Gabinet Baracka Obamy

Pierwszy gabinet Baracka Obamy (2009-2013)
Drugi gabinet Baracka Obamy (2013-2017)

Skład

HerbFunkcja/

Departament

ZdjęcieImię i nazwiskoKadencja
Od
Seal Of The President Of The United States Of America.svgPrezydentPresident Barack Obama (1).jpgBarack Obama20 stycznia 2009
US Vice President Seal.svgWiceprezydentJoe Biden20 stycznia 2009
Department of state.svgDyplomacjaJohn Kerry official Secretary of State portrait.jpgJohn Kerry1 lutego 2013
US-DeptOfTheTreasury-Seal.svgSkarbJacob Lew official portrait.jpgJack Lew27 lutego 2013
United States Department of Defense Seal.svgObronaAsh Carter DOD Secretary Portrait.jpgAshton Carter17 lutego 2015
SprawiedliwośćLoretta Lynch.jpgLoretta Lynch27 kwietnia 2015
Zasoby wewnętrzneSecretary Jewell and the Northwest Youth Corps (8818705428).jpgSally Jewell12 kwietnia 2013
RolnictwoMichael T. Scuse official portrait.JPGMichael Scuse (p.o)13 stycznia 2017
HandelPenny Pritzker official portrait.jpgPenny Pritzker26 czerwca 2013
US-DeptOfLabor-Seal.svgPracaOfficial portrait of United States Secretary of Labor Tom Perez.jpgThomas Perez23 lipca 2013
Seal of the United States Department of Homeland Security.svgBezpieczeństwoJeh Johnson official DHS portrait.jpgJeh Johnson23 grudnia 2013
ZdrowieSylvia Mathews Burwell official portrait.jpgSylvia Mathews Burwell9 czerwca 2014
EdukacjaJohn B. King, Jr.2015.jpgJohn King
(do 14 marca 2016 pełniący obowiązki)
1 stycznia 2016
US-DeptOfHUD-Seal.svgUrbanizacjaJulián Castro's Official HUD Portrait.jpgJulian Castro28 lipca 2014
Seal of the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (1989-2012).svgWeteraniRobert A. McDonald Official Portrait.jpgRobert A. McDonald30 lipca 2014
TransportAnthony Foxx official portrait.jpgAnthony Foxx2 czerwca 2013
Seal of the United States Department of Energy.svgEnergetykaMoniz official portrait sitting.jpgErnest Moniz21 maja 2013
Department of state.svgDyplomacjaSecretary Clinton 8x10 2400 1.jpgHillary Clinton21 stycznia 20091 lutego 2013
US-DeptOfTheTreasury-Seal.svgSkarbTimothy Geithner Treasury.jpgTimothy Geithner26 stycznia 200927 lutego 2013
United States Department of Defense Seal.svgObronaRobert Gates, official DoD photo portrait, 2006.jpgRobert Gates20 stycznia 20091 lipca 2011
Leon Panetta, official DoD photo portrait, 2011.jpgLeon Panetta1 lipca 201127 lutego 2013
Chuck Hagel27 lutego 201317 lutego 2015
Zasoby wewnętrzneKensalazar.jpgKen Salazar20 stycznia 200912 kwietnia 2013
HandelWolffOtto-c.jpgOtto Wolff (p.o.)20 stycznia 200925 lutego 2009
Gary Locke.jpgGary Locke25 lutego 20091 sierpnia 2011
Rebecca Blank official portrait.jpgRebecca Blank (p.o)1 sierpnia 201121 października 2011
John Bryson official portrait.jpgJohn Bryson21 października 201121 czerwca 2012
Rebecca Blank official portrait.jpgRebecca Blank (p.o)21 czerwca 20121 czerwca 2013
Cameron Kerry official portrait.jpegCameron Kerry (p.o)1 czerwca 201326 czerwca 2013
US-DeptOfLabor-Seal.svgPracaHilda Solis.jpgHilda Solis24 lutego 200922 stycznia 2013
Seal of the United States Department of Homeland Security.svgBezpieczeństwoPortrait Napolitano hires new.jpgJanet Napolitano20 stycznia 20096 września 2013
Rand Beers official portrait.jpgRand Beers
(pełniący obowiązki)
6 września 201323 grudnia 2013
TransportRay LaHood.jpgRay LaHood22 stycznia 20092 czerwca 2013
Seal of the United States Department of Energy.svgEnergetykaSecretaryChu.jpgSteven Chu20 stycznia 200922 kwietnia 2013
Daniel Poneman official portrait.jpgDaniel Poneman (p.o)22 kwietnia 201321 maja 2013
Seal of the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (1989-2012).svgWeteraniEric Shinseki official Veterans Affairs portrait.jpgEric Shinseki20 stycznia 200930 maja 2014
Sloan Gibson.jpgSloan Gibson
(pełniący obowiązki)
30 maja 201430 lipca 2014
ZdrowieSebeliusofficialphoto.jpgKathleen Sebelius28 kwietnia 20099 czerwca 2014
US-DeptOfHUD-Seal.svgUrbanizacjaDonovanShaunLS.jpgShaun Donovan26 stycznia 200928 lipca 2014
SprawiedliwośćEric Holder official portrait small.jpgEric Holder20 stycznia 200927 kwietnia 2015
EdukacjaArne Duncan20 stycznia 20091 stycznia 2016
RolnictwoTom Vilsack, official USDA photo portrait.jpgTom Vilsack20 stycznia 200913 stycznia 2017

