Pell served as Director for Strategic Planning on the National Security Staff,[5] and was a White House Fellow from 2011 to 2012.[6]
In 2013, Pell served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Office of International and Foreign Language Education at the United States Department of Education.[6][9] His support for language education and cultural proficiency was recognized by the Northeast Conference on the Teaching of Foreign Languages which presented him with its Advocacy Award in 2014—an award Pell's grandfather received in 1988.[10]
On January 27, 2014, Pell confirmed he would run for Governor of Rhode Island in the 2014 election[11] His then-wife, Michelle Kwan, appeared in TV ads on his behalf to garner support among female voters before the September 9th, 2014 primary.[12] Pell placed third in the Democratic primary, which was won by Gina Raimondo.
In 2016, Pell was elected as a presidential elector from Rhode Island and served as President of the Rhode Island Electoral College.
In 2020, Stanford University awarded Pell the Sloan Fellowship at its Graduate School of Business.
Personal life
In January 2013, Pell married five-time world figure skating champion and two-time Olympic medalist Michelle Kwan. The two first met in April 2011.[13] In 2017, Pell announced in a statement that he had filed for divorce from Kwan.[14]
Pell speaks English, Spanish, Mandarin Chinese,[15] Arabic, and some Russian.[5][16]