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.

Filter By:

Topic

Type

Recent Commentary

Analysis and Commentary

Enormously Reliant Upon One Advisor, Has Trump Recreated The FDR Presidency?

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Monday, April 10, 2017

One way to look at what may have occurred inside a feuding West Wing of the Trump White House these past few days: nothing quite says career suicide quite like getting between this president and his family.

Analysis and Commentary

Hail, Hail The Gang's All Here -- But Not The Gang That Killed A Court Filibuster A Decade Ago

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Thursday, April 6, 2017

Pick up a newspaper on Friday morning and, presuming you’re in a large metropolitan area with a left-leaning daily, the impression will be that of a United States Senate draped in black crèpe now that the majority Republicans have messed with tradition and invoked the “nuclear option” to clear the path for the Gorsuch nomination.

Analysis and Commentary

Trump Passes On The First Pitch -- Fair Or Foul For A GOP President?

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Monday, April 3, 2017

President Trump didn’t show up for first-pitch honors on major-league baseball’s Opening Day --- the White House citing a scheduling conflict.

Featured

Three Issues That Unify Brown And Four GOP Governors Who Have A Beef With Washington

by Bill Whalenvia Sacramento Bee
Thursday, March 30, 2017

Now that he’s appeared on “Meet the Press” and met up with the one Californian who may be the key to money flowing from the nation’s capital back to Sacramento (that would be House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy), it’s time for the next act in Gov. Jerry Brown’s national drama.

Analysis and Commentary

The Fault Lies Not In The Speaker's Plan -- It's Due In Part To The House's Rugged Math

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Saturday, March 25, 2017

At the risk of being a day late and a hot take short, I’m adding my two cents on the House’s failed experimentation with Obamacare repeal. Math is what matters most.

Analysis and Commentary

How Serious Is Schwarzenegger On Redistricting?

by Bill Whalenvia Sacramento Bee
Thursday, March 16, 2017

As my faithful chocolate lab approaches a 10th birthday, an apology is in order. For the past decade, I’ve denied him a sibling – a rival with whom to tug on ropes, test wills and ultimately decide who’s the alpha dog. Canine psychology may explain the odd coupling that is Donald Trump and Arnold Schwarzenegger – “deplorable” meets “expendable.”

Analysis and Commentary

Can Democrats Find Their Gubernatorial Groove? Can Republicans Gain Ground In California?

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Wednesday, March 8, 2017

John Cox is running for governor of California. As far as I know, he’s not related to Edward Cox, Richard Nixon’s son-in-law, Archibald Cox, the special prosecutor Nixon wanted fired, or James M. Cox, the answer to the question of who lost to Warren Harding in 1920.

Analysis and Commentary

A Strategy For Trump: Escape The Washington Bubble, Tout His Agenda, Pressure Congress

by Bill Whalenvia Forbes
Sunday, March 5, 2017

Years ago, the political strategist Dick Morris liked to suggest that America’s chief executive suffered from a split personality – a “Saturday night Bill Clinton” who lacked good moral judgment; a more pious “Sunday morning President Clinton” who was a devoted public servant.

US Capitol Building
Featured

D.C. And West Coast Are Worlds Apart

by Bill Whalenvia Sacramento Bee
Thursday, March 2, 2017

This column comes from the nation’s capital, where it dawns on me that I’ve reached a dubious milestone: the first one-third of my professional career was spent practicing the black arts of politics, policy and media here in Washington, D.C.; the more recent two-thirds has been toiling in a similar vineyard in California.

Analysis and Commentary

Four Big Takeaways (And Four Shocking Surprises) From Trump's Speech

by Bill Whalenvia Fox News
Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Maybe I have baseball on the brain, but when I watch President Trump what I’ve seen to date is one fastball after another.

Pages