User:SuperWIKI

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Hello there. My name is SuperWIKI (not my real name), an avid Wikipedian who just wants friends, a job he loves and tons of fun! Has odd interests with the military, the nature of death, over-analyzing what cannot be analyzed (yeah I don't get it either) and re-doing everything he does just because it's not 'perfect' enough. That extends to the list articles I create for the welfare of this task force. Not a member (way too busy to), but I consider someone who keeps track of appointments and new promotions and wants to update them regularly for the public, zealously and attentively. You know, normal stuff. Still new to it though. I'll need tons of time and work put in before I actually fulfill my goal and even then my short attention span might make me give up halfway and continue in the next decade. Oh well.

Aside from all this malarkey, I mostly work on the Trope Pantheons on the TVTropes website. An excellent crossover comprising all characters from all across fiction (and uncontroversial real life where permitted), that sort of project will always and eternally be, to say the phrase, my jam. I may not exactly agree with the site's policies (especially its political leanings, which I will not elaborate on). Just a weirdo who happened to step is what I always say, the guy disconnected from reality always yakking on about that one chicken in the backyard, and whoever that deputy of the Mafia organization is (spoiler alert for File 1066: it was the rabbit-toothed chef). When you look at my userboxes, be mindful or enthused: one of them is not true. You already know don't you? Darn it. Heh.

So anyway...

Franchises I specialise in:

and to a certain extent...

Service summary[edit]

To-do list for SuperWIKI:

Post-hold updates

  1. PRIORITY: Check that all newly-promoted 4-star, 3-star, and 2-star officers are updated accordingly.
    1. Move up newly-promoted officers to the next highest list.
    2. Remove newly-promoted officers from the lower list.
    3. Correct and update all related unit (main and dual-hats), leadership lists, overall service branch articles that have the officer's unit leadership included, and predecessor and successor's Wikipedia articles (especially the s-mil).
  1. Check dates of rank for newly-promoted officers after hold (consult GOMO for Army; MyNavyHR for Navy, USAF and USSF biographies for Air and Space Force)
  1. Change all PNG seals and logos to SVG, where possible
  1. Reminder: January (.00), February (.17), March (.25), April (.33), May (.42), June (.50), July (.58), August (.67), September (.75), October (.83), November (.92), December (.98)

Service award progress[edit]

Currently, this editor has earned the Master Editor service award.

To get to the next level, Master Editor II, they need to meet the time requirement.
Progress towards the next level (by time): [ 165.5 days / 365.2 days ]

45.3% completed

  

Awards received[edit]

Silver star
Silver star
Bronze star
Bronze star
Bronze star
Hero of the Pantheon
for spearheading an emergency Archiving of the Pantheon
Hero of Pantheonic Fervour
for respectable and steadfast adminship of a Pantheon Discord server
Original Barnstar Ribbon
with three bronze and two silver service stars
Master Editor Ribbon Senior Editor III Ribbon Senior Editor II Ribbon
Senior Editor Ribbon Veteran Editor IV Ribbon Veteran Editor III Ribbon
Veteran Editor II Ribbon Veteran Editor Ribbon Experienced Editor Ribbon
Yeoman Level 4 Ribbon Journeyman Level 4 Ribbon Apprentice Level 4 Ribbon
Novice Level 4 Ribbon Registered Editor Level 4 Ribbon Experienced Pantheon Contributor Ribbon[1]
The Original Barnstar
from Thewolfchild
The Military Barnstar
from FormalDude
The Military Barnstar
from Neovu79
Singapore Contributor Badge

My main duties (AVOID taking on more than you can chew, even if you hate articles of poor quality)[edit]

  • Update four-star, three-star, and two-star U.S. military officer lists, and related information, and create new lists for retired officers where data is available.
  • Upload voice tracks for U.S. executive branch officials, senators, representatives, ambassadors and military officers.
  • Avoid getting drawn into overall research and restructuring efforts in relation to these articles, lest you overstress yourself.

