United States order of precedence
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| This article does not cite any references or sources. (November 2007) Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
[edit] Details as of December 2007
- President of the United States (George W. Bush) and First Lady (Laura Bush)
- Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate (Dick Cheney) and Second Lady (Lynne Cheney) (if present)
- Governor (while in his or her state)
- Mayor (while in his or her city)
- Speaker of the United States House of Representatives (Nancy Pelosi)
- Chief Justice of the United States (John Roberts)
- Former Presidents of the United States (in order of term) and respective First Ladies:
- Jimmy Carter (1977–1981) and Rosalynn Carter (if present)
- George H. W. Bush (1989–1993) and Barbara Bush (if present)
- Bill Clinton (1993–2001) and Hillary Rodham Clinton (if present)
- U.S. ambassadors (while at their posts)
- United States Secretary of State (Condoleezza Rice)
- Ambassadors Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of foreign states (in order of tenure)
- Widows of former Presidents of the United States (in order of spouse's term):
- Ministers of foreign powers
- Associate Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States (in order of appointment):
- Retired Chief Justices (none now living)
- Retired Associate Justices of the Supreme Court
- Members of the United States Cabinet (in the order of the creation of their departments; note that the U.S. Secretary of State already appears above, at #9, also, the creation date for the Secretary of War is used as the date for the Secretary of Defense's spot in the precedence):
- Secretary of the Treasury (Henry Paulson)
- Secretary of Defense (Robert Gates)
- Attorney General (Michael Mukasey)
- Secretary of the Interior (Dirk Kempthorne)
- Secretary of Agriculture (vacant) See #26 below
- Secretary of Commerce (Carlos Gutierrez)
- Secretary of Labor (Elaine Chao)
- Secretary of Health and Human Services (Michael Leavitt)
- Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (Alphonso Jackson)
- Secretary of Transportation (Mary Peters)
- Secretary of Energy (Samuel W. Bodman)
- Secretary of Education (Margaret Spellings)
- Secretary of Veterans Affairs (James Peake)
- Secretary of Homeland Security (Michael Chertoff)
- White House Chief of Staff (Joshua B. Bolten)
- Director of the Office of Management and Budget (Jim Nussle)
- Director of National Drug Control Policy (John P. Walters)
- United States Trade Representative (Susan Schwab)
- Director of National Intelligence (John Michael McConnell)
- U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations (Zalmay Khalilzad)
- President Pro Tempore of the Senate (Robert Byrd)
- Other Current United States Senators (by Seniority; note that Robert Byrd, the most senior current Senator, already appears at #23 above)
- Ted Kennedy (November 6 1962)
- Daniel Inouye (January 3 1963)
- Ted Stevens (December 24 1968)
- Pete Domenici (January 3 1973)
- Joe Biden (January 3 1973)
- Patrick Leahy (January 3 1975)
- Richard Lugar (January 4 1977)
- Orrin Hatch (January 4 1977)
- Max Baucus (November 15 1978)
- Thad Cochran (December 27 1978)
- John Warner (January 2 1979)
- Carl Levin (January 3 1979)
- Chris Dodd (January 3 1981)
- Chuck Grassley (January 3 1981)
- Arlen Specter (January 3 1981)
- Jeff Bingaman (January 3 1983)
- John Kerry (January 2 1985)
- Tom Harkin (January 3 1985)
- Mitch McConnell (January 3 1985)
- Jay Rockefeller (January 15 1985)
- Barbara Mikulski (January 6 1987)
- Richard Shelby (January 6 1987)
- John McCain (January 6 1987)
- Harry Reid (January 6 1987)
- Kit Bond (January 6 1987)
- Kent Conrad (January 6 1987)
- Herb Kohl (January 3 1989)
- Joe Lieberman (January 3 1989)
- Daniel Akaka (May 16 1990)
- Larry Craig (January 3 1991)
- Dianne Feinstein (November 10 1992)
- Byron Dorgan (December 15 1992)
- Barbara Boxer (January 3 1993)
- Judd Gregg (January 3 1993)
