[Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: GEORGE W. BUSH (2001, Book I)]
[January 20, 2001]
[Pages 783-801]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office www.gpo.gov]
Appendix B / Administration of George W. Bush, 2001
Appendix B--Nominations Submitted to the Senate
[[Page 783]]
The following list does not include promotions of members of the
Uniformed Services, nominations to the Service Academies, or nominations
of Foreign Service officers.
Submitted January 20
Colin Luther Powell,
of Virginia, to be Secretary of State.
Paul Henry O'Neill,
of Pennsylvania, to be Secretary of the Treasury.
Donald Henry Rumsfeld,
of Illinois, to be Secretary of Defense.
Gale Ann Norton,
of Colorado, to be Secretary of the Interior.
Ann Margaret Veneman,
of California, to be Secretary of Agriculture.
Donald Louis Evans,
of Texas, to be Secretary of Commerce.
Tommy G. Thompson,
of Wisconsin, to be Secretary of Health and Human Services.
Melquiades Rafael Martinez,
of Florida, to be Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.
Spencer Abraham,
of Michigan, to be Secretary of Energy.
Roderick R. Paige,
of Texas, to be Secretary of Education.
Anthony Joseph Principi,
of California, to be Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
Mitchell E. Daniels, Jr.,
of Indiana, to be Director of the Office of Management and Budget.
Christine Todd Whitman,
of New Jersey, to be Administrator of the Environmental Protection
Agency.
Submitted January 24
Norman Y. Mineta,
of California, to be Secretary of Transportation.
Submitted January 29
John Ashcroft,
of Missouri, to be Attorney General.
Elaine Lan Chao,
of Kentucky, to be Secretary of Labor.
Robert B. Zoellick,
of Virginia, to be U.S. Trade Representative, with the rank of
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary.
Submitted February 1
Paul Henry O'Neill,
of Pennsylvania, to be U.S. Governor of the International Monetary Fund
for a term of 5 years; U.S. Governor of the International Bank for
Reconstruction and Development for a term of 5 years; U.S. Governor of
the Inter-American Development Bank for a term of 5 years; U.S. Governor
of the African Development Bank for a term of 5 years; U.S. Governor of
the Asian Development Bank; U.S. Governor of the African Development
Fund; U.S. Governor of the European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development.
Submitted February 6
Joe M. Allbaugh,
of Texas, to be Director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Submitted February 13
Bill Frist,
of Tennessee, to be a Representative of the United States of America to
the Fifty-fifth Session of the General Assembly of the United Nations.
[[Page 784]]
Submitted February 15
Sean O'Keefe,
of New York, to be Deputy Director of the Office of Management and
Budget, vice Sylvia M. Mathews.
Paul D. Wolfowitz,
of Maryland, to be Deputy Secretary of Defense, vice Rudy F. de Leon.
Submitted February 26
Mark A. Weinberger,
of Maryland, to be an Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, vice
Jonathan Talisman, resigned.
Submitted February 28
David Aufhauser,
of the District of Columbia, to be General Counsel for the Department
of the Treasury, vice Neal S. Wolin, resigned.
John M. Duncan,
of the District of Columbia, to be a Deputy Under Secretary of the
Treasury, vice Ruth Martha Thomas.
Submitted March 8
Kenneth W. Dam,
of Illinois, to be Deputy Secretary of the Treasury, vice Stuart E.
Eizenstat, resigned.
Michael P. Jackson,
of Virginia, to be Deputy Secretary of Transportation, vice Mortimer L.
Downey, resigned.
Richard Lee Armitage,
of Virginia, to be Deputy Secretary of State, vice Strobe Talbott.
John Robert Bolton,
of Maryland, to be Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and
International Security, vice John David Holum, resigned.
Grant S. Green, Jr.,
of Virginia, to be an Under Secretary of State (Management), vice
Bonnie R. Cohen.
Marc Isaiah Grossman,
of Virginia, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, class of
Career Minister, to be an Under Secretary of State (Political Affairs),
vice Thomas R. Pickering.
William Howard Taft IV,
of Virginia, to be Legal Adviser of the Department of State, vice David
Andrews.
Submitted March 13
Theodore Bevry Olson,
of the District of Columbia, to be Solicitor General of the United
States, vice Seth Waxman, resigned.
Dov S. Zakheim,
of Maryland, to be Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller), vice
William J. Lynn III.
Submitted March 15
Kenneth I. Juster,
of the District of Columbia, to be Under Secretary of Commerce for
Export Administration, vice William Alan Reinsch, resigned.
