The designated survivor for a president's address to Congress starts the day as a Cabinet secretary and ends it that way, too, God willing.
Read full article: JEA board to meet amid rising tensions over leadership, workplace culture, ‘racism’ claims A man was killed in a head-on crash Monday night on Jacksonville’s Northside, according to the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office.
Man facing eight counts of attempted murder after setting Springfield house on fire, JSO saysPoliticsThis photo combination shows, from top left, former agriculture secretary under President Bill Clinton Dan Glickman in Washington, March 28, 2005, Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins in Washington, March 12, 2025, former Veterans Affairs Secretary James Nicholson in Washington, Sept. 18, 2007, and former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales in New Orleans, Aug. 28, 2007. FILE - Veterans Affairs Secretary James Nicholson testifies on Capitol Hill in Washington, Sept. 18, 2007, before the House Veterans Affairs Committee hearing on the state of the Veterans Affairs Department. FILE - Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins arrives before Ireland's Prime Minister Michael Martin and President Donald Trump speak during an event in the East Room of the White House in Washington, March 12, 2025. FILE - In this March 28, 2005 file photo, former agriculture secretary under President Bill Clinton Dan Glickman speaks during an interview with The Associated Press in Washington. This photo combination shows, from top left, former agriculture secretary under President Bill Clinton Dan Glickman in Washington, March 28, 2005, Veterans Affairs Secretary Doug Collins in Washington, March 12, 2025, former Veterans Affairs Secretary James Nicholson in Washington, Sept. 18, 2007, and former Attorney General Alberto Gonzales in New Orleans, Aug. 28, 2007. Picking a fail-safe in case of a cataclysmic event that wipes out everyone else dates back to the Cold War. It's been dramatized in novels andTaking on the role of designated survivor brings extra adrenaline jolts and humbling thoughts about being unwittingly catapulted into the presidency and unthinkable tragedy — though the minute-to-minute details usually don't feature the high drama of fictional portrayals, those who have done it say. “It focuses your mind. It also enhances your prayer that it doesn’t happen to you,” James Nicholson, who was President George W. Bush's veterans affairs secretary and designated survivor during the 2006 State of the Union, said of possibly becoming president after a cataclysmic event.Historian and journalist Garrett M. Graff said the concept of a designated survivor has long captivated people because it combines the public's inherent fascination with danger and the romance of an “everyman” being thrust into the presidency. “The idea of, you’re just a random Cabinet official, and then something terrible happens and, all of a sudden, you’re president of the United States," said Graff, author of “Raven Rock: The Story of the U.S. Government’s Secret Plan to Save Itself — While the Rest of Us Die.” Until the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, designated survivors had more control over where they went outside Washington. President Bill Clinton's energy secretary, the late Bill Richardson, was picked in 2000 and simply moved up a planned weekend trip to Oxford, Maryland, a waterfront town about 80 miles away, so he'd be there during the State of the Union. When Dan Glickman, Clinton’s agriculture secretary, was tapped during the 1997 State of the Union, his hometown of Wichita, Kansas, was too far away, so he chose New York, where his daughter lived. “I thought it was kind of exciting. But I wasn’t hyped up from a dangerous perspective,” Glickman said. “I don’t even think anybody told me to be careful.” Alberto Gonzales, Bush's attorney general, was the designated survivor during the 2007 State of the Union. He said White House chief of staff Josh Bolten called a few days before and offered a couple of options for where he could hunker down. Gonzales chose to be in flight, and he arrived at what was then called Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland to find “members of every major department and agency” there to ride with him. They carried thick binders stuffed with memos and protocol instructions, just in case. He recalled a series of briefings that may have stretched right into Bush's speech, which he watched from the air. “It was during that time that it sort of suddenly hit me, if something happened in the Capitol and everyone's killed, that I'd be president,” Gonzales said."It's sort of sobering. And you wonder, ‘Would I be up to governing a wounded nation?’”In “Raven Rock,” Graff details how the designated survivor idea was formalized by the Carter and Reagan administrations amid fears that Soviet subs just off the Atlantic coast could fire nuclear missiles and wipe out Washington with barely 10 minutes’ warning. Beginning in April 1980, the White House Military Office tasked the Federal Emergency Management Agency with ensuring succession. An aide was directed to recommend to