The Trump administration announced on Tuesday that it is relaunching the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) by Executive Order.
The purpose of PCAST is to "provide policy recommendations on strengthening American leadership in science and technology, building the workforce of the future, and supporting foundational research and development across the country," according to a White House press release.
The council has been inactive since President Trump took office 3 years ago, Nextgov reported. The Trump administration has a history of dissolving councils. In 2017, following the white nationalist marches and attack in Charlottesville, Virginia, several CEOs resigned from 2 of Trump's economic advisory councils. In response, he eliminated both.
-Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 16, 2017
Trump's newly announced council has 2 tech executives, and a mix of people from the private sector and academia, which isn't unusual by itself. President Obama's council was also made up mostly of academics, though the Obama council also included some high profile tech figures, including Google's then-CEO Eric Schmidt and Microsoft Chief Research and Strategy Officer Craig Mundie. The sole CEO on Trump's science and tech council is H. Fisk Johnson, the head of SC Johnson and Son Inc, the privately held company that makes Raid and Drano.
President Obama also named his council much sooner after his election, in April of 2009. It's not clear why Trump's council is being announced three years into his term.
A White House spokesperson told Business Insider, "The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy has advanced important initiatives in R&D, artificial intelligence, quantum computing, ocean science, biotechnology, and more."
Here are the 7 members appointed by Trump: