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Mike McCurry

Mike McCurry conducts a White House press conference

In office
1995 – 1998
Preceded by Dee Dee Myers
Succeeded by Joe Lockhart

Born October 27, 1954 (1954-10-27) (age 55)
Charleston, South Carolina, U.S.
Political party Democratic
Residence Kensington, Maryland

Mike McCurry (born October 27, 1954) is best known as the former press secretary for Bill Clinton's administration. He is a Washington-based communications consultant and is associated with the firm Public Strategies Washington, Inc. He is also active within the administration of the United Methodist Church, serving as a lay delegate to the Church General Conference and on various denominational boards. Born in Charleston, SC, he was educated at Princeton University and Georgetown University. McCurry is married, with three children, and lives in Kensington, Maryland.

Education and Early career

McCurry attended San Carlos High School on the San Francisco Peninsula from 1969-1971 and then transferred to the racially diverse Ravenswood High School in East Palo Alto, where he graduated in 1972. During his senior year in high school, McCurry served as the governor of the California Junior State, a student-run mock government that today is better known as the Junior State of America. McCurry received his Bachelor of Arts degree from Princeton University in 1976 and a Master of Arts degree from Georgetown University in 1985. He began his political career as press secretary to the Committee on Labor and Human Resources, as well as press secretary to Abscam-disgraced Senator Harrison A. Williams from 1976–1981. Between 1981 and 1983, he served as press secretary to Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan.

From 1988 to 1990, McCurry served as director of communications for the Democratic National Committee, and served as press secretary for the presidential campaigns of John Glenn (1984), Bruce Babbitt (1988), and Bob Kerrey, (1992), as well as the 1988 vice-presidential campaign for Lloyd Bentsen.

Prior to serving in the White House as press secretary to Clinton, McCurry served as spokesman for the Department of State from 1993–1995, as well as chief spokesman for Warren Christopher.

Post-Clinton career

McCurry also serves on the boards of Share Our Strength, the Council for Excellence in Government, the Junior Statesmen Foundation, Wesley Theological Seminary, the Washington Center for Politics & Journalism, and Grassroots.com. Mike also helped found the youth voter turnout organization, Freedom's Answer, with Doug Bailey.

Those close to McCurry spoke highly of his famous dry humor, his unexcelled competency, and his kindness as a person. He once responded to the Taco Liberty Bell incident by saying that the federal government was also "selling the Lincoln Memorial to Ford Motor Co. and renaming it the Lincoln-Mercury Memorial."[1] He was well-respected by the press corps during his tenure. However, his honesty and competency were not always appreciated by his colleagues. In 1998, he expressed doubts about Bill Clinton's fitness to remain in office.[2]

Starting May 2005, McCurry was a contributing blogger at The Huffington Post. As of November, 2008, his most recent contribution was dated May, 2006 [3]. In December, 2008, McCurry contributed "How my party found God" to The Daily Beast. In the biographical blurb with the column, it was reported that he was a graduate student at Wesley Theological. [4]

McCurry is a partner at the influential Washington, D.C. based lobbying firm Public Strategies Washington, Inc. In 2006, in his position as co-chairman of Hands Off the Internet, he lobbied against Internet regulations in the controversial network neutrality debate.

On April 15, 2009 it was announced that McCurry and George W. Bush press secretary Ari Fleischer would both work as temporary media aides to Conservative Prime Minister of Canada Stephen Harper. The two aides were enlisted by the PMO to elevate Harper's and Canada's profiles with American news outlets.[5]

Political offices
Preceded by
Dee Dee Myers
White House Press Secretaries
1994 – 1998
Succeeded by
Joe Lockhart

Notes








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