- Patty Murray (January 3 1993)
- Russ Feingold (January 3 1993)
- Bob Bennett (January 3 1993)
- Kay Bailey Hutchison (June 14 1993)
- Jim Inhofe (November 17 1994)
- Olympia Snowe (January 4 1995)
- Jon Kyl (January 4 1995)
- Ron Wyden (February 6 1996)
- Sam Brownback (November 7 1996)
- Pat Roberts (January 7 1997)
- Richard Durbin (January 7 1997)
- Tim Johnson (January 7 1997)
- Wayne Allard (January 7 1997)
- Jack Reed (January 7 1997)
- Mary Landrieu (January 7 1997)
- Jeff Sessions (January 7 1997)
- Gordon Smith (January 7 1997)
- Chuck Hagel (January 7 1997)
- Susan Collins (January 7 1997)
- Mike Enzi (January 7 1997)
- Chuck Schumer (January 6 1999)
- Jim Bunning (January 6 1999)
- Mike Crapo (January 6 1999)
- Blanche Lincoln (January 6 1999)
- George Voinovich (January 6 1999)
- Evan Bayh (January 6 1999)
- Bill Nelson (January 3 2001)
- Tom Carper (January 3 2001)
- Debbie Stabenow (January 3 2001)
- John Ensign (January 3 2001)
- Maria Cantwell (January 3 2001)
- Ben Nelson (January 3 2001)
- Hillary Rodham Clinton (January 3 2001) - If Bill Clinton is present, Hillary Clinton appears with her husband (see #7 above)
- Lisa Murkowski (December 20 2002)
- Frank Lautenberg (January 3 2003)
- Saxby Chambliss (January 3 2003)
- Lindsey Graham (January 3 2003)
- John E. Sununu (January 3 2003)
- Elizabeth Dole (January 3 2003)
- Lamar Alexander (January 3 2003)
- John Cornyn (January 3 2003)
- Norm Coleman (January 3 2003)
- Mark Pryor (January 3 2003)
- Richard Burr (January 3 2005)
- Jim DeMint (January 3 2005)
- Tom Coburn (January 3 2005)
- John Thune (January 3 2005)
- Johnny Isakson (January 3 2005)
- David Vitter (January 3 2005)
- Mel Martinez (January 3 2005)
- Barack Obama (January 3 2005)
- Ken Salazar (January 3 2005)
- Bob Menendez (January 18 2006)
- Ben Cardin (January 3 2007)
- Bernie Sanders (January 3 2007)
- Sherrod Brown (January 3 2007)
- Jim Webb (January 3 2007)
- Bob Casey, Jr. (January 3 2007)
- Bob Corker (January 3 2007)
- Claire McCaskill (January 3 2007)
- Amy Klobuchar (January 3 2007)
- Sheldon Whitehouse (January 3 2007)
- Jon Tester (January 3 2007)
- John Barrasso (June 22 2007)
- Governors of the States when outside home states (by order of admission of State to Union)
- Governor of Delaware (Ruth Ann Minner)
- Governor of Pennsylvania (Ed Rendell)
- Governor of New Jersey (Jon Corzine)
- Governor of Georgia (Sonny Perdue)
- Governor of Connecticut (M. Jodi Rell)
- Governor of Massachusetts (Deval Patrick)
- Governor of Maryland (Martin O'Malley)
- Governor of South Carolina (Mark Sanford)
- Governor of New Hampshire (John Lynch)
- Governor of Virginia (Tim Kaine)
- Governor of New York (Eliot Spitzer)
- Governor of North Carolina (Mike Easley)
- Governor of Rhode Island (Donald Carcieri)
- Governor of Vermont (Jim Douglas)
- Governor of Kentucky (Steve Beshear)
- Governor of Tennessee (Phil Bredesen)
- Governor of Ohio (Ted Strickland)
- Governor of Louisiana (Kathleen Blanco)
- Governor of Indiana (Mitch Daniels)
- Governor of Mississippi (Haley Barbour)
- Governor of Illinois (Rod Blagojevich)
- Governor of Alabama (Bob Riley)
- Governor of Maine (John Baldacci)
- Governor of Missouri (Matt Blunt)
- Governor of Arkansas (Mike Beebe)
- Governor of Michigan (Jennifer Granholm)
- Governor of Florida (Charlie Crist)
- Governor of Texas (Rick Perry)
- Governor of Iowa (Chet Culver)
- Governor of Wisconsin (Jim Doyle)
- Governor of California (Arnold Schwarzenegger)
- Governor of Minnesota (Tim Pawlenty)
- Governor of Oregon (Ted Kulongoski)
- Governor of Kansas (Kathleen Sebelius)
- Governor of West Virginia (Joe Manchin)
- Governor of Nevada (Jim Gibbons)
- Governor of Nebraska (Dave Heineman)
- Governor of Colorado (Bill Ritter)
- Governor of North Dakota (John Hoeven)
- Governor of South Dakota (Mike Rounds)
- Governor of Montana (Brian Schweitzer)
- Governor of Washington (Christine Gregoire)
- Governor of Idaho (Butch Otter)
- Governor of Wyoming (Dave Freudenthal)
- Governor of Utah (Jon Huntsman, Jr.)
