception remained limited, with event videos garnering under 200 views on public platforms. Such interventions highlight ongoing elite efforts to recalibrate discourse, yet empirical trends in declining institutional confidence suggest limited causal impact on root-level public skepticism.

References

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