served as a White House fellow from 2009 to 2010. (AK) served as a White House fellow from 2002 to 2003. (TN) served as a White House fellow from 1991 to 1992. • 1965–1966
Tom Johnson; former chairman/CEO,
CNN; former publisher, Los Angeles Times. • 1966–1967
Jane Cahill Pfeiffer; former chairman,
NBC. • 1966–1967
Samuel H. Howard; Senior Vice President,
Financial Executives Institute; chairman,
Federation of American Hospitals; Member of
Bipartisan Commission on Medicare under President
Bill Clinton; Member of
Commission on Social Security under President
Ronald Reagan; former national chairman,
Easter Seals. • 1967–1968 Preston Townley; former CEO, the Conference Board, former dean,
Carlson School of Management, University of Minnesota • 1967–1968
Timothy E. Wirth; President,
United Nations Foundation; Former
Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs; former
Senator,
Colorado. • 1968–1969
Robert D. Haas; Chairman/CEO,
Levi Strauss & Company. • 1969–1970
Michael H. Armacost; former president,
the Brookings Institution; former
ambassador to
Japan and the
Philippines; former
under secretary of state for political affairs. • 1969–1970
Percy A. Pierre; former
assistant secretary of the U. S. Army for Research, Development and Acquisition,
Acting Secretary of the U.S. Army; President,
Prairie View A&M University. • 1970–1971
Dana G. Mead; former chairman/CEO,
Tenneco, Inc. • 1971–1972
Robert C. McFarlane; former
national security advisor to President
Ronald Reagan. • 1971–1972
Deanell R. Tacha;
Judge,
United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. • 1972–1973
Luis G. Nogales; former CEO,
United Press International; former president,
Univision. • 1972–1973
Joseph P. Carroll; founding president – Secrétaire Perpetuel,
Association du Mécénat de l'Institut; founding ,resident – Secrétaire Perpetuel,
the American Friends of the Guimet Foundation; emeritus member-
Board of Visitors, School of Engineering and Applied Science, Columbia University; Philanthropist. • 1972–1973
Colin Powell; former secretary,
U.S. Department of State; former chairman,
Joint Chiefs of Staff; founding chairman,
America's Promise; General,
U.S. Army (Ret). • 1973–1974
Doris M. Meissner;
Senior Fellow,
Migration Policy Institute; former commissioner,
Immigration and Naturalization Service. • 1973–1974
Peter M. Dawkins; Vice Chairman,
CitiGroup Private Bank; former chairman/CEO of
Primerica Financial Services, Inc.;
Heisman Trophy winner;
Brigadier General,
U.S. Army (Ret). • 1973–1974
Frederick S. Benson III; President,
United States – New Zealand Council; former vice president,
Weyerhaeuser Company; • 1973–1974
Delano Meriwether; Leukemia researcher. • 1974–1975
Roger B. Porter;
Professor,
John F. Kennedy School of Government,
Harvard University. • 1974–1975
Garrey E. Carruthers; President/CEO,
Cimarron Health Plan; former
governor of New Mexico. • 1975–1976
Marshall N. Carter; former chairman/CEO,
State Street Bank & Trust Company. • 1975–1976
Wesley K. Clark; retired
general,
U.S. Army (Ret); former
Supreme Allied Commander,
Europe. • 1975–1976
Dennis C. Blair;
Admiral,
U.S. Navy (Ret); former
director of national intelligence; former president,
Institute for Defense Analyses; former
commander in chief,
U.S. Pacific Command. • 1976–1977
Lynn A. Schenk; former
congresswoman, California. • 1976–1977
Charles A. Ansbacher;
Conductor,
Boston Landmarks Orchestra. • 1977–1978
Nelson A. Diaz; Partner,
Blank Rome LLP; former
city solicitor, City of
Philadelphia; former
general counsel,
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. • 1979–1980
Lincoln Caplan; author, journalist, Truman Capote Visiting Lecturer in Law and Senior Research Scholar in Law at Yale Law School. • 1979–1980
Victoria Chan-Palay; neuroscientist,
University of Zurich Medical School. • 1979–1980
Anne Cohn Donnelly; former executive director,
National Commission for Prevention of Child Abuse. • 1979–1980
Marsha J. Evans; President/CEO of
American Red Cross; former national executive director of the
Girl Scouts of the USA;
Rear Admiral,
U.S. Navy (Ret). • 1980–1981
Joan Abrahamson; President,
the Jefferson Institute; President,
Jonas Salk Foundation. • 1980–1981
Thomas J. Campbell; former
U.S. congressman,
California. • 1980–1981
M. Margaret McKeown;
Judge,
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit. • 1981–1982
Paul V. Applegarth; CEO, Value Enhancement International; former founding managing director, the Emerging Africa Infrastructure Fund; former founding CEO, the Millennium Challenge Corporation. • 1981–1982
Joe L. Barton;
U.S. congressman,
Texas. • 1981–1982
Myron E. Ullman; former CEO,
Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessy; former chairman/CEO,
DFS Group, LTD; former chairman/CEO,
R.H. Macy & Company; Chairman & CEO,
J.C. Penney. • 1982–1983
Scott Gration, USAF Major General (Ret) and US special envoy to Sudan. • 1982–1983
William L. Roper;
Dean,
School of Medicine, Vice Chairman for Medical Affairs, and CEO,
UNC Health Care system,
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. • 1982–1983
Frank Klotz;
Lieutenant General,
US Air Force; Assistant Vice Chief of Staff, director
