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Wikipedia

Ray Mabus

Raymond Edwin Mabus Jr. (/mbəs/; born October 11, 1948) is an American politician and lawyer. A member of the Democratic Party, he served as the 75th United States Secretary of the Navy from 2009 to 2017. Mabus previously served as the State auditor of Mississippi from 1984 to 1988, as the 60th governor of Mississippi from 1988 to 1992, and as the United States ambassador to Saudi Arabia from 1994 to 1996.

Ray Mabus
Official portrait, 2014
75th United States Secretary of the Navy
In office
May 19, 2009 – January 20, 2017
PresidentBarack Obama
DeputyRobert O. Work
Janine A. Davidson
Preceded byDonald C. Winter
Succeeded byRichard V. Spencer
United States Ambassador to Saudi Arabia
In office
July 5, 1994 – April 25, 1996
PresidentBill Clinton
Preceded byJohn Frank Bookout Jr.
Succeeded byWyche Fowler
60th Governor of Mississippi
In office
January 12, 1988 – January 14, 1992
LieutenantBrad Dye
Preceded byWilliam Allain
Succeeded byKirk Fordice
37th Auditor of Mississippi
In office
January 5, 1984 – January 7, 1988
GovernorWilliam Allain
Preceded byHamp King
Succeeded byPete Johnson
Personal details
Born
Raymond Edwin Mabus Jr.

(1948-10-11) October 11, 1948 (age 75)
Ackerman, Mississippi, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Spouses
Julie Hines
(m. 1987; div. 2000)
Lynne Horecky
(m. 2007)
Children3
EducationUniversity of Mississippi (BA)
Johns Hopkins University (MA)
Harvard University (JD)
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/service United States Navy
Years of service1970–1972
Rank Lieutenant (junior grade)

Early life and education edit

Mabus was born on October 11, 1948, in Ackerman, Choctaw County, Mississippi, United States. He was the only child of Raymond Mabus Sr. (1901–1986),[1] a successful timber farmer,[2] and Lucille (née Curtis) Mabus (1909–2000), a teacher.[3] His paternal uncle, merchant Leslie E. Mabus (1896–1992),[4] was a member of the Mississippi State Senate from 1932 to 1936.[5]

Mabus graduated from Ackermann High School in 1966 as class valedictorian.[6] He graduated summa cum laude from the University of Mississippi, where he was a member of Beta Theta Pi, with a Bachelor of Arts in English and political science. He earned a Master of Arts in political science from Johns Hopkins University and a Juris Doctor, magna cum laude, from Harvard Law School. 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[7] Prior to attending law school, he also served two years in the Navy as a surface warfare officer from 1970 to 1972 aboard the cruiser USS Little Rock (CLG-4), achieving the rank of Lieutenant Junior Grade.[8] He worked as a law clerk in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and as a legal counsel to a subcommittee of the United States House Committee on Agriculture.[6]

Early political career edit

Mabus volunteered for William F. Winter's unsuccessful gubernatorial candidacy in 1967.[9] Following Winter's successful election to the governorship in 1979, he returned to Mississippi to work as the governor's legal counsel in 1980.[2][10] While in office, Winter and his staff pushed through a legislative overhaul of the state's public education system.[11] Mabus was one of several of the governor's aides who delivered lectures across the state to build popular support for the reform bill.[12] State Senator Ellis B. Bodron, who was broadly opposed to the legislation, denounced Mabus and the other young Winter aides—including Dick Molpus, David Crews, Bill Gartin, Andy P. Mullins, and John Henegan—as the "Boys of Spring", a moniker which they thereafter took pride in.[13] Mabus also helped draft an open records law and more stringent driving under the influence legislation.[14] He left the counsel position in 1983.[2]

Mississippi State Auditor edit

Election edit

While working on Winter's staff in 1982, Mabus requested that the Department of Audit supply him with the latest three audit reports for Hinds County government. The department sent him three reports, with the latest dated 1977. Surprised, Mabus reminded the department that he wanted the three latest audits. The department informed him that 1977 was the last year in which an audit of the county was conducted, and that all audits were being conducted on a five-year-delay. Aspiring to run for elective office, Mabus researched the position of State Auditor.[15] He realized the office had the power to investigate nearly all state and local government agencies,[16] later saying, "I did a radical thing. I went and read the statute. That office had more jurisdiction than almost any in the state of Mississippi. It had never been used. It's the one place you can combat corruption without changing the law. It was sitting there, waiting for somebody like me to come along."[10] Concluding that it could be "the most powerful office in the state", he decided to run for the position of State Auditor in the 1983 elections.[16]

In the 1983 Democratic primary, Mabus faced Department of Audit employee Mason Shelby and former radio station owner Murray Cain.[17] Shelby was viewed as the favorite of the outgoing state auditor, Hamp King, and other leaders in the department. Mabus and Cain criticized the department for which Shelby worked as outdated in its methods and a part of an old boy network.[18] Mabus declared that the department was two to four years behind on most of its audits. King wrote an open letter to Mabus rejecting his claims as exaggerations and asked a legislative committee to conduct a review of the Department of Audit.[19] Mabus ultimately won the election, and the legislative report was published in December. The committee identified several flaws with the department's structure and practices, and determined that it was delinquent for 581 fiscal years worth of audits.[20]

Tenure edit

Mabus was sworn-in as state auditor on January 5, 1984.[21] At the time he took office, he found the audit department was disorganized; in addition to being behind on hundreds of years' worth of audits, it had no filing system and thousands of dollars' worth of checks for auditing services performed for local governments and other agencies were stored in a shoebox in the auditor's office. Mabus convinced the legislature to permit the department to contract out auditing services to private Certified Public Accountant firms to work on the backlog. Using these strategies, the office eliminated the backlog in two years.[15] On July 1, 1985, his office adopted Generally Accepted Accounting Principles for financial reporting. His office also released a single comprehensive annual financial report for state government for the 1986 fiscal year instead of separate reports for each state agency, the first time this had been done in Mississippi.[22] The consolidated report was well-received, and the legislature subsequently mandated the issuance of a comprehensive financial report by statute, though it transferred the responsibility for the document's publication to the Fiscal Management Board.[23]

Mabus discovered early in his tenure that many department auditors conducting reviews of county government finances were forced to piece together county accounting records as they worked.[15] Though the state charged $25 per day it took to work on a county audit, most counties found this preferable than paying to maintain their own accounting. Many auditors found that records were missing, which Mabus feared might conceal evidence of fraud.[24] In order to improve county accounting practices, he created a new requirement that county governments maintain up-to-date accounting records, raised the cost of daily auditing services to $100, and appointed a head of an investigative division in the department.[25] He had field auditors supplied with undercover tags so that their vehicles could not be traced during their investigations.[26]

Mabus warned the Mississippi Association of Supervisors that he would enforce financing laws strictly and would disapprove of misuse of local government resources or noncompliance with purchasing practices. In order to ease compliance, he created a technical assistance division in the Department of Audit to provide legal and accounting advice to county boards of supervisors. He also met with each of the 82 county boards to advise them of relevant state laws and his expectations. To deal with complaints of misconduct, he created a departmental hotline to field public grievances. The hotline received numerous complaints from across the state, accusing county supervisors of various acts of malfeasance including misusing county resources for private purposes, signing contracts with companies despite conflicts of interest, gifting away government funds to charities, and extorting contractors.[25] Mabus' office ultimately audited all 82 counties during his term, enabling five to have their bond ratings restored and leading to $1.7 million in misused funds being returned to the state.[10] His actions infuriated many county supervisors.[27]

Early in his term Mabus began collaborating with the Federal Bureau of Investigation on a corruption investigation into Mississippi county governments known as Operation Pretense.[28] For the purposes of secrecy, initially only Mabus and his chief investigator in his department were aware of the scope of the federal investigation, until the first indictments against county officials were announced in February 1987.[29] By the time Operation Pretense was finished, 57 public officials were indicted.[30] The Department of Audit's contribution to the investigation was mostly limited to providing purchasing records for federal prosecutors to use as evidence of wrongdoing.[31] Upon the public reveal of the investigation, Mabus appealed to the state legislature to switch counties from the beat system of government to the unit system,[a] mandate the hiring of professional county administrators, and strengthen county record-keeping standards. He also advised restricting federally-convicted criminals from holding public office, barring convicted vendors from securing government contracts, and creating a white collar crimes unit in the office of the Attorney General of Mississippi.[33] He was succeeded as State Auditor by Pete Johnson on January 7, 1988.[34]

Governor of Mississippi edit

1987 election edit

 
Mabus as governor.

Mabus began planning a gubernatorial bid in 1985 and formally declared his candidacy four days after Operation Pretense was revealed to the public in 1987. Incumbent William Allain did not seek reelection.[35] In the Democratic primary he faced seven other candidates, including former governor Bill Waller, Attorney General Ed Pittman, Maurice Dantin, John Arthur Eaves, and Mike Sturvidant.[6] Mabus had an advantage in being from northeast Mississippi, which usually heavily participated in Democratic primaries. He also enjoyed the good faith of many journalists for cracking down on corruption.[30] Some warned that county supervisors would organize against him as retaliation for his work as auditor, but these fears proved unfounded.[36][b] Mabus led in the August 4 primary with 37 percent of the vote, while Sturvidant—who spent heavily on his campaign—placed second with 16 percent.[37][38] A runoff was held on August 25 in which Mabus took 65 percent of the vote, the largest-ever margin of victory in a runoff in the state's history.[30][37]

In the 1987 general election Mabus faced Republican Jack Reed. A businessman from Tupelo, Reed had worked with Winter on education reform and ran as a moderate, leaving voters with the impression that the two candidates had little to distinguish one from the other.[39] Mabus ran with the slogan "Mississippi will never be last again,"[14] and while his campaign did not articulate many specific stances, it emphasized a theme of change.[10] He pledged to raise the state's teacher salaries to the Southeastern average, which Reed criticized as necessitating either a tax hike or funding cuts to other government responsibilities. Mabus spent a total of $2.9 million on his campaign, the most ever spent on a Mississippi gubernatorial candidacy.[37] He won with 53.4 percent of the vote, relying on a coalition of support from blacks, urbanites, and traditional Democrats from the northeastern portion of the state.[39] About two-thirds of the white electorate voted against him, but he secured almost 90 percent of the black vote. Mabus was inaugurated as the 60th Governor of Mississippi on January 12, 1988. Aged 39, he was the youngest governor in the country.[14]

Executive action and appointments edit

Mabus staffed his gubernatorial administration with a significant number of political moderates from outside the state.[40] He appointed the first black members to the State Tax Commission and the first woman head of the Department of Public Safety.[41] Mabus had potential judicial appointments vetted by a commission before making a selection among their nominees.[42]

Legislative action edit

County reform edit

At the beginning of his term, Mabus enjoyed the cooperation of legislators[43] and an $85 million budget surplus.[44] In 1988 he proposed a bill to the legislature which would require counties to switch from the beat system to the unit system and hire a professional county administrator to handle financial matters and purchasing.[45] The State Senate passed a bill which mandated a transition by all counties to switch to a loose form of the unit system, while the House of Representatives endorsed legislation which would allow counties to switch to a full unit system following a local referendum. A conference committee was unable to reconcile the two different proposals before they expired on the legislative calendar. The legislature successfully passed a bill raising supervisor's salaries, which Mabus vetoed on April 30.[46] In early June he declared that he would call the legislature into special session to consider the unit system legislation, and the session was eventually scheduled for August 10.[47] Addressing the legislature in joint session, Mabus denounced the beat system as an antiquated form of government which "made stealing too easy and too tempting" and created inefficiency.[48] On August 16, the legislature passed the County Government Reorganization Act, which stipulated that counties were to decide on what form of government to use in a November referendum, and further stipulated requirements for implementation of the unit system. Mabus signed the bill into law.[49] County supervisors began drawing up cost estimates of implementing the unit system, with estimates from 47 different counties varying from $500 to $1.48 million. Mabus and other observers denounced the estimates as exaggerated and criticized them for not incorporating cost-savings projections post-transition.[50] In November, 46 of the 82 counties voted to adopt the unit system, with 61 percent of voters backing the switch.[51] Mabus established the Governor's County Unit Task Force in January 1991 to examine the progress of the unit transition and recommend improvements.[52] None of its findings were used due to the end of Mabus' term.[53]

State fiscal reform and budgetary issues edit

During the 1988 session, Mabus vetoed a bill which would have forced the Fiscal Management Board—which he chaired as governor—to uniformly reduce expenditures if a projected revenue shortfall became apparent. He also convinced the legislature to appropriate the projected revenue surplus towards increasing schoolteacher salaries, and successfully lobbied the body to adopt several government reorganization recommendations, including the creation of a Department of Finance and Administration,[54] which replaced the Fiscal Management Board and assumed its responsibilities for making budget recommendations and fiscal adjustments.[55] The reorganization also led to the abolition of the State Eleemosynary Board and charitable hospitals, with the latter's funds subsequently diverted to the state Medicaid program.[54] Mabus was disappointed that the legislature did not adopt the majority of his proposals—which would have greatly reduced the number of state boards and commissions—but claimed that those enacted saved the state at least $928,744 annually.[55] In the 1989 session he proposed the legislature authorize the issuance of general obligation bonds to fund a five-year capital improvement plan and thereby free up general revenue for other services.[56] The bond proposal expired due to disagreement between the Senate and House, so Mabus called the legislature into special session to address the issue. The legislature authorized the issuance of $78.1 million in bonds for the 1990 fiscal year, and in the 1990 session authorized the issuance of an additional $69.5 million in bonds.[54] Facing a $120 million budget shortfall in early 1991, Mabus imposed large cuts to state expenditures as required by law.[57][44]

B.E.S.T. edit

Mabus decided to focus on improving public education during the 1990 legislative session.[58] By the time the legislature had convened in January, the governor had circulated his education plan across the state. The platform—Better Education for Success Tomorrow or B.E.S.T.—included new adult and family literacy programs, a program to ameliorate the high school dropout rate, the creation of health clinics in schools, a plan to monitor schools with subpar performance and financially reward and reduce restrictions on schools with excellent performance, and the establishment of a new school construction and facility repair fund.[41] In funding his proposals, Mabus eschewed sales or income tax increases, arguing that "the working people of Mississippi pay enough taxes", and argued for the establishment of a state lottery.[59] The state constitution banned lotteries, and could only be amended by public referendum following the approval of two-thirds of the legislature. The Senate refused to approve a referendum,[60] but the legislature passed most of B.E.S.T. with the added provision that the program would expire on June 30 if no funding was ultimately found for it.[59]

On June 18, Mabus called the legislature into special session to consider various plans for funding B.E.S.T.. He suggested several options for the body to consider including the lottery, gambling taxes, or higher government service fees, but refused to consider tax increases, arguing that the state had overused that option for previous education improvements. The legislature ultimately adjourned without approving a funding plan. Mabus continued to lobby for the financing of B.E.S.T. for another year without success.[60] As time went on, many legislators began to feel Mabus was arrogant and did not want to be an equal partner in creating public policy for the state.[61] Focus groups convened by Mabus' campaign organization in the aftermath of the special session largely interpreted the governor's failure as a result of his unwillingness to compromise with the legislature.[62]

He gave teachers the largest pay raise in the nation;[63] and was named one of Fortune Magazine's ten "best education governors".[64]

Political affairs edit

In January 1988, Mabus indicated that he wanted to replace the chairman of the Mississippi Democratic Party, Ed Cole, the first black man to hold the position.[65] The move rankled many black Democrats in the state.[66] Some of Cole's supporters accused Mabus of racism, but most criticized him for attempting to effect a personal takeover of the party. Mabus and his allies attempted to cast Cole as an "old guard" moderate of an ineffective organization while portraying his desired candidate, Billie Thompson, as an effective reformer and fundraiser. On April 9, the party's executive committee voted to reelect Cole as chairman. In his victory speech, Cole declared, "I want [Mabus] to know that he belongs to our party and our party does not belong to him."[65]

1991 election edit

Enabled by a gubernatorial succession amendment ratified in 1986, Mabus became the first Mississippi governor to run for reelection in the 20th century. In the 1991 Democratic primary he faced former U.S. Congressman Wayne Dowdy, who ran with the slogan "Save us from Mabus",[44] and George Blair. Styling himself a populist, Dowdy ran an old-style campaign and attempted to portray Mabus as arrogant, calling him "the ruler".[67] He also mocked Mabus' 1987 slogan by saying that if elected "Mississippi would never be lost again".[68] Mabus denounced his opponent as part of the "old guard" of Mississippi politicians and criticized his attendance record in the U.S. Congress.[68] Equipped with more financial resources, Mabus' spent five times the amount of Dowdy and won in the primary with 50.7 percent of the vote.[68]

In the general election Mabus faced Republican Kirk Fordice, a former Vicksburg construction executive.[44] Fordice had not been expected by most observers to win his own primary and thus entered the general election with momentum, while Mabus had been harmed by his narrow victory in the Democratic contest. Mabus' campaign focused on attempting to make Fordice unappealing, while Fordice's campaign concentrated their efforts on turning the election into a referendum on Mabus' performance.[69]

Fordice declared his support for legislative term limits and welfare reform. He labeled Mabus a "Kennedyesque liberal" who focused too much on education and criticized his deficit spending.[44] Republican-hosted focus groups found the governor to be "aloof" and unconcerned with the necessities of "average" Mississippians[70] and Fordice's signature campaign television ad attacked the incumbent for having "tried" but "not accomplished much".[69] Mabus continued to advocate support for public education and attack Fordice as a lobbyist and outsider who did not appreciate the needs of the state. Later in the campaign, race became an issue, as Fordice declared his support for workfare and ending racial quotas. Mabus aired a series of television ads which accused Fordice of planning to shut down the state's historically black schools.[44]

The governor spent twice as much as his opponent and held an edge in polls up to the election, but many potential voters identified themselves as undecided. On November 5, Fordice won with 50.8 percent to Mabus' 47.6 percent, the first Republican victory in a Mississippi gubernatorial race since 1874.[71] Having received six percent less of the total vote share than in 1987, several observers blamed Mabus' loss on perception that he was an arrogant leader. Turnout among black voters was also lower in 1991, and some national Democrats accused Fordice of using race-baiting tactics.[72] Mabus was succeeded by Fordice on January 14, 1992.[73]

Ambassador to Saudi Arabia and aftermath edit

Mabus was appointed by President Bill Clinton to be the United States Ambassador to Saudi Arabia. Confirmed by the U.S. Senate on July 1, 1994,[74] he served until 1996, when he resigned to return to Mississippi to work for his family's lumber business.[75] During his tenure five Americans were killed in a bombing at a military training installation in Riyadh.[76] Before he departed, the Saudi Arabian government inducted him into the Order of King Abdulaziz.[77]

After his return to Mississippi, Mabus practiced law.[64] In 2000 he took an executive position at Foamex International. He served as the company's CEO during a bankruptcy reorganization and resigned from the post in 2007 to spend more time in Mississippi.[78]

Secretary of the Navy edit

Appointment edit

 
Mabus meeting with President Obama in the Oval Office in June 2010.
 
Gen. James T. Conway, Sec. Mabus, and Adm. Gary Roughead testify before Congress in February 2010.
 
Vice Adm. Walter E. Carter Jr., Adm. John M. Richardson, Sec. Mabus, Deputy Sec. of Defense Robert O. Work, and Gen. Robert Neller at the 117th Army-Navy Game in December 2016.

In 2008 Mabus campaigned for Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama in Mississippi, who was subsequently elected President of the United States.[79] On March 27, 2009, Mabus was nominated by Obama to be appointed Secretary of the Navy.[80] He was sworn in on May 19, 2009,[81] and held a ceremonial swearing in at Washington Navy Yard on June 18, 2009, where he was re-sworn in by the Secretary of Defense Robert Gates.[82][83][84]

Great Green Fleet edit

Several months after taking office, Mabus declared that he wanted to originate half of all of the Navy's power needs from non-petroleum sources by 2020. As part of this, he declared that a number of ships would be covered under a "Great Green Fleet" initiative in which half of them would be partly powered by sources other than fossil fuels.[85] He argued that using alternative energy sources would reduce the force's reliance on foreign oil imports and thereby increase its energy independence.[86] The Navy experimented with biofuels during his tenure, though their high expense often garnered skepticism,[85] including when Senator John McCain noted that one report of a 2012 exercise showed that a half biodiesel fuel blend cost the Navy $26.75 per gallon instead of the usual $3.25 per gallon.[85][87] As a result, Congress required all major purchases of alternative fuels to be conducted at competitive prices. In 2016 the Navy introduced a beef-fat fuel blend that cost $2.05 per gallon.[87] Later in his tenure the destroyer USS Mason successfully operated on a biofuel blend that cost only $1.99 per gallon, a fact which Mabus claimed was overlooked.[85]

Ship naming controversies edit

As Navy secretary, Mabus was given the responsibility of naming the force's ships.[88] In April 2010 a furor arose when it was reported that Mabus made the proposal to name a United States Navy warship the USS John P. Murtha (LPD-26) after the late Pennsylvania Democratic congressman John Murtha. Additional naming controversies occurred due to the naming of the auxiliary ship USNS Cesar Chavez (T-AKE-14) after civil rights activist Cesar Chavez[89] and a littoral combat ship the USS Gabrielle Giffords (LCS-10) in honor of former Arizona Democratic Congresswoman Gabby Giffords, after she suffered life-threatening wounds in the 2011 mass shooting in her home district of Tucson, Arizona.[90]

Subsequent ship namings include his January 6, 2016, announcement of his naming of another auxiliary ship after civil rights activist and sitting incumbent Georgia Democratic Congressman John Lewis (i.e., USNS John Lewis (T-AO-205)). Mabus further stated that this particular class of auxiliary ship, of which the John Lewis would be the lead ship, would all be named after civil rights leaders.[91] In April he announced his plans to name a destroyer after former Senate Armed Services Committee chairman Carl Levin. Congressional Republicans accused Mabus of politicizing the ship-naming process, and Representative Steven Palazzo unsuccessfully attempted to amend a defense appropriation bill to bar the secretary from naming ships after congressmen who were not military service members.[92] On July 14 Mabus named a ship after gay rights icon and San Francisco Democratic politician Harvey Milk.[93]

Gulf Coast recovery edit

In June 2010, Obama ordered Mabus to draft a long-term plan to restore the condition of the Gulf Coast in the aftermath of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.[94] Some regional businessmen and environmentalists were critical of the assignment, being troubled by Mabus' previous investments in energy trading companies and worried that as the secretary of navy, he would not be able to devote his full attention to the cleanup effort.[95] He introduced a recovery plan in September which received bipartisan support in Congress. Based on his recommendations, Congress subsequently passed the RESTORE Act, allocating over $5 billion to rehabilitate the coast.[94]

Budget disputes edit

After a January 2015 report by the Defense Business Board and McKinsey & Company discovered the U.S. Department of Defense was spending $134 billion, 23% of its total budget, on back-office work, and that the back-office bureaucracy staff of over one million people was nearly as great as the number of active troops, the board recommended a plan to cut $125 billion in waste over five years. However, when Ash Carter became defense secretary the next month, he replaced the board chairman, the McKinsey results were classified as secret, and its report was removed from public websites. Mabus then gave a speech at the American Enterprise Institute highlighting the McKinsey report, calling the back-office costs "pure overhead" and particularly criticizing the Defense Finance and Accounting Service and the Defense Logistics Agency.[96] Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics Frank Kendall III then wrote to him asking "please refrain from taking any more public pot shots [...] I do not want this spilling over into further public discourse."[96]

Throughout his tenure, Mabus contracted the building of 86 ships for the navy.[97] In 2016 he drafted a budget for the navy for the 2018 fiscal year, which included billions of dollars earmarked for building dozens of additional ships. Carter's draft budget for the Department of Defense did not reflect this appropriation, and in December 2016 Mabus released a memo stating that he did not wish to cut money from shipbuilding, citing the decline in the size of the navy from 2001 to 2008. He also told Carter that "you and I both know that this budget is almost totally a symbolic one," making note of the impending end of Obama's tenure.[85]

Personnel affairs edit

Mabus stated that he placed emphasis on "developing a more diverse force" during his tenure.[85] Some personnel accused him of promoting "social engineering" policies.[79] The United States Armed Forces' "don't ask, don't tell" policy towards gay servicemen ended in 2011.[85] Two years later the Navy introduced randomized breathalyzer tests for on-duty sailors to curb alcohol abuse.[79] Mabus created new Reserve Officers' Training Corps programs at different universities, including Harvard University and Arizona State University.[85] He also removed zone distinctions from promotion considerations, allowing personnel to be considered equally for rank promotions without regard towards their specializations. At his direction the Navy introduced expanded graduate school-level education offerings and created a program to offer excelling junior officers to work for three years at Fortune 500 companies.[79] He arranged for women to enter the submarine fleet in 2011.[98] Mabus also pushed for the introduction of unisex uniforms in the Navy and the United States Marine Corps. In July 2015 he expanded the maternity leave of Navy Department personnel to 18 weeks, though Carter later trimmed this to 12 weeks across all armed forced in January 2016.[87]

In late 2015 the Marine Corps released the results of a nine-month-long study on female performance in the corps, concluding that the average woman recruit was injured twice as often men, less accurate with infantry weapons, and not as effective at recovering wounded troops from the battlefield. Mabus immediately dismissed the findings, saying the Marine Corps failed to describe the effectiveness of the highest-performing women and did not provide sufficient reason to continue to exclude women from the most demanding roles in the corps. Following an instruction from Defense Secretary Carter, on January 1, 2016, Mabus ordered the Marine Corps to draft a plan to make all of its training co-ed within 15 days[85] and directed the service to make all job-titles gender neutral.[87] He subsequently met with Marine Commandant General Robert B. Neller and agreed to leave boot camp segregated by gender. His actions provoked the ire of members of Congress, with Representative Duncan D. Hunter demanding his resignation and others criticizing the narrow timeframe he had given the corps.[85]

Departure edit

Mabus declared in March 2016 that he would consider retirement[94] and stepped down as Secretary of the Navy on January 20, 2017, upon the inauguration of President Donald Trump. He was succeeded by Assistant Navy Secretary Sean Stackley, who became acting secretary pending the confirmation of a new permanent secretary.[85][99] Mabus was one of only a few national security officials to serve continuously during Obama's entire tenure[85] and the longest-serving secretary of the navy since Josephus Daniels, who served from 1913 to 1921. He declared, "For me, leading the Department of the Navy is the greatest honor of my life."[87]

Awards, honors, community service edit

 
Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus presents the Navy Distinguished Public Service Medal to U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT)

Mabus has been awarded the U.S. Department of Defense Distinguished Public Service Award, the U.S. Army's Distinguished Civilian Service Award, the Martin Luther King Jr. Social Responsibility Award from the King Center for Nonviolent Social Change in Atlanta, the National Wildlife Federation Conservation Achievement Award, the King Abdulaziz Award from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and the Mississippi Association of Educators' Friend of Education Award.

He was included in Glassdoor's 2013 list of "Highest Rated CEOs" at 43rd place with an 82% approval rate.[100] In 2017 the Mississippi Center for Justice accorded Mabus its Champion of Justice award.[101] In 2019 the town of Ackermann erected historic markers honoring both Mabus and fellow town native former governor J. P. Coleman at Governor's Park.[102]

He is active in many community activities, primarily focusing on education. Following Hurricane Katrina, he founded the Help and Hope Foundation, which works to meet the needs of children affected by the storm.

Personal life edit

Mabus married Julie Hines, the daughter of a Jackson banker, in 1987, shortly before he ran for governor. Some observers speculated that the marriage was meant to improve his image before the campaign. They had two daughters together.[103] They divorced in 2000,[64] with the separation proceedings and the following custody dispute over their children marked by bitterness. A Hinds County court ultimately granted Mabus shared custody with the children.[103] He married Lynne Horecky in 2007.[64]

Mabus is a fan of the Boston Red Sox having first followed the team during the 1975 World Series while a student at Harvard Law School.[104] During his tenure as Navy Secretary, he threw ceremonial first pitches at all 30 major league baseball parks in the United States, the only person ever believed to have done so.[88]

Acting edit

In 2009, and again in 2014, Mabus made cameo appearances on the TV drama NCIS in the Season 7 episode "Child's Play", and in the Season 12 episode "Semper Fortis", as an NCIS Agent named "Ray".[105] In 2012, he appeared in the movie Battleship as the commanding officer of the USS Ronald Reagan.[106] Mabus made a cameo appearance as himself in the "It's Not a Rumor" episode of the TV series The Last Ship, issuing orders to the crew of the Nathan James via a recorded message; in the storyline, by the time the ship received the orders, Mabus had succumbed to the "Red Flu" virus.[107]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Under the beat system, each supervisor on a given board is responsible for managing road construction in their assigned district, or beat. Under the unit system, road construction considerations are handled in a centralized manner by the entire board of supervisors and a county administrator and road manager.[32]
  2. ^ One undercover FBI agent, Jerry King, later stated that many supervisors were satisfied with Mabus' gubernatorial candidacy, noting that it would lead to his departure from the auditor's office.[27]

References edit

  1. ^ "Obituary for Raymond E. Mabus". The Greenwood Commonwealth. June 12, 1986. p. 2. from the original on January 5, 2024. Retrieved January 5, 2024.
  2. ^ a b c Mullaney 1994, p. 205.
  3. ^ "Obituary for Lucille Curtis Mabus". Clarion-Ledger. June 9, 2000. p. 18. Retrieved January 5, 2024.
  4. ^ "Leslie E Mabus in US, Social Security Death Index". Fold3. from the original on January 5, 2024. Retrieved January 5, 2024.
  5. ^ "Obituary for Leslie E. Mabus". Clarion-Ledger. October 3, 1992. p. 16. from the original on January 5, 2024. Retrieved January 5, 2024.
  6. ^ a b c Sansing 2016, p. 229.
  7. ^ . www.mshistorynow.mdah.ms.gov. Archived from the original on October 25, 2019. Retrieved May 31, 2018.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on August 13, 2018. Retrieved April 24, 2007.
  9. ^ Bolton 2013, p. 135.
  10. ^ a b c d Boyer, Peter J. (February 28, 1988). . New York Times Magazine. Archived from the original on January 15, 2010.
  11. ^ Nash & Taggart 2009, pp. 139, 196.
  12. ^ Bolton 2013, p. 248.
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  90. ^ Ewing, Philip (February 15, 2012). "Navy Plays it Safe With New DDG and LCS Names". Military.com. from the original on March 20, 2012. Retrieved March 7, 2012. Less than a week after drawing traditionalist ire for naming a Navy warship after former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, Navy Secretary Ray Mabus returned to standard convention Wednesday in a batch of new names for forthcoming warships.
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Works cited edit

  • Ball, Howard (2006). Justice in Mississippi: The Murder Trial of Edgar Ray Killen. University Press of Kansas. ISBN 9780700614615.
  • Bolton, Charles C. (2013). William F. Winter and the New Mississippi: A Biography. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1-61703-787-0.
  • Crockett, James R. (2003). Operation Pretense: The FBI's Sting on County Corruption in Mississippi. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781578064960.
  • Mullaney, Marie Marmo (1994). Biographical Directory of the Governors of the United States, 1988-1994. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780313283123.
  • Lamis, Alexander P., ed. (1999). Southern Politics in the 1990s. Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 9780807166765.
  • Nash, Jere; Taggart, Andy (2009). Mississippi Politics: The Struggle for Power, 1976-2008 (second ed.). University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781604733570.
  • Nossiter, Adam (1994). Of Long Memory: Mississippi And The Murder Of Medgar Evers. Reading, Massachusetts: Addison-Wesley. ISBN 9780201483390.
  • Pugh, Brian A. (2020). Chaos and Compromise: The Evolution of the Mississippi Budgeting Process. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781496830227.
  • Sansing, David G. (2016). Mississippi Governors: Soldiers, Statesmen, Scholars, Scoundrels (first ed.). Oxford: Nautilus Publishing Company. ISBN 978-1-936946-81-5.
  • Southwick, Leslie (1998). "Mississippi Supreme Court Elections: A Historical Perspective 1916-1996". Mississippi College Law Review. 18 (1): 115–198.

External links edit

  • Appearances on C-SPAN  
    • C-SPAN Q&A interview with Mabus, February 5, 2012
Political offices
Preceded by Auditor of Mississippi
1984–1988
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of Mississippi
1988–1992
Succeeded by
Preceded by United States Secretary of the Navy
2009–2017
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic nominee for Governor of Mississippi
1987, 1991
Succeeded by
Diplomatic posts
Preceded by United States Ambassador to Saudi Arabia
1994–1996
Succeeded by
U.S. order of precedence (ceremonial)
Preceded byas Former US Senator Order of precedence of the United States
Within Mississippi
Succeeded byas Former Governor
Preceded byas Former Governor Order of precedence of the United States
Outside Mississippi

mabus, raymond, edwin, mabus, born, october, 1948, american, politician, lawyer, member, democratic, party, served, 75th, united, states, secretary, navy, from, 2009, 2017, mabus, previously, served, state, auditor, mississippi, from, 1984, 1988, 60th, governo. Raymond Edwin Mabus Jr m eɪ b e s born October 11 1948 is an American politician and lawyer A member of the Democratic Party he served as the 75th United States Secretary of the Navy from 2009 to 2017 Mabus previously served as the State auditor of Mississippi from 1984 to 1988 as the 60th governor of Mississippi from 1988 to 1992 and as the United States ambassador to Saudi Arabia from 1994 to 1996 Ray MabusOfficial portrait 201475th United States Secretary of the NavyIn office May 19 2009 January 20 2017PresidentBarack ObamaDeputyRobert O WorkJanine A DavidsonPreceded byDonald C WinterSucceeded byRichard V SpencerUnited States Ambassador to Saudi ArabiaIn office July 5 1994 April 25 1996PresidentBill ClintonPreceded byJohn Frank Bookout Jr Succeeded byWyche Fowler60th Governor of MississippiIn office January 12 1988 January 14 1992LieutenantBrad DyePreceded byWilliam AllainSucceeded byKirk Fordice37th Auditor of MississippiIn office January 5 1984 January 7 1988GovernorWilliam AllainPreceded byHamp KingSucceeded byPete JohnsonPersonal detailsBornRaymond Edwin Mabus Jr 1948 10 11 October 11 1948 age 75 Ackerman Mississippi U S Political partyDemocraticSpousesJulie Hines m 1987 div 2000 wbr Lynne Horecky m 2007 wbr Children3EducationUniversity of Mississippi BA Johns Hopkins University MA Harvard University JD Military serviceAllegiance United StatesBranch service United States NavyYears of service1970 1972RankLieutenant junior grade Ray Mabus s voice source source Ray Mabus testifies before the Senate Armed Services Committee on the FY2013 Navy and Marine Corps budgetRecorded March 15 2012 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early political career 3 Mississippi State Auditor 3 1 Election 3 2 Tenure 4 Governor of Mississippi 4 1 1987 election 4 2 Executive action and appointments 4 3 Legislative action 4 3 1 County reform 4 3 2 State fiscal reform and budgetary issues 4 3 3 B E S T 4 4 Political affairs 4 5 1991 election 5 Ambassador to Saudi Arabia and aftermath 6 Secretary of the Navy 6 1 Appointment 6 2 Great Green Fleet 6 3 Ship naming controversies 6 4 Gulf Coast recovery 6 5 Budget disputes 6 6 Personnel affairs 6 7 Departure 7 Awards honors community service 8 Personal life 8 1 Acting 9 Notes 10 References 11 Works cited 12 External linksEarly life and education editMabus was born on October 11 1948 in Ackerman Choctaw County Mississippi United States He was the only child of Raymond Mabus Sr 1901 1986 1 a successful timber farmer 2 and Lucille nee Curtis Mabus 1909 2000 a teacher 3 His paternal uncle merchant Leslie E Mabus 1896 1992 4 was a member of the Mississippi State Senate from 1932 to 1936 5 Mabus graduated from Ackermann High School in 1966 as class valedictorian 6 He graduated summa cum laude from the University of Mississippi where he was a member of Beta Theta Pi with a Bachelor of Arts in English and political science He earned a Master of Arts in political science from Johns Hopkins University and a Juris Doctor magna cum laude from Harvard Law School 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 7 Prior to attending law school he also served two years in the Navy as a surface warfare officer from 1970 to 1972 aboard the cruiser USS Little Rock CLG 4 achieving the rank of Lieutenant Junior Grade 8 He worked as a law clerk in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit and as a legal counsel to a subcommittee of the United States House Committee on Agriculture 6 Early political career editMabus volunteered for William F Winter s unsuccessful gubernatorial candidacy in 1967 9 Following Winter s successful election to the governorship in 1979 he returned to Mississippi to work as the governor s legal counsel in 1980 2 10 While in office Winter and his staff pushed through a legislative overhaul of the state s public education system 11 Mabus was one of several of the governor s aides who delivered lectures across the state to build popular support for the reform bill 12 State Senator Ellis B Bodron who was broadly opposed to the legislation denounced Mabus and the other young Winter aides including Dick Molpus David Crews Bill Gartin Andy P Mullins and John Henegan as the Boys of Spring a moniker which they thereafter took pride in 13 Mabus also helped draft an open records law and more stringent driving under the influence legislation 14 He left the counsel position in 1983 2 Mississippi State Auditor editElection edit While working on Winter s staff in 1982 Mabus requested that the Department of Audit supply him with the latest three audit reports for Hinds County government The department sent him three reports with the latest dated 1977 Surprised Mabus reminded the department that he wanted the three latest audits The department informed him that 1977 was the last year in which an audit of the county was conducted and that all audits were being conducted on a five year delay Aspiring to run for elective office Mabus researched the position of State Auditor 15 He realized the office had the power to investigate nearly all state and local government agencies 16 later saying I did a radical thing I went and read the statute That office had more jurisdiction than almost any in the state of Mississippi It had never been used It s the one place you can combat corruption without changing the law It was sitting there waiting for somebody like me to come along 10 Concluding that it could be the most powerful office in the state he decided to run for the position of State Auditor in the 1983 elections 16 In the 1983 Democratic primary Mabus faced Department of Audit employee Mason Shelby and former radio station owner Murray Cain 17 Shelby was viewed as the favorite of the outgoing state auditor Hamp King and other leaders in the department Mabus and Cain criticized the department for which Shelby worked as outdated in its methods and a part of an old boy network 18 Mabus declared that the department was two to four years behind on most of its audits King wrote an open letter to Mabus rejecting his claims as exaggerations and asked a legislative committee to conduct a review of the Department of Audit 19 Mabus ultimately won the election and the legislative report was published in December The committee identified several flaws with the department s structure and practices and determined that it was delinquent for 581 fiscal years worth of audits 20 Tenure edit Mabus was sworn in as state auditor on January 5 1984 21 At the time he took office he found the audit department was disorganized in addition to being behind on hundreds of years worth of audits it had no filing system and thousands of dollars worth of checks for auditing services performed for local governments and other agencies were stored in a shoebox in the auditor s office Mabus convinced the legislature to permit the department to contract out auditing services to private Certified Public Accountant firms to work on the backlog Using these strategies the office eliminated the backlog in two years 15 On July 1 1985 his office adopted Generally Accepted Accounting Principles for financial reporting His office also released a single comprehensive annual financial report for state government for the 1986 fiscal year instead of separate reports for each state agency the first time this had been done in Mississippi 22 The consolidated report was well received and the legislature subsequently mandated the issuance of a comprehensive financial report by statute though it transferred the responsibility for the document s publication to the Fiscal Management Board 23 Mabus discovered early in his tenure that many department auditors conducting reviews of county government finances were forced to piece together county accounting records as they worked 15 Though the state charged 25 per day it took to work on a county audit most counties found this preferable than paying to maintain their own accounting Many auditors found that records were missing which Mabus feared might conceal evidence of fraud 24 In order to improve county accounting practices he created a new requirement that county governments maintain up to date accounting records raised the cost of daily auditing services to 100 and appointed a head of an investigative division in the department 25 He had field auditors supplied with undercover tags so that their vehicles could not be traced during their investigations 26 Mabus warned the Mississippi Association of Supervisors that he would enforce financing laws strictly and would disapprove of misuse of local government resources or noncompliance with purchasing practices In order to ease compliance he created a technical assistance division in the Department of Audit to provide legal and accounting advice to county boards of supervisors He also met with each of the 82 county boards to advise them of relevant state laws and his expectations To deal with complaints of misconduct he created a departmental hotline to field public grievances The hotline received numerous complaints from across the state accusing county supervisors of various acts of malfeasance including misusing county resources for private purposes signing contracts with companies despite conflicts of interest gifting away government funds to charities and extorting contractors 25 Mabus office ultimately audited all 82 counties during his term enabling five to have their bond ratings restored and leading to 1 7 million in misused funds being returned to the state 10 His actions infuriated many county supervisors 27 Early in his term Mabus began collaborating with the Federal Bureau of Investigation on a corruption investigation into Mississippi county governments known as Operation Pretense 28 For the purposes of secrecy initially only Mabus and his chief investigator in his department were aware of the scope of the federal investigation until the first indictments against county officials were announced in February 1987 29 By the time Operation Pretense was finished 57 public officials were indicted 30 The Department of Audit s contribution to the investigation was mostly limited to providing purchasing records for federal prosecutors to use as evidence of wrongdoing 31 Upon the public reveal of the investigation Mabus appealed to the state legislature to switch counties from the beat system of government to the unit system a mandate the hiring of professional county administrators and strengthen county record keeping standards He also advised restricting federally convicted criminals from holding public office barring convicted vendors from securing government contracts and creating a white collar crimes unit in the office of the Attorney General of Mississippi 33 He was succeeded as State Auditor by Pete Johnson on January 7 1988 34 Governor of Mississippi edit1987 election edit Main article 1987 Mississippi gubernatorial election nbsp Mabus as governor Mabus began planning a gubernatorial bid in 1985 and formally declared his candidacy four days after Operation Pretense was revealed to the public in 1987 Incumbent William Allain did not seek reelection 35 In the Democratic primary he faced seven other candidates including former governor Bill Waller Attorney General Ed Pittman Maurice Dantin John Arthur Eaves and Mike Sturvidant 6 Mabus had an advantage in being from northeast Mississippi which usually heavily participated in Democratic primaries He also enjoyed the good faith of many journalists for cracking down on corruption 30 Some warned that county supervisors would organize against him as retaliation for his work as auditor but these fears proved unfounded 36 b Mabus led in the August 4 primary with 37 percent of the vote while Sturvidant who spent heavily on his campaign placed second with 16 percent 37 38 A runoff was held on August 25 in which Mabus took 65 percent of the vote the largest ever margin of victory in a runoff in the state s history 30 37 In the 1987 general election Mabus faced Republican Jack Reed A businessman from Tupelo Reed had worked with Winter on education reform and ran as a moderate leaving voters with the impression that the two candidates had little to distinguish one from the other 39 Mabus ran with the slogan Mississippi will never be last again 14 and while his campaign did not articulate many specific stances it emphasized a theme of change 10 He pledged to raise the state s teacher salaries to the Southeastern average which Reed criticized as necessitating either a tax hike or funding cuts to other government responsibilities Mabus spent a total of 2 9 million on his campaign the most ever spent on a Mississippi gubernatorial candidacy 37 He won with 53 4 percent of the vote relying on a coalition of support from blacks urbanites and traditional Democrats from the northeastern portion of the state 39 About two thirds of the white electorate voted against him but he secured almost 90 percent of the black vote Mabus was inaugurated as the 60th Governor of Mississippi on January 12 1988 Aged 39 he was the youngest governor in the country 14 Executive action and appointments edit Mabus staffed his gubernatorial administration with a significant number of political moderates from outside the state 40 He appointed the first black members to the State Tax Commission and the first woman head of the Department of Public Safety 41 Mabus had potential judicial appointments vetted by a commission before making a selection among their nominees 42 Legislative action edit County reform edit At the beginning of his term Mabus enjoyed the cooperation of legislators 43 and an 85 million budget surplus 44 In 1988 he proposed a bill to the legislature which would require counties to switch from the beat system to the unit system and hire a professional county administrator to handle financial matters and purchasing 45 The State Senate passed a bill which mandated a transition by all counties to switch to a loose form of the unit system while the House of Representatives endorsed legislation which would allow counties to switch to a full unit system following a local referendum A conference committee was unable to reconcile the two different proposals before they expired on the legislative calendar The legislature successfully passed a bill raising supervisor s salaries which Mabus vetoed on April 30 46 In early June he declared that he would call the legislature into special session to consider the unit system legislation and the session was eventually scheduled for August 10 47 Addressing the legislature in joint session Mabus denounced the beat system as an antiquated form of government which made stealing too easy and too tempting and created inefficiency 48 On August 16 the legislature passed the County Government Reorganization Act which stipulated that counties were to decide on what form of government to use in a November referendum and further stipulated requirements for implementation of the unit system Mabus signed the bill into law 49 County supervisors began drawing up cost estimates of implementing the unit system with estimates from 47 different counties varying from 500 to 1 48 million Mabus and other observers denounced the estimates as exaggerated and criticized them for not incorporating cost savings projections post transition 50 In November 46 of the 82 counties voted to adopt the unit system with 61 percent of voters backing the switch 51 Mabus established the Governor s County Unit Task Force in January 1991 to examine the progress of the unit transition and recommend improvements 52 None of its findings were used due to the end of Mabus term 53 State fiscal reform and budgetary issues edit During the 1988 session Mabus vetoed a bill which would have forced the Fiscal Management Board which he chaired as governor to uniformly reduce expenditures if a projected revenue shortfall became apparent He also convinced the legislature to appropriate the projected revenue surplus towards increasing schoolteacher salaries and successfully lobbied the body to adopt several government reorganization recommendations including the creation of a Department of Finance and Administration 54 which replaced the Fiscal Management Board and assumed its responsibilities for making budget recommendations and fiscal adjustments 55 The reorganization also led to the abolition of the State Eleemosynary Board and charitable hospitals with the latter s funds subsequently diverted to the state Medicaid program 54 Mabus was disappointed that the legislature did not adopt the majority of his proposals which would have greatly reduced the number of state boards and commissions but claimed that those enacted saved the state at least 928 744 annually 55 In the 1989 session he proposed the legislature authorize the issuance of general obligation bonds to fund a five year capital improvement plan and thereby free up general revenue for other services 56 The bond proposal expired due to disagreement between the Senate and House so Mabus called the legislature into special session to address the issue The legislature authorized the issuance of 78 1 million in bonds for the 1990 fiscal year and in the 1990 session authorized the issuance of an additional 69 5 million in bonds 54 Facing a 120 million budget shortfall in early 1991 Mabus imposed large cuts to state expenditures as required by law 57 44 B E S T edit Mabus decided to focus on improving public education during the 1990 legislative session 58 By the time the legislature had convened in January the governor had circulated his education plan across the state The platform Better Education for Success Tomorrow or B E S T included new adult and family literacy programs a program to ameliorate the high school dropout rate the creation of health clinics in schools a plan to monitor schools with subpar performance and financially reward and reduce restrictions on schools with excellent performance and the establishment of a new school construction and facility repair fund 41 In funding his proposals Mabus eschewed sales or income tax increases arguing that the working people of Mississippi pay enough taxes and argued for the establishment of a state lottery 59 The state constitution banned lotteries and could only be amended by public referendum following the approval of two thirds of the legislature The Senate refused to approve a referendum 60 but the legislature passed most of B E S T with the added provision that the program would expire on June 30 if no funding was ultimately found for it 59 On June 18 Mabus called the legislature into special session to consider various plans for funding B E S T He suggested several options for the body to consider including the lottery gambling taxes or higher government service fees but refused to consider tax increases arguing that the state had overused that option for previous education improvements The legislature ultimately adjourned without approving a funding plan Mabus continued to lobby for the financing of B E S T for another year without success 60 As time went on many legislators began to feel Mabus was arrogant and did not want to be an equal partner in creating public policy for the state 61 Focus groups convened by Mabus campaign organization in the aftermath of the special session largely interpreted the governor s failure as a result of his unwillingness to compromise with the legislature 62 He gave teachers the largest pay raise in the nation 63 and was named one of Fortune Magazine s ten best education governors 64 Political affairs edit In January 1988 Mabus indicated that he wanted to replace the chairman of the Mississippi Democratic Party Ed Cole the first black man to hold the position 65 The move rankled many black Democrats in the state 66 Some of Cole s supporters accused Mabus of racism but most criticized him for attempting to effect a personal takeover of the party Mabus and his allies attempted to cast Cole as an old guard moderate of an ineffective organization while portraying his desired candidate Billie Thompson as an effective reformer and fundraiser On April 9 the party s executive committee voted to reelect Cole as chairman In his victory speech Cole declared I want Mabus to know that he belongs to our party and our party does not belong to him 65 1991 election edit Main article 1991 Mississippi gubernatorial election Enabled by a gubernatorial succession amendment ratified in 1986 Mabus became the first Mississippi governor to run for reelection in the 20th century In the 1991 Democratic primary he faced former U S Congressman Wayne Dowdy who ran with the slogan Save us from Mabus 44 and George Blair Styling himself a populist Dowdy ran an old style campaign and attempted to portray Mabus as arrogant calling him the ruler 67 He also mocked Mabus 1987 slogan by saying that if elected Mississippi would never be lost again 68 Mabus denounced his opponent as part of the old guard of Mississippi politicians and criticized his attendance record in the U S Congress 68 Equipped with more financial resources Mabus spent five times the amount of Dowdy and won in the primary with 50 7 percent of the vote 68 In the general election Mabus faced Republican Kirk Fordice a former Vicksburg construction executive 44 Fordice had not been expected by most observers to win his own primary and thus entered the general election with momentum while Mabus had been harmed by his narrow victory in the Democratic contest Mabus campaign focused on attempting to make Fordice unappealing while Fordice s campaign concentrated their efforts on turning the election into a referendum on Mabus performance 69 Fordice declared his support for legislative term limits and welfare reform He labeled Mabus a Kennedyesque liberal who focused too much on education and criticized his deficit spending 44 Republican hosted focus groups found the governor to be aloof and unconcerned with the necessities of average Mississippians 70 and Fordice s signature campaign television ad attacked the incumbent for having tried but not accomplished much 69 Mabus continued to advocate support for public education and attack Fordice as a lobbyist and outsider who did not appreciate the needs of the state Later in the campaign race became an issue as Fordice declared his support for workfare and ending racial quotas Mabus aired a series of television ads which accused Fordice of planning to shut down the state s historically black schools 44 The governor spent twice as much as his opponent and held an edge in polls up to the election but many potential voters identified themselves as undecided On November 5 Fordice won with 50 8 percent to Mabus 47 6 percent the first Republican victory in a Mississippi gubernatorial race since 1874 71 Having received six percent less of the total vote share than in 1987 several observers blamed Mabus loss on perception that he was an arrogant leader Turnout among black voters was also lower in 1991 and some national Democrats accused Fordice of using race baiting tactics 72 Mabus was succeeded by Fordice on January 14 1992 73 Ambassador to Saudi Arabia and aftermath editMabus was appointed by President Bill Clinton to be the United States Ambassador to Saudi Arabia Confirmed by the U S Senate on July 1 1994 74 he served until 1996 when he resigned to return to Mississippi to work for his family s lumber business 75 During his tenure five Americans were killed in a bombing at a military training installation in Riyadh 76 Before he departed the Saudi Arabian government inducted him into the Order of King Abdulaziz 77 After his return to Mississippi Mabus practiced law 64 In 2000 he took an executive position at Foamex International He served as the company s CEO during a