The Salvation Army In
The Salvation Army, the rank of
commissioner is the second-highest attainable rank and the highest rank by appointment, as the rank of
general is attained by election by the
High Council. It is one of the original ranks of the Army and has been in use since 1880, the first commissioner was
George Scott Railton.
Scouting Within the
Scout Movement, a
commissioner is a senior adult leader who is responsible for the management of an aspect of Scouting and/or the leadership of other adults, as opposed to adult leaders who lead youth members.
Boy Scouts of America Commissioners are district and council leaders who help Scout units succeed. They coach and consult with adult leaders of Cub Scout packs, Boy Scout troops, and Venturing crews. Commissioners help maintain the standards of the Boy Scouts of America.
Sports In some
sports leagues, including
all four North American professional major sports the commissioner is the highest executive position in the league. The exact powers of the commissioner depend on the constitution and/or rules of the league, and are invariably limited by State and Federal Law and collective bargaining agreements. Commissioners are elected by the owners of the league's clubs or board of directors/governors, and function as executive directors of the various owner's associations describing themselves as Leagues and handle matters such as discipline, arbitration of disputes between the clubs, etc. in the interests of the owners. The title was first used in 1920, when
Kenesaw Mountain Landis was appointed
Commissioner of Baseball in the aftermath of the
Black Sox Scandal. Landis was titled "commissioner" partly to distinguish his office from that of the "president" of the
American and
National Leagues. Landis' title derived from the
National Commission, the ruling body for baseball established in 1903, when the two leagues were largely autonomous organizations. The commission originally consisted of three members. Desperate to restore public confidence in their sport's integrity,
baseball owners agreed to appoint Landis as the game's sole
commissioner after he rebuffed their offer of a position at the head of a reformed commission. Baseball owners also gave Landis absolute power and a lifetime contract, which permitted the former judge to assume more power over the sport than a commissioner in any sport has held since. The other
major professional sports leagues of North America followed suit, either replacing their positions of league president with that of the commissioner or appointing a commissioner and reducing the position of league president to a mere figurehead role. The
National Football League appointed its first commissioner in 1941. The NFL, which in its early years faced several rival leagues, intended its commissioner's office to be analogous to the one then held by Landis in baseball, with authority over all of professional football. The NFL's rivals responded by appointing their own commissioners (thereby explicitly rejecting the NFL commissioner's authority). Finally in 1966, the
American Football League agreed to abolish their commissioner's office and recognize the authority of then-NFL commissioner
Pete Rozelle in exchange for the NFL agreeing to
a merger with its most successful rival. This did not result in any formal change to Rozelle's title or even in his powers, since the NFL constitution already purportedly granted him extensive power over other professional leagues. Nevertheless he became informally known as the
football commissioner until 1970 when the merger was finalized and the AFL was fully absorbed into the NFL. No rival U.S. football league has recognized the NFL commissioner's authority since 1970, although no such league has lasted longer than three seasons. In
Canadian football, the title of commissioner dates to no later than the 1940s. Like many of the NFL's rivals south of the border, the top Canadian football leagues then in existence (the
Interprovincial Rugby Football Union and
Western Interprovincial Football Union) appointed commissioners in a bid to assert their leagues' independence from the NFL commissioner. When the two leagues formed an umbrella organization (the Canadian Football Council) in 1956, the posts of IRFU commissioner and WIFU commissioner were abolished and former WIFU Commissioner
Sydney Halter was appointed commissioner of the CFC. When the CFC itself evolved into the modern
Canadian Football League in 1958, Halter carried on in the office as that league's first commissioner. The
National Basketball Association (NBA) followed suit by appointing a commissioner in 1967, largely in response to a
rival league that commenced play that year. The ABA did not recognize the NBA commissioner's authority and maintained its own commissioner's office until
merging with the NBA in 1976. The
National Hockey League (NHL) did not follow suit when the rival
World Hockey Association commenced playing, as then-NHL president
Clarence Campbell, who was openly hostile to the WHA's very existence, made clear he was not interested in any change to his own title. The NHL finally appointed a commissioner in 1993 (long after
merging with the WHA) when incumbent
Gary Bettman assumed office.
Major League Soccer (MLS) appointed a commissioner upon its founding later that year. The use of "commissioner" has been less prevalent in top-level women's leagues. When the NBA founded the
Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) in 1996, it chose to use the title of "president" for that league's chief executive, and did not use the title of "commissioner" for that position until 2019. The
National Women's Soccer League (NWSL), founded in 2012 with play starting in 2013, initially called its chief executive "commissioner", but that position had been vacant after the resignation of the league's second commissioner,
Jeff Plush, shortly before the 2017 season. The NWSL's highest office was styled as "president" until the "commissioner" title was reinstated when Lisa Baird filled that post in 2020. Due to the unique ownership structure of the
Professional Women's Hockey League, the organization has no current plans to appoint a commissioner. In general, the commissioners' powers and responsibilities in the NFL, NBA and NHL are not substantially different from those of the presidents that preceded them. Although baseball's subsequent commissioners have not had the absolute power that Landis did, former Commissioner
Bud Selig has succeeded in centralizing authority over
Major League Baseball in the commissioner's office, relegating the position of league president to an honorary title and giving baseball's commissioner competencies similar to those of his colleagues in the other major sports. Many minor professional and amateur leagues throughout the United States and Canada have also appointed commissioners. The title has not caught on outside North America. In Great Britain, the title
chief executive is used for the most closely equivalent position in that country's professional leagues. A key difference between the state of affairs in North America and Europe is that most European sports (including those in Great Britain) include powerful governing bodies that operate independently of and hold some power over the professional leagues, whereas in North America the equivalent governing bodies'
de facto authority is mostly confined to amateur sport. For example, while the
Premier League is roughly as lucrative and wealthy as the "Big Four" North American leagues,
the Football Association nevertheless has the power to veto the appointment of that league's chief executive. The
Australian Football League is governed by the
AFL Commission, whose members are called
commissioners. However, the head of the commission, who is the closest equivalent to a North American sports commissioner, is formally titled the
chairman, and is never referred to as a
commissioner. Current commissioners of the North American professional leagues are: •
Roger Goodell in the NFL •
Rob Manfred in MLB (and
MiLB) •
Adam Silver in the NBA •
Gary Bettman in the NHL •
Don Garber in MLS •
Stewart Johnston in the CFL •
Russ Brandon in the
UFL •
Cathy Engelbert in the WNBA • Lisa Baird in the NWSL ==Compound titles==