Withdrawn March 19
The following persons to the positions indicated, which were sent to the
Senate on January 3, 2001:
Bonnie J. Campbell,
of Iowa, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Eighth Circuit, vice George
G. Fagg, retired.
James E. Duffy, Jr.,
of Hawaii, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit, vice Cynthia
Holcomb Hall, retired.
Barry P. Goode,
of California, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit, vice
Charles E. Wiggins, retired.
Roger L. Gregory,
of Virginia, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Fourth Circuit (new
position), to which position he was appointed during the last recess of
the Senate.
Kathleen McCree Lewis,
of Michigan, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Sixth Circuit, vice
Cornelia G. Kennedy, retired.
Enrique Moreno,
of Texas, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Fifth Circuit, vice William
L. Garwood, retired.
Helene N. White,
of Michigan, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Sixth Circuit, vice Damon
J. Keith, retired.
[[Page 785]]
Sarah L. Wilson,
of Maryland, to be a Judge of the U.S. Court of Federal Claims for a
term of 15 years, vice Loren A. Smith, term expired.
James A. Wynn, Jr.,
of North Carolina, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Fourth Circuit,
vice James Dickson Phillips, Jr., retired.
The nomination of the following person, which was sent to the Senate on
January 4, 2001:
Alston Johnson,
of Louisiana, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Fifth Circuit, vice John
M. Duhe, Jr.
The nominations of the following persons, which were sent to the Senate
on January 5, 2001:
James V. Aidala,
of Virginia, to be Assistant Administrator for Toxic Substances of the
Environmental Protection Agency, vice Lynn R. Goldman, to which position
he was appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Nina M. Archabal,
of Minnesota, to be a member of the National Council on the Humanities
for a term expiring January 26, 2006, vice Nicholas Kanellos, term
expired, to which position she was appointed during the last recess of
the Senate.
James H. Atkins,
of Arkansas, to be member of the Federal Retirement Thrift Investment
Board for a term expiring September 25, 2004, to which position he was
appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Geoff Bacino,
of Illinois, to be a member of the National Credit Union Administration
Board for the term of 6 years expiring August 2, 2005, vice Norman E.
D'Amours, term expired, to which position he was appointed during the
last recess of the Senate.
Betty G. Bengtson,
of Washington, to be a member of the National Council on the Humanities
for a term expiring January 26, 2006, vice Ramon A. Gutierrez, term
expired, to which position she was appointed during the last recess of
the Senate.
Allen E. Carrier,
of the District of Columbia, to be a member of the Board of Trustees of
the Institute of American Indian and Alaska Native Culture and Arts
Development for a term expiring May 19, 2004, vice Duane H. King, term
expired, to which position he was appointed during the last recess of
the Senate.
Ron Chew,
of Washington, to be a member of the National Council on the Humanities
for a term expiring January 26, 2006, vice Robert I. Rotberg, term
expired, to which position he was appointed during the last recess of
the Senate.
Edward Correia,
of Maryland, to be a member of the National Council on Disability for a
term expiring September 17, 2002, vice Michael B. Unhjem, term expired,
to which position he was appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
George Darden,
of Georgia, to be a member of the Board of Directors of the Overseas
Private Investment Corporation for the term expiring December 17, 2003,
vice Zell Miller, to which position he was appointed during the last
recess of the Senate.
Dennis M. Devaney,
of Michigan, to be a member of the U.S. International Trade Commission
for a term expiring December 16, 2009, vice Thelma J. Askey, term
expired, to which position he was appointed during the last recess of
the Senate.
James F. Dobbins,
of New York, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, class of
Minister-Counselor, to be an Assistant Secretary of State (European
Affairs), vice Marc Grossman, resigned, to which position he was
appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
James A. Dorskind,
of California, to be General Counsel of the Department of Commerce,
vice Andrew J. Pincus, resigned, to which position he was appointed
during the last recess of the Senate.
[[Page 786]]
Bill Duke,
of the District of Columbia, to be a member of the National Council on
the Humanities for a term expiring January 26, 2006, vice Charles
Patrick Henry, term expired, to which position he was appointed during
the last recess of the Senate.
Michael V. Dunn,
of Iowa, to be a member of the Farm Credit Administration Board, Farm
Credit Administration, for a term expiring October 13, 2006, vice Marsha
P. Martin, to which position he was appointed during the last recess of
the Senate.
Fred P. DuVal,
of Arizona, to be a member of the Board of Directors of the Inter-
American Foundation for a term expiring October 6, 2002, vice Ann
Brownell Sloane, term expired, to which position he was appointed during
the last recess of the Senate.
Ross Edward Eisenbrey,
of the District of Columbia, to be member of the Occupational Safety
and Health Review Commission for a term expiring April 27, 2005, vice
Stuart E. Weisberg, term expired, to which position he was appointed
during the last recess of the Senate.