bankruptcy reorganization and resigned from the post in 2007 to spend more time in Mississippi 78 Secretary of the Navy editAppointment edit nbsp Mabus meeting with President Obama in the Oval Office in June 2010 nbsp Gen James T Conway Sec Mabus and Adm Gary Roughead testify before Congress in February 2010 nbsp Vice Adm Walter E Carter Jr Adm John M Richardson Sec Mabus Deputy Sec of Defense Robert O Work and Gen Robert Neller at the 117th Army Navy Game in December 2016 In 2008 Mabus campaigned for Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama in Mississippi who was subsequently elected President of the United States 79 On March 27 2009 Mabus was nominated by Obama to be appointed Secretary of the Navy 80 He was sworn in on May 19 2009 81 and held a ceremonial swearing in at Washington Navy Yard on June 18 2009 where he was re sworn in by the Secretary of Defense Robert Gates 82 83 84 Great Green Fleet edit Several months after taking office Mabus declared that he wanted to originate half of all of the Navy s power needs from non petroleum sources by 2020 As part of this he declared that a number of ships would be covered under a Great Green Fleet initiative in which half of them would be partly powered by sources other than fossil fuels 85 He argued that using alternative energy sources would reduce the force s reliance on foreign oil imports and thereby increase its energy independence 86 The Navy experimented with biofuels during his tenure though their high expense often garnered skepticism 85 including when Senator John McCain noted that one report of a 2012 exercise showed that a half biodiesel fuel blend cost the Navy 26 75 per gallon instead of the usual 3 25 per gallon 85 87 As a result Congress required all major purchases of alternative fuels to be conducted at competitive prices In 2016 the Navy introduced a beef fat fuel blend that cost 2 05 per gallon 87 Later in his tenure the destroyer USS Mason successfully operated on a biofuel blend that cost only 1 99 per gallon a fact which Mabus claimed was overlooked 85 Ship naming controversies edit See also United States ship naming conventions As Navy secretary Mabus was given the responsibility of naming the force s ships 88 In April 2010 a furor arose when it was reported that Mabus made the proposal to name a United States Navy warship the USS John P Murtha LPD 26 after the late Pennsylvania Democratic congressman John Murtha Additional naming controversies occurred due to the naming of the auxiliary ship USNS Cesar Chavez T AKE 14 after civil rights activist Cesar Chavez 89 and a littoral combat ship the USS Gabrielle Giffords LCS 10 in honor of former Arizona Democratic Congresswoman Gabby Giffords after she suffered life threatening wounds in the 2011 mass shooting in her home district of Tucson Arizona 90 Subsequent ship namings include his January 6 2016 announcement of his naming of another auxiliary ship after civil rights activist and sitting incumbent Georgia Democratic Congressman John Lewis i e USNS John Lewis T AO 205 Mabus further stated that this particular class of auxiliary ship of which the John Lewis would be the lead ship would all be named after civil rights leaders 91 In April he announced his plans to name a destroyer after former Senate Armed Services Committee chairman Carl Levin Congressional Republicans accused Mabus of politicizing the ship naming process and Representative Steven Palazzo unsuccessfully attempted to amend a defense appropriation bill to bar the secretary from naming ships after congressmen who were not military service members 92 On July 14 Mabus named a ship after gay rights icon and San Francisco Democratic politician Harvey Milk 93 Gulf Coast recovery edit In June 2010 Obama ordered Mabus to draft a long term plan to restore the condition of the Gulf Coast in the aftermath of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill 94 Some regional businessmen and environmentalists were critical of the assignment being troubled by Mabus previous investments in energy trading companies and worried that as the secretary of navy he would not be able to devote his full attention to the cleanup effort 95 He introduced a recovery plan in September which received bipartisan support in Congress Based on his recommendations Congress subsequently passed the RESTORE Act allocating over 5 billion to rehabilitate the coast 94 Budget disputes edit After a January 2015 report by the Defense Business Board and McKinsey amp Company discovered the U S Department of Defense was spending 134 billion 23 of its total budget on back office work and that the back office bureaucracy staff of over one million people was nearly as great as the number of active troops the board recommended a plan to cut 125 billion in waste over five years However when Ash Carter became defense secretary the next month he replaced the board chairman the McKinsey results were classified as secret and its report was removed from public websites Mabus then gave a speech at the American Enterprise Institute highlighting the McKinsey report calling the back office costs pure overhead and particularly criticizing the Defense Finance and Accounting Service and the Defense Logistics Agency 96 Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition Technology and Logistics Frank Kendall III then wrote to him asking please refrain from taking any more public pot shots I do not want this spilling over into further public discourse 96 Throughout his tenure Mabus contracted the building of 86 ships for the navy 97 In 2016 he drafted a budget for the navy for the 2018 fiscal year which included billions of dollars earmarked for building dozens of additional ships Carter s draft budget for the Department of Defense did not reflect this appropriation and in December 2016 Mabus released a memo stating that he did not wish to cut money from shipbuilding citing the decline in the size of the navy from 2001 to 2008 He also told Carter that you and I both know that this budget is almost totally a symbolic one making note of the impending end of Obama s tenure 85 Personnel affairs edit Mabus stated that he placed emphasis on developing a more diverse force during his tenure 85 Some personnel accused him of promoting social engineering policies 79 The United States Armed Forces don t ask don t tell policy towards gay servicemen ended in 2011 85 Two years later the Navy introduced randomized breathalyzer tests for on duty sailors to curb alcohol abuse 79 Mabus created new Reserve Officers Training Corps programs at different universities including Harvard University and Arizona State University 85 He also removed zone distinctions from promotion considerations allowing personnel to be considered equally for rank promotions without regard towards their specializations At his direction the Navy introduced expanded graduate school level education offerings and created a program to offer excelling junior officers to work for three years at Fortune 500 companies 79 He arranged for women to enter the submarine fleet in 2011 98 Mabus also pushed for the introduction of unisex uniforms in the Navy and the United States Marine Corps In July 2015 he expanded the maternity leave of Navy Department personnel to 18 weeks though Carter later trimmed this to 12 weeks across all armed forced in January 2016 87 In late 2015 the Marine Corps released the results of a nine month long study on female performance in the corps concluding that the average woman recruit was injured twice as often men less accurate with infantry weapons and not as effective at recovering wounded troops from the battlefield Mabus immediately dismissed the findings saying the Marine Corps failed to describe the effectiveness of the highest performing women and did not provide sufficient reason to continue to exclude women from the most demanding roles in the corps Following an instruction from Defense Secretary Carter on January 1 2016 Mabus ordered the Marine Corps to draft a plan to make all of its training co ed within 15 days 85 and directed the service to make all job titles gender neutral 87 He subsequently met with Marine Commandant General Robert B Neller and agreed to leave boot camp segregated by gender His actions provoked the ire of members of Congress with Representative Duncan D Hunter demanding his resignation and others criticizing the narrow timeframe he had given the corps 85 Departure edit Mabus declared in March 2016 that he would consider retirement 94 and stepped down as Secretary of the Navy on January 20 2017 upon the inauguration of President Donald Trump He was succeeded by Assistant Navy Secretary Sean Stackley who became acting secretary pending the confirmation of a new permanent secretary 85 99 Mabus was one of only a few national security officials to serve continuously during Obama s entire tenure 85 and the longest serving secretary of the navy since Josephus Daniels who served from 1913 to 1921 He declared For me leading the Department of the Navy is the greatest honor of my life 87 Awards honors community service edit nbsp Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus presents the Navy Distinguished Public Service Medal to U S Senator Richard Blumenthal D CT Mabus has been awarded the U S Department of Defense Distinguished Public Service Award the U S Army s Distinguished Civilian Service Award the Martin Luther King Jr Social Responsibility Award from the King Center for Nonviolent Social Change in Atlanta the National Wildlife Federation Conservation Achievement Award the King Abdulaziz Award from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the Mississippi Association of Educators Friend of Education Award He was included in Glassdoor s 2013 list of Highest Rated CEOs at 43rd place with an 82 approval rate 100 In 2017 the Mississippi Center for Justice accorded Mabus its Champion of Justice award 101 In 2019 the town of Ackermann erected historic markers honoring both Mabus and fellow town native former governor J P Coleman at Governor s Park 102 He is active in many community activities primarily focusing on education Following Hurricane Katrina he founded the Help and Hope Foundation which works to meet the needs of children affected by the storm Personal life editMabus married Julie Hines the daughter of a Jackson banker in 1987 shortly before he ran for governor Some observers speculated that the marriage was meant to improve his image before the campaign They had two daughters together 103 They divorced in 2000 64 with the separation proceedings and the following custody dispute over their children marked by bitterness A Hinds County court ultimately granted Mabus shared custody with the children 103 He married Lynne Horecky in 2007 64 Mabus is a fan of the Boston Red Sox having first followed the team during the 1975 World Series while a student at Harvard Law School 104 During his tenure as Navy Secretary he threw ceremonial first pitches at all 30 major league baseball parks in the United States the only person ever believed to have done so 88 Acting edit In 2009 and again in 2014 Mabus made cameo appearances on the TV drama NCIS in the Season 7 episode Child s Play and in the Season 12 episode Semper Fortis as an NCIS Agent named Ray 105 In 2012 he appeared in the movie Battleship as the commanding officer of the USS Ronald Reagan 106 Mabus made a cameo appearance as himself in the It s Not a Rumor episode of the TV series The Last Ship issuing orders to the crew of the Nathan James via a recorded message in the storyline by the time the ship received the orders Mabus had succumbed to the Red Flu virus 107 Notes edit Under the beat system each supervisor on a given board is responsible for managing road construction in their assigned district or beat Under the unit system road construction considerations are handled in a centralized manner by the entire board of supervisors and a county administrator and road manager 32 One undercover FBI