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

Trump Should Find A Democrat To Replace Comey -- If Diogenes Can Be Found These Days

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Tuesday, May 9, 2017

One thing we now know about President Trump: he doesn’t appreciate irony. Tomorrow, May 10, marks the 93rd anniversary of J. Edgar Hoover taking over as acting director of the FBI. Ironically, James Comey kept a copy of Hoover’s wiretap request of Martin Luther King Jr. as a reminder of past bureau missteps.

Analysis and Commentary

California's Geriatric Liberal Leadership

by Bill Whalenvia Real Clear Politics
Tuesday, May 9, 2017

Next year marks a century since Lulu Hunt Peters, a Californian by way of Maine, gifted the world with “Diet and Health: With Key to the Calories.”

Analysis and Commentary

“Area 45”, Beaming Aboard

by Bill Whalenvia Ricochet
Friday, May 5, 2017

In case you haven’t noticed, there’s a new addition to Ricochet’s already impressive choice of podcast listening. Produced by the Hoover Institution, we call it “Area 45” – Hoover fellows and other notables in the greater Hoover galaxy (academics, media members, officeholders) examining various policy aspects of the 45th President of the United States.

Analysis and Commentary

Rating Trump, Obama And Recent Presidents: Let's Play It Off

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Wednesday, May 3, 2017

Brace yourself, but I fear we’re in for a wave of Barack Obama media nostalgia this summer. Earlier Wednesday, the former First Couple unveiled the design for their presidential library in Chicago.

Analysis and Commentary

How To Follow Trump's Opening Act? Some Second Hundred-Day Suggestions

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Saturday, April 29, 2017

And so the 100th day of the Trump presidency ended little different from most days on the 2016 campaign trail: the man whom few at first took seriously when he waded into presidential politics, making promises he may never keep in front of an adoring audience gobbling it up, all the while giving cable news the eye candy it can’t resist.

Featured

An Independence Rally Behind The California Flag? Choose One Of These Dates

by Bill Whalenvia Sacramento Bee
Thursday, April 27, 2017

If California’s feeling a little forlorn these days, it might be the one-two punch of postpartum non-secession depression – we’ve had a Brexit, maybe a Frexit, depending on how the French election plays out, but Calexit is a no-go for now – coupled with other states revisiting their historic roots while America’s nation-state finds its way in this turbulent time of angry populism.

Analysis and Commentary

Georgia On The Mind, But Pay No Mind To The Results In Georgia

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Wednesday, April 19, 2017

I have two takeaways from Tuesday’s vote in Georgia’s 6th Congressional – the special election to replace former Rep. Tom Price – and neither is a flattering portrait of today’s politics.

Analysis and Commentary

What's A Democrat To Run On These Days? In California: Gays, Guns, Grass And Government

by Bill Whalenvia Fox News
Monday, April 17, 2017

Thanks to Hillary Clinton’s unexpected defeat last fall, Democrats face a quandary they weren’t expecting until the next decade: what does their party embody in a post-Clinton universe?

Analysis and Commentary

Do Democrats Really Want An Early California Presidential Primary?

by Bill Whalenvia Los Angeles Times
Friday, April 14, 2017

Plucked from California’s political recycling bin: proposals by Democrats in Sacramento to move the Golden State’s presidential primary election from June to the third week in March, and perhaps even earlier, in 2020. It’s not a groundbreaking concept.

Featured

Why Feinstein Might Not Want Six More Years In The Senate

by Bill Whalenvia Sacramento Bee
Thursday, April 13, 2017

Befitting a political career that’s spanned almost five decades, let’s look at Sen. Dianne Feinstein’s prospects through the prisms of two television commercials that aired back when California’s senior senator was cutting her teeth on San Francisco city politics.

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