Media użyte na tej stronie

US-DeptOfJustice-Seal.svg

Seal of the United States Department of Justice.

The origins of the seal are unknown; it was first used in the 19th century as the seal for the Office of the Attorney General (prior to the formation of the Department of Justice) but the exact date is unknown. Even the translation of the Latin motto is murky, a matter of debate between Latin scholars. The Department's currently accepted translation is who prosecutes on behalf of Lady Justice, referring to the Attorney General. The motto is an allusion to the wording of the writ in a qui tam action: qui tam pro domino rege quam pro se ipso sequitur ("he who sues on behalf of our lord the King as well as for himself." The current-day seal dates from 1934, when some (though not all) of the heraldic mistakes on the original were corrected. More information here.
Seal of the United States Department of Homeland Security.svg
Seal of the United States Department of Homeland Security. A graphically styled American eagle appears in a circular blue field. The eagle's outstretched wings break through an inner red ring into an outer white ring that contains a circular placement of the words "U.S. DEPARTMENT OF" in the top half and "HOMELAND SECURITY" in the bottom half. The outer white ring has a silvery gray border. As in The Great Seal, the eagle’s left claw holds an olive branch with 13 leaves and 13 seeds while the right claw grasps 13 arrows. Centered on the eagle's breast is a shield divided into three sections containing elements that represent the homeland "from sea to shining sea." The top element, a dark blue sky, contains 22 stars representing the original 22 agencies and bureaus that have come together to form the department. The left shield element contains white mountains behind a green plain underneath a light blue sky. The right shield element contains four wave shapes representing the oceans, lakes and waterways alternating light and dark blue separated by white lines.
President Barack Obama (1).jpg
U.S. President Barack Obama's official photograph in the Oval Office on 6 December 2012.
Sylvia Mathews Burwell official portrait.jpg
Official portrait of Health & Human Services Secretary Sylvia Mathews Burwell.
Official portrait of Vice President Joe Biden.jpg
Cropped official portrait of Vice President Joe Biden in his West Wing Office at the White House, Jan. 10, 2013. (Official White House Photo by David Lienemann)
Seal of the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development.svg
Seal of the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development.

The seal was originally unveiled on November 10, 1966, and later defined in law (Federal Register 32FR366-67 and 24 CFR subtitle A, §11.1, both since removed as part of a streamlining of the federal code). The seal was defined as:

On a white background within a circle composed of the words, "U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development," is an eagle and two stars. The six upper bars depicting the upper portion of the eagle's wings, the torso of the eagle, the star at the right of the eagle, and the words, "U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development," are colored blue. The eight lower bars depicting the lower portion of the eagle's wings and the star at the left of the eagle are colored green."