Jayne G. Fawcett,
of Connecticut, to be a member of the Board of Trustees of the
Institute of American Indian and Alaska Native Culture and Arts
Development for a term expiring May 19, 2006, vice Alfred H. Qoyawayma,
term expired, to which position she was appointed during the last recess
of the Senate.
Toni G. Fay,
of New Jersey, to be a member of the Board of Directors of the
Corporation for National and Community Service for a term expiring
October 6, 2001, vice John Rother, term expired, to which position she
was appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Anita Perez Ferguson,
of California, to be a member of the Board of Directors of the Inter-
American Foundation for a term expiring September 20, 2006, vice Maria
Otero, term expired, to which position she was appointed during the last
recess of the Senate.
Donald L. Fixico,
of Kansas, to be a member of the National Council on the Humanities for
a term expiring January 26, 2004, vice Alan Charles Kors, term expired,
to which position he was appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Gregory M. Frazier,
of Kansas, to be Chief Agricultural Negotiator, Office of the U.S.
Trade Representative, with the rank of Ambassador, to which position he
was appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Hsin-Ming Fung,
of California, to be a member of the National Council on the Arts for a
term expiring September 3, 2006, vice Speight Jenkins, term expired, to
which position she was appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Henry Glassie,
of Indiana, to be a member of the National Council on the Humanities
for a term expiring January 26, 2006, vice Martha Congleton Howell, term
expired, to which position he was appointed during the last recess of
the Senate.
James John Hoecker,
of Virginia, to be a member of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
for the term expiring June 30, 2005, to which position he was appointed
during the last recess of the Senate.
Paulette H. Holahan,
of Louisiana, to be a member of the National Commission on Libraries
and Information Science for a term expiring July 19, 2004, vice Mary S.
Furlong, term expired, to which position she was appointed during the
last recess of the Senate.
Elwood Holstein, Jr.,
of New Jersey, to be Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and
Atmosphere, vice Terry D. Garcia, resigned, to which position he was
appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Mary D. Hubbard,
of Alabama, to be a member of the National Council on the Humanities
for a term expiring January 26, 2004, vice Theodore S. Hamerow, term
expired, to which position he was appointed during the last recess of
the Senate.
[[Page 787]]
Timothy Earl Jones, Sr.
of Georgia, to be a Commissioner of the U.S. Parole Commission for a
term of 6 years, vice Marie F. Ragghianti, to which position he was
appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Arthenia L. Joyner,
of Florida, to be a member of the Federal Aviation Management Advisory
Council for a term of one year (new position), to which position she was
appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
John R. Lacey,
of Connecticut, to be Chairman of the Foreign Claims Settlement
Commission of the United States for a term expiring September 30, 2003,
vice Delissa A. Ridgway, term expired, to which position he was
appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Miguel D. Lausell,
of Puerto Rico, to be a member of the Board of Directors of the
Overseas Private Investment Corporation for a term expiring December 17,
2003, vice John Crystal, to which position he was appointed during the
last recess of the Senate.
Edwin A. Levine,
of Florida, to be an Assistant Administrator of the Environmental
Protection Agency, vice David Gardiner, resigned, to which position he
was appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Robert Mays Lyford,
of Arkansas, to be a member of the Board of Directors of the Overseas
Private Investment Corporation for a term expiring December 17, 2002,
vice Harvey Sigelbaum, term expired, to which position he was appointed
during the last recess of the Senate.
Sheryl R. Marshall,
of Massachusetts, to be a member of the Federal Retirement Thrift
Investment Board for a term expiring October 11, 2002, to which position
she was appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Marilyn Gell Mason,
of Florida, to be a member of the National Commission on Libraries and
Information Science for a term expiring July 19, 2003, vice Joel David
Valdez, term expired, to which position she was appointed during the
last recess of the Senate.
Laramie Faith McNamara,
of Virginia, to be a member of the Foreign Claims Settlement Commission
of the United States for a term expiring September 30, 2001, vice John
R. Lacey, term expired, to which position she was appointed during the
last recess of the Senate.
Allan I. Mendelowitz,
of Connecticut, to be a Director of the Federal Housing Finance Board
for a term expiring February 27, 2007, vice Bruce A. Morrison, term
expired, to which position he was appointed during the last recess of
the Senate.
Susan Ness,
of Maryland, to be a member of the Federal Communications Commission
for a term of 5 years from July 1, 1999, to which position she was
appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Naomi Shihab Nye,
of Texas, to be a member of the National Council on the Humanities for
a term expiring January 26, 2006, vice Bev Lindsey, term expired, to
which position she was appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
David Z. Plavin,
of New York, to be a member of the Federal Aviation Management Advisory
Council for a term of one year (new position), to which position he was
appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Donald L. Robinson,
of the District of Columbia, to be a member of the National Commission
on Libraries and Information Science for a term expiring July 19, 2002,
vice Gary N. Sudduth, to which position he was appointed during the last
recess of the Senate.
