Difference between revisions of "Cupboard of Jonathan Redall"
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== Cupboard == | == Cupboard == | ||
− | The table below shows the Cupboard of President Redall. Positions listed multiple times are positions whose secretary has changed, and those will be listed with their tenure and a label of which terms they served. | + | The table below shows the Cupboard of President Redall. Positions listed multiple times are positions whose secretary has changed, and those will be listed with their tenure and a label of which terms they served. In bold are those who completed two full terms. |
:{| class="wikitable sortable" |Style: Width=85% | :{| class="wikitable sortable" |Style: Width=85% |
Latest revision as of 20:53, 17 March 2020
The Cupboard of Jonathan Redall was the official executive advisory and enforcement panel of the fourth President of the United States of Quentin, Jonathan Redall. President Redall served two terms, and his Cupboard was perhaps the most varied in all of history, with Redall negatively influencing many of his officials, causing them to retire or quit, along with some deaths. He had two GTNECs, Max Wagner who retired during his first term, and Han Seeram, who served the rest of the period.
The Cupboard and its functions are laid out in the Constitution of the United States of Quentin, specifically in Article III, Section IV, and gives the President full power over appointments of secretaries. Redall had to make many appointments, and did not carry on the precedent of submitting his nominees to the House of Bureaucrats for their approval, initiating a lawsuit by Bureaucrat Cockington Ravenclaw against the President, which was decided in favor of Ravenclaw by the Supreme Council in Ravenclaw v. Redall. This ruling made the process of submitting executive nominees to the House for confirmation official.
Cupboard
The table below shows the Cupboard of President Redall. Positions listed multiple times are positions whose secretary has changed, and those will be listed with their tenure and a label of which terms they served. In bold are those who completed two full terms.