the president who should skip events when all possible successors were together outside the White House.outside Reagan National Airport in January 2025 was on a continuity of government mission — training to keep the federal government functioning in case of catastrophe. The first time that a Cabinet member being kept away from a presidential speech to Congress was publicly divulged was President Ronald Reagan’s Education Secretary Terrel Bell in 1981. But Bell wasn’t identified until afterward. Today, TV images from the House chamber allow political junkies to spot the missing Cabinet member within minutes.Nicholson said Bush's chief of staff Andy Card had asked him a few weeks before the State of the Union to be the designated survivor. He was a natural fit given that his agency played an important role in continuity of government exercises due to its numerous hospitals and clinics nationwide. Nicholson flew by helicopter to a destination only divulged once he was in the air and later sat in a command center, where he underwent briefings before watching Bush’s speech. He was served a “wonderful” dinner, prepared on-site by personnel from the White House mess, though he said he couldn't recall if it was T-bone steak or prime rib or something similar. “It made you think that, at least if this awful thing happened, you’d be well fed," he said. “The enormity of that job. You think about, remote as it is, this is something you might have to do,” Nicholson said of becoming president. Nicholson's wife was attending the State of the Union, meaning that if something happened, she could be among the victims, which only added to the pressure. When it was over, Nicholson wasn't asked to fill in future designated survivors like Gonzales on what to expect.Glickman recalls boarding an Air Force G-3 from Andrews along with Secret Service agents, a military official and a series of advisers not on his usual staff. A three-car motorcade later carried him from LaGuardia Airport to his daughter's apartment near Union Square. She wanted to invite others to watch the speech with them, but Glickman nixed that. “This was not a party," he said. It wasn't all serious, though. Glickman said he was told he didn't need to dress up, so he didn't wear a suit. Instructions not to study up spared him from reading briefing books or memorizing security protocols. After the speech, the Secret Service asked if Glickman wanted a ride to the airport. He declined, saying he planned to have dinner with his daughter. It was sleeting when the motorcade left without him, making taxis scarce — and the sudden return to real life especially abrupt. “I was the most powerful man on the face of the earth, theoretically," Glickman remembered joking at the time."And then I can't even get a cab.” Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.Police now say 5 teens hit by gunfire during ‘takeover’ event in Jacksonville BeachHistoric Greenleaf building to reopen with dining, fitness and speakeasy in the heart of downtownJSO investigating deadly shooting in Northwest JacksonvilleCharlton County farmer videos massive blaze impacting farmFinding furever homes for dogs at Dogtopia Jax Beach BlvdCold cases of 2 Jacksonville men highlighted for Missing Adults Day at city hallJSO launches new investigation on TikTok account posting women, children without consentSt. Johns Technical High to merge with St. Augustine High next academic school yearJacksonville family sleeping in truck seeks help after house fire destroyed everythingDoes Jacksonville have the potential to be a little Hollywood?
George W. Bush Garrett M. Graff Alberto Gonzales Andrew Card Washington News Joshua Bolten Donald Trump Doug Collins Ronald Reagan James Nicholson Dan Glickman Bill Richardson
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Greer urges partners to ‘stand by’ trade deals after tariff rulingHis comments echo those of others in Trump's Cabinet in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling striking down the his 'Liberation Day' tariffs.
Read more »
Trump Hosts Governors at White House Dinner, Highlights Economic Progress and Border SecurityPresident Donald Trump hosted a dinner for governors in the East Room, celebrating economic achievements, border security, and military strength. Key cabinet members and the First Lady were in attendance. The president highlighted progress made during his term, including low inflation, secure borders, and a strong military. The event featured prayers and a performance by a violinist.
Read more »
Political Backlash After Pro-Palestine Comments at Berlin Awards CeremonyA German cabinet minister walked out during one acceptance speech, and Berlin's conservative mayor said the ceremony was “misused for political destruction.”
Read more »
Not so toxic: Masculinity's comeback makes America thrivePresident Trump and his Cabinet think American society benefits from an infusion of manly energy — and it seems to be paying off.
Read more »
From Cabinet secretary to doomsday president: What being the designated survivor is likeWASHINGTON (AP) — They typically start the day as low-profile Cabinet secretaries. They end it that way, too, God willing.
Read more »