Peter F. Romero,
of Florida, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, class of
Minister-Counselor, to be an Assistant Secretary of State (Inter-
American Affairs), vice Jeffrey Davidow, to which position he was
appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
[[Page 788]]
Vicki L. Ruiz,
of Arizona, to be a member of the National Council on the Humanities
for a term expiring January 26, 2006, vice Harold K. Skramstad, term
expired, to which position she was appointed during the last recess of
the Senate.
Barbara J. Sapin,
of Maryland, to be a member of the Merit Systems Protection Board for
the term of 7 years expiring March 1, 2007, vice Benjamin Leader
Erdreich, resigned, to which position she was appointed during the last
recess of the Senate.
Gerald S. Segal,
of Pennsylvania, to be a member of the National Council on Disability
for a term expiring September 17, 2003, vice Shirley W. Ryan, term
expired, to which position he was appointed during the last recess of
the Senate.
Islam A. Siddiqui,
of California, to be Under Secretary of Agriculture for Marketing and
Regulatory Programs, vice Michael V. Dunn, to which position he was
appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Beth Susan Slavet,
of Massachusetts, to be Chairman of the Merit Systems Protection Board,
vice Benjamin Leader Erdreich, resigned, to which position she was
appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Kenneth Lee Smith,
of Arkansas, to be Assistant Secretary for Fish and Wildlife,
Department of the Interior, vice Donald J. Barry, resigned, to which
position he was appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Isabel Carter Stewart,
of Illinois, to be a member of the National Council on the Humanities
for a term expiring January 26, 2006, vice David Finn, term expired, to
which position she was appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Shibley Telhami,
of Maryland, to be a member of the Board of Directors of the U.S.
Institute of Peace for a term expiring January 19, 2001, to which
position he was appointed during the last recess of the Senate.
Dennis P. Walsh,
of Maryland, to be a member of the National Labor Relations Board for
the term of 5 years expiring December 16, 2004, vice Sarah McCracken
Fox, to which position he was appointed during the last recess of the
Senate.
Judith A. Winston,
of the District of Columbia, to be Under Secretary of Education, vice
Marshall S. Smith, to which position she was appointed during the last
recess of the Senate.
Submitted March 22
Michele A. Davis,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, vice
Michelle Andrews Smith, resigned.
Tim S. McClain,
of California, to be General Counsel, Department of Veterans Affairs,
vice Leigh A. Bradley, resigned.
Andrew S. Natsios,
of Massachusetts, to be Administrator of the U.S. Agency for
International Development, vice J. Brady Anderson, resigned.
Faryar Shirzad,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Commerce, vice Troy
Hamilton Cribb, resigned.
Larry D. Thompson,
of Georgia, to be Deputy Attorney General, vice Eric H. Holder, Jr.
Submitted March 27
Argeo Paul Cellucci,
of Massachusetts, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of
the United States of America to Canada.
Submitted March 28
Daniel J. Bryant,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Attorney General, vice Robert Raben,
resigned.
John D. Graham,
of Massachusetts, to be Administrator of the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, vice John T.
Spotila, resigned.
[[Page 789]]
Submitted March 29
Charles S. Abell,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Defense, vice Alphonso
Maldon, Jr.
Grant D. Aldonas,
of Virginia, to be Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade,
vice Robert S. LaRussa.
Brenda L. Becker,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Commerce, vice Deborah K.
Kilmer, resigned.
Submitted April 3
Stephen Goldsmith,
of Indiana, to be a member of the Board of Directors of the Corporation
for National and Community Service for a term expiring October 6, 2005,
vice Victor H. Ashe, term expired.
Richard Nathan Haass,
of Maryland, for the rank of Ambassador during his tenure of Service as
Director, Policy Planning Staff, Department of State.
James Andrew Kelly,
of Hawaii, to be an Assistant Secretary of State (East Asian and
Pacific Affairs), vice Stanley O. Roth.
Donna R. McLean,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Assistant Secretary of
Transportation, vice Peter J. Basso, Jr., resigned.
Submitted April 4
Erik Patrick Christian,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Associate Judge of the Superior
Court of the District of Columbia for the term of 15 years, vice Eugene
N. Hamilton, term expired.
Paula J. Dobriansky,
of Virginia, to be an Under Secretary of State (Global Affairs), vice
Frank E. Loy.
