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James Carville
James Carville is America’s best-known political consultant. His long list of electoral successes evidences a knack
for steering overlooked campaigns to unexpected landslide victories and for re-making political underdogs into upset winners.
Carville’s winning streak began in 1986 when he managed the gubernatorial victory of Robert Casey in Pennsylvania. A loser
in three previous attempts, dubbed the “Three-Time-Loss from Holy Cross” by the media, Casey defeated popular Lieutenant
Governor William Scranton, Jr. in a remarkable come-from-behind win thanks to Carville. In 1987, Carville helped Wallace
Wilkinson, who commanded less than 1% of the vote in the early polls, win a hard-fought gubernatorial campaign in Kentucky.
The following year brought Carville to New Jersey where he guided Frank Lautenberg’s campaign for U.S. Senate to
victory, defeating Rhodes Scholar and Heisman Trophy winner Pete Dawkins. Carville next managed the successful 1990
gubernatorial campaign of Georgia’s Lieutenant Governor Zell Miller, including a tough primary win over Atlanta mayor
Andrew Young.
In 1991, Carville—who had already become prominent in political circles—drew national attention when he led Senator
Harris Wofford from 40 points behind in the polls to an upset landslide victory over former Pennsylvania Governor
and U.S. Attorney General Richard Thornburgh. With the startling and unpredicted Wofford win, Carville exposed the
political vulnerability of George Bush, who enjoyed 91% approval ratings during the Gulf War.
Having wounded the sitting President in 1991, Carville finished the job the following year when he guided William
Jefferson Clinton to the Presidency in 1992. In 1993, Carville was honored as Campaign Manager of the Year by the
American Association of Political Consultants for his leadership of Clinton’s fearsome and intense “War Room” at
campaign headquarters in Little Rock. Carville was also the focus, along with George Stephanopoulos, of the
feature-length Academy Award nominated documentary The War Room.
After the Clinton victory, Carville began to focus on foreign consulting. Since that time, Carville’s political
clients have included the following: Greek Prime Minister Constantine Mitsotakis; Brazilian President Fernando
Henrique Cardoso; Honduran Prime Minister Carlos Flores; President Jamil Mahuad of Ecuador; the Liberal Party
of Canada; Sao Paolo Mayor Celso Pitta, Argentine Economic Minister Domingo Cavallo, Francisco Labastida of
Mexico, Prime Minister of Trinidad and Tobago Basdeo Panday; Hipolito Meija of the Dominican Republic; and
many others spread across the globe. In 1999, Carville led Ehud Barak to victory in his campaign to become
the Prime Minister of Israel.
James Carville is also an author, actor, producer, talk-show host, speaker and restaurateur. Author James
Carville, (with co-author and wife Mary Matalin, former Assistant to President Bush and Counselor to
Vice-President Cheney), first wrote All’s Fair: Love, War, and Running for President, which spent eight weeks
on The New York Times bestseller list. Carville’s other books have included We’re Right, They’re Wrong: A
Handbook for Spirited Progressives; And the Horse He Rode In On: The People vs. Kenneth Starr; Stickin’; Buck
Up, Suck Up…and Come Back When You Foul Up; Had Enough? A Handbook for Fighting Back; his children’s book, Lu
and the Swamp Ghost; and 2006’s Take it Back.
In the fall of 2003, actor James Carville and wife Mary Matalin put a fresh and critically-acclaimed spin on political
consulting and on television in the HBO series “K Street”, a political drama based on the working lives of Washington
political consultants. In addition, Carville can be seen regularly on television as a CNN commentator and contributor. Most
recently, Carville is hosting XM radio’s “60/20” weekly sports show. Carville also co-produced the remake of the 1949 Oscar
award-winning movie “All The King’s Men” with a cast that included such acting luminaries as Sean Penn, Anthony Hopkins, Jude
Law, Patricia Clarkson, Kate Winslet, and James Gandolfini.
James Carville resides in Virginia with his wife and two daughters.
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