Users in contact with or follow[edit]

  • Thewolfchild (Moderator(?) I am on speaking terms with, very willing to help if you ask nicely)
  • Maliepa (Veteran uploader of military images, refer to him first for any potential image uploads if afraid of duplication)
  • Morinao (Very infrequent editor, the one who inspired me to start making lists based on his four-star ones)
  • Neovu79 (Infrequent, formerly frequent, uploads and contributions to military appointments and recently promoted officers)
  • KingEdinburgh (Routine updates to military nominations and appointments,[2] image uploads)
  • SmartyPants22 (So many list articles, note one-star officers and British senior officers)
  • EPMen (Substantive updates to military assignments, not often but tremendously consequential)
  • Clay (U.S. government personnel appointments + images, ask for potential nomination news)
  • RandomUserGuy1738 (Exclusive to Wikimedia; uploads Lloyd Austin images from the SecDef Flickr. Refer to him for potential Austin duplicates unless mine is earlier upload)
  • Foxtrot5151 (Contacted Morinao before, excellent military promotion researcher who has sent amendments to the Senate Armed Services Committee before)
  • LosPajaros (Many audio files of politicians)
  • AlaskaGal (Ted Stevens. Just Ted Stevens)

Pages created/contributed to[edit]

Military personnel[edit]

United States Army[edit]

United States Marine Corps[edit]

United States Navy[edit]

United States Air Force[edit]

United States Coast Guard[edit]

Military positions[edit]

Military units[edit]

Lists[edit]

Others[edit]

Pages I and LosPajaros + others added audio files to[edit]

Those in bold consisted of multiple attempts; those highlighted in yellow are uploaded by LosPajaros or a related user

Executive branch[edit]

Civilians[edit]