Theodore William Kassinger,
of Maryland, to be General Counsel of the Department of Commerce, vice
James A. Dorskind.
Sean B. O'Hollaren,
of Oregon, to be an Assistant Secretary of Transportation, vice Michael
J. Frazier, resigned.
Stephen A. Perry,
of Ohio, to be Administrator of General Services, vice David J. Barram,
resigned.
Maurice A. Ross,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Associate Judge of the Superior
Court of the District of Columbia for the term of 15 years, vice Henry
F. Greene, term expired.
Chris Spear,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Labor, vice Edward B.
Montgomery.
John B. Taylor,
of California, to be an Under Secretary of the Treasury, vice Timothy
F. Geithner.
Submitted April 5
Lincoln P. Bloomfield, Jr.,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of State (Political-Military
Affairs), vice Eric D. Newsom.
Victoria Clarke,
of Maryland, to be an Assistant Secretary of Defense, vice Kenneth H.
Bacon.
Kristine Ann Iverson,
of Illinois, to be an Assistant Secretary of Labor, vice Geri D.
Palast.
Submitted April 6
Wade F. Horn,
of Maryland, to be Assistant Secretary for Family Support, Department of
Health and Human Services, vice Olivia A. Golden, resigned.
Scott Whitaker,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Health and Human Services,
vice Richard J. Tarplin, resigned.
Thelma J. Askey,
of Tennessee, to be Director of the Trade and Development Agency, vice
J. Joseph Grandmaison.
Maria Cino,
of Virginia, to be Assistant Secretary of Commerce and Director General
of the U.S. and Foreign Commercial Service, vice Marjory E. Searing.
Charles A. James, Jr.,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Attorney General, vice Joel I. Klein,
resigned.
[[Page 790]]
Piyush Jindal,
of Louisiana, to be an Assistant Secretary of Health and Human
Services, vice Margaret Ann Hamburg, resigned.
Submitted April 23
Edward C. Aldridge,
of Virginia, to be Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition and
Technology, vice Jacques Gansler.
Peter F. Allgeier,
of Virginia, to be a Deputy U.S. Trade Representative, with the rank of
Ambassador, vice Richard W. Fisher, resigned.
Bruce Marshall Carnes,
of Virginia, to be Chief Financial Officer, Department of Energy, vice
Michael Telson, resigned.
Maureen Patricia Cragin,
of Maine, to be an Assistant Secretary of Veterans Affairs (Public and
Intergovernmental Affairs), vice John T. Hanson, resigned.
Viet D. Dinh,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Assistant Attorney General, vice
Eleanor Acheson, resigned.
Roger Walton Ferguson, Jr.,
of Massachusetts, to be a member of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System for a term of 14 years from February 1, 2000
(reappointment).
William D. Hansen,
of Virginia, to be Deputy Secretary of Education, vice Frank S.
Holleman III, resigned.
William J. Haynes II,
of Tennessee, to be General Counsel of the Department of Defense, vice
Douglas A. Dworkin.
Robert Glenn Hubbard,
of New York, to be a member of the Council of Economic Advisers, vice
Martin Neil Baily, resigned.
A. Elizabeth Jones,
of Maryland, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, class of
Career Minister, to be an Assistant Secretary of State (European
Affairs), vice James F. Dobbins.
Powell A. Moore,
of Georgia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Defense, vice John K.
Veroneau.
Timothy J. Muris,
of Virginia, to be a Federal Trade Commissioner for the term of 7 years
from September 26, 2001, vice Robert Pitofsky, term expiring.
Angela Styles,
of Virginia, to be Administrator for Federal Procurement Policy, vice
Deidre A. Lee, resigned.
Submitted April 25
Claude A. Allen,
of Virginia, to be Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services, vice
Kevin L. Thurm, resigned.
Lou Gallegos,
of New Mexico, to be an Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, vice Paul
W. Fiddick, resigned.
Timothy J. Muris,
of Virginia, to be a Federal Trade Commissioner for the unexpired term
of 7 years from September 26, 1994, vice Robert Pitofsky, resigned.
Lee Sarah Liberman Otis,
of Virginia, to be General Counsel of the Department of Energy, vice
Mary Anne Sullivan, resigned.
Pat Pizzella,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Labor, vice Patricia
Watkins Lattimore.
Mary Kirtley Waters,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Agriculture, vice Andrew
C. Fish, resigned.
Submitted April 26
Stephen L. Johnson,
of Maryland, to be Assistant Administrator for Toxic Substances of the
Environmental Protection Agency, vice James V. Aidala, resigned.
Submitted April 30
Kathleen Q. Abernathy,
of Maryland, to be a member of the Federal Communications Commission
for a term of 5 years from July 1, 2000, vice Harold W. Furchtgott-Roth.
