Experts

Chris Lu

Fast Facts

  • U.S. ambassador to the United Nations for management and reform in the Biden Administration
  • Deputy secretary of labor in the Obama Administration
  • White House cabinet secretary and assistant to President Obama
  • Executive director, Obama-Biden Transition Project
  • Expertise on foreign policy, management of complex organizations, labor and workforce issues, presidential transitions

Areas Of Expertise

  • Foreign Affairs
  • Domestic Affairs
  • Jobs and Economy
  • Governance
  • Congress
  • Politics
  • The Presidency

Chris Lu is the James R. Schlesinger Distinguished Professor at the University of Virginia's Miller Center. During a public service career that has spanned all three branches of the federal government, Lu’s experience includes both domestic and foreign policy as well as the management of complex organizations. 

Lu has been confirmed twice by the U.S. Senate for senior-level presidential appointments. During the Biden Administration, he served as the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations for management and reform, where he led negotiations on the UN budget, coordinated oversight of UN programs, and managed cross-cutting issues, including global AI policy. 

During the second term of the Obama Administration, Lu served as the U.S. deputy secretary of labor. In this role, he was the chief operating officer of a Cabinet department with 17,000 employees and a $12 billion budget. 

From 2009 to 2013, Lu served as the White House cabinet secretary and assistant to the president, where he was the primary liaison between the White House and the federal agencies. President Obama said of Lu's service: “Through his dedication and tireless efforts, Chris has overseen one of the most stable and effective cabinets in history – a cabinet that has produced extraordinary accomplishments over the past four years.”

The proud son of immigrants, Lu is one of the highest-ranking Asian Americans ever to have served in the federal government. As the deputy secretary of the Labor Department, he was only the second Asian American in history to hold that position in a cabinet department. During the Obama Administration, Lu also co-chaired the White House Initiative on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders.

Prior to his service in the executive branch, Lu was the legislative director and acting chief of staff for then-Senator Obama. The day after Election Day 2008, he was named the executive director of the Obama-Biden transition planning team, which was widely recognized as one of the most successful presidential transitions in history.

His government experience also includes serving as the deputy chief counsel of the House Oversight Committee and a law clerk to Judge Robert E. Cowen of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.

Outside of government, Lu was a senior advisor to FiscalNote (a global AI/technology company), a senior fellow at the Miller Center from 2017 to 2021, and the co-editor of the book Triumphs and Tragedies of the Modern Congress. Lu is a graduate of Princeton University and Harvard Law School and holds an honorary doctorate from MacMurray College.

Chris Lu News Feed

"There's no time for complacency. 148 days of hard work, and we take back our country,” tweeted Chris Lu, who was a senior Obama administration official and now a senior fellow at the University of Virginia's Miller Center.
Chris Lu Washington Examiner
Senior Fellow Chris Lu is interviewed on MSNBC.
Chris Lu MSNBC
Chris Lu was White House Cabinet Secretary and then the Deputy Secretary of Labor in the Obama Administration on Biden's VP Pick.
Chris Lu SiriusXM
Senior Fellow Chris Lu is interviewed on MSNBC.
Chris Lu MSNBC
There has been growing disquiet about Section 230 on both sides of the aisle — and many liberals worry that it means hugely influential digital companies have no incentive to curb disinformation. Chris Lu, who served as White House Cabinet Secretary under former President Obama, acknowledged that he thought the legislation “needs to be reexamined.” But many figures in the tech world argue that revoking or altering Section 230 would fundamentally change the whole internet. And Lu argued that the most pressing issue was how existing rules, drawn up by the companies themselves to govern content, are applied.
Chris Lu The Hill
Chris Lu, the Cabinet secretary during Obama’s first term and the deputy secretary of labor during his second, found that such continuity helped bridge the gap between a government that can’t anticipate every scenario and the natural tendency of disasters not to follow a script. He told me that it was especially crucial that former Homeland Security Adviser John Brennan, former Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, and former FEMA Director Craig Fugate had worked together for years. “You can’t underestimate having three people managing this stuff who all know each other’s rhythms, who know the authorities they have. There is no substitute for that,” Lu said.
Chris Lu The Atlantic