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Political appointments of the first Trump administration

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Template:Trump transition

This is a list of political appointments made by the President of the United States, Donald Trump, before his inauguration on January 20, 2017.

After election day, media outlets reported on persons described by various sources as possible appointments to senior positions in the incoming Trump presidency. Until the Trump Administration announces their official cabinet, this page will continue to be updated with new information and potential positions.

All members of the Cabinet require the advice and consent of the United States Senate following appointment by the President prior to taking office. The Vice Presidency is exceptional in that the position requires election to office pursuant to the United States Constitution. Although some are afforded Cabinet-level rank, non-cabinet members within the Executive Office of the President, such as White House Chief of Staff, National Security Advisor, and White House Press Secretary, do not hold constitutionally created positions and most do not require Senate confirmation for appointment.

Analysis

Due to Trump's lack of government experience and fluid political positions, much interest existed among the media over his cabinet nominations, as they are believed to show how Trump plans to govern.

Certain news organizations, such as Politico and Newsweek, called Trump's incomplete cabinet a "conservative dream team"[1] or "the most conservative cabinet [in United States history]."[2] On the other hand, The Wall Street Journal stated that "it's nearly impossible to identify a clear ideological bent in the incoming president's" cabinet nominations.[3] The Wall Street Journal also stated that Trump's nominations signaled a pro-deregulation administration policy.[4]

Among Donald Trump's appointments there have been several former Goldman Sachs employees, such as Steven Mnuchin, Steven Bannon, or Gary Cohn, as well as several generals, such as Mike Flynn, James Mattis, or John Kelly. These appointments have generated some criticism, including allegations of violations of the principle of civilian control of the military and allegations of regulatory capture.[5][6] The Democratic senator from Missouri, Claire McCaskill, has criticized Donald Trump's cabinet stating; "I call it the three 'G' Cabinet: Goldman, generals and gazillionaires." [7]

On 18 January, two days before Trump's inauguration, it was reported that he had by then nominated only 28 people to fill 690 positions requiring Senate confirmation.[8] In particular, there had been no nominations below the Cabinet level for the departments of State or Defence, and the staff for the National Security Council was incomplete, while none of the NSC leadership had any NSC experience.[9] It was also reported that hundreds of briefing papers had been created by Obama's NSC and sent to Team Trump, but no one knew if they had been reviewed.[10]

Announced high-level positions

Cabinet and cabinet-level positions are marked in beige.

Office Nominee Term begins

Executive Office of the President

White House Chief of Staff

Reince Priebus

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Senior Counselor to the President and White House Chief Strategist[11]

Steve Bannon[12]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Counselor to the President

Kellyanne Conway[13]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Senior Counselor to the President for Economic Initiatives

Dina Powell[14]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Senior Advisor to the President for Policy

Stephen Miller

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Senior Advisor to the President for Strategic Planning

Jared Kushner[15]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Director of Strategic Initiatives for the White House Strategic Development Group

Chris Liddell[16]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Director of the Office of Public Liaison and Intergovernmental Affairs

Anthony Scaramucci

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

National Security Advisor

Michael T. Flynn[17]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Deputy National Security Advisor

K. T. McFarland[18]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Staff Secretary

Rob Porter[19]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Cybersecurity Advisor

Rudy Giuliani

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Executive Secretary of the National Security Council

Keith Kellogg

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Director of the Domestic Policy Council

File:Andrew Bremberg, Director of the Domestic Policy Council.jpg

Andrew Bremberg

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Director of the National Economic Council

File:Gary D. Cohn President and Chief Operating Officer at Goldman Sachs.jpg

Gary Cohn[20]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Director of the National Trade Council

Peter Navarro[21]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Homeland Security Advisor

Tom Bossert[22]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Cabinet Secretary

Bill McGinley[23] January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Social Secretary

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Press Secretary and White House Director of Communications

Sean Spicer[24]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Director of Strategic Communications

Hope Hicks[25]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Director of Social Media

Dan Scavino[25]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Personal Secretary

Madeleine Westerhout[23] January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Chief Usher

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Deputy Chief of Staff

Katie Walsh[26]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations

Joe Hagin[26]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Legislative, Intergovernmental Affairs and Implementation