[[Page 791]]
Othoniel Armendariz,
of Texas, to be a member of the Federal Labor Relations Authority for a
term of 5 years expiring July 1, 2005, vice Donald S. Wasserman, term
expired.
Eric M. Bost,
of Texas, to be Under Secretary of Agriculture for Food, Nutrition, and
Consumer Services, vice Shirley Robinson Watkins, resigned.
Michael Chertoff,
of New Jersey, to be an Assistant Attorney General, vice James K.
Robinson.
Kathleen B. Cooper,
of Texas, to be Under Secretary of Commerce for Economic Affairs, vice
Robert J. Shapiro, resigned.
David Garman,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Energy (Energy Efficiency
and Renewable Energy), vice Dan Reichter, resigned.
John W. Gillis,
of California, to be Director of the Office for Victims of Crime, vice
Kathryn M. Turman, resigned.
James Gurule,
of Michigan, to be Under Secretary of the Treasury for Enforcement,
vice James E. Johnson, resigned.
William T. Hawks,
of Mississippi, to be Under Secretary of Agriculture for Marketing and
Regulatory Programs, vice Islam A. Siddiqui.
Robin L. Higgins,
of Florida, to be Under Secretary of Veterans Affairs for Memorial
Affairs, vice Robert M. Walker, resigned.
Kay Coles James,
of Virginia, to be Director of the Office of Personnel Management, vice
Janice R. Lachance.
Joseph J. Jen,
of California, to be Under Secretary of Agriculture for Research,
Education, and Economics, vice I. Miley Gonzales.
James J. Jochum,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Commerce, vice R. Roger
Majak, resigned.
Walter H. Kansteiner,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of State (African Affairs),
vice Susan E. Rice.
Kevin Keane,
of Wisconsin, to be an Assistant Secretary of Health and Human
Services, vice Melissa T. Skolfield, resigned.
David D. Lauriski,
of Utah, to be Assistant Secretary of Labor for Mine Safety and Health,
vice J. Davitt McAteer.
Leo S. Mackay, Jr.,
of Texas, to be Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs, vice Hershel
Wayne Gober, resigned.
Kevin J. Martin,
of North Carolina, to be a member of the Federal Communications
Commission for a term of 5 years from July 1, 2001, vice William E.
Kennard, term expiring.
Bruce P. Mehlman,
of Maryland, to be Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Technology
Policy, vice Kelly H. Carnes, resigned.
J. B. Penn,
of Arkansas, to be Under Secretary of Agriculture for Farm and Foreign
Agricultural Services, vice August Schumacher, Jr., resigned.
David A. Sampson,
of Texas, to be Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Economic
Development, vice Arthur C. Campbell, resigned.
Peter S. Watson,
of California, to be President of the Overseas Private Investment
Corporation, vice George Munoz, resigned.
Grover J. Whitehurst,
of New York, to be Assistant Secretary for Educational Research and
Improvement, Department of Education, vice Cyril Kent McGuire, resigned.
Patrick Henry Wood III,
of Texas, to be a member of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
for the term expiring June 30, 2005, vice James John Hoecker, resigned.
[[Page 792]]
Francis S. Blake,
of Connecticut, to be Deputy Secretary of Energy, vice T. J. Glauthier,
resigned.
Nora Mead Brownell,
of Pennsylvania, to be a member of the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission for the remainder of the term expiring June 30, 2001, vice
Vicky A. Bailey, resigned.
Nora Mead Brownell,
of Pennsylvania, to be a member of the Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission for a term expiring June 30, 2006 (reappointment).
David S.C. Chu,
of the District of Columbia, to be Under Secretary of Defense for
Personnel and Readiness, vice Bernard Daniel Rostker.
Shinae Chun,
of Illinois, to be Director of the Women's Bureau, Department of Labor,
vice Irasema Garza.
James Laurence Connaughton,
of the District of Columbia, to be a member of the Council on
Environmental Quality, vice George T. Frampton, Jr.
Gordon England,
of Texas, to be Secretary of the Navy, vice Richard Danzig.
Donald Cameron Findlay,
of Illinois, to be Deputy Secretary of Labor, vice Edward B.
Montgomery, resigned.
Carl W. Ford, Jr.,
of Arkansas, to be an Assistant Secretary of State (Intelligence and
Research), vice J. Stapleton Roy, resigned.
Richard A. Hauser,
of Maryland, to be General Counsel of the Department of Housing and
Urban Development, vice Gail W. Laster, resigned.
Jeffrey R. Holmstead,
of Colorado, to be an Assistant Administrator of the Environmental
Protection Agency, vice Robert W. Perciasepe, resigned.
