Mary Matalin
Mary Matalin
Mary Joe Matalinis an American political consultant well known for her work with the Republican Party. She has served under President Ronald Reagan, was campaign director for George H.W. Bush, was an assistant to President George W. Bush, and counselor to Vice President Dick Cheney until 2003. Matalin has been chief editor of Threshold Editions, a conservative publishing imprint at Simon & Schuster, since March 2005. She is married to Democratic political consultant James Carville. She appears in the award-winning...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionNews Anchor
Date of Birth19 August 1953
CityCalumet City, IL
CountryUnited States of America
When I walk down the boardwalk,people stop me and say, 'Oh, your house is the one that glows.
Learn how to communicate, learn how to speak.
No one else, ever, will think you're great the way your mother does.
Having control over your schedule is the only way that women who want to have a career and a family can make it work.
He's not going to hold it against whoever said whatever about him. But it's a good thing not to forget, and it's a good thing to know who your friends are.
For our government to go securely forward, the heads of it need to be separated, and he accepts that as part of the job.
The average House loss in the mid-term for the president's party is 30 seats, and the president's party on average has lost Senate seats in the last two-thirds of 22 elections.
It's not unfair to say he doesn't forget, but that doesn't necessarily translate into holding a grudge.
It's the hardest job in the White House. You've got to really stay in the lane, you've got to stay really focused on the message. ... The press' job is to write something different, and he can't give them what they want. If he is successful at his job, it makes it harder for them to do their job.
The economy is a huge issue. Peace and prosperity. That is why the president will offer -- even before the Congress comes back likely -- a growth package for investors and consumers and the market.
I was a comfort factor. I'm not a hustler.
It's not beyond the realm (of possibilities) that nobody's in trouble for anything, ... One of the possibilities in these things is that everybody is exonerated.
I didn't know that it existed until I was actually down there, and I'm sure I could find my way back there to this day.
He's a scholar and somewhat of an academic, and has studied our history and America's place in the world, in history, and believes that all the progress of the last century, or a goodly portion of it -- eradication of tyrants and communism and fascism and Hitlerism -- was a direct result of the strength of the United States of America and their willingness to use their strength for good.