- Governor of Oklahoma (Brad Henry)
- Governor of New Mexico (Bill Richardson)
- Governor of Arizona (Janet Napolitano)
- Governor of Alaska (Sarah Palin)
- Governor of Hawaii (Linda Lingle)
- Acting heads of executive departments
- Acting Secretary of Agriculture (Chuck Conner) See also #16 above and #35 below
- Former Vice Presidents of the United States (in order of term):
- Walter Mondale (1977–1981)
- Dan Quayle (1989–1993)
- Al Gore (1993–2001)
- Other Members of the United States House of Representatives (by length of term served)
- John Dingell (1955)
- John Conyers (1965)
- Dave Obey (1969)
- Charles B. Rangel (1971)
- Bill Young (1971)
- Ralph Regula (1973)
- Pete Stark (1973)
- Don Young (1973)
- John Murtha (1974)
- George Miller (1975)
- Jim Oberstar (1975)
- Henry Waxman (1975)
- Ed Markey (1976)
- Norman D. Dicks (1977)
- Dale E. Kildee (1977)
- Nick Rahall (1977)
- Ike Skelton (1977)
- Jerry Lewis (1979)
- Tom Petri (1979)
- Jim Sensenbrenner (1979)
- David Dreier (1981)
- Barney Frank (1981)
- Ralph Hall (1981)
- Duncan Hunter (1981)
- Tom Lantos (1981)
- Hal Rogers (1981)
- Chris Smith (1981)
- Frank Wolf (1981)
- Steny Hoyer (1981)
- Howard Berman (1983)
- Rick Boucher (1983)
- Dan Burton (1983)
- Marcy Kaptur (1983)
- Sander M. Levin (1983)
- Alan Mollohan (1983)
- Solomon P. Ortiz (1983)
- John M. Spratt, Jr. (1983)
- Ed Towns (1983)
- Gary Ackerman (1983)
- Jim Saxton (1984)
- Joe Barton (1985)
- Howard Coble (1985)
- Bart Gordon (1985)
- Paul E. Kanjorski (1985)
- Pete Visclosky (1985)
- Richard Baker (1987)
- Peter DeFazio (1987)
- Elton Gallegly (1987)
- Wally Herger (1987)
- John Lewis (1987)
- Louise McIntosh Slaughter (1987)
- Chris Shays (1987)
- Lamar S. Smith (1987)
- Fred Upton (1988) (Nancy Pelosi would ordinarily be here, having been in the House since June 1987, but is #5 by virtue of being Speaker of the House)
- Jim McCrery (1988)
- Jerry Costello (1988)
- John James Duncan, Jr. (1988)
- etc.
- Non-voting delegates to the House of Representatives
- Governor of Puerto Rico (Aníbal Acevedo Vilá)
- National Security Advisor to the President (Stephen Hadley)
- Counselors and Assistants to the President
- Chargés d'affaires of Foreign Countries
- Former Secretaries of State
- Deputy Secretaries of Executive Departments
- Deputy Secretary of State (John Negroponte)
- Deputy Secretary of the Treasury (Robert M. Kimmitt)
- Deputy Secretary of Defense (Gordon R. England)
- Deputy Attorney General (Craig S. Morford) (Acting)
- Deputy Secretary of the Interior (Lynn Scarlett)
- Deputy Secretary of Agriculture (Chuck Conner) (presently Acting Secretary of Agriculture) See #26
- Deputy Secretary of Commerce (David Sampson)
- Deputy Secretary of Labor (vacant)
- Deputy Secretary of Health and Human Services (Tevi Troy)
- Deputy Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (Roy Bernardi)
- Deputy Secretary of Transportation (Maria Cino)
- Deputy Secretary of Energy (Clay Sell)
- Deputy Secretary of Education (Raymond Simon)
- Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs (Gordon Mansfield)
- Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security (Michael P. Jackson)
- Solicitor General (Paul Clement)
- Administrator of the Agency for International Development (Henrietta H. Fore)
- Director of the United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (Robert Joseph)
- Under Secretaries of State and Counsels
- Under Secretaries of Executive Departments
- U.S. Ambassadors at Large
- Secretaries of the United States Armed Forces:
- Postmaster General (John E. Potter)
- Chairman of the Federal Reserve (Ben Bernanke)
- Chairman of the Council on Environmental Quality (James L. Connaughton)
- Chairman of the Export-Import Bank of the United States (James H. Lambright)
- Chairman of the Federal Thrift Retirement Investment Board (Andrew Saul)
- Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (Michael Mullen)
- Under Secretaries of Defense
- Vice Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff (James E. Cartwright)
- Chiefs of Staff of the Four Services (in order of appointment):