Robert D. McCallum, Jr.,
of Georgia, to be an Assistant Attorney General, vice David W. Ogden,
resigned.
Susan B. Neuman,
of Michigan, to be Assistant Secretary for Elementary and Secondary
Education, Department of Education, vice Michael Cohen, resigned.
Jessie Hill Roberson,
of Alabama, to be an Assistant Secretary of Energy (Environmental
Management), vice Carolyn L. Huntoon, resigned.
John E. Robson,
of California, to be President of the Export-Import Bank of the United
States for a term expiring January 20, 2005, vice James A. Harmon,
resigned.
Christina B. Rocca,
of Virginia, to be Assistant Secretary of State for South Asian
Affairs, vice Karl Frederick Inderfurth.
Romolo A. Bernardi,
of New York, to be an Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development, vice Cardell Cooper, resigned.
Ralph F. Boyd, Jr.,
of Massachusetts, to be an Assistant Attorney General, vice Bill Lann
Lee, resigned.
William J. Burns,
of the District of Columbia, a career member of the Senior Foreign
Service, class of Minister-Counselor, to be an Assistant Secretary of
State (Near Eastern Affairs), vice Edward S. Walker, Jr.
Ann Laine Combs,
of Michigan, to be an Assistant Secretary of Labor, vice Leslie Beth
Kramerich.
Michael Joseph Copps,
of Virginia, to be a member of the Federal Communications Commission
for a term of 5 years from July 1, 1999, vice Susan Ness, term expired.
Lorne W. Craner,
of Virginia, to be Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human
Rights, and Labor, vice Harold Hongju Koh.
Ruth A. Davis,
of Georgia, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, class of
Career Minister, to be Director General of the Foreign Service, vice
Marc Grossman.
[[Page 793]]
Linnet F. Deily,
of California, to be a Deputy U.S. Trade Representative, with the rank
of Ambassador, vice Rita D. Hayes, resigned.
Thomas C. Dorr,
of Iowa, to be Under Secretary of Agriculture for Rural Development,
vice Jill L. Long, resigned.
Douglas Jay Feith,
of Maryland, to be Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, vice Walter
Becker Slocombe.
Linda J. Fisher,
of the District of Columbia, to be Deputy Administrator of the
Environmental Protection Agency, vice W. Michael McCabe, resigned.
Peter R. Fisher,
of New Jersey, to be an Under Secretary of the Treasury, vice Gary
Gensler, resigned.
J. Steven Griles,
of Virginia, to be Deputy Secretary of the Interior, vice David J.
Hayes, resigned.
Eugene Hickok,
of Pennsylvania, to be Under Secretary of Education, vice Judith A.
Winston, resigned.
Alphonso R. Jackson,
of Texas, to be Deputy Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, vice
Saul N. Ramirez, Jr., resigned.
Brian Jones,
of California, to be General Counsel, Department of Education, vice
Judith A. Winston, resigned.
Jacob Lozada,
of Puerto Rico, to be an Assistant Secretary of Veterans Affairs, vice
Eugene A. Brickhouse, resigned.
Gordon H. Mansfield,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Veterans Affairs
(Congressional Affairs), vice Edward P. Scott, resigned.
Alfred Rascon,
of California, to be Director of Selective Service, vice Gil Coronado,
resigned.
Eugene Scalia,
of Virginia, to be Solicitor for the Department of Labor, vice Henry L.
Solano, resigned.
Thomas Scully,
of Virginia, to be Administrator of the Health Care Financing
Administration, vice Nancy-Ann Min Deparle.
John Charles Weicher,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Housing
and Urban Development, vice William C. Apgar, Jr., resigned.
Submitted May 1
Hector V. Barreto, Jr.,
of California, to be Administrator of the Small Business
Administration, vice Aida Alvarez, resigned.
Thomas E. White,
of Texas, to be Secretary of the Army, vice Louis Caldera.
Kathleen Q. Abernathy,
of Maryland, to be a member of the Federal Communications Commission for
a term of 5 years from July 1, 1999, vice Susan Ness, term expired.
Michael Joseph Copps,
of Virginia, to be a member of the Federal Communications Commission for
a term of 5 years from July 1, 2000, vice Harold W. Furchtgott-Roth.
Withdrawn May 1
Kathleen Q. Abernathy,
of Maryland, to be a member of the Federal Communications Commission for
a term of 5 years from July 1, 2000, vice Harold W. Furchtgott-Roth,
which was sent to the Senate on April 30, 2001.
Michael Joseph Copps,
of Virginia, to be a member of the Federal Communications Commission for
a term of 5 years from July 1, 1999, vice Susan Ness, term expired,
which was sent to the Senate on April 30, 2001.
