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postmaster general
noun
plural
postmasters generalthe executive head of the postal system of a country.
postmaster general
noun
the executive head of the postal service in certain countries
postmaster general
The head of the United States Postal Service. Until 1970, the postmaster general was head of the federal Post Office Department and a member of the president's cabinet. In 1970, the Postal Service was set up as an independent agency in place of the Post Office Department. The Postal Service is operated like a private corporation, although postal workers receive the benefits of federal employees.
Word History and Origins
Origin of postmaster general1
Example Sentences
This month, the Postal Service’s Board of Governors announced its selection of David Steiner to be the next postmaster general.
The Constitution gives Congress the sole authority to establish a postal system, but in 1970 Congress removed the postmaster general from the Cabinet and subjected the post office to a quasi-privatization.
Louis DeJoy, postmaster general, said the Postal Service goal is to make peak holiday season delivery “superior and routine.”
Louis DeJoy, the postmaster general of the United States, said the main post office facility in Atlanta would be named after Lewis in an August ceremony.
“We must, indeed, all hang together or, most assuredly, we shall all hang separately,” Benjamin Franklin, not incidentally the country’s first postmaster general, said under very different circumstances.
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