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Mark Green (politician)

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Mark Green (politician)
NameMark Green
Birth date1 September 1964
Birth placeBoston, Massachusetts
OccupationPhysician, Politician, Author
PartyRepublican Party
Spouse* Lorrie Green
Alma mater* Vanderbilt University School of Medicine * United States Military Academy

Mark Green (politician) is an American physician and Republican politician who has served in elective office and executive appointments at state and federal levels. He represented Tennessee's 7th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives and later served as the United States Secretary of the Army in the Biden administration-era period of defense leadership transition. Green's background encompasses military service with the United States Army, medical practice in Nashville, and contested statewide campaigns.

Early life and education

Green was born in Boston, Massachusetts and raised in a family with ties to New England. He attended United States Military Academy at West Point, where he received a commission into the United States Army. After active service, he pursued medical training at Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in Nashville, completing clinical rotations linked to teaching hospitals such as Vanderbilt University Medical Center. His educational trajectory intersected with institutions like Harvard University-affiliated programs and national military education forums.

Military service and medical career

Following graduation from West Point, Green served in the United States Army including assignments with units that interacted with commands such as United States Central Command and elements of U.S. Special Operations Command. He later completed medical residency training and practiced as an emergency medicine physician at facilities in Tennessee and surrounding states, working alongside clinicians from Johns Hopkins Hospital, Mayo Clinic, and academic centers connected to American College of Emergency Physicians. During deployments he engaged with organizations including United States Agency for International Development partners and Médecins Sans Frontières-adjacent networks, while earning recognition from military awards committees and veteran service groups like the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars.

Tennessee political career

Green entered Tennessee politics by affiliating with the Republican Party apparatus in Nashville and participating in county-level organizations tied to the Tennessee Republican Party. He served in the Tennessee State Senate representing districts that included rural counties interacting with state agencies such as the Tennessee Department of Health and the Tennessee Department of Transportation. In the legislature he worked on legislation intersecting with stakeholders like the National Rifle Association and business groups such as the Chamber of Commerce networks. His state tenure brought him into contact with governors including Bill Haslam and predecessors including Don Sundquist.

U.S. House of Representatives

Green was elected to the United States House of Representatives from Tennessee's 7th congressional district, joining congressional delegations and committees aligned with institutions such as the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, the House Committee on Armed Services, and caucuses like the Republican Study Committee. In Washington he collaborated with lawmakers including Kevin McCarthy, Mitch McConnell, John Boehner, and members of delegations from Texas, Florida, and Ohio. His legislative initiatives referenced agencies like the Department of Defense, the Department of Homeland Security, and the Department of Veterans Affairs, and engaged with policy actors including Heritage Foundation, American Enterprise Institute, and Cato Institute analysts. Green supported bills concerning veterans' health delivery, homeland security appropriations, and regulatory reform aligned with conservative groups including Club for Growth.

Gubernatorial campaigns and statewide politics

Green sought statewide office in Tennessee, launching campaigns that placed him alongside statewide figures such as former governors Bill Lee and Phil Bredesen in the political narrative. His gubernatorial bids mobilized endorsements from organizations like the National Rifle Association and business coalitions such as the Tennessee Chamber of Commerce, while drawing scrutiny from media outlets including The Tennessean, Nashville Scene, and national networks like Fox News and CNN. Campaign themes referenced state institutions including the Tennessee Department of Education and fiscal debates involving the Tennessee State Funding Board.

Tenure as U.S. Secretary of the Army

As United States Secretary of the Army, Green oversaw matters tied to the Department of the Army under the broader United States Department of Defense leadership alongside Secretary of Defense officials and service chiefs from the United States Navy and United States Air Force. His responsibilities involved force readiness, procurement programs with contractors such as Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and Raytheon Technologies, and personnel policies affecting service members who train at installations like Fort Bragg, Fort Campbell, and Fort Hood. Green interacted with congressional oversight through the Senate Armed Services Committee and the House Armed Services Committee, and coordinated with allied defense ministries including those of NATO members and partners like Israel and Japan on combined readiness and security assistance programs. His tenure addressed modernization portfolios including acquisition efforts for systems associated with F-35 Lightning II, M1 Abrams, and networked command initiatives.

Political positions and policy views

Green's policy positions reflect conservative priorities emphasized by organizations such as the Heritage Foundation and the American Conservative Union. On national security he advocated robust defense spending aligned with strategies from National Defense Strategy discussions and supported bilateral partnerships with countries such as United Kingdom, South Korea, and Saudi Arabia. On social policy he aligned with groups like Focus on the Family and legislative coalitions supportive of restrictions aligned with state statutes in Tennessee debated in chambers such as state legislatures and the United States Supreme Court docket. On healthcare he drew on his emergency medicine background in dialogues with professional associations including the American Medical Association and American College of Emergency Physicians about Medicaid matters and veterans' health reform involving the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Category:1964 births Category:Living people Category:Members of the United States House of Representatives from Tennessee Category:United States Secretaries of the Army Category:Tennessee Republicans Category:Vanderbilt University School of Medicine alumni