The seal is a representative of high rise buildings simulating an eagle and giving emphasis to the "urban" in HUD's name. The eagle (shown abstractly) is a symbol of Federal authority. The use of green symbolizes open space, land, growth and prosperity. The blue in the Seal alludes to the quality of life and environment in America's cities.

More information here.
Seal of the United States Department of the Treasury.svg

The seal of the United States Department of the Treasury.

The original seal dates from the Board of Treasury during the Articles of Confederation, and so predates the department (and Federal Government) itself. The current design is a slight simplification of the original, introduced in 1968.

The seal's arms depicts balancing scales (to represent justice), a key (the emblem of official authority) and a chevron with thirteen stars (to represent the original states).

For more information, see here.
Ash Carter DOD Secretary Portrait.jpg
US Department of Defense portrait of Ashton B. Carter, Secretary of Defense.
US-DeptOfHHS-Seal.svg

The seal of the United States Department of Health and Human Services. The symbol represents the American People sheltered in the wing of the American Eagle, suggesting the Department’s concern and responsibility for the welfare of the people. The colors are reflex blue and gold.

This seal is now just used for mainly legal purposes; the department has a separate logo which is used for its visual identity.

More information here and here.
US-DeptOfEducation-Seal.svg

Seal of the United States Department of Education.

The seal was introduced on May 7, 1980, and is described in law as:

Standing upon a mound, an oak tree with black trunk and limbs and green foliage in front of a gold rising sun, issuing gold rays on a light blue disc, enclosed by a dark blue border with gold edges bearing the inscription "DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION" above a star at either side of the words "UNITED STATES OF AMERICA" in smaller letters in the base; letters and stars in white.

More information here and 34 CFR Part 3.
Sloan Gibson.jpg
Sloan Gibson is the current Deputy Secretary of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.
SecretaryChu.jpg
U.S. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu.
Julián Castro's Official HUD Portrait.jpg
Julián Castro's Official HUD Portrait
US-DeptOfTransportation-Seal.svg
Seal of the United States Department of Transportation, introduced on 17 November 1980. The seal is described in 49 CFR 3.1 as 'A white abstract triskelion figure signifying motion appears within a circular blue field. The figure is symmetrical. The three branches of the figure curve outward in a counter-clockwise direction, each tapering almost to a point at the edge of the field. Surrounding the blue circle is a circular ring of letters. The upper half of the ring shows the words “Department of Transportation”. The lower half of the ring shows the words “United States of America”. The letters may be shown in either black or medium gray. The official seal of the Department is modified when embossed. It appears below in black and white.'
Official portrait of United States Secretary of Labor Tom Perez.jpg
Official portrait of United States Secretary of Labor Tom Perez
Secretary Jewell and the Northwest Youth Corps (8818705428).jpg
Autor: Matt Christenson, Bureau of Land Management, Licencja: CC BY-SA 2.0

U.S. Secretary of the Interior Sally Jewell announcing $4.2 million in grants to support conservation employment and mentoring opportunities for 600+ people ages 15-25 on public lands across the country.

Jewell and Portland mayor Charlie Hales kicked off the summer work season at an event in Oaks Bottom Wildlife Refuge in Portland, Oregon where they were joined by Krystyna Wolniakowski, Pacific Northwest Regional Director of the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, and members of the Northwest Youth Corps, one of the first year's grant recipients.

Further info
Moniz official portrait sitting.jpg
Official photograph of United States Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz
DuncanArne.jpg
Photo of Education Secretary Arne Duncan (2009-). The original photo can be found in the "Color photo—Print quality" zip file.
Jeh Johnson official DHS portrait.jpg
Official portrait of Department of Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson.
Anthony Foxx official portrait.jpg
Official portrait of Secretary of Transportation Anthony Foxx.
Daniel Poneman official portrait.jpg
Official portrait of the Deputy Secretary of Energy Daniel Poneman.
President Barack Obama with full cabinet 09-10-09.jpg
First Cabinet of President Barack Obama in the White House East Room.