Executive branch (civilians)
Presidents[edit]
  • Joe Biden (46th U.S. President; 47th U.S. Vice President; former U.S. senator)
  • George H. W. Bush (41st U.S. President; 43rd U.S. Vice President; 11th DCI; 2nd liaison to PRC; 10th ambassador to the UN; former House)
  • George W. Bush (43rd U.S. President; 46th Texas governor)
  • Jimmy Carter (39th U.S. President; 76th Georgia governor)
  • Bill Clinton (42nd U.S. President; 40th and 42nd Arkansas governor; 50th Arkansas attorney general)
  • Calvin Coolidge (30th U.S. President; 29th U.S. Vice President; 48th Massachusetts governor; 46th Massachusetts lieutenant governor)
  • Dwight D. Eisenhower (34th U.S. President; retired U.S. Army general)
  • Gerald Ford (38th U.S. President; 40th U.S. Vice President; former House)
  • Warren G. Harding (29th U.S. President; former U.S. senator; 28th Ohio lieutenant governor)
  • Lyndon B. Johnson (36th U.S. President; 37th U.S. Vice President; former U.S. senator; former House)
  • Richard Nixon (37th U.S. President; 36th U.S. Vice President; former U.S. senator; former House)
  • Barack Obama (44th U.S. President; former U.S. senator)
  • Ronald Reagan (40th U.S. President; 33rd California governor)
  • William Howard Taft (27th U.S. President; 10th chief justice; 42nd War secretary; former appeals court judge; 6th U.S. solicitor general)
  • Donald Trump (45th U.S. President)
  • Woodrow Wilson (28th U.S. President; 34th New Jersey governor)
Vice Presidents[edit]
  • Kamala Harris (49th U.S. Vice President; former U.S. senator; 32nd California attorney general)
  • Walter Mondale (42nd U.S. Vice President; 24th ambassador to Japan; former U.S. senator; 23rd Minnesota attorney general)
  • Mike Pence (48th U.S. Vice President; 50th Indiana governor; former House)
Cabinet officials[edit]
  • John Ashcroft (79th Attorney General; former U.S. senator; 50th Missouri governor; 38th Missouri attorney general; 29th Missouri auditor)
  • Les Aspin (18th SECDEF; former House)
  • Lloyd Austin (28th SECDEF; retired U.S. Army general)
  • William Barr (77th and 85th Attorney General; 25th deputy attorney general; former DOJ official)
  • Lloyd Bentsen (69th Treasury secretary; former U.S. senator; former House)
  • Antony Blinken (71st State secretary; 18th State deputy secretary; 26th deputy NSA)
  • John Bryson (37th Commerce secretary)
  • Pete Buttigieg (19th Transportation secretary; 32nd South Bend mayor)
  • Miguel Cardona (12th Education secretary)
  • Ash Carter (25th SECDEF; 31st deputy SECDEF; former Defense Department official)
  • Julian Castro (16th HUD secretary; 181st San Antonio mayor; former South Antonio city councillor)
  • Elaine Chao (18th Transportation secretary; 24th Labor secretary; 12th Peace Corps director; 4th Transportation deputy secretary)
  • Hillary Clinton (67th State secretary; former U.S. senator; former U.S. First Lady)
  • Mark Esper (27th SECDEF; 23rd SECARMY)
  • Marcia Fudge (18th HUD secretary; former House; former Warrensville Heights mayor)
  • Merrick Garland (86th Attorney General; former appeals court judge)
  • Robert Gates (22nd SECDEF; 15th DCI; 17th DNSA; 16th DDCI)
  • Timothy Geithner (75th Treasury secretary; former New York Fed president)
  • Alberto Gonzales (80th Attorney General; former White House counsel; former Texas Supreme Court justice; former Texas state secretary)
  • Jennifer Granholm (16th Energy secretary; 47th Michigan governor; 51st Michigan attorney general)
  • Deb Haaland (54th Interior secretary; former House)
  • Eric Holder (82nd Attorney General; 29th Deputy Attorney General; former U.S. attorney; former D.C. court judge)
  • Chuck Hagel (24th SECDEF; former U.S. senator)
  • Sally Jewell (51st Interior secretary)
  • Loretta Lynch (83rd Attorney General; former U.S. attorney)
  • Jim Mattis (26th SECDEF; retired U.S. Marine Corps general)
  • Alejandro Mayorkas (7th DHS secretary; 6th DHS deputy secretary; 3rd USCIS director; former U.S. attorney)
  • Denis McDonough (11th Veterans Affairs secretary; 26th White House chief of staff; 25th DNSA)
  • Norman Mineta (14th Transportation secretary; 33rd Commerce secretary; former House; 59th San Jose mayor)
  • Michael Mukasey (81st Attorney General; former district court judge)
  • Steven Mnuchin (77th Treasury secretary)
  • Paul H. O'Neill (72nd Treasury secretary; former OMB deputy director)
  • Leon Panetta (23rd SECDEF; 3rd CIA director; 18th White House chief of staff; 29th OMB director; former House)
  • Henry Paulson (74th Treasury secretary)
  • Sonny Perdue (31st Agriculture secretary; 81st Georgia governor)
  • Mike Pompeo (70th State secretary; 6th CIA director; former House)
  • Tom Price (23rd HHS secretary; former House; former Georgia state senator)
  • Penny Pritzker (38th Commerce secretary)
  • Gina Raimondo (40th Commerce secretary; 75th Rhode Island governor; 30th Rhode Island treasurer)
  • Condoleezza Rice (66th State secretary; 19th NSA)
  • Wilbur Ross (39th Commerce secretary)
  • Jeff Sessions (84th Attorney General; former U.S. senator; 44th Alabama attorney general; former U.S. attorney)
  • John W. Snow (73rd Treasury secretary; 3rd NHTSA administrator)
  • Julie Su (acting Labor secretary; 27th Labor deputy secretary)
  • Rex Tillerson (69th State secretary)
  • Eric Shinseki (7th Veterans Affairs secretary; retired U.S. Army general)
  • Tom Vilsack (30th and 32nd Agriculture secretary; 40th Iowa governor)
  • Marty Walsh (29th Labor secretary; 53rd Boston mayor)
  • Janet Yellen (78th Treasury secretary; 15th Fed chair; 19th Fed vice chair; former CEA chair)
Agency and department officials[edit]
Ambassadors (political appointees)[edit]
  • John Abizaid (23rd ambassador to Saudi Arabia; retired U.S. Army general)
  • John R. Allen (former special presidential envoy for ISIL coalition; retired U.S. Marine Corps general)
  • Howard Baker (26th ambassador to Japan; 12th White House chief of staff; former U.S. senator)
  • Max Baucus (11th ambassador to China; former U.S. senator)
  • Scott Brown (19th ambassador to New Zealand and Samoa; former U.S. senator)
  • R. Nicholas Burns (13th ambassador to China; former career Foreign Service)
  • Joe Donnelly (12th ambassador to the Holy See; former U.S. senator; former House)
  • Rahm Emanuel (31st ambassador to Japan; 55th Chicago mayor; 23rd White House chief of staff; former House)
  • Jeff Flake (31st ambassador to Turkey; former U.S. senator; former House)
  • Eric Garcetti (26th ambassador to India; 42nd Los Angeles mayor)
  • Callista Gingrich (11th ambassador to the Holy See)
  • Amy Gutmann (30th ambassador to Germany)
  • Nikki Haley (29th ambassador to the UN; 116th South Carolina governor)
  • Harry B. Harris Jr. (23rd ambassador to South Korea; retired U.S. Navy admiral)
  • Pete Hoekstra (24th ambassador to the Netherlands; former House)
  • Kay Bailey Hutchison (22nd ambassador to NATO; former U.S. senator)
  • Jonathan E. Kaplan (17th ambassador to Singapore)
  • Caroline Kennedy (27th ambassador to Australia; 29th ambassador to Japan)
  • John Kerry (1st WH climate envoy; 68th State secretary; former U.S. senator; 66th Massachusetts lieutenant governor)
  • Jack Lew (22nd ambassador to Israel; 76th Treasury secretary; 25th White House chief of staff; 32nd/38th OMB director)
  • Gary Locke (10th ambassador to China; 36th Commerce secretary; 21st Washington governor)
  • Cindy McCain (ambassador to UN for Food & Agriculture)
  • George J. Mitchell (former special envoy for Middle East Peace; former 9/11 commission vice chair; former special envoy for Northern Ireland; former U.S. senator)
  • Marc B. Nathanson (32nd ambassador to Norway)
  • Ken Salazar (32nd ambassador to Mexico; 50th Interior secretary; former U.S. senator)
  • Linda Thomas-Greenfield (31st ambassador to the UN; former career Foreign Service)
  • Tom Udall (20th ambassador to New Zealand and Samoa; former U.S. senator)
Ambassadors (career FSOs)[edit]
Other executive branch[edit]

