David Davenport

Research Fellow
Biography: 

David Davenport is a research fellow at the Hoover Institution and a senior fellow at the Ashbrook Center. He specializes in constitutional federalism, civic education, modern American conservatism, and international law.

Davenport is the former president of Pepperdine University (1985–2000). Under his leadership, the university experienced significant growth in quality and reputation. Davenport cofounded Common Sense California and the Davenport Institute for Public Engagement and Civic Leadership. He also served on the board of California Forward, a major bipartisan reform group, and was a member of Governor Schwarzenegger’s California Performance Review Commission. He was a visiting fellow at the Ashbrook Center working on civic education from 2016 to 2018.

He is a regular columnist for the Washington Examiner and his study, "Commonsense Solutions To Our Civics Crisis," was published by the Orrin G. Hatch Foundation in 2020.

He has coauthored three books with his colleague Gordon Lloyd: How Public Policy Became War (2019), Rugged Individualism: Dead or Alive? (2017), and The New Deal and Modern American Conservatism: A Defining Rivalry (2013). These books offer distinctive ways of understanding both the current and the historic debates between progressives and conservatives.  

Davenport has also contributed chapters to Hoover books on values in a free society and legal threats to American values; and has authored articles in Policy Review on “The New Diplomacy” and “The Politics of Literacy.”

Davenport earned a BA with distinction in international relations from Stanford University and a JD from the University of Kansas’s School of Law, where he was elected to Order of the Coif and earned national and international awards in moot court competitions.

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Recent Commentary

Analysis and Commentary

A Lump Of Coal

by David Davenportvia Townhall
Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Hoover fellow David Davenport discusses President Obama's use and abuse of executive power.

Analysis and Commentary

Bringing A Little Sanity To Indiana's March (Religious) Madness

by David Davenportvia Forbes
Monday, March 30, 2015

In the current white-hot debates over gay marriage, I submit that what the Indiana and other bills actually do is help manage an important policy dilemma.  As a society, do we value gay rights?  Increasingly the answer is yes.  Do we value religious freedom and practice?  Historically the answer is yes.  We value both, but they do not always live easily together. 

Analysis and Commentary

Brace Yourself For The Most Important Supreme Court Case Of The Year

by David Davenportvia Forbes
Friday, February 27, 2015

On Wednesday, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in its most important case of the year, King v. Burwell.  The case is most obviously significant because it could invalidate subsidies for low income individuals covered by Obamacare in the approximately two-thirds of states that did not establish their own exchanges.

US Ballot Box Image
Analysis and Commentary

Jeb Bush A 'Reform' Conservative? America Doesn't Need Conservatism Lite

by David Davenportvia Fox News
Friday, February 27, 2015

I am wary of the adjectives Republican presidential candidates like to place in front of the word “conservative.” 

Analysis and Commentary

Time To Leave Federalizing Of Education Behind

by David Davenportvia Forbes
Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Washington, D.C. has managed to take the most basic state and local responsibility—K-12 education—and federalize it at breathtaking speed over the last 12 years.  Now, with the signature piece of federalizing legislation, No Child Left Behind, up for reauthorization in Congress, it is time to put the brakes on this failed and misguided federal experiment.

Analysis and Commentary

The Era Of Big Government Is Back--Or Did It Ever Leave?

by David Davenportvia Forbes
Wednesday, February 4, 2015

When President Obama introduced his mammoth $4.4 trillion budget this week, he effectively announced that the era of big government is back.  Even his fellow Democrat, Bill Clinton, had famously proclaimed in 1996 that “the era of big government is over.”  This followed Ronald Reagan’s warning in 1981 that “government is not the solution to our problem, government is the problem.”

The Palestinian People
Analysis and Commentary

Palestinian Statehood: Who Should Decide And How?

by David Davenportvia Forbes
Friday, January 9, 2015

You would think there would be a clear-cut definition and path for establishing a new nation-state.  But in the Alice in Wonderland world called international law, there is not.  And this very uncertainty has created an opening for Palestine to attempt to shift the political balance in the Middle East and pursue a novel “throw enough against the wall in the hope that something will stick” approach to gaining statehood.

Analysis and Commentary

David Davenport on Townhall.com

by David Davenportvia Townhall
Monday, January 5, 2015

Research Fellow David Davenport discusses the Forbes study of the best and worst states for business on Townhall.com

Interviews

David Davenport on Townhall Radio

by David Davenportvia Townhall
Thursday, December 11, 2014

Research Fellow David Davenport discusses the potential for a "liberty moment" in light of the growing disillusionment in the US on Townhall Radio.

Analysis and Commentary

Washington Policy-Making: Next Two Years Are About Election 2016

by David Davenportvia Forbes
Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Even though the words policy and politics sound a lot alike and share a Greek origin, in practice they are usually quite different. Running for office is not the same as governing. E.J. Dionne argues in his classic book Why Americans Hate Politics that this very difference is a key part of voters’ frustration.

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