Wednesday 17 August 2016

Kellyanne Conway: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know



Donald Trump’s new campaign manager Kellyanne Conway is a mother of four and GOP pollster tasked with helping Trump improve his image with women.

Saying, “I want to win,” Trump shook up his campaign on Aug. 17, naming Conway as campaign manager and Breitbart News Chairman Stephen Bannon as his campaign’s CEO, Politico said.

“I’m bringing on fantastic people who know how to win and love to win,” Trump said, according to Politico, which added that Paul Manafort, who had been running Trump’s campaign, will remain in his position.

Conway is regarded as a conservative gender gap expert who has worked for years on women’s trends in polling but has had her own controversies relating to comments about women’s issues, such as once calling for femininity instead of feminism in a speech. She also once advised that Republicans stop talking about rape during campaigns, according to a 2013 Politico article.

Trump’s campaign shakeup comes after Hillary Clinton has risen in the 2016 presidential polls. The RealClearPolitics polling average shows her up 6.1 percent in national polling; her numbers have climbed since the Democratic National Convention.

Here’s what you need to know:


Politico describes Conway “as a pollster for Trump’s running mate Indiana Gov. Mike Pence” and says she “has been working with the Trump campaign since July.”

In 1995, she founded The Polling Company, Inc., which calls itself “a nationally-regarded primary research and consulting firm based in Washington, DC, with offices in New York City.”

She frequently appears on national television shows to discuss the campaign, and her firm conducts political market research. National Review says that “when the Clinton-impeachment struggle ensued, a team of ‘brainy blond barristers’–Kellyanne Conway, Ann Coulter, and the late Barbara Olson–appeared on television night after night to fearlessly defend the Constitution against the likes of Susan Estrich, Ellen Ratner, and Eleanor Clift.”

In a press release announcing her hire, the Trump campaign said, “Ms. Conway, a highly sought-after pollster, will work on messaging and travel frequently with Mr. Trump, while working closely with Mr. Bannon and Mr. Manafort on all aspects of the campaign moving forward.”

Conway is a mother of four; she once asked her 11-year-old daughter, Claudia, to change out of a turquoise shirt on Memorial Day and into a blue one because “it wasn’t a shade available to Betsy Ross when she stayed up through the night sewing the damn flag,” according to The Las Vegas Review Journal.

The newspaper says Conway was raised in New Jersey in a half-Irish, half-Italian family where women “posted prints of the Pope and the Last Supper on the walls.”

On Twitter, Conway calls herself: “Pollstress. Pres.,The Polling Company/WomanTrend since 1995. Mother of 4 Fabulous Children. Senior Advisor and Pollster to Trump-Pence 2016.”

She is married to George T. Conway III, and they have four children, according to her company bio. Her husband is a “a litigation partner at the law firm Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen and Katz” and her maiden name was Fitzpatrick.

George Conway’s law firm bio says he is a partner who joined the firm in September 1988 and has litigation experience “in securities litigation, mergers and acquisitions litigation, contract litigation, antitrust litigation, and other litigation, both at the trial and appellate levels.” The website says he worked on cases involving a Swiss artist and worked on a case for Philip Morsein which ABC News ended up publicly apologizing “for asserting in a news program that two giant tobacco companies add extra nicotine to their cigarettes.”

The New York Times said that apology was criticized by anti-smoking advocates, quoting one professors as saying, “Philip Morris has bullied a major television network into apologizing for what was essentially a true story.”

The Observer claims that Conway worked on the Paula Jones lawsuit against Bill Clinton and may have been a source for Matt Drudge, which has not been proven. The New York Times named George Conway as one of a “small secret clique of lawyers in their 30’s who share a deep antipathy toward the President” and who helped push the Paula Jones case “into the criminal arena and into the office of the independent counsel, Kenneth W. Starr.”

Of Conway, specifically, The Times said he was “a New York lawyer educated at Yale” who “shared Mr. Marcus’s low view of President Clinton. When the Jones case led to Ms. (Monica) Lewinsky, (another lawyer) and Mr. Conway searched for a new lawyer for Mrs. (Linda) Tripp.”