Rick Dearborn[26]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Deputy Director of Communications

Jessica Ditto[27]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Deputy Director of Communications and Research

Raj Shah[27]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Special Assistant to the President for Intragovernmental and Technology Initiatives

Reed Cordish[28]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Director of Communications for the Office of Public Engagement and Intergovernmental Affairs

Omarosa Manigault[27]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Director of Oval Office Operations

Keith Schiller[27]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Director of Legislative Affairs

Marc Short[27]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Political Director

Bill Stepien[27]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Director of Presidential Personnel

John DeStefano[27]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Director of Advance

George Gigicos[27]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Special Assistant and Personal Aide to the President

John McEntee[27]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Special Advisor to the President on Regulatory Reform

Carl Icahn

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Special Representative for International Negotiations

Jason Greenblatt[29]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

White House Counsel

Don McGahn[30]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Deputy Assistant to the President

Bill McGinley[23]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Deputy Assistant to the President

Sean Cairncross[23]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Director of the Office of Chief of Staff

Michael Ambrosini[23]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Deputy Press Secretary

Lindsay Walters[23]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Deputy Press Secretary

Sarah Huckabee Sanders[23]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Deputy Press Secretary

Stephanie Grisham[23]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Executive Assistant to the President

Madeleine Westerhout[23]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Assistant Communications Director for Surrogate Operations

Boris Epshteyn[23]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Director of Media Affairs

Helen Aguirre Ferre[23]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Chief of Staff to the Vice President

Josh Pitcock[27]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Deputy Chief of Staff to the Vice President

Jen Pavlik[27]

January 20, 2017
(without Senate confirmation)

Director of the Office of Management and Budget

Mick Mulvaney

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Director of the Office of Management and Budget

Upon Senate confirmation

Chief Performance Officer

Upon Senate confirmation

Managing Director of the Council on Environmental Quality

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the Office of Administration

Upon Senate confirmation

Trade Representative

Robert Lighthizer[31]

Upon Senate confirmation

Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers

(list of contenders)

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy

Upon Senate confirmation

Department of Agriculture

Secretary of Agriculture

Sonny Perdue[32]

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Secretary of Agriculture

Upon Senate confirmation

Assistant Secretary of Agriculture for Congressional Relations

Upon Senate confirmation

Department of Commerce

Secretary of Commerce

Wilbur Ross

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Secretary of Commerce

Todd Ricketts[33]

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of Commerce for Economic Affairs

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the Bureau of Economic Analysis

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the United States Census Bureau

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of Commerce for Industry and Security

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property

Upon Senate confirmation

Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Economic Development

Upon Senate confirmation

Department of Defense

Secretary of Defense

James Mattis

January 20, 2017
Confirmed by Senate (98–1)
Dissenting votes: Gillibrand

Deputy Secretary of Defense

Robert O. Work[34]

Upon Senate confirmation

Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations/Low Intensity Conflict & Interdependent Capabilities

Upon Senate confirmation

Secretary of the Army

Vincent Viola[35]

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of the Army

Upon Senate confirmation

Secretary of the Navy

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of the Navy

Upon Senate confirmation

Secretary of the Air Force

Heather Wilson[36]

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of the Air Force

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics

Upon Senate confirmation

Chief of the National Guard Bureau

Upon Senate confirmation

Vice Chief of the National Guard Bureau

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency

Upon Senate confirmation

Vice Chief of Naval Operations

Upon Senate confirmation

General Counsel of the Navy

Upon Senate confirmation

Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Research, Development and Acquisitions)

Upon Senate confirmation

Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Manpower and Reserve Affairs)

Upon Senate confirmation

Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Financial Management and Comptroller)

Upon Senate confirmation

Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Installations and Environment)

Upon Senate confirmation

General Counsel of the Air Force

Upon Senate confirmation

Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (Acquisition)

Upon Senate confirmation

Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (Financial Management & Comptroller)

Upon Senate confirmation

Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (Installations, Environment & Logistics)

Upon Senate confirmation

Assistant Secretary of the Air Force (Manpower & Reserve Affairs)

Upon Senate confirmation

Department of Education

Secretary of Education

Betsy DeVos

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Secretary of Education

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of Education

Upon Senate confirmation

Department of Energy

Secretary of Energy

Rick Perry[37]

