Best Chief of Staff? (user search)
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  Best Chief of Staff? (search mode)
Pages: [1]
Poll
Question: Best Chief of Staff?
#1
John Steelman (1946-1953)
 
#2
Sherman Adams (1953-1958)
 
#3
Wilton Persons (1958-1961)
 
#4
Kenneth O'Donnell (1961-1963)
 
#5
Marvin Watson (1963-1968)
 
#6
James R. Jones (1968-1969)
 
#7
H.R. Haldeman (1969-1973)
 
#8
Al Haig (1973-1974)
 
#9
Donald Rumsfield (1974-1975)
 
#10
Dick Cheney (1975-1977)
 
#11
Hamilton Jordan (1979-1980)
 
#12
Jack Watson (1980-1981)
 
#13
James Baker (1981-1985)
 
#14
Don Regan (1985-1987)
 
#15
Howard Baker (1987-1988)
 
#16
Kenneth Duberstein (1988-1989)
 
#17
John Sununu (1989-1991)
 
#18
Samuel Skinner (1991-1992)
 
#19
James Baker (1992-1993)
 
#20
Mark McLarty (1993-1994)
 
#21
Leon Panetta (1994-1997)
 
#22
Erskine Bowles (1997-1998)
 
#23
John Podesta (1998-2001)
 
#24
Andrew Card (2001-2006)
 
#25
Joshua Bolton (2006-2009)
 
#26
Rahm Emmanuel (2009-2010)
 
#27
Pete Rouse (2010-2011)
 
#28
Bill Daley (2011-2012)
 
#29
Jack Lew (2012-2013)
 
#30
Denis McDonough (2013-2017)
 
#31
Reince Priebus (2017-2017)
 
#32
John Kelly (2017-?)
 
Show Pie Chart
Partisan results

Total Voters: 28

Author Topic: Best Chief of Staff?  (Read 760 times)
FEMA Camp Administrator
Cathcon
Atlas Star
*****
Posts: 27,355
United States


« on: July 31, 2017, 09:54:38 PM »

Rumsfeld and Cheney at some point switched from being foreign policy realists like Ford, Kissinger, Powell, and Rice, to being neoconservatives. In the 1970s, though, they were pretty great.

As early as their first period in power--that is, the mid 1970's, and the first time that is relevant here--they stood notably to Kissinger's "right".
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FEMA Camp Administrator
Cathcon
Atlas Star
*****
Posts: 27,355
United States


« Reply #1 on: July 31, 2017, 10:04:31 PM »

Rumsfeld and Cheney at some point switched from being foreign policy realists like Ford, Kissinger, Powell, and Rice, to being neoconservatives. In the 1970s, though, they were pretty great.

As early as their first period in power--that is, the mid 1970's, and the first time that is relevant here--they stood notably to Kissinger's "right".
Not really. Phil Crane and Alexander Haig were the main two hawks at the time.

Fascinating.
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