United States Deputy Secretary of Commerce

The Deputy Secretary of Commerce is a high-ranking position within the U.S. 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 $11.4 billion budget, 13 operating units, and 46,000 employees. In that capacity, the deputy secretary is also a member of the President’s Management Council. The current deputy secretary is Don Graves, who was sworn in on May 14, 2021.

Deputy Secretary of Commerce of the United States of America
Seal of the Department of Commerce
Flag of the Deputy Secretary of Commerce
Incumbent
Don Graves
since May 14, 2021
United States Department of Commerce
Member ofU.S. Department of Commerce
Reports toUnited States Secretary of Commerce
SeatWashington, D.C., U.S.
AppointerThe President of the United States
with Senate advice and consent
FormationJanuary 26, 1977
First holderSidney Harman
Websitewww.Commerce.gov

History edit

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.

Rebecca M. Blank was the deputy secretary of commerce until she stepped down on May 31, 2013. She was confirmed by unanimous consent by the U.S. Senate in March 2012. She had been serving as acting deputy secretary since November 18, 2010.[1] She replaced Dennis F. Hightower, who was deputy secretary of commerce from August 2009 to August 2010.[2]

Patrick D. Gallagher was appointed acting deputy secretary on June 1, 2013.[3] Bruce H. Andrews was confirmed as the next deputy secretary on July 24, 2014.

List of deputy secretaries of commerce edit

#ImageNameTerm beganTerm endedPresident(s) served under
1Sidney HarmanJanuary 26, 1977August 28, 1980Jimmy Carter
2 Luther H. Hodges Jr.September 8, 1980January 20, 1981
3 Joseph Robert Wright Jr.January 29, 1981August 23, 1982Ronald Reagan
4 Guy W. FiskeAugust 24, 1982May 20, 1983
5 Bud BrownMay 20, 1983July 12, 1988
6 Donna F. TuttleJuly 12, 1988January 20, 1989
7 Thomas J. MurrinFebruary 11, 1989April 17, 1991George H. W. Bush
8 Rockwell A. SchnabelApril 25, 1991January 20, 1993
9 David J. BarramJanuary 27, 1993May 14, 1996Bill Clinton
10 Robert L. MallettMay 14, 1997January 20, 2001
11 Samuel BodmanJanuary 22, 2001July 16, 2004George W. Bush
12 Theodore KassingerAugust 20, 2004July 21, 2005
13 David A. SampsonJuly 25, 2005August 30, 2007
14 John J. SullivanSeptember 1, 2007March 14, 2008
March 14, 2008January 20, 2009
15 Dennis HightowerAugust 11, 2009August 27, 2010Barack Obama
16 Rebecca BlankNovember 28, 2010March 29, 2012
March 29, 2012June 1, 2013
Patrick D. Gallagher
Acting
June 1, 2013July 24, 2014
17 Bruce H. AndrewsJuly 24, 2014January 20, 2017
18 Karen Dunn KelleySeptember 22, 2017November 28, 2018Donald Trump
November 28, 2018January 20, 2021
Wynn Coggins
Acting
March 3, 2021May 14, 2021Joe Biden
19 Don GravesMay 14, 2021Incumbent

References edit

  1. ^ "Rebecca M. Blank, Acting Deputy Secretary of Commerce". United States Department of Commerce. Retrieved 2011-03-22.
  2. ^ "Dennis F. Hightower Confirmed as Deputy Secretary of Commerce". United States Department of Commerce. Archived from the original on 2009-08-14. Retrieved 2009-08-21.
  3. ^ "Leadership".

External links edit