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Secretary of Energy

Upon Senate confirmation

Department of the Interior

Secretary of the Interior

Ryan Zinke

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Secretary of the Interior

Upon Senate confirmation

Department of Justice

Attorney General

Jeff Sessions

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Attorney General

Rod J. Rosenstein[38]

Upon Senate confirmation

Solicitor General

Upon Senate confirmation

Department of Health and Human Services

Secretary of Health and Human Services

Tom Price

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services

Upon Senate confirmation

Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

Seema Verma[39]

Upon Senate confirmation

Commissioner of Food and Drugs

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the Indian Health Service
Upon Senate confirmation

Department of Homeland Security

Secretary of Homeland Security

John F. Kelly

January 20, 2017
Confirmed by Senate (88–11)
Dissenting votes: Blumenthal, Booker, Cortez Masto, Gillibrand, Harris, Heinrich, Merkley, Udall, Van Hollen, Warren, Wyden

Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of Homeland Security for Management

Upon Senate confirmation

Administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency

Upon Senate confirmation

Commandant of the Coast Guard

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the Secret Service

Without Senate confirmation

Department of Housing and Urban Development

Secretary of Housing and Urban Development

Ben Carson

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Secretary of Housing and Urban Development

Upon Senate confirmation

Department of Labor

Secretary of Labor

Andrew Puzder

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Secretary of Labor

Upon Senate confirmation

Department of State

Secretary of State

Rex Tillerson[40]

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Secretary of State

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Secretary of State for Management and Resources

Upon Senate confirmation

Counselor of the Department of State

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs

Thomas A. Shannon, Jr.[34]

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of State for Management

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of State for Economic Growth, Energy, and the Environment

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security Affairs

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of State for Civilian Security, Democracy, and Human Rights

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to the United Nations

Nikki Haley

Upon Senate confirmation

Permanent Representative to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization

Upon Senate confirmation

Chief of Protocol

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Argentina

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Australia

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Belgium

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Brazil

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Canada

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to China

Terry Branstad[41]

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Cuba

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to the Czech Republic

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Denmark

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to the Dominican Republic

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to the European Union

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Finland

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to France

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Germany

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Greece

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to the Holy See

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Hungary

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Iceland

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to India

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Ireland

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Israel

David Friedman[42]

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Italy

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Japan

William F. Hagerty[43]

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to South Korea

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Mexico

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to the Netherlands

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to New Zealand

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Norway

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Poland

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Portugal

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Russia

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Saudi Arabia

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to South Africa

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Spain

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Sweden

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Turkey

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to Ukraine

Upon Senate confirmation

Ambassador to the United Kingdom

Woody Johnson[44]

Upon Senate confirmation

Special Presidential Envoy for the Global Coalition to Counter the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant

Brett H. McGurk[34]

Upon Senate confirmation

U.S. Ambassador-at-Large for Counter Terrorism

Upon Senate confirmation

Department of Transportation

Secretary of Transportation

Elaine Chao

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Secretary of Transportation

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of Transportation for Policy

Upon Senate confirmation

Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration

Upon Senate confirmation

Administrator of the Federal Highway Administration

Upon Senate confirmation

Department of the Treasury

Secretary of the Treasury

Steven Mnuchin

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Secretary of the Treasury

Upon Senate confirmation

Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Financial Stability

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence

Adam Szubin[34]

Upon Senate confirmation

Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorist Financing

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of the Treasury for Domestic Finance

Upon Senate confirmation

Treasurer

Upon Senate confirmation

Administrator of the Community Development Financial Institutions Fund

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the United States Mint

Upon Senate confirmation

Department of Veterans Affairs

Secretary of Veterans Affairs

David Shulkin

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of Veterans Affairs for Health

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of Veterans Affairs for Benefits

Upon Senate confirmation

Under Secretary of Veterans Affairs for Memorial Affairs

Upon Senate confirmation

Independent Agencies

Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency

Scott Pruitt

Upon Senate confirmation

Administrator of the Small Business Administration

Linda McMahon

Upon Senate confirmation

Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development

Upon Senate confirmation

Chair of the Securities and Exchange Commission

Jay Clayton[45]