From left to right:
Back row: Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood, Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency Lisa P. Jackson, Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke, Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis, President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, Secretary of Interior Ken Salazar, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Shaun Donovan, Director of the Office of Management and Budget Peter R. Orszag, Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers Christina Romer, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan.
Second row: Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack, Secretary of Energy Steven Chu, Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano, Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius, United States Trade Representative Ron Kirk, United States Permanent Representative to the United Nations Ambassador Susan Rice, Secretary of Veteran Affairs Eric Shinseki.
Third row, sitting: Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, Secretary of Treasury Timothy F. Geithner, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, Attorney General of the United States Eric Holder.
Rand Beers official portrait.jpg
Official portrait of acting Secretary of Homeland Security Rand Beers.
John Kerry official Secretary of State portrait.jpg
Official portrait of U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry.
Seal of the United States Department of Justice.svg

Seal of the United States Department of Justice.

The origins of the seal are unknown; it was first used in the 19th century as the seal for the Office of the Attorney General (prior to the formation of the Department of Justice) but the exact date is unknown. Even the translation of the Latin motto is murky, a matter of debate between Latin scholars. The Department's currently accepted translation is who prosecutes on behalf of Lady Justice, referring to the Attorney General. The motto is an allusion to the wording of the writ in a qui tam action: qui tam pro domino rege quam pro se ipso sequitur ("he who sues on behalf of our lord the King as well as for himself." The current-day seal dates from 1934, when some (though not all) of the heraldic mistakes on the original were corrected. More information here.
Chuck Hagel Defense portrait.jpg
United States Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel's official portrait.
DonovanShaunLS.jpg
A photo portrait of Shaun L.S. Donovan, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (2009-). This is the print version of his portrait.
US-DeptOfTheInterior-Seal.svg

Seal of the United States Department of the Interior.

The seal consists of a male bison with the head and body in a left position, standing on a prairie, with mountains and a rising sun in the background, enclosed within two concentric circles, having the words "U.S. Department of the Interior" and the date "March 3, 1849" (when Congress created the department) inscribed in the top and bottom arcs within these circles. See here for more information.

The bison seal dates from 1917, when it was used as the emblem on the initial department flag and thereafter replaced the old version of the seal, which used a federal eagle. The eagle was reinstated for a few years in the 1920s, and a different seal was used from 1968-69, but on both occasions the bison seal was reinstated. For more information see this chapter in The Department of Everything Else: Highlights of Interior History.
Seal of the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (1989–2012).svg

The creation of the new Department of Veterans Affairs in 1989 required a new official seal to represent VA. In November 1988, after the law establishing VA as a cabinet department was signed, VA initiated a competition among employees for a seal design that would give the new department a "new look." The winner of that competition, and creator of today's VA seal was David E. Gregory, a medical media production specialist at the Indianapolis VA Medical Center. These are the key elements of the seal, as he described them:

  • The eagle represents the United States.
  • The circle of five stars above the eagle represents the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines and Coast Guard.
  • The two flags in the eagle's talons represent the span of America's history from 13 colonies to the present 50 states.
  • The flags are bound by a golden cord symbolic of those Americans who have fallen in service to their country.
  • The eagle holds the cord to perpetuate the memory of those veterans who have fallen and sacrificed for the nation.
More information here.
Cameron Kerry official portrait.jpeg
Official portrait of Acting Secretary of Commerce Cameron Kerry.
John B. King, Jr.2015.jpg
John B. King, Jr., Senior Advisor Delegated Duties of Deputy Secretary of Education
Seal of the Vice President of the United States.svg
Seal of the Vice President of the United States. The blazon is defined in Executive Order 11884 as:

The Coat of Arms of the Vice President of the United States shall be of the following design:

SHIELD: Paleways of thirteen pieces argent and gules, a chief azure; upon the breast of an American eagle displayed holding in his dexter talon an olive branch proper and in his sinister a bundle of thirteen arrows gray, and in his beak a gray scroll inscribed "E PLURIBUS UNUM" sable.

CREST: Behind and above the eagle a radiating glory or, on which appears an arc of thirteen cloud puffs gray, and a constellation of thirteen mullets gray.

