United States Deputy Secretary of Commerce
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The Deputy Secretary of Commerce is a high ranking position within the United States Department of Commerce. It was created on December 13, 1979 when President Jimmy Carter sent a letter to the U.S. Senate and nominated Luther H. Hodges, Jr., who then currently held the title of Under Secretary of Commerce. The Deputy Secretary serves as the Department’s chief operating officer, with responsibility for the day-to-day management of its approximately $6.5 billion budget, 13 operating units, and 38,000 employees. In that capacity, the Deputy Secretary is also a member of the President’s Management Council.
The Deputy Secretary serves as the principal deputy of the Secretary of Commerce in all matters affecting the Department and performs continuing and special duties as the Secretary may assign including, as may be specified by the Secretary, the exercise of policy direction and general supervision over operating units not placed under other Secretarial Officers or other Department officials. In addition, the Deputy Secretary acts as Secretary if the Secretary has died, resigned, or is otherwise unable to perform the functions and duties of the office of Secretary. The current Deputy Secretary is David A. Sampson, who was nominated by the President on April 1, 2005, and confirmed by the Senate on June 16.
[edit] List of Deputy Secretaries of Commerce
Name | Term |
---|---|
Luther H. Hodges, Jr. | 1980-1981 |
Joseph F. Wright | 1981-1982 |
Guy W. Fiske | 1982-1983 |
Clarence J. Brown, Jr. | 1983-1988 |
Donna F. Tuttle | 1988-1989 |
Thomas J. Murrin | 1989-1991 |
Rockwell A. Schnabel | 1991-1993 |
John A. Rollwagen | 1993-1997 |
Robert L. Mallett | 1997-2001 |
Samuel W. Bodman | 2001-2003 |
Theodore W. Kassinger | 2004- |
David A. Sampson | 2005- |
[edit] External links
- The official biography of the current Deputy Secretary
- The mission and organization of the Department of Commerce, in which the Deputy Secretary's functions and duties are listed
- Executive order on the line of succession for the Secretary of Commerce