Upon Senate confirmation

Chief Executive Officer of the Millennium Challenge Corporation

Upon Senate confirmation

Chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the Federal Housing Finance Agency

Upon Senate confirmation

Administrator of the General Services Administration

Upon Senate confirmation

Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the National Science Foundation

Upon Senate confirmation

Chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the Office of Personnel Management

Upon Senate confirmation

Commissioner of the Social Security Administration

Upon Senate confirmation

Deputy Commissioner of the Social Security Administration

Upon Senate confirmation

Chair of the National Endowment for the Arts

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the Peace Corps

Upon Senate confirmation

Independent Intelligence Agencies

Director of National Intelligence

Dan Coats[46]

Upon Senate confirmation

Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the National Counterterrorism Center

Nicholas J. Rasmussen[34]

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the National Counterproliferation Center

Upon Senate confirmation

Director of the Central Intelligence Agency

Mike Pompeo[47]

Upon Senate confirmation

Possible candidates for other high-level positions

Vice Chair of the Federal Reserve

There are currently two vacancies on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, formerly held by Sarah Bloom Raskin and Jeremy C. Stein, to which Trump will be able to name appointees. All sitting members were appointed by Barack Obama. The current Fed Chair has a term which expires in early 2018, as does the primary Vice Chair, at which point Trump will be able to replace the holders of both of those roles. (Trump complained about Yellen in particular and the Fed in general during his campaign, but after his election has signalled that he would not push for an early resignation prior to that expiration.[48]) In addition to the primary Vice Chair role, there is also a new (Dodd-Frank) regulatory Vice Chair Of Supervision role,[49] currently unfilled officially (albeit unofficially being held by Daniel Tarullo). It is expected that Trump will fill the two vacant seats, and then name one of those new appointees as Vice Chair of Supervision, during 2017. (He may additionally opt to replace the primary Vice Chair, and/or the Fed Chair, when their terms expire in 2018.) The following names have been mentioned as potential appointees to the board, which is a prerequisite of taking either of the vice chair roles (or the role of the chair). See also, the FOMC membership, which is a superset of the FRB membership discussed here.[50][51][52][53] Although it is considered unlikely given the quasi-independent nature of the Fed, there is a possibility that the composition of the group itself (size and term-lengths and membership) could be directly altered by the Republican-controlled legislative and executive branches during the 2017-2019 session (see Federal Reserve Act), should the five sitting Obama-appointees come into serious conflict with the economic agenda of lawmakers (for instance in 1948 Marriner S. Eccles was replaced as chair by Thomas B. McCabe).[54] During the 2016 campaign, candidates from both parties criticized the Fed's nominal independence from both politics and profit, albeit on different grounds: among other critics, Trump accused it of making economic decisions with an eye to influencing elections, and Clinton wanted to keep members of the banking industry from serving.[55]

Image Name Description
John Allison Former CEO of the Cato Institute, former CEO of BB&T.[53] (Was previously under consideration for Treasury Secretary.)
Paul S. Atkins CEO of Patomak Global Partners, former SEC member.[56]
John C. Dugan Former Comptroller of the Currency.[56]
Randall Guynn banking lawyer at Davis Polk & Wardwell, clerked for SCOTUS Judge William Rehnquist.[56]
Thomas M. Hoenig Vice Chair of the FDIC, former president of the Kansas City Fed.[56]
French Hill U.S. Representative for Arkansas's 2nd congressional district[57] CEO of a bank in Arkansas, undergraduate degree in economics from Vanderbilt University, graduate certificate from UCLA in corporate directorship, on the Economic Policy Council and Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Treasury under George H. W. Bush.
Glenn Hubbard Professor of economics at Columbia, visiting scholar at AEI, former Deputy Assistant Treasury Secretary 1991-1993 under George H. W. Bush, former Council of Economic Advisors chair 2001-2003 under George W. Bush,[58] advisor to Romney'12 (reportedly a leading contender for Treasury secretary had Romney been elected), advisor to Bush'16.[59] Also mentioned as a potential Treasury pick during mid-2016.[60][61] Mentioned as a potential contender for Fed chair, in 2018.[61][62]
David Malpass Head of the economic subgroup in the Trump transition team[52][63][64] Deputy Assistant Treasury Secretary under Ronald Reagan, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State under George H. W. Bush, chief economist at Bear Stearns. Mentioned multiple times as a potential contender for Fed chair, in 2018.[62]
Gregory Mankiw Professor of economics at Harvard,[58] textbook author, and one of the most influential academic economists in the world (based on citation-analysis metrics). Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers under George W. Bush 2003-2005, adviser to Romney'08 and also Romney'12. Mentioned as a potential contender for Fed chair, in 2018.[62]
David Nason CEO of GE Energy Financial Services, also Assistant Treasury Secretary 2005-2009 during the financial crisis of 2007-2010.[56]
Judy Shelton Economic advisory group member to Trump'16, director of the Sound Money Project at the Atlas Network[63][64] Economist with a Ph.D in business administration, previously advised Carson'16.
John Taylor Professor of economics at Stanford University[52][58][65] (with an economics Ph.D therefrom) and Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution. Mentioned multiple times as a potential contender for Fed chair, in 2018.[62]
Kevin Warsh Former Federal Reserve governor. Mentioned as a potential contender for Fed chair, in 2018.[62]