The Seal of the Vice President of the United States shall consist of the Coat of Arms encircled by the words "Vice President of the United States."

The design is the same as the Seal of the President of the United States, except that there is no ring of stars, the clouds are gray (instead of proper), the stars are gray (instead of argent), the scroll is gray (instead of white), the arrows are gray (instead of proper), and the background colors and inscription (obviously) differ.
Michael T. Scuse official portrait.JPG
Michael T. Scuse, US acting Deputy Secretary of Agriculture and Under Secretary for Farm and Foreign Services
US-DeptOfCommerce-Seal.svg

Seal of the United States Department of Commerce.

The seal was approved on April 4, 1913 and is derived from the seal of the defunct United States Department of Commerce and Labor. It is composed of the arms (Per fesse azure and or, a ship in full sail on waves of the sea, in chief proper; and in base a lighthouse illumined proper), and crest ("The American Eagle displayed"). Around the arms, between two concentric circles, are the words "Department of Commerce" and "United States of America".

The official symbolism has been modified as the functions of the department have changed. As of 2007: the ship is a symbol of commerce; the blue denotes uprightness and constancy; the lighthouse is a well-known symbol representing guidance from the darkness which is translated to commercial enlightenment; and the gold denotes purity. The crest is the American bald eagle denoting the national scope of the Department's activities.

Full description at CFR Title 15 Part 1
WolffOtto-c.jpg
This is a crop of Image:WolffOtto.jpg. A photo of former Acting Commerce Secretary Otto J. Wolff (2009), taken at a 2004 Commerce Dept. Acquisition Conference in 2004.
Eric Shinseki official Veterans Affairs portrait.jpg
Official image of Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric Shinseki
US-DeptOfAgriculture-Seal2.svg

Seal of the United States Department of Agriculture.

The USDA seal was created in 1895. It was adapted for use as a general identifier in 1980, but those usages were replaced with the USDA Logo in 1996. The seal has been withdrawn from use as a departmental identifier, though it is still used on legal materials and other internal uses.

The seal is defined as:

Two and three-eights inches in diameter (azure), a shock of corn (or), upon a base (vert) an American plough proper. All within a double annulet (argent), outer roped, inner beaded, charged with the inscription: UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, and at the base, a scroll bearing the legend: "1862.AGRICULTURE IS THE FOUNDATION OF MANUFACTURE AND COMMERCE. 1889." (or). A diapered background of 44 stars (argent) for the States of the Union.

The dates on the scroll represent the year the Department was founded by act of Congress (1862), and the year the Department was made an Executive Office headed by a Secretary of cabinet rank (1889). The 44 stars represent the states in the Union in 1889.

See here and here for more information.
Loretta Lynch.jpg
Loretta Lynch, U.S. Attorney for E.D.N.Y., prospective U.S. Attorney General
Leon Panetta, official DoD photo portrait, 2011.jpg
Official portrait of Leon Panetta as United States Secretary of Defense
Rebecca Blank official portrait.jpg
Official portrait of Acting Secretary of Commerce Rebecca Blank.
John Bryson official portrait.jpg
Official portrait of United States Secretary of Commerce John Bryson.
Kensalazar.jpg
U.S. Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar.
US Cabinet official group photo July 26, 2012.jpg

President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden pose with the full Cabinet for an official group photo in the Grand Foyer of the White House, July 26, 2012.

Seated, from left, are: Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood, Acting Commerce Secretary Rebecca Blank, U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations Susan Rice, and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack.

Standing in the second row, from left, are: Education Secretary Arne Duncan, Attorney General Eric H. Holder, Jr., Labor Secretary Hilda L. Solis, Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner, Chief of Staff Jack Lew, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric K. Shinseki, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, and U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk.

Standing in the third row, from left, are: Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan, Energy Secretary Steven Chu, Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa P. Jackson, Office of Management and Budget Acting Director Jeffrey D. Zients, Council of Economic Advisers Chair Alan Krueger, and Small Business Administrator Karen G. Mills. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)
Sebeliusofficialphoto.jpg
Official portrait of Secretary Sebelius
Penny Pritzker official portrait.jpg
Official portrait of Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker.