Mick Mulvaney is a busy man. In addition to spending the past three months as the acting (though perhaps soon-to-be permanent) White House chief of staff, he’s also the president’s budget director. And until December, Mulvaney enjoyed an illustrious stint as the acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. During the course of his CFPB leadership, agency morale plummeted by 25 points.

There is one more role Mulvaney appears to have taken on during his time in the White House that has yet to be made public: Since Feb. 20, 2018, Mick seems to have spent a portion of nearly every workday getting beaten at a private online trivia game.

Mulvaney (or someone who shares his name, alma mater, hometown, Irish pride and at least one acquaintance) appears to be a member of Learned League, an online, invite-only trivia competition that pits players against each other over the course of each 25-day-long season. A player’s first season is free, while the next year’s worth of seasons costs $30. Each business day of the season, users go head-to-head with another player in their assigned league to answer six fill-in-the-blank trivia questions from a number of categories as they attempt to rise through the ranks.

Because Learned League takes the integrity of its trivia very seriously, it demands that its members do the same. As such, anyone lucky enough to be invited into the league will need to offer quite a bit of information about themselves, all in the spirit of forthrightness. From the site’s privacy policy:

As LearnedLeague is built on a foundation of player honesty, it is not possible to allow total anonymity on a player’s part. In order to participate in LearnedLeague as a player, one must register with the league using his or her real name (first and last) and email address. LL player nomenclature policy is that, for new players, a Player Name will consist (at the least) of a player’s last name and first initial (e.g. ‘SmithM’). If this is still too revealing for a player’s taste, and/or if the player is famous or high-profile (e.g. ‘ObamaM’), accommodations can be made, but only in select circumstances, and always in the spirit of league integrity.

In addition to requiring players to use their real names, Learned League also lists its users’ gender, location and college. Which is how we know that user MulvaneyM, who, remarkably, has never missed a day of questions, is a male from Lancaster, South Carolina, who attended Georgetown University and chose a shamrock as his user flag.