Appointees to all the roles under discussion here (board members, vice chairs, and fed chair) must undergo hearings before the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs on the way to being confirmed by a vote of the full Senate.

Chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers

This role is a cabinet-level position, usually filled by an economist or a professor (by contrast with the director of the National Economic Council which is usually filled by someone with a managerial background).[66] See also, various other Trump administration roles directly related to the economy: Fed Vice-Chair, SEC chair, OMB director, Treasury secretary, Commerce secretary, U.S. Trade Rep, SBA administrator, and various others.

Under Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs

Image Name Description
David Malpass Former chief economist at Bear Stearns[67][68]

Secretary of the Navy

Image Name Description
Philip Bilden Private equity executive at HarbourVest Partners Asia branch[69]
Randy Forbes Former U.S. Representative for Virginia's 4th Congressional District[70]
Duncan D. Hunter U.S. Representative for California's 50th congressional district[71]

Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Image Name Description
Mark Albrecht Former Executive Secretary of the National Space Council[72]
Jim Bridenstine U.S. Representative for Oklahoma's 1st Congressional District[72][73]
Eileen Collins Former astronaut and Space Shuttle Commander[72]
Doug Cooke Former Associate Administrator for the Office of Exploration Systems Mission Directorate[74]
Mike Griffin Former Administrator of NASA[75]
Charles J. Precourt Former astronaut and Space Shuttle Commander[74]
Scott Pace Director of the Space Policy Institute at George Washington University[75]

Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy

Image Name Description
Thomas Massie U.S. Representative from Kentucky's 4th congressional district[76]

Commissioner of Food and Drugs

Image Name Description
Scott Gottlieb Former Deputy Commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration; resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute[77]
Jim O'Neill Co-founder of the Thiel Fellowship, managing director of Clarium Capital and former Principal Associate Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services[78]

Deputy Secretary of State

Image Name Description
Elliott Abrams Former Deputy National Security Advisor for Global Democracy Strategy; official in Reagan and Bush administrations[79]
John Bolton Former United States Ambassador to the United Nations; former Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security Affairs[80]
Paula Dobriansky Former Under Secretary of State for Democracy and Global Affairs[81]
Richard Haass President of the Council on Foreign Relations; former Director of Policy Planning for the United States Department of State[82]
James Franklin Jeffrey Former Deputy National Security Advisor; former U.S. Ambassador to Iraq, Turkey and Albania[81]
Robert M. Kimmitt Former United States Deputy Secretary of the Treasury[81]

Deputy Secretary of Education

Image Name Description
Hanna Skandera Secretary of Education of New Mexico; former Deputy Education Commissioner of Florida[83]

U.S. Solicitor General

Image Name Description
George Conway Partner at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz[84]

Ambassador to the European Union

Image Name Description
Ted Malloch CEO and Professor[85]

Ambassador to Italy

Image Name Description
Lewis M. Eisenberg Finance Chairman of the Republican National Committee[86]

Ambassador to Mexico

Image Name Description
Alberto Gonzales Former United States Attorney General[87]
Randy Neugebauer Former U.S. Representative for Texas' 19th congressional district[88]
Toby Neugebauer Son of Rep. Randy Neugebauer, co-founder of Quantum Energy Partners[88]
Larry Rubin President and Chairman of the Board of The American Society of Mexico[87]
Albert C. Zapanta President and Chief Executive Officer of the United States-Mexico Chamber of Commerce[87]

Ambassador to Russia

Image Name Description
Thomas Graham Former Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Russian Affairs; managing director of Kissinger Associates[89]
Dana Rohrabacher U.S. Representative from California's 48th congressional district[89]

Announced positions from which candidates have withdrawn

See also

References

  1. ^ Restuccia, Andrew; Cook, Nancy; Woellert, Lorraine (November 30, 2016). "Trump's Conservative Dream Team". Politico. Retrieved November 30, 2016.
  2. ^ Cooper, Matthew (December 9, 2016). "Donald Trump Is Building the Most Conservative Presidential Cabinet In U.S. History". Newsweek. Retrieved December 10, 2016. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  3. ^ Seib, Gerald (December 5, 2016). "Donald Trump Shuffles the Ideological Deck". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved December 5, 2016. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  4. ^ Timiraos, Nick; Tangel, Andrew (December 8, 2016). "Donald Trump's Cabinet Selections Signal Deregulation Moves Are Coming". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved December 10, 2016. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  5. ^ Smith, David (December 2, 2016). "Trump's billionaire cabinet could be the wealthiest administration ever". The Guardian. Retrieved January 7, 2017.
  6. ^ Crilly, Rob (December 13, 2016). "'Goldman, generals and gazillionaires' make up Trump's team". The National. Retrieved January 7, 2017.
  7. ^ Page, Susan (December 11, 2016). "Analysis: Trump's Cabinet dubbed 'Goldman, generals and gazillionaires'". USA Today. Retrieved January 7, 2017.
  8. ^ Bernstein, Jonathan (18 January 2017). "The Empty Trump Administration". Bloomberg View. Bloomberg LP. Retrieved 19 January 2017.
  9. ^ Crowley, Michael (17 January 2017). "Is Trump ready for a national security crisis?". POLITICO LLC. Retrieved 19 January 2017.
  10. ^ Landler, Mark (17 January 2017). "Trump National Security Team Gets a Slow Start". The New York Times. Retrieved 19 January 2017.
  11. ^ "Donald Trump Taps Reince Priebus As Chief Of Staff, Steve Bannon As Chief Strategist : The Two-Way". NPR. 2016-08-17. Retrieved 2016-11-14.
  12. ^ "Trump's cabinet". Retrieved 23 November 2016.
  13. ^ "Trump campaign star Conway named as his presidential counselor". Reuters. 22 December 2016. Retrieved 23 December 2016.
  14. ^ Klein, Betsy (January 11, 2017). "Meet Dina Powell, Ivanka Trump's woman in the White House". CNN. Retrieved January 11, 2017.
  15. ^ Haberman, Maggie; Thrush, Glenn (January 9, 2017). "Jared Kushner Named Senior White House Adviser to Donald Trump". The New York Times. Retrieved January 9, 2017.
  16. ^ "Kiwi businessman Chris Liddell appointed as one of Donald Trump's assistants". New Zealand Herald. 18 January 2017. ISSN 1170-0777. Retrieved 17 January 2017.
  17. ^ Rosenberg, Matthew; Haberman, Maggie (November 17, 2016). "Trump Is Said to Offer National Security Post to Michael Flynn, Retired General". The New York Times. Retrieved November 18, 2016.
  18. ^ W. Peters, Jeremy; Haberman, Maggie (November 25, 2016). "Donald Trump Adds K.T. McFarland to His National Security Team". The New York Times. Retrieved November 25, 2016.
  19. ^ Thomas Burr (13 January 2017). "Trump campaign star Conway named as his presidential counselor". The Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved 13 January 2017.
  20. ^ "Trump Chooses Goldman Sachs Executive Gary Cohn for Key Economic Post". CBS News. December 10, 2016. Retrieved December 10, 2016.
  21. ^ "Trump taps China trade critic Navarro for new White House post". Politico. 21 December 2016. Retrieved 21 December 2016.
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