Robert Lane Gibbs (born March 29, 1971) was the 28th
White House Press Secretary. Gibbs was the
communications director for then-
U.S. Senator Barack Obama and Obama's
2008 presidential campaign. Gibbs, who has worked with Obama since 2004, was press secretary of
John Kerry's
2004 presidential campaign and has previously specialized in Senate campaigns, having served as communications director for the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee and for four individual Senate campaigns, including those of Obama in 2004 and
Fritz Hollings in 1998. Gibbs was also the press secretary of Representative
Bob Etheridge. On November 22, 2008, Gibbs was announced as the press secretary of the
Obama administration. He assumed the role of press secretary on January 20, 2009, and gave his first official briefing on January 22.
On January 5, 2011, Gibbs announced that he would leave the White House to become an outside advisor to the administration. He left on February 11, 2011.
Early life and education
Gibbs was born in
Auburn, Alabama. His parents, Nancy and Robert Coleman Gibbs, worked in the
Auburn University library system and involved their son in politics at an early age. Nancy Gibbs would take Robert, then known as...
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