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Under Secretary of the Navy. Thomas Mancinelli: August 20, 2024 [75] — Erik Raven [76] April 13, 2022 (Confirmed April 7, 2022 by voice vote) [V 35] August 2024 — General Counsel of the Navy. Sean Coffey [77] February 16, 2022 (Confirmed February 9, 2022, 79–17) [RC 22] — — Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Manpower and Reserve Affairs ...
Thomas J. Mancinelli is an American naval officer and politician who has been serving as the acting United States Under Secretary of the Navy since August 2024 as part of the Biden administration. [1] He served in the United States Marine Corps, being deployed to fight in the Anbar campaign during the Iraq War on two separate occasions. [2]
On December 13, 2021, President Joe Biden nominated Raven to be the next undersecretary of the Navy. Hearings were held by the Senate Armed Services Committee on his nomination on March 22, 2022. His nomination was favorably reported by the committee on April 5, 2022.
The Joseph R. Biden Presidential Library is an archive of the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) in which state papers related to the presidency of Joe Biden will be deposited following the conclusion of his term as President of the United States, as well as a proposed museum on Joe Biden.
On April 23, 2021, President Joe Biden announced Berger as his nominee to be the United States Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Installations and Environment. [3] [7] [8] On April 28, 2021, her nomination was sent to the United States Senate. [9]
Carlos Del Toro (born 1961) [1] is a Cuban-American entrepreneur and retired United States Navy officer who has served as the 78th United States Secretary of the Navy since 2021. [2] [3] He is the second Hispanic American to serve as the Secretary of the Navy, after Edward Hidalgo. [4]
Joe Biden Supreme Court candidates; Cabinet of Joe Biden, for the vetting process undergone by top-level roles including advice and consent by the Senate; Sr. Advisor to the President, the role formerly held by Karl Rove under George W. Bush, then by Valerie Jarrett/David Axelrod/etc. under Barack Obama
Following his election victory in 2020, U.S. president Joe Biden had 4,000 political appointments to make to the federal government. Of those 4,000 political appointments, more than 1250 require Senate confirmation. Upon taking office, Biden quickly placed more than 1,000 high-level officials into roles that did not require confirmation. [1]