Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sperling is the author of the 2020 book Economic Dignity, [38] building on a 2019 piece he published in Democracy Journal. [39] Sperling was a top economic adviser for Hillary Clinton during her 2008 presidential campaign. [40] [41]
Gene Sperling (born 1958) COVID-19 Relief (American Rescue Plan) March 15, 2021 – August 2024 [39] Democratic: List of advisors to the president. Advisor Portfolio
Gene Sperling – Director of the National Economic Council (2011–2014) Rishi Sunak – Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (2022–2024) Peter Sutherland – UN representative for refugees; former EU commissioner; former attorney general of Ireland; Chairman Emeritus of GS International
White House senior adviser Gene Sperling is leaving his administration position to work with Vice President Kamala Harris' election campaign as the Democrats step up efforts to challenge Donald ...
The solution came from White House National Economic Council Director Gene Sperling, who, on July 12, 2011, proposed a compulsory trigger that would go into effect if another agreement was not made on tax increases and/or budget cuts equal to or greater than the debt ceiling increase by a future date.
Elliot Sperling (1951–2017), American associate professor; Fritz Sperling (born 1945), Austrian bobsledder; Gene Sperling (born 1958), American economist and attorney; George Sperling (born 1934), American cognitive psychologist; Gerhard Sperling (born 1937), East German race walker; Hilde Krahwinkel Sperling (1908–1981), German tennis player
Gene Sperling (1985), Director of the National Economic Council, 1996–2000, 2011–2014; Alphonso Taft (1838), 31st Secretary of War, 1876; Cyrus Vance (1942), 57th Secretary of State, 1977–1980; Christopher A. Wray (1992), 8th Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2017–present [10]
Founded in 2002 by Gene Sperling, the Center for Universal Education is a policy center at the Brookings Institution focused on universal quality education particularly in the developing world. Originally a think tank for the Council on Foreign Relations , it moved to the Brookings Institution in 2009. [ 1 ]