agent Jerry King later stated that many supervisors were satisfied with Mabus gubernatorial candidacy noting that it would lead to his departure from the auditor s office 27 References edit Obituary for Raymond E Mabus The Greenwood Commonwealth June 12 1986 p 2 Archived from the original on January 5 2024 Retrieved January 5 2024 a b c Mullaney 1994 p 205 Obituary for Lucille Curtis Mabus Clarion Ledger June 9 2000 p 18 Retrieved January 5 2024 Leslie E Mabus in US Social Security Death Index Fold3 Archived from the original on January 5 2024 Retrieved January 5 2024 Obituary for Leslie E Mabus Clarion Ledger October 3 1992 p 16 Archived from the original on January 5 2024 Retrieved January 5 2024 a b c Sansing 2016 p 229 Mississippi History Now Ray Mabus Sixtieth Governor of Mississippi 1988 1992 www mshistorynow mdah ms gov Archived from the original on October 25 2019 Retrieved May 31 2018 USSLittleRock org Archived from the original on August 13 2018 Retrieved April 24 2007 Bolton 2013 p 135 a b c d Boyer Peter J February 28 1988 The Yuppies of Mississippi How They Took Over the Statehouse New York Times Magazine Archived from the original on January 15 2010 Nash amp Taggart 2009 pp 139 196 Bolton 2013 p 248 Nash amp Taggart 2009 pp 139 143 144 a b c Sansing David August 2009 Ray Mabus Sixtieth Governor of Mississippi 1988 1992 Mississippi History Now Mississippi Department of Archives and History Archived from the original on May 29 2022 Retrieved June 8 2022 a b c Crockett 2003 p 89 a b Nash amp Taggart 2009 p 196 Crockett 2003 p 87 Crockett 2003 pp 87 88 Crockett 2003 p 88 Crockett 2003 pp 88 89 Oppel Tom January 6 1984 Statewide officials sworn into offices Dye vows state will continue progress The Clarion Ledger pp 1B 2B Archived from the original on December 7 2022 Retrieved December 7 2022 Pugh 2020 p 33 Pugh 2020 pp 33 34 Crockett 2003 pp 89 90 a b Crockett 2003 p 90 Crockett 2003 p 99 a b Crockett 2003 p 94 Crockett 2003 p 91 Crockett 2003 pp 91 92 a b c Nash amp Taggart 2009 p 197 Crockett 2003 pp 87 92 McLaurin Mac July 10 2017 County Government Mississippi Encyclopedia Mississippi Humanities Council Archived from the original on August 15 2022 Retrieved June 7 2022 Crockett 2003 p 92 Crockett 2003 p 95 Nash amp Taggart 2009 pp 196 197 Crockett 2003 pp 93 94 a b c Mullaney 1994 p 207 Auditor in Mississippi Wins Democratic Slot for Governor The New York Times late ed Associated Press August 26 1987 p A14 a b Nash amp Taggart 2009 p 198 Ball 2006 pp 61 62 a b Nash amp Taggart 2009 p 224 Southwick 1998 p 193 Pugh 2020 p 34 a b c d e f Mullaney 1994 p 209 Crockett 2003 p 110 Crockett 2003 p 112 Crockett 2003 pp 112 113 Crockett 2003 pp 113 114 Crockett 2003 p 114 Crockett 2003 pp 115 116 Crockett 2003 p 117 Crockett 2003 p 119 Crockett 2003 p 121 a b c Pugh 2020 p 35 a b Pugh 2020 pp 43 44 Pugh 2020 pp 35 45 Nash amp Taggart 2009 p 223 Nash amp Taggart 2009 pp 223 224 a b Nash amp Taggart 2009 pp 224 225 a b Nash amp Taggart 2009 p 225 Nossiter 1994 p 226 Nash amp Taggart 2009 pp 225 226 Applebome Peter September 16 1991 Mississippi Governor s Record at Issue New York Times Archived from the original on December 20 2016 Retrieved February 12 2017 a b c d Sansing 2016 p 230 a b O Keefe Joe April 10 1988 Cole retains Democratic chairmanship The Clarion Ledger pp 1A 10A Archived from the original on February 24 2023 Retrieved February 24 2023 Nossiter 1994 p 227 Lamis 1999 pp 252 253 a b c Lamis 1999 p 253 a b Nash amp Taggart 2009 p 229 Nash amp Taggart 2009 p 226 Lamis 1999 p 255 Lamis 1999 pp 255 256 Fordice sworn in as governor of Mississippi Austin American Statesman January 15 1992 p A13 Lippman Thomas W July 6 1994 D Amato Gets Message Across With Hold on Envoy to Riyadh The Washington Post p A17 U S Ambassador to Resign Return Home to Mississippi The Orlando Sentinel Central Florida ed Associated Press April 1 1996 p A8 McKenzie Danny January 7 1996 Deadly bombing plagues busy but homesick Mabus The Clarion Ledger p 1B Archived from the original on August 28 2022 Retrieved August 28 2022 Saudis honor outgoing Mabus The Commercial Appeal Associated Press April 28 1996 p 3 Archived from the original on August 28 2022 Retrieved August 28 2022 Johnson returns as CEO of supplier Foamex Furniture Today Bridge Tower Media April 16 2007 Archived from the original on September 7 2022 Retrieved September 7 2022 a b c d Harkins Gina Meyers Meghann January 17 2016 Navy secretary builds legacy one controversial brick at a time Marine Corps Times Archived from the original on December 1 2022 Retrieved July 6 2022 Emily Wagster Pettus March 27 2009 Obama chooses ex Miss governor for Navy post Navy Times Mabus Sworn in as New Navy Secretary Navy mil Navy News Service May 19 2009 Archived from the original on May 27 2009 Retrieved May 20 2009 Barfield Berry Deborah June 19 2009 Former Miss gov sworn in as new Navy secretary The Clarion Ledger Harrison Darren June 18 2009 Secretary of Navy Committed to Sailors Families Official Website of the United States Navy Archived from the original on March 28 2014 Retrieved July 10 2014 Ewing Philip June 18 2009 Well sworn SecNav praises traditions Navy Times a b c d e f g h i j k l Lamothe Dan December 30 2016 Obama s only Navy secretary pushed an agenda of social change Now he leaves with a warning The Washington Post Archived from the original on March 9 2020 Retrieved July 5 2022 Mabus Foreign oil U S weakness The Clarion Ledger Associated Press October 8 2011 p 2B Archived from the original on September 3 2022 Retrieved September 3 2022 a b c d e Seck Hope Hodge March 1 2016 Ray Mabus Longest Serving Navy Secretary Since World War I to Retire Military com Archived from the original on July 5 2022 Retrieved July 5 2022 a b Montgomery Rick September 22 2018 Navy official had first pitch then named USS Kansas City The Kansas City Star pp 1A 10A Archived from the original on September 7 2022 Retrieved September 7 2022 Robbins Gary Aguilera Elizabeth May 18 2011 Navy secretary names ship after Cesar Chavez San Diego Union Tribune Archived from the original on November 26 2013 Retrieved March 7 2012 Mabus remarks came amid controversy On Tuesday Hunter issued a statement saying Naming a ship after Cesar Chavez goes right along with other recent decisions by the Navy that appear to be more about making a political statement than upholding the Navy s history and tradition Ewing Philip February 15 2012 Navy Plays it Safe With New DDG and LCS Names Military com Archived from the original on March 20 2012 Retrieved March 7 2012 Less than a week after drawing traditionalist ire for naming a Navy warship after former Rep Gabrielle Giffords Navy Secretary Ray Mabus returned to standard convention Wednesday in a batch of new names for forthcoming warships SECNAV Mabus Names First T AO X Next Generation Oiler After Rep John Lewis January 6 2016 Archived from the original on September 27 2016 Retrieved September 26 2016 Berry Deborah Barfield June 17 2016 Palazzo Opposes Naming Policy Hattiesburg American pp A1 A5 Archived from the original on August 2 2022 Retrieved August 2 2022 Navy to Name Ship After Gay Rights Activist Harvey Milk July 28 2016 Archived from the original on November 7 2021 Retrieved September 26 2016 a b c Sansing 2016 p 231 Assignment of part time spill recovery chief panned The Billings Gazette Associated Press June 20 2010 p 6A Archived from the original on September 3 2022 Retrieved September 3 2022 a b Whitlock Craig Woodward Bob December 5 2016 Pentagon buries evidence of 125 billion in bureaucratic waste The Washington Post p A1 Archived from the original on July 21 2018 Retrieved December 6 2016 Nelson Karen November 5 2016 Longest serving Navy secretary since WWI visits Ingalls on farewell tour Sun Herald pp 1A 5A Meyers Meghann January 19 2016 A progressive Navy secretary s clash with Marines over jobs for women Navy Times Retrieved July 6 2022 Jennewein Chris January 20 2017 Sean Stackley Is Now Acting Secretary of the Navy Times of San Diego Archived from the original on November 6 2023 Retrieved July 6 2022 Glassdoor s Highest Rated CEOs 2013 Glassdoor Archived from the original on July 14 2014 Retrieved July 10 2014 Harrison and Mabus honored at champions dinner The Northside Sun November 9 2017 p 13B Archived from the original on September 7 2022 Retrieved September 7 2022 Robertson Mike September 18 2019 Markers at Governor s Park unveiled with large crowd The Choctaw Plaindealer Vol 132 no 38 pp 1 24 Archived from the original on September 7 2022 Retrieved September 7 2022 a b Holland Gina July 17 2000 Mabus focuses on parenting not politics The Greenwood Commonwealth Associated Press p 4 Archived from the original on September 2 2022 Retrieved September 2 2022 Shachtman Noah July 17 2012 How the Navy s Incompetence Sank the Green Fleet Wired Archived from the original on February 24 2017 Retrieved March 11 2017 Ray Mabus to guest star on NCIS United Press International November 9 2009 Archived from the original on June 11 2013 Retrieved March 17 2012 Capaccio Tony May 18 2012 Navy Wanted Slimmer Sailor For Role in Battleship Movie Bloomberg News Archived from the original on March 25 2016 Retrieved September 7 2022 San Diego stars in TNT s Last Ship The San Diego Union Tribune April 23 2015 Archived from the original on January 25 2016 Retrieved January 3 2016 Works cited editBall Howard 2006 Justice in Mississippi The Murder Trial of Edgar Ray Killen University Press of Kansas ISBN 9780700614615 Bolton Charles C 2013 William F Winter and the New Mississippi A Biography Jackson University Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 61703 787 0 Crockett James R 2003 Operation Pretense The FBI s Sting on County Corruption in Mississippi Jackson University Press of Mississippi ISBN 9781578064960 Mullaney Marie Marmo 1994 Biographical Directory of the Governors of the United States 1988 1994 Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 9780313283123 Lamis Alexander P ed 1999 Southern Politics in the 1990s Louisiana State University Press ISBN 9780807166765 Nash Jere Taggart Andy 2009 Mississippi Politics The Struggle for Power 1976 2008 second ed University Press of Mississippi ISBN 9781604733570 Nossiter Adam 1994 Of Long Memory Mississippi And The Murder Of Medgar Evers Reading Massachusetts Addison Wesley ISBN 9780201483390 Pugh Brian A 2020 Chaos and Compromise The Evolution of the Mississippi Budgeting Process University Press of Mississippi ISBN 9781496830227 Sansing David G 2016 Mississippi Governors Soldiers Statesmen Scholars Scoundrels first ed Oxford Nautilus Publishing Company ISBN 978 1 936946 81 5 Southwick Leslie 1998 Mississippi Supreme Court Elections A Historical Perspective 1916 1996 Mississippi College Law Review 18 1 115 198 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ray Mabus United States Navy bio page Mississippi Historical Society biography Appearances on C SPAN nbsp C SPAN Q amp A interview with Mabus February 5 2012Political officesPreceded byHamp King Auditor of Mississippi1984 1988 Succeeded byPete JohnsonPreceded byWilliam Allain Governor of Mississippi1988 1992 Succeeded byKirk FordicePreceded byB J PennActing United States Secretary of the Navy2009 2017 Succeeded byRichard V SpencerParty political officesPreceded byWilliam Allain Democratic nominee for Governor of Mississippi1987 1991 Succeeded byDick MolpusDiplomatic postsPreceded byDavid WelchActing United States Ambassador to Saudi Arabia1994 1996 Succeeded byWyche FowlerU S order of precedence ceremonial Preceded byMartha McSallyas Former US Senator Order of precedence of the United StatesWithin Mississippi Succeeded byRonnie Musgroveas Former GovernorPreceded byMitch Danielsas Former Governor Order of precedence of the United StatesOutside Mississippi Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ray Mabus amp oldid 1204452394, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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