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This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding reliable references. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (November 2008) Dick Morris (born November 28, 1948) is an American political author and commentator who previously worked as a pollster, political campaign Morris became an adviser to the Bill Clinton administration after Clinton was elected president in 1992. Morris encouraged Clinton to pursue so-called third way policies of triangulation that merged traditional Republican and Democratic proposals, rhetoric, and issues to achieve maximum political gain and popularity. He worked as a Republican strategist before joining the Clinton administration, where he helped Clinton recover from the 1994 midterm elections by convincing the President to adopt Republican policies.[1] The president consulted Morris in secret beginning in 1994.[2] In the words of Clinton's Chief of Staff Leon Panetta, "I always had the feeling that the president wanted to listen to the dark side, even though he clearly knew in his guts where the issues were and what he wanted to do. He always wanted to listen to the Morris voice to kind of say, what are the thoughts of the most extreme kind of manipulative operation that could go on in politics? I want to hear that voice. I want to hear what he's thinking." Clinton's communications director George Stephanopoulos has said that "Over the course of the first nine months of 1995, no single person had more power over the president".[2] More recently, Morris has emerged as a harsh critic of the Clintons and has written several books that criticize them, including Rewriting History, a rebuttal to Senator Hillary Clinton's Living History. Morris said that he would leave the United States if Hillary Clinton were elected president in 2008.[3] Contents [hide] 1 Early life 2 Morris and the Clintons 2.1 Fallout 2.2 Later work 2.3 Female Presidential candidates and sexism 3 Other work 3.1 Political consulting 3.2 Guest commentator and political prognosticator 3.3 Foreign political consultant 3.4 Morris' DVD 4 Books 5 See also 6 References 7 External links // Early life Morris attended Stuyvesant High School in New York City,[4] where he was active | ||||
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