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Customary protocol when presidential administrations change is for nominees from the outgoing president to tender their resignations to the incoming chief executive.
It’s then up to the incoming president to decide whether to accept those resignations or allow a nominee from the predecessor to remain in office.
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U.S. Mint Director David J. Ryder, who was approved for a five-year term April 12, 2018, under nomination from Republican President Donald J. Trump, will face that decision.
Coin World queried Ryder as to whether he plans to submit his resignation to Democratic President-elect Joe Biden or remain in office to fulfill his full term unless asked to step down for replacement by Biden. As of Nov. 13, no reply was forthcoming.
Ryder’s predecessor, Edmund C. Moy, also a Republican, remained in the Mint director’s chair when Barack Obama was sworn into office Jan. 20, 2009, and stayed there another two years before departing for the private sector on Jan. 9, 2011. Moy became the 38th Mint director in September 2006.
The U.S. Senate did not act on either of President Obama’s two nominees for Mint director — Bibiana Boerio, a former Ford Motor Co. executive in Detroit, or Matthew Rhett Jeppson, who served as principal deputy Mint director before being nominated as Mint director. Jeppson joined the U.S. Mint on Jan. 12, 2015, in the newly created position of principal deputy director.
The slot stayed open until the nomination of Ryder, who previously served a 14-month stint from 1993 to 1994 as the 34th Mint director under a recess appointment from President George H.W. Bush.
The path to Ryder’s service as the 39th Mint director was a long one. Originally nominated by President Trump on Oct. 2, 2017, he appeared before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs three weeks later and was subsequently voted out of committee for a full Senate vote. However, the full Senate did not take a vote before the congressional session ended. The process restarted Jan. 8, 2018, when Ryder was again nominated by President Trump. Ryder’s nomination eventually received the approval of the full Senate by unanimous consent on March 21, 2018.
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Don’t win this for the Gipper, Mr. President.
The Reagan Foundation is distancing itself from President Donald Trump’s reelection campaign.
CNN reports that the organization representing the interests and legacy of late President Ronald Reagan reached out to Trump’s campaign last week to ask that that they stop hawking a commemorative coin set featuring the two presidents to raise money. The Republican National Committee was also asked to knock it off.
Coin collectors who donated $45 or more were offered an opportunity to win a coin.
The RNC was surprised by the request, noting “(Reagan’s) likeness is used by thousands of Republicans each year who gather around the country for ‘Reagan Dinners,’ and his library regularly hosts debates for our presidential candidates.”
RNC spokesman Michael Ahrens told CNN the Trump family had recently helped raise money for the late president’s foundation. He also said the RNC would honor the Reagan Foundation’s request and stop promoting the collectible coin.
Trump lashed out against the foundation and other perceived adversaries Sunday.
“So the Washington Post is running the Reagan Foundation, and RINO Paul Ryan is on the Board of Fox, which has been terrible,” he tweeted. “We will win anyway, even with the phony @FoxNews suppression polls (which have been seriously wrong for 5 years)!”
Video: Biden, Trump campaigns confront somber coronavirus realities (ABC News)
The president seems to be referring to Washington Post CEO Frederick J. Ryan, who was Reagan’s chief of staff from 1989–1995. That Ryan also runs Reagan’s foundation. Former House speaker Paul Ryan joined the Fox Corporation in early 2019.
There has been no comment from the Reagan Foundation.
The Republican incumbent, who is under fire for his handling of the COVID-19 pandemic among other things, is struggling to connect with tradition Republicans. Conservative organizations like The Lincoln Project have sprung up to oppose Trump’s reelection.
Trump has Reagan to thank for the “Make America Great Again” campaign slogan that will be remembered as one of the most effective in political history. It was Reagan whose 1980 campaign against Jimmy Carter successfully reached out to voters with posters and pins reading “Let’s Make America Great Again.”
Reagan, at the time, was the challenger, not the incumbent.
Reagan also famously asked voters during that race to simply ask themselves, “Are you better off now than you were four years ago?” The Harvard Kennedy School called that “one of the most important campaign questions of all time.”
Reagan won a second term in 1984 by overwhelmingly defeating Walter Mondale, who won only his home state and Washington, D.C.
A C-SPAN survey of historians rated Reagan the ninth best president to date, with Abraham Lincoln, George Washington and Franklin D. Roosevelt filling out the top three slots, respectively.
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