[[Page 794]]
Submitted May 2
Robert Gordon Card,
of Colorado, to be Under Secretary of Energy, vice Ernest J. Moniz,
resigned.
Submitted May 7
Stephen Brauer,
of Missouri, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the
United States of America to Belgium.
Jack Dyer Crouch II,
of Missouri, to be an Assistant Secretary of Defense, vice Franklin D.
Kramer.
Susan Morrisey Livingstone,
of Montana, to be Under Secretary of the Navy, vice Robert B. Pirie,
Jr.
James G. Roche,
of Maryland, to be Secretary of the Air Force, vice F. Whitten Peters.
Submitted May 8
Mary Sheila Gall,
of Virginia, to be Chairman of the Consumer Product Safety Commission,
vice Ann Brown.
William Henry Lash III,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Commerce, vice Patrick A.
Mulloy, resigned.
Submitted May 9
Terrence W. Boyle,
of North Carolina, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Fourth Circuit,
vice J. Dickson Phillips, Jr., retired.
Edith Brown Clement,
of Louisiana, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Fifth Circuit, vice John
M. Duhe, Jr., retired.
Deborah L. Cook,
of Ohio, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Sixth Circuit, vice Alan E.
Norris, retired.
Miguel A. Estrada,
of Virginia, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the District of Columbia
Circuit, vice Patricia M. Wald, retired.
Roger L. Gregory,
of Virginia, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Fourth Circuit (new
position).
Michael W. McConnell,
of Utah, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Tenth Circuit, vice Stephen
H. Anderson, retired.
Priscilla Richman Owen,
of Texas, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Fifth Circuit, vice William
L. Garwood, retired.
Barrington D. Parker,
of Connecticut, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Second Circuit, vice
Ralph K. Winter, retired.
John G. Roberts, Jr.,
of Maryland, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the District of Columbia
Circuit, vice James L. Buckley, retired.
Dennis W. Shedd,
of South Carolina, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Fourth Circuit,
vice Clyde H. Hamilton, retired.
Jeffrey S. Sutton,
of Ohio, to be U.S. Circuit Judge for the Sixth Circuit, vice David A.
Nelson, retired.
Submitted May 10
Cari M. Dominguez,
of Maryland, to be a member of the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission for a term expiring July 1, 2001, vice Joyce Elaine Tucker,
term expired.
Cari M. Dominguez,
of Maryland, to be a member of the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission for a term expiring July 1, 2006 (reappointment).
Michael K. Powell,
of Virginia, to be a member of the Federal Communications Commission
for a term of 5 years from July 1, 2002 (reappointment).
Submitted May 14
Paul Vincent Kelly,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Secretary of State (Legislative
Affairs), vice Barbara Mills Larkin.
Lynn Leibovitz,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Associate Judge of the Superior
Court of the District of Columbia for the term of 15 years, vice Stephen
G. Milliken, retired.
[[Page 795]]
George Tracy Mehan III,
of Michigan, to be an Assistant Administrator of the Environmental
Protection Agency, vice J. Charles Fox, resigned.
John D. Negroponte,
of the District of Columbia, to be the Representative of the United
States of America to the United Nations, with the rank and status of
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, and the Representative of
the United States of America in the Security Council of the United
Nations, vice Richard Holbrooke.
John D. Negroponte,
of the District of Columbia, to be Representative of the United States
of America to the Sessions of the General Assembly of the United Nations
during his tenure of service as Representative of the United States of
America to the United Nations.
Peter W. Rodman,
of the District of Columbia, to be an Assistant Secretary of Defense,
vice Edward L. Warner III.
Brian Carlton Roseboro,
of New Jersey, to be an Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, vice Lewis
Andrew Sachs, resigned.
Allan Rutter,
of Texas, to be Administrator of the Federal Railroad Administration,
vice Jolene Mortiz Molitoris, resigned.
Patricia Lynn Scarlett,
of California, to be an Assistant Secretary of the Interior, vice M.
John Berry.
Submitted May 16
Angela Antonelli,
of Virginia, to be Chief Financial Officer, Department of Housing and
Urban Development, vice Richard F. Keevey.
Lori A. Forman,
of Virginia, to be an Assistant Administrator of the U.S. Agency for
International Development, vice Robert C. Randolph, resigned.
Pierre-Richard Prosper,
of California, to be Ambassador at Large for War Crimes Issues, vice
David J. Scheffer.
Charles J. Swindells,
of Oregon, to be Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the
United States of America to New Zealand, and to serve concurrently and
without additional compensation as Ambassador Extraordinary and
Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to Samoa.
Margaret DeBardeleben Tutwiler,