Air Force Staff (Ret). • 1982–1983
Douglas Kmiec; former
U.S. ambassador to Malta;
United States assistant attorney general for the
Office of Legal Counsel. • 1983–1984
Elaine Chao; former secretary,
U.S. Department of Transportation; former secretary,
U.S. Department of Labor; former president/CEO,
United Way of America; former director,
Peace Corps. • 1983–1984
Mufi Hannemann;
Mayor, City and County of
Honolulu. • 1984–1985
Tom Leppert; Mayor of
Dallas; former CEO of
Turner Construction Company. • 1984–1985
Rick Stamberger; President and CEO,
SmartBrief. • 1985–1986
Ann E. Rondeau; President
Naval Postgraduate School; U.S. Navy Vice Admiral (Ret). • 1986–1987
Paul A. Gigot;
Editor,
editorial page,
The Wall Street Journal. • 1986–1987
William J. Lennox, Jr.;
Lt. General,
U.S. Army;
Superintendent,
United States Military Academy (Ret). • 1987–1988
Mary Schiavo;
Inspector General,
U.S. Department of Transportation; Author,
Flying Blind, Flying Safe; Attorney • 1988–1989
Jeff Colyer;
Governor of Kansas, plastic surgeon, and former Kansas representative. • 1988–1989
Charles Patrick Garcia; chairman, Board of Visitors,
United States Air Force Academy; former CEO, Sterling Financial Group of Companies; best-selling author of
A Message From Garcia and
Leadership Lessons of the White House Fellows. • 1988–1989
Patrick M. Walsh; retired
United States Navy Admiral, former
commander,
U.S. Pacific Fleet,
Vice Chief of Naval Operations and
Blue Angels pilot (Ret). • 1990–1991
Samuel D. Brownback; former
U.S. senator,
Kansas; former
governor of Kansas. • 1991–1992
Margarita Colmenares; first Latina engineer at
Chevron. • 1991–1992
Raymond E. Johns, Jr.;
General,
US Air Force; Commander,
Air Mobility Command (Ret). • 1991–1992
Bill Hagerty; U.S. senator, Tennessee; former U.S. ombassador to Japan. • 1992–1993
Kurt M. Campbell; 22nd U.S. deputy secretary of state and 24th assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs • 1992–1993
Robert L. Gordon III; Deputy Under-Secretary of Defense, Military Community, and Family Policy. • 1993–1994
Paul Antony; Chief Medical Officer,
PhRMA and retired U.S. Navy
Commander. • 1993–1994
W. Scott Gould; Deputy Secretary of Veterans Affairs. • 1993–1994
Jami Floyd; Journalist and media personality. • 1994–1995
Wifredo Ferrer; U.S. attorney for the Southern District of Florida. • 1994–1995
David Iglesias, U.S. attorney for the District of New Mexico; U.S. Navy Captain and Judge Advocate General (Ret); and Director of the
Wheaton Center for Faith, Politics & Economics. • 1995-1996
Teresa Leger Fernández; Congresswoman from from
New Mexico's 3rd congressional district. • 1995–1996
Kinney Zalesne; co-author of bestselling book and Wall Street Journal column
Microtrends. • 1996–1997
Brenda Berkman; first female FDNY firefighter. • 1997–1998
Sanjay Gupta;
CNN senior medical
correspondent; neurosurgeon. • 1997–1998
Brad Carson, 21st president of the
University of Tulsa;
Under Secretary of the Army;
General Counsel of the Army; Member of the
U.S. House of Representatives (OK-2). • 1998–1999
Juan M. Garcia; Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Manpower, former representative District 32,
Texas House of Representatives. • 1998–1999
John K. Tien; 8th U.S. deputy secretary of homeland security and retired Army Colonel. • 1998–1999
Carlos Del Toro; 78th U.S. secretary of the navy and retired Navy commander. • 2000–2001
Dave Aronberg; Florida state senator, District 27. • 2001–2002
Steve Poizner;
California state insurance commissioner. • 2001–2002
Kris Kobach; 45th Kansas attorney general; 31st Kansas secretary of state (2011–2019). • 2002–2003
Daniel S. Sullivan; Senator from Alaska. • 2002–2003
Richard Greco Jr., Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Financial Management and Comptroller). • 2004–2005
Jerry L. Johnson, managing director of RLJ Equity Partners. • 2004–2005
Louis O'Neill, Ambassador to Moldova (OSCE Mission). • 2005-2006
Dan Caine;
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and US Air Force lieutenant general. • 2005–2006
Eric Greitens; 56th governor of Missouri and former
Navy SEAL. • 2005–2006
Robert Reffkin; co-founder and CEO of
Compass, Inc. • 2006–2007
Wes Moore;
Governor of Maryland; former CEO of the
Robin Hood Foundation. • 2008–2009
Nicole Malachowski; US Air Force Colonel (Ret) and first woman to be a pilot with the
Thunderbirds. • 2009-2010
Emil Michael; Under Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering. • 2011–2012
L. Felice Gorordo; Acting U.S. executive director of the World Bank and U.S. alternate executive director of the World Bank • 2011–2012
Anthony Woods, secretary of the
Maryland Department of Veterans Affairs. • 2013–2014
Elliot Ackerman; author and Marine Corps veteran. • 2015–2016
Lashanda Holmes; first African-American female
helicopter pilot for the
Coast Guard. • 2015–2016
Shereef Elnahal; Under Secretary of Veterans Affairs for Health; first
Muslim American
New Jersey cabinet member. • 2016–2017
Sharice Davids; Congresswoman from
Kansas's 3rd congressional district. • 2018-2019
Clay Fuller; Congressman from
Georgia's 14th congressional district. ==The President's Commission on White House Fellowships==