Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. News

Welcome to 2016: US Senate staff will no longer receive BlackBerrys

Add as a preferred source on Google

The iconic BlackBerry, once a fixture of midlevel managers and entrepreneurial types everywhere, has pretty much gone the way of the dodo — according to market analytics firm Statista, the QWERTY dinosaur held a measly .2 percent of the smartphone market in the first quarter of this year. But because bureaucracy moves slower than molasses sometimes, the U.S. government has only recently become privy to the manufacturer’s accelerating obsolescence. According to memo from its Sergeant at Arms office, U.S. Senate staffers will “will not be guaranteed” BlackBerries in the future.

At blame for the change is Blackberry, reportedly. The Canadian manufacturer has “discontinued” production of “all BlackBerry OS 10 devices” — the only BlackBerry phones on offer in Congress’s internal electronics catalog. “BlackBerry devices supports will continue for the foreseeable future,” the memo read, “[but] once we have exhausted our current in-house stock, new device procurement will be limited, while supplies last, to warranty exchanges only.”

Recommended Videos

In the early 2000s, BlackBerrys quickly came to dominate the pockets of Capit0l Hill aides, thanks to their robust messaging features and long battery life. The handsets’ signature textured keyboards held appeal, too — due to their unmatched ability to ease the many cumbersome secretarial demands of Senate staffers — as did the Blackberry’s robust privacy features. And from a more pragmatic standpoint, many BlackBerries were cheaper than other phones, and were supplied to agencies as part of yearslong contracts. It’s a fact of which BlackBerry was all too aware. “The federal government is a very important market to us and will continue to be. It is our core strength,” Blackberry exec Scott Totzke told The Washington Post in 2012.

But the market has since passed Blackberry by — competitors like Apple and Samsung chipped away at the company’s toehold as their offerings approached feature parity (and consumers acclimated to the idea of phones without physical keyboards). The newest iPhone’s battery life is on a par with most Blackberry 10 devices. The Galaxy S7 supports KNOX, Samsung’s end-to-end security solution. And both support almost practically every messaging and email platform under the sun.

But many lawmakers, stubborn to the end, clung to their familiar BlackBerrys. A 2012 National Journal survey showed that 77 percent of Senate staffers used the aging phones — among them President Barrack Obama and much of the White House staff. That said, signs of change are in the air: a recent report by The Hill found that of 102 lawmakers surveyed, 71 percent used iPhones — more than double the percentage (28) that still relied primarily on a BlackBerry.

The recent change in policy, no doubt, will help drag the remaining holdouts kicking and screaming into the brave new world of iPhones and Android phones. But considering Blackberry’s commitment to Android — its latest Priv handset ran Android, and its upcoming handsets are rumored to sport the same — some staffers may, in fact, never have to worry about switching. Whether or not that is a good thing is another matter.

Kyle Wiggers
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
Tecno’s EllaClaw AI agent wants to clean up your phone and run your errands
Tecno EllaClaw

Most AI assistants are happy to chat with you, but they rarely roll up their sleeves and get things done. Tecno wants to change that with EllaClaw, its beta-stage mobile AI agent that aims to handle real tasks on your phone instead of just answering questions. The company showed off the next version of EllaClaw, and it now reaches deeper into your device and your favorite apps.

Tired of a slow, hot, battery-drained phone? EllaClaw has the solution.

Read more
The Pixel 10 Pro at $684 is the best Prime Day phone deal I’ve seen, and it’s hard to find better value right now
Prime Day has slashed $315 off Google's compact flagship, bringing the Pixel 10 Pro down to its lowest price yet and making it one of the easiest smartphone deals to recommend.
Rear shell of Google Pixel 10 Pro.

The Pixel 10 Pro was already one of our favorite phones to test this year, and now it's $315 cheaper. Prime Day has pushed the 128GB model down to $684, its lowest price since launch, with the 256GB variant in Obsidian currently sitting at $784.

Buy at Amazon

Read more
I use portable chargers all year, and these are the 5 Prime Day power bank deals worth buying
From compact everyday chargers to rugged solar-powered batteries, these five power banks stand out from the sea of Prime Day discounts for all the right reasons.
Powerbank

A good power bank isn't exciting until your phone drops to 5% during a flight, a commute, or a long day away from an outlet. That's when having a reliable backup battery suddenly feels essential. Prime Day is packed with portable charger deals, but many of them are generic products that look good on paper and disappoint in daily use. For this shortlist, I focused on trusted brands, practical features, portability, and unique use cases. Whether you want a dependable everyday charger, a MagSafe companion, or an emergency battery for outdoor adventures, these are the power banks I'd consider buying during Prime Day.

Anker PowerCore 10K - My everyday favorite power bank

Read more