Bill nelson wife
Administrator of NASA
Head of the US independent space agency
The administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is the highest-ranking official of NASA, the national space agency of the United States. The administrator is NASA's chief decision maker, responsible for providing clarity to the agency's vision and serving as a source of internal leadership within NASA.
The office holder also has an important place within United States space policy,[1] and is assisted by a deputy administrator.
A member of the Democratic Party , Nelson served from to as a U. Nelson retired from Congress in to run for governor of Florida , but was unsuccessful. In , Nelson was elected to the U. Nelson ran in for a fourth term, but narrowly lost to then-Governor Rick Scott. In the U.The administrator is appointed by the president of the United States, with the advice and consent of the United States Senate, and thereafter serves at the president's pleasure. Former senator and astronaut Bill Nelson has served as the administrator since May 3, Entrepreneur and commercial astronaut Jared Isaacman has been the nominee for NASA administrator since December 4,
Duties and responsibilities
The administrator serves as NASA's chief executive officer, accountable to the President for the leadership necessary to achieve the agency's mission.
This leadership requires articulating the agency's vision, setting its programmatic and budget priorities and internal policies, and assessing Agency performance.[2]
History
The first administrator of NASA was Dr. T. Keith Glennan; during his term he brought together the disparate projects in space development research in the US.[3]Daniel Goldin held the post for the longest term (nearly 10 years), and is best known for pioneering the "faster, better, cheaper" approach to space programs.[4] The only person to hold the post twice is James C.
Fletcher, who returned to NASA following the Challenger disaster.[5]
The current administrator is former senator and astronaut Bill Nelson, who was nominated by President Joe Biden on March 19, ,[6] confirmed by the Senate on April 29, and officially sworn in on May 3.[7] The current nominee for administrator is entrepreneur and commercial astronaut Jared Isaacman, who was nominated by President-elect Donald Trump on December 4, [8]
List of administrators
- Status
Denotes an acting administrator of NASA
Denotes a presumptive nominee
No. | Portrait | Name | Took office | Left office | Days served | President serving under | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | T. Keith Glennan | August 19, | January 20, | Dwight D. Eisenhower | |||
- | Hugh Dryden | January 11, | February 14, | 24 | John F.
Kennedy | ||
2 | James E. Webb | February 14, | October 7, | 1, | |||
1, (2, total) | Lyndon B. Johnson | ||||||
3 | Thomas O.
Paine | October 8, | March 21, | ||||
60 | Richard Nixon | ||||||
March 21, | September 15, | ( total) | |||||
- | George Low | September 16, | April 26, | ||||
4 | James C.
Fletcher | April 27, | May 1, | 1, | |||
Gerald Ford | |||||||
( total) | Jimmy Carter | ||||||
- | Alan M. Lovelace | May 2, | June 20, | 49 | |||
5 | Robert A. Frosch | June 21, | January 20, | 1, | |||
- | Alan M.
Lovelace | January 21, | July 10, | ( total) | Ronald Reagan | ||
6 | James M. Beggs | July 10, | December 4, | 1, | |||
- | William Graham | December 4, | May 11, | ||||
7 | James C.
Fletcher | May 12, | April 8, | ||||
78 ( total) | George H. W. Bush | ||||||
- | Dale D. Myers | April 8, | May 13, | 35 | |||
8 | Richard H.
Truly | May 14, | June 30, | 47 | |||
July 1, | March 31, | 1, (1, total) | |||||
9 | Daniel Goldin | April 1, | November 17, | ||||
2, | Bill Clinton | ||||||
(3, total) | George W.
Bush | ||||||
- | Daniel Mulville | November 19, | December 21, | 32 | |||
10 | Sean O'Keefe | December 21, | February 11, | 1, | |||
- | Frederick D. Gregory | February 11, | April 14, | 62 | |||
11 | Michael D.
Griffin | April 14, | January 20, | 1, | |||
- | Christopher Scolese | January 20, | July 17, | Barack Obama | |||
12 | Charles Bolden | July 17, | January 20, | 2, | |||
- | Robert M.
Lightfoot Jr. | January 20, | April 23, | Donald Trump | |||
13 | Jim Bridenstine | April 23, | January 20, | 1, | |||
- | Steve Jurczyk | January 20, | May 3, | Joe Biden | |||
14 | Bill Nelson | May 3, | Incumbent | 1, | |||
- | Jared Isaacman | - | Nominee[8] | - | Donald Trump |
Line of succession
The line of succession for the administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is as follows:[9]
- Deputy administrator of NASA
- Associate administrator of NASA
- Chief of staff of NASA
- Director of Johnson Space Center (Houston, Texas)
- Director of Kennedy Space Center (Merritt Island, Florida)
- Director of Marshall Space Flight Center (Redstone Arsenal, Alabama)
In the event of there being no deputy administrator of NASA, the associate administrator will serve as acting administrator.
See also
References
- ^"NASA Strategic Management Handbook".
Archived from the original on May 10, Retrieved April 23,
- ^"Chapter 2-Roles and Responsibilities".Senator bill nelson wiki He is a member of the Democratic Party. He was the United States Senator from Florida from to He lost his re-election campaign in to Republican Governor Rick Scott. He was a member of the Florida House of Representatives from to and in the United States House of Representatives from to In January , he became the second sitting member of Congress to fly in space, after Jake Garn.
Archived from the original on April 25, Retrieved April 23,
- ^"T. Keith Glennan biography". NASA. August 4, Archived from the original on July 8, Retrieved July 5,
- ^"Daniel S. Goldin biography". NASA. March 12, Archived from the original on June 15, Retrieved July 5,
- ^"James C.
Fletcher biography". NASA.
Bill nelson jr A fifth-generation Floridian whose ancestors came to Florida in , Nelson represented the state for 18 years in the U. Senate and 12 years in the U. House of Representatives. He served on key committees, including as ranking member of the Senate Commerce Committee and chairman of the Subcommittees on Science and Space in both the Senate and the House. By preparing NASA for Artemis II and subsequent missions — and commissioning a new generation of lunar landers, spacesuits, and rovers — NASA laid the foundation for the American astronauts of a new century to set foot on the surface of the Moon.Archived from the original on July 6, Retrieved July 5,
- ^"President Biden Announces his Intent to Nominate Bill Nelson for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration". The White House. March 19, Archived from the original on March 19, Retrieved March 19,
- ^"List of Administrators and Deputy Administrators of NASA".
NASA. Archived from the original on May 21, Retrieved July 4,
- ^ ab"Trump Picks Jared Isaacman as NASA Administrator". . I am humbled and grateful," Nelson said in a Monday X post. Nelson, a member of the Democratic Party, began his U. He won a seat in the U. House six years later, representing Florida's 9th congressional district. House to reach the final frontier.
December 4, Retrieved December 4,
- ^"Designation of Officers of the National Aeronautics And Space Administration To Act as Administrator". Federal Register. January 22, Archived from the original on October 30, Retrieved October 30,