Military[edit]

Executive branch (military)
U.S. Army[edit]
U.S. Marine Corps[edit]
U.S. Navy[edit]
U.S. Air Force[edit]
U.S. Space Force[edit]
U.S. Coast Guard[edit]

State and municipal officials[edit]

  • Frank Murkowski (R-AK) (8th Alaska governor; former U.S. senator)
  • Lurleen Wallace (D-AL) (46th Alabama governor; former Alabama First Lady)
  • Sarah Huckabee Sanders (R-AR) (47th Arkansas governor; 31st White House press secretary)
  • Mike Coffman (R-CO) (Aurora, Colorado mayor; former House)
  • Sam Brownback (R-KS) (46th Kansas governor; former U.S. senator; former House)
  • Joseph Curtatone (D-MA) (35th Somerville mayor)
  • Michelle Wu (D-MA) (54th Boston mayor; former Boston City Council president; former Boston City Council member)
  • Anthony Brown (D-MD) (47th Maryland attorney general; former House; 8th Maryland lieutenant governor)
  • Mark Dayton (D-MN) (40th Minnesota governor, former U.S. senator; 15th Minnesota auditor)
  • Keith Ellison (D-MN) (30th Minnesota attorney general; former House)
  • Greg Gianforte (R-MT) (26th Montana governor; former House)
  • Gurbir Grewal (D-NJ) (61st New Jersey attorney general)
  • Eric Adams (D-NY) (110th NYC mayor; 18th Brooklyn borough president; former NY state senator)
  • Mike DeWine (R-OH) (70th Ohio governor; 50th Ohio attorney general; former U.S. senator; 59th Ohio lieutenant governor; former House)
  • John Kasich (R-OH) (69th Ohio governor; former House)
  • Lincoln Chafee (LP-RI) (74th Rhode Island governor; former U.S. senator; former Warwick mayor)
  • Henry McMaster (R-SC) (117th South Carolina governor; 91st South Carolina lieutenant governor; 50th South Carolina attorney general; former SC GOP chair; former U.S. attorney)
  • Joseph L. Fisher (D-VA) (3rd Virginia HR secretary; former House)