- Commandant of the Coast Guard (Thad W. Allen)
- Commanders-in-Chief of Unified and Specified Commands of Four-Star Grade
- U.S. Northern Command (USNORTHCOM) (Gen. Victor E. Renuart)
- U.S. Southern Command (USSOUTHCOM) (Admiral James G. Stavridis)
- U.S. European Command (USEUCOM) (GEN Bantz J. Craddock)
- U.S. Pacific Command (USPACOM) (ADM Timothy J. Keating)
- U.S. Central Command (USCENTCOM) (ADM William J. Fallon)
- U.S. African Command (USAFRICOM) (GEN William E. Ward)
- U.S. Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) (ADM Eric T. Olson)
- U.S. Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM) (Gen Kevin P. Chilton)
- U.S. Transportation Command (USTRANSCOM) (Gen. Norton A. Schwartz)
- U.S. Joint Forces Command (USJFCOM) (Gen Lance L. Smith)
- Generals of the Army, Generals of the Air Force, and Fleet Admirals (None living)
- Lieutenant Governors (or the equivalent) of the States (by order of admission of State to Union)
- Lieutenant Governor of Delaware (John C. Carney, Jr.)
- Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania (Catherine Baker Knoll)
- President of the Senate of New Jersey (Richard Codey)
Lieutenant Governor of New Jersey - Effective January 2010 - Lieutenant Governor of Georgia (Casey Cagle)
- Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut (Michael Fedele)
- Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts (Tim Murray)
- Lieutenant Governor of Maryland (Anthony G. Brown)
- Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina (André Bauer)
- President of the Senate of New Hampshire (Sylvia Larsen)
- Lieutenant Governor of Virginia (Bill Bolling)
- Lieutenant Governor of New York (David Paterson)
- Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina (Beverly Perdue)
- Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island (Elizabeth H. Roberts)
- Lieutenant Governor of Vermont (Brian Dubie)
- Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky (Daniel Mongiardo)
- Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee (Ron Ramsey)
- Lieutenant Governor of Ohio (Lee Fisher)
- Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana (Mitch Landrieu)
- Lieutenant Governor of Indiana (Becky Skillman)
- Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi (Amy Tuck)
- Lieutenant Governor of Illinois (Pat Quinn)
- Lieutenant Governor of Alabama (Jim Folsom, Jr.)
- President of the Maine Senate (Beth Edmonds)
- Lieutenant Governor of Missouri (Peter Kinder)
- Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas (Bill Halter)
- Lieutenant Governor of Michigan (John D. Cherry)
- Lieutenant Governor of Florida (Jeff Kottkamp)
- Lieutenant Governor of Texas (David Dewhurst)
- Lieutenant Governor of Iowa (Patty Judge)
- Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin (Barbara Lawton)
- Lieutenant Governor of California (John Garamendi)
- Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota (Carol Molnau)
- Secretary of State of Oregon (Bill Bradbury)
- Lieutenant Governor of Kansas (Mark Parkinson)
- President of the West Virginia Senate (Earl Ray Tomblin)
- Lieutenant Governor of Nevada (Brian Krolicki)
- Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska (Rick Sheehy)
- Lieutenant Governor of Colorado (Barbara O'Brien)
- Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota (Jack Dalrymple)
- Lieutenant Governor of South Dakota (Dennis Daugaard)
- Lieutenant Governor of Montana (John Bohlinger)
- Lieutenant Governor of Washington (Brad Owen)
- Lieutenant Governor of Idaho (Jim Risch)
- Secretary of State of Wyoming (Max Maxfield)
- Lieutenant Governor of Utah (Gary R. Herbert)
- Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma (Jari Askins)
- Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico (Diane Denish)
- Secretary of State of Arizona (Jan Brewer)
- Lieutenant Governor of Alaska (Sean Parnell)
- Lieutenant Governor of Hawaii (James Aiona)
[edit] External links
- Order of Precedence from the Office of the Mayor of City of New York
- US order of precedence, all the way down to junior military officersid:Urutan protokoler Amerika Serikat
pl:Precedencja w USA

