Dick Morris, author of the recently released best seller, “Rewriting History,” joins WorldNetDaily today as a columnist.
Generally regarded as the most prominent of American political consultants, Morris is widely credited with Bill Clinton’s amazing re-election victory in 1996 after the president lost Congress to the Republicans only two years earlier.
Since then, Morris has become a regular commentator for the Fox News Channel and writes weekly columns for the New York Post, The Hill magazine in Washington, D.C., and the National Post in Canada.
Morris’ relationship with Clinton began in 1977 when he handled the Arkansas attorney general’s successful campaign to become the youngest governor in the nation. However, Morris did not work on Clinton’s defeat for re-election in 1980, but did oversee his comeback victory in 1982, as well as his Arkansas re-election victories in 1984, 1986 and 1990. Additionally, Morris has handled the winning campaigns of over 30 senators or governors – including Republicans like Sen. Trent Lott and former Govs. Bill Weld of Massachusetts and