U.S. Congress (Senate)[edit]

U.S. Congress (Senate)

1939 Senate cohort[edit]

Robert A. Taft (R-OH)

1947 Senate cohort[edit]

John C. Stennis (D-MS)
  • John C. Stennis (D-MS) (former President pro tempore; former Standards, Armed Services, Appropriations chair)

1948 Senate cohort[edit]

1954 Senate cohort[edit]

Strom Thurmond (R-SC)
  • Strom Thurmond (R-SC) (former President pro tempore; former Judiciary, Armed Services chair)

1957 Senate cohort[edit]

1959 Senate cohort[edit]

Robert Byrd (D-WV)
  • Hugh Scott (R-PA) (former GOP leader)
  • Robert Byrd (D-WV) (former President pro tempore; former Appropriations chair; former Democratic leader)

1961 Senate cohort[edit]

1962 Senate cohort[edit]

Ted Kennedy (D-MA)
  • Ted Kennedy (D-MA) (former Judiciary, HELP chair; former Democratic whip)

1963 Senate cohort[edit]

Daniel Inouye (D-HI)
  • Daniel Inouye (D-HI) (former President pro tempore; former Intelligence, Indian Affairs, Commerce, Appropriations chair)

1966 Senate cohort[edit]

1967 Senate cohort[edit]

1968 Senate cohort[edit]

Ted Stevens (R-AK)
  • Ted Stevens (R-AK) (former President pro tempore; former Ethics, Rules, Governmental Affairs, Appropriations, Commerce chair)

1969 Senate cohort[edit]

Bob Dole (R-KS)
  • Alan Cranston (D-CA) (former Veterans Affairs chair; former Democratic whip)
  • Bob Dole (R-KS) (former GOP leader; former Finance chair)
  • Bob Packwood (R-OR) (former Commerce, Finance chair; former GOP conference chair)

1971 Senate cohort[edit]

  • William Roth (R-DE) (former Governmental Affairs, Finance chair)

1972 Senate cohort[edit]

Sam Nunn (D-GA)
  • Sam Nunn (D-GA) (former Armed Services chair)

1973 Senate cohort[edit]

1974 Senate cohort[edit]

  • Wendell Ford (D-KY) (former Democratic whip; former Space, Rules chair)

1975 Senate cohort[edit]

Patrick Leahy (D-VT)
  • Patrick Leahy (D-VT) (former President pro tempore; former Agriculture, Judiciary, Appropriations chair)

1976 Senate cohort[edit]

  • John Chafee (R-RI) (former Environment chair; former GOP conference chair)

1977 Senate cohort[edit]

Richard Lugar (R-IN)

1978 Senate cohort[edit]

Nancy Kassebaum (R-KS)
Thad Cochran (R-MS)

1979 Senate cohort[edit]

Carl Levin (D-MI)
John Warner (R-VA)

1980 Senate cohort[edit]

1981 Senate cohort[edit]

Arlen Specter (D-PA)
  • Chris Dodd (D-CT) (former Rules, Banking chair)
  • Chuck Grassley (R-IA) (President pro tempore emeritus; ranking, Budget, Narcotics; former Aging, Finance, Judiciary chair)
  • Don Nickles (R-OK) (former Budget chair; former GOP whip)
  • Arlen Specter (D-PA) (former Intelligence, Veterans Affairs, Judiciary chair)