The Times added, “Mr. Conway wanted his role kept hidden as well, because his New York law firm, Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, included influential Democrats like Bernard W. Nussbaum, a former White House counsel. Mr. Conway’s name does not appear on any billing records.”

George Conway also represented the NFL in trademark litigation against the Dallas Cowboys and “his pro bono work includes his successful representation in the Second Circuit of crime victims and public-interest groups as amici curiae in opposing claims that federal law requires the State of New York to allow felons to vote while still incarcerated,” the website of his New York law firm says.

The Las Vegas Review Journal says she lives in New Jersey and met Trump in 2006, “when she served on the condominium board at Trump World Tower in Manhattan.”

Mother Jones says Conway previously backed Trump’s primary rival Ted Cruz. “She served as a strategist for Keep the Promise I, a pro-Cruz super-PAC bankrolled by hedge fund billionaire Robert Mercer that ran attack ads against Trump during the primary campaign, including one blasting the real estate mogul for supposedly supporting government-run healthcare,” said Mother Jones.

Her company’s website says she has worked for a variety of Republican political figures, including, “late Congressman Jack Kemp; President Reagan’s pollster, Richard Wirthlin; Congressmen Marsha Blackburn, Lee Zeldin, Steve King; Vice President Dan Quayle; Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich; Sens. Fred Thompson and Ted Cruz, and Gov. Mike Pence.”

The Review Journal says Conway has been criticized before for comments she made about women. “She caught flack for telling women to embrace femininity, not feminism, in a 2011 speech at the Conservative Women’s Network. She caught more in 2013 for advising a group of House Republicans to stop talking about rape,” the newspaper said.

In the latter incident, Former Rep. Todd Akin (R-Mo.) had sparked controversy when he said a woman could terminate a pregnancy resulting from a “legitimate rape,” according to Politico. Soon after, Conway “dispensed the stern advice” that Republicans should avoid talking about rape in campaigns, calling it a “four-letter word,” according to Politico.

Politico said Conway made the comment “as part of a polling presentation she made alongside fellow GOP pollsters David Winston — an adviser to House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) — and Dave Sackett. The comment was described by several sources in the room.”

Conway was Akin’s consultant and also created controversy when she compared him to cult leader David Koresh, said CNN.

Conway’s company bio says “The RNC tasked Kellyanne with helping to defeat the so-called ‘War on Women.’” One division of her polling company, WomanTrend, tracks “the social, cultural, financial, professional and health trends influencing—and being influenced by—women,” the company website says. The Review Journal says she was hired to fix Trump’s image with women by urging him to show more compassion and not insult their looks.

Her company biography calls her a “fully-recovered” attorney, and says she is admitted to practice law in four jurisdictions (Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and the District of Columbia). “She has practiced law, clerked for a judge in Washington, DC and for four years, was an adjunct professor at George Washington University Law Center,” says the bio.

She earned a B.A. in political science from Trinity College, Washington, D.C., studied at Oxford University, and earned her law degree, with honors, from George Washington University Law Center, the bio says.

Conway’s views on feminism were discussed in an Atlantic magazine article on conservative women’s views on feminism. In that article, she said, conservatives want women “to see that there’s even an alternative to the progressive, liberal orthodoxy that has every woman constantly thinking about abortion, contraception, being a victim of the patriarchy” and said conservatives present “an alternative of fun, engaging accomplished women.”

Two days before the shakeup, Donald Trump’s campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, was named “in an investigation by Ukrainian authorities looking at whether he and others received millions in illegal payments from Ukraine’s former pro-Russian ruling party,” CNN said.

CNN said the investigation is looking into the administration of former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich, “for whom Manafort worked as a political consultant” before Yanukovich was ousted.

A New York Times story alleged that investigators found Manafort’s name in a secret ledger outlining a $12.7 million payout to Manafort; Manafort fervently denies the allegations.

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