Where Innovation Happens by Tim Rowe
In this episode of Where Innovation Happens, I sit down with Daniel Koh, a candidate for Congress in Massachusetts’ Sixth District, for a conversation about innovation, competitiveness, and the role political leaders can play in helping builders build. ⠀ Political leaders can have profound impacts on the innovation landscape. With this in mind, this is the first of what I expect will be a number of conversations with aspiring political leaders about the impact they believe they can have on innovation. ⠀ I’ve known Dan for years, going back to his time as Chief of Staff to Boston Mayor Marty Walsh, a role he took on at just 29 years old. When Walsh later became U.S. Secretary of Labor, Dan followed him to Washington as his Chief of Staff once again. ⠀ Since then, Dan has also worked inside the White House and in the startup world, including as Chief Operating Officer of HqO. ⠀ That combination makes him an interesting guest for us. Dan has seen government from the inside, but he has also worked in the early-stage world, where companies are trying to find customers, raise capital, hire talent, and survive long enough to matter. ⠀ That experience shapes how he thinks about policy, economic growth, and what it takes for a region to remain competitive. ⠀ We talk about why Dan is running, and his view that Washington has become too focused on personal attacks and not focused enough on delivering for people. ⠀ We discuss artificial intelligence, including the challenge of addressing real risks while protecting the enormous potential of new technology, especially in health research, life sciences, and the search for cures. ⠀ We also dig into the housing challenge in Massachusetts, the abundance agenda, and the simple but often overlooked idea that supply and demand still matter. ⠀ Dan talks about Massachusetts not just as Boston or Cambridge, but as a broader innovation ecosystem. He sees places like Lynn, Andover, and the rest of the Sixth District as part of a potential corridor of innovation, if the region chooses to think and act more ambitiously. ⠀ Another major theme is talent. Massachusetts educates some of the most capable people in the world, but too many leave after graduation to build their careers elsewhere. ⠀ We talk about what it would take to keep more of that talent here, and what role public leaders can play in supporting entrepreneurs, startups, and growing companies. ⠀ In this conversation, I seek to find out what government can do when leaders understand both policy and the real-world challenges of building something new. ⠀ Whether you are an entrepreneur, investor, policymaker, or someone who cares about the future of Massachusetts and the country, I think you will find a lot here worth thinking about. ⠀ Featured guest: Daniel Koh, candidate for Congress in Massachusetts’ Sixth District, former Chief of Staff to Boston Mayor Marty Walsh and U.S. Secretary of Labor Marty Walsh, former White House official, and former COO of HqO. ⠀ Host: Tim Rowe, founder of Cambridge Innovation Center (CIC) and host of Where Innovation Happens. ⠀ Topics and keywords: innovation policy, startups, entrepreneurship, Massachusetts politics, Congress 2026, Sixth Congressional District, Daniel Koh, Dan Koh, Tim Rowe, Where Innovation Happens, Boston innovation, life sciences, biotech, artificial intelligence policy, housing affordability, abundance agenda, talent pipeline, venture capital, economic competitiveness, Cambridge Innovation Center, CIC, startup ecosystem, government and innovation.
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