1982 Senate cohort[edit]

Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ)

1983 Senate cohort[edit]

1985 Senate cohort[edit]

Tom Harkin (D-IA)

1987 Senate cohort[edit]

John McCain (R-AZ)
Barbara Mikulski (D-MD)
  • Richard Shelby (R-AL) (former Intelligence, Banking, Rules, Appropriations chair)
  • John McCain (R-AZ) (former Indian Affairs, Commerce, Armed Services chair)
  • Barbara Mikulski (D-MD) (former Appropriations chair)
  • Kit Bond (R-MO) (former Small Business chair)
  • Kent Conrad (D-ND) (former Budget chair)
  • Harry Reid (D-NV) (former Democratic leader; former Ethics chair)
  • Tom Daschle (D-SD) (former Democratic leader)

1989 Senate cohort[edit]

1990 Senate cohort[edit]

  • Daniel Akaka (D-HI) (former Veterans Affairs, Indian Affairs chair)
  • Bob Smith (R-NH) (former Ethics, Environment chair)

1991 Senate cohort[edit]

1992 Senate cohort[edit]

Dianne Feinstein (D-CA)

1993 Senate cohort[edit]

Ben Nighthorse Campbell (R-CO)

1994 Senate cohort[edit]

  • Jim Inhofe (R-OK) (former Environment, Armed Services chair)
  • Fred Thompson (R-TN) (former Governmental Affairs chair)

1995 Senate cohort[edit]

1996 Senate cohort[edit]

1997 Senate cohort[edit]

1999 Senate cohort[edit]

Chuck Schumer (D-NY)

2001 Senate cohort[edit]

2002 Senate cohort[edit]

Lisa Murkowski (R-AK)
John Cornyn (R-TX)

2003 Senate cohort[edit]

Lamar Alexander (R-TN)

2005 Senate cohort[edit]

2006 Senate cohort[edit]

2007 Senate cohort[edit]

2009 Senate cohort[edit]

2010 Senate cohort[edit]

2011 Senate cohort[edit]

2012 Senate cohort[edit]

2013 Senate cohort[edit]

Elizabeth Warren (D-MA)

2014 Senate cohort[edit]

2015 Senate cohort[edit]

Gary Peters (D-MI)

2017 Senate cohort[edit]

2018 Senate cohort[edit]

2019 Senate cohort[edit]

Mitt Romney (R-UT)

2020 Senate cohort[edit]

2021 Senate cohort[edit]

2023 Senate cohort[edit]

U.S. Congress (House)[edit]

U.S. Congress (House)

1941 House cohort[edit]

Jamie Whitten (D-MS)

1949 House cohort[edit]

Peter W. Rodino (D-NJ)

1953 House cohort[edit]

William Natcher (D-KY)
Tip O'Neill (D-MA)

1955 House cohort[edit]

John Dingell (D-MI)
  • Dante Fascell (D-FL) (former Foreign Affairs chair)
  • John Dingell (D-MI) (former Dean; former Energy and Commerce chair)
  • Jim Wright (D-TX) (former Speaker and Democratic leader)

1957 House cohort[edit]

Robert H. Michel (R-IL)

1959 House cohort[edit]

Dan Rostenkowski (D-IL)
Silvio O. Conte (R-MA)

1961 House cohort[edit]

Mo Udall (D-AZ)

1963 House cohort[edit]

Augustus Hawkins (D-CA)
Claude Pepper (D-FL)

1965 House cohort[edit]

Patsy Mink (D-HI)
Tom Foley (D-WA)

1966 House cohort[edit]

Guy Vander Jagt (R-MI)

1967 House cohort[edit]

1969 House cohort[edit]

Dave Obey (D-WI)

1971 House cohort[edit]

Bill Young (R-FL)
Charles Rangel (D-NY)

1973 House cohort[edit]

Don Young (R-AK)

