fattony, you raise good points to keep the discussion grounded. I admit this discussion is an emotional one for me because I believe there's an adverse societal trend at play, marked by business schools beginning in the 1980s when they realized they could sell the MBA degree as "anyone can manage anything" to people who weren't sure what they wanted to do with their careers (I have an MBA so I am not just throwing rocks) and perpetuated by certain political-economy ideologies along the lines of "everything will be great if we can just keep public spending as low as possible - it's those damn people passionate about causes who are inevitably reckless." Reality is that being a great manager IS an important professional skill, and people passionate about causes CAN be prone to overspending. I deny neither of those things.
I actually wholeheartedly agree with you that managerial skill is key here - BUT, I worry that the current administration would choose people specifically because they are ANTI-cause. That they will strip service features, increase service intervals, reduce skilled staff, etc, to make the numbers look good.
We err if we choose someone who is blinded by their cause....and we err if we choose someone who doesn't give a shit about a cause. There's no such thing as politically neutral cost-cutting - I'm sorry, it just doesn't exist. So I would rather err toward taking care of the cause.
As for what type of background makes the best leader of an organization?
You are spot on - an RF designer or a software developer or a materials engineer would all be constituent disciplinary practitioners at Apple, and on those merits alone none would make a well-rounded CEO. But what I am suggesting is that there is a critical middle-ground of background relevance - Tim Cook being a great example: he was a promote-from-within candidate who spent YEARs as Jobs' understudy, running key operations at the company. So to generalize: someone who has expertise in getting products of Apples' nature through design, into production, and out to customers - that's a great background for an Apple CEO!
Same goes for transit: no one expects an expert in trains, or busses, or light rail specifically. But someone who knows the risks, the politics, the vendor base, and the requisite resources cold - and is passionate about the cause of transit? Why - because again, there's no such thing as neutral cost cutting. Cost control needs to be aligned with a purpose. Of course Ramirez won't be making bus schedules himself...but when it comes to shoehorning something into the budget so an underserved area gets taken care of, is he up for that? Without support from the leader, good initiatives die.
I am not against the general concept of prioritizing managerial competence.
I am against the deliberate devaluation of cause-passion specifically so that cost-cutting can be the priority rather than GREAT TRANSIT.
And no, I do not think that someone who really cares about transit and who is also a capable manager is so much of a unicorn that we couldn't try to find him/her. I think what we ended up with was a deliberate attempt to avoid him/her.