Bill Whalen

Virginia Hobbs Carpenter Distinguished Policy Fellow in Journalism
Biography: 

Bill Whalen, the Virginia Hobbs Carpenter Distinguished Policy Fellow in Journalism and a Hoover Institution research fellow since 1999, writes and comments on campaigns, elections and governance with an emphasis on California and America’s political landscapes.

Whalen writes on politics and current events for Forbes.com. His commentary can also be seen on the opinion pages of the The Washington Post and Real Clear Politics, as well as Hoover’s “California On Your Mind” web channel.

Whalen hosts Hoover’s “Area 45” podcast on politics and policy in the age of the Trump presidency and he serves as one of the moderators of Hoover’s “GoodFellows” broadcast on the social, economic and geopolitical consequences of the coronavirus pandemic.

Whalen has been a guest political analyst on the Fox News Channel, MSNBC and CNN. He’s also a regular guest on the nationally syndicated radio shows hosted by John Batchelor and Lars Larson.

Whalen has served as a media consultant for California political hopefuls and aspiring policy leaders. His past clients have included former Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, former congressman Tom Campbell and former Los Angeles mayor Richard J. Riordan.

Prior to joining the Hoover Institution, Whalen served as chief speechwriter and director of public affairs for former California governor Pete Wilson. In that capacity, he was responsible for the governor's annual State of the State address, as well as other major policy addresses.

Before moving to California, Whalen was a political correspondent for Insight Magazine, the national newsweekly and sister publication of the Washington Times, where he was honored for his profiles and analysis of candidates, campaigns, Congress, and the White House.

In addition to his time in Washington as a political journalist, Whalen served as a speechwriter for the Bush-Quayle reelection campaign and was a senior associate with the public relations firm Robinson-Lake/Sawyer-Miller, offering media and political advice for domestic and foreign clientele.

Whalen currently resides in Palo Alto, California.

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Recent Commentary

Featured

They Say That Breaking Up Is Hard To Do -- Unless It's Breaking California Into More Than Two

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Next year marks the 50th anniversary of then-California Gov. Ronald Reagan signing the nation’s first no-fault divorce law.

Analysis and Commentary

Impeachment's Not Off The Table, Even If The Numbers Don't Add Up

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Monday, April 9, 2018

If you’re keeping score at home, circle Wednesday, May 9, on your calendar as a big day in the life of the Trump presidency. Why that date? Because it was on the second Wednesday in May, back in 2006, that Nancy Pelosi told her fellow Democrats to ixnay talk of impeaching an unpopular Republican president.

Analysis and Commentary

While Pelosi Stars In Republican Ads, Does Fate Have Another Plan For Her?

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Thursday, April 5, 2018
If you happen to live in a congressional swing district – one where a Republican incumbent is on the hot griddle – and don’t like the mien of Nancy Pelosi, then I have some bad news: you could be seeing a lot more of her the closer we get to Election Day.
Analysis and Commentary

Schwarzenegger Goes Off Course On His Latest Quest

by Bill Whalenvia Sacramento Bee
Thursday, March 29, 2018

I don’t have a problem with Arnold Schwarzenegger adding Don Quixote to his assortment of action heroes. So be it if the ex-governor wants to tilt at windmills. When he’s not talking about suing oil companies for contributing to global warming (“first-degree murder”), he wants to cure the California GOP of its conservative bent.

Featured

Who's Buried In Grant's Tomb? Republican Fiscal Discipline

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Sunday, March 25, 2018

To the old maxim that a conservative is a liberal mugged by reality, should we count President Trump as a Washington crime statistic?

Analysis and Commentary

To Regain The House, Democrats Will Need A Few Breaks -- And The Loudness Of More Lambs

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Saturday, March 17, 2018

Newt Gingrich is deeply, deeply concerned. The former House Speaker and big political thinker believes it’s time for a wake-call in the White House. Otherwise he fears, the Trump Administration will be dealing with (translation: being investigated to death by) a Democratic-controlled House a year from now.

Featured

This Is Why President Trump Will Come Back To California

by Bill Whalenvia Sacramento Bee
Thursday, March 15, 2018

So how did President Donald Trump fare on this week’s visit to California, his first since taking office nearly 14 months ago? Better than Gerald Ford, who twice was targeted for assassination when he visited the Golden State in 1975.

Analysis and Commentary

Trump's Late In Getting To California, But He May Be A Step Ahead In Setting Up For 2020

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Sunday, March 11, 2018

When Donald Trump touches down in California on Tuesday, for the time as America’s 45th President, the question will be: is Trump politically ahead or behind the curve?

Analysis and Commentary

What Is The Conventional Take On Trump's Unconventionality?

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Monday, March 5, 2018

There’s no honor among thieves. That said, I’ll try to claim the moral high ground by giving credit where it’s due – to the Harvard Lunch Club political podcast, which this week had a very clever take on President Trump’s unorthodox way of telling the world that he intends to seek a second term.

Analysis and Commentary

There’s A Difference Between Weapons Of War And Personal Protection. Conservatives Need To Figure It Out

by Bill Whalen quoting Condoleezza Ricevia Sacramento Bee
Wednesday, February 28, 2018

When Confederate soldiers surrendered at Appomattox, they voluntarily handed over their muskets – tens of thousands of them. But they were allowed to keep their side arms. Why? Because Northern generals considered the former to be instruments of war and the latter personal property.

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