Just hours after news broke that Chuck Hagel would resign under pressure from the Obama administration, three contenders emerged as likely replacements for the Defense Secretary many critics derided as ineffective.
The Hagel decision—perhaps the biggest shake-up of President Obama’s White House team—comes on the heels of midterm elections largely seen as a rejection of the president’s policies and ahead of his stated plan to request explicit Congressional approval for new military intervention.
RELATED: Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel forced out
There are three likely candidates to succeed Hagel: Michele Fourney, Ashton Carter, Jack Reed, and Robert Work. They’ll have to make it through a tough approval process led by the Senate Armed Services Committee, and with the president acting without Congressional approval to use airstrikes in Syria and Iraq to fight off ISIS, the confirmation process promises to be particularly contentious and bitter.
Here’s a look at the top candidates.
Ashton Carter is a national security stalwart under Democrats. He joined the Obama administration in 2009, eventually rising to be the Pentagon’s second-in-command from 2011 to 2013. There he managed the Pentagon’s budget, its 2.2 million employees, and rose within the ranks of Obama administration until late 2013, when the 59-year-old resigned after being passed up for the top job Hagel snagged.
A Rhodes Scholar, theoretical physicist, and former Harvard professor with a bachelor’s degree in medieval history, Carter has largely shied away from being a political heavy hitter, the very thing that helped Hagel, a former Republican senator, secure the nomination in 2013.
Michèle Flournoy could be the country’s first female Secretary of Defense. She served as the under secretary of defense for policy until 2012, when she stepped down to “rebalance” her personal life.