1974 House cohort[edit]

1975 House cohort[edit]

George Miller (D-CA)
Henry Waxman (D-CA)
  • George Miller (D-CA) (former Children, Natural Resources, Education chair)
  • Henry Waxman (D-CA) (former Oversight, Energy and Commerce chair)
  • Henry Hyde (R-IL) (former Judiciary, International Relations chair)
  • Jim Oberstar (D-MN) (former Transportation chair)

1976 House cohort[edit]

Ron Paul (R-KY)

1977 House cohort[edit]

Dick Gephardt (D-MO)

1979 House cohort[edit]

Jerry Lewis (R-CA)
Newt Gingrich (R-GA)

1980 House cohort[edit]

1981 House cohort[edit]

Tom Lantos (D-CA)
Barney Frank (D-MA)
Steny Hoyer (D-MD)

1983 House cohort[edit]

Sander Levin (D-MI)

1984 House cohort[edit]

1985 House cohort[edit]

1987 House cohort[edit]

Nancy Pelosi (D-CA)
John Lewis (D-GA)

1988 House cohort[edit]

1989 House cohort[edit]

1990 House cohort[edit]

1991 House cohort[edit]

John Boehner (R-OH)
Eleanor Holmes Norton (D-DC)

1992 House cohort[edit]

1993 House cohort[edit]

Mike Castle (R-DE)
Jim Clyburn (D-SC)

1995 House cohort[edit]

Walter B. Jones Jr. (R-NC)

1996 House cohort[edit]

Elijah Cummings (D-MD)

1997 House cohort[edit]

1998 House cohort[edit]

Barbara Lee (D-CA)

1999 House cohort[edit]

Paul Ryan (R-WI)

2001 House cohort[edit]

Adam Schiff (D-CA)

2002 House cohort[edit]

2003 House cohort[edit]

2004 House cohort[edit]

2005 House cohort[edit]

Henry Cuellar (D-TX)

2007 House cohort[edit]

Gabby Giffords (D-AZ)

2008 House cohort[edit]

2009 House cohort[edit]

John Garamendi (D-CA)

2010 House cohort[edit]

2011 House cohort[edit]

2012 House cohort[edit]

2013 House cohort[edit]

Hakeem Jeffries (D-NY)

2014 House cohort[edit]

2015 House cohort[edit]

Ken Buck (R-CO)

2016 House cohort[edit]

2017 House cohort[edit]

Don Bacon (R-NE)
Liz Cheney (R-WY)

2018 House cohort[edit]

2019 House cohort[edit]

Ilhan Omar (D-MN)
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY)

2020 House cohort[edit]

2021 House cohort[edit]

2022 House cohort[edit]

2023 House cohort[edit]

Judicial branch[edit]

Judicial branch
  • Samuel Alito (SCOTUS associate justice; former appeals court judge; former U.S. attorney)
  • Stephen Breyer (former SCOTUS associate justice; former appeals court judge)
  • Ruth Bader Ginsburg (former SCOTUS associate justice; former appeals court judge)
  • Neil Gorsuch (SCOTUS associate justice; former appeals court judge)
  • Ketanji Brown Jackson (SCOTUS associate justice; former appeals court, district court judge)'
  • Elena Kagan (SCOTUS associate justice; 45th solicitor general)
  • Brett Kavanaugh (SCOTUS associate justice; former appeals court judge; former WH staff secretary)
  • Anthony Kennedy (former SCOTUS associate justice; former appeals court judge)
  • Sandra Day O'Connor (former SCOTUS associate justice; former state appeals court judge)
  • John Roberts (17th SCOTUS chief justice; former appeals court judge; former principal deputy solicitor general)
  • Antonin Scalia (former SCOTUS associate justice; former appeals court judge; former U.S. attorney)
  • Sonia Sotomayor (SCOTUS associate justice; former appeals court, district court judge)
  • David Souter (former SCOTUS associate justice; former state supreme court, appeals court judge; 20th New Hampshire attorney general)
  • Clarence Thomas (SCOTUS associate justice; former appeals court judge; 8th EEOC chair)

Others[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Image is placeholder
  2. ^ You're faster than me!

Notes[edit]