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Thomas Franklin "Mack" McLarty, III (born June 14, 1946) is an American business and political leader who served as President Bill Clinton's first White House Chief of Staff from 1993 to June 1994, and subsequently as counselor to the president and special envoy for the Americas, before leaving government service in June 1998.
The firm was founded in 1982 by Henry Kissinger. In 1999 Mack McLarty joined Kissinger to expand the firm and its New York headquarters to open Kissinger McLarty Associates, with the firm's Washington office on 18th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, D.C. [2] McLarty was White House Chief of Staff under Bill Clinton.
Johnson collaborated with Mack McLarty and Steve Landers to create RLJ-McLarty-Landers Automotive Holdings, LLC in 2007. [25] It is the parent company for Little Rock, Arkansas based RML Automotive. [26] Johnson holds 60% of RLJ-McLarty-Landers Automotive Holdings, LLC, making it the largest minority-owned automotive dealership in the country. [13]
Clinton, who had vowed to run a professional operation, asked Panetta to become his new chief of staff, replacing Mack McLarty. According to author Nigel Hamilton, "Panetta replaced McLarty for the rest of Clinton's first term—and the rest is history. To be a great leader, a modern president must have a great chief of staff—and in Leon ...
Jack McLarty (1919–2011), American painter; John McLarty (1842–1909), Australian politician; Mack McLarty (born 1946), American politician; Nell McLarty (1912–1998), Australian cricketer; Norman Alexander McLarty (1889–1945), Canadian politician; Ron McLarty (1947–2020), American actor and novelist; Ross McLarty (1891–1962 ...
In 2013, before he went on a spree of buying insurance companies, Lindberg reported a net worth of $340 million. By 2017 he reported a net worth of $1.7 billion, according to The Wall Street Journal. [7] Lindberg has sued the WSJ over this and other articles. [2] The purchase of insurance companies provided Lindberg with much of his cash.
White House Chief of Staff Mack McLarty took some of the early heat for Travelgate in 1993. On July 2, 1993, the White House issued its own 80-page report on the firings, one that the New York Times termed "strikingly self-critical". [ 23 ]
James Addison Baker III [note 1] (born April 28, 1930) [1] is an American attorney, diplomat and statesman. A member of the Republican Party, he served as the 10th White House chief of staff and 67th United States secretary of the treasury under President Ronald Reagan and the 61st U.S. secretary of state before returning as the 16th White House chief of staff under President George H. W. Bush.