Navy secretary ray mabus biography
•
Ray Mabus: Sixtieth Governor of Mississippi:
Although Ray Mabus was the youngest governor in America at the time of his inauguration on January 12, , he had accumulated an impressive record of public service and academic achievements.
Born October 11, , in Choctaw County, Mississippi, Raymond Edwin Mabus had earned three degrees: a bachelor of arts from the University of Mississippi, summa cum laude; a master’s in political science from Johns Hopkins; and a law degree from Harvard, magna cum laude. He had been offered a Fulbright Scholarship, had held a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship, and had traveled widely throughout Europe, the Middle East, Russia, and Latin America.
In addition to a two-year tour of duty in the United States Navy aboard a guided-missile cruiser, Mabus had also served as a law clerk in the United States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals and as a legal counsel to a subcommittee of the House Agriculture Committee. As legal counsel to Governor William Winter, he was instrumental in the drafting and enactment of the Education Reform Act of , a stricter law against driving under the influence of alcohol, and an open records law.
In Mabus was elected state auditor in his first campaign for public office. As state auditor, Mabus became a highly visible and s
•
The Honorable Ray Mabus
Featured Videos
Disabled American Veterans (DAV) Distinguished Speaker Series | Ray Mabus ’75
USGBC Speaker Series: U.S Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus
Ray Mabus
Speech Topics
We face dynamic global security environment, more complicated than at any time in the post-WW II era, with China increasingly flexing its muscles, a revanchist Russia, wild cards in the Middle East and Northwest Asia and non-state actors – even lone wolves – spreading terror.
The leader of the world’s only global Navy and Marine Corps for the last eight years, a former ambassador to Saudi Arabia, and a former CEO, Ray Mabus is the most traveled senior government leader ever, logging over million miles to visit with Sailors, Marines and senior political and military leaders in separate countries and territories.
Mabus offers a unique, insider’s perspective on the challenges and opportunities, the risks and potential rewards facing not just those concerned about national security, but also those whose businesses are impacted by international events – which means every business.
Achieving leadership generally is a long, hard and uphill road and those who travel it frequently take great risks in their climb, but too many become risk-averse onc
•
Ray Mabus
American politician
Ray Mabus | |
|---|---|
Official representation, | |
| In office May 19, – January 20, | |
| President | Barack Obama |
| Deputy | Robert O. Work Robert C. Martinage (acting) Thomas W. Hicks (acting) Janine A. Davidson |
| Preceded by | Donald C. Winter |
| Succeeded by | Richard V. Spencer |
| In office July 5, – April 25, | |
| President | Bill Clinton |
| Preceded by | John Frank Bookout Jr. |
| Succeeded by | Wyche Fowler |
| In office January 12, – January 14, | |
| Lieutenant | Brad Dye |
| Preceded by | William Allain |
| Succeeded by | Kirk Fordice |
| In office January 5, – January 7, | |
| Governor | William Allain |
| Preceded by | Hamp King |
| Succeeded by | Pete Johnson |
| Born | Raymond King Mabus Jr. () Oct 11, (age76) Ackerman, Mississippi, U.S. |
| Political party | Democratic |
| Spouses | Julie Hines (m.; div.)Lynne Horecky (m.) |
| Children | 3 |
| Relatives | Brandon Presley (cousin-in-law)[1][2] |
| Education | University party Mississippi (BA) Johns Hopkins Institution of higher education (MA) Harvard Institution of higher education (JD) |
| Allegiance | United States |
| Branch/service | United States Navy |
| Yearsof service | – |
| Rank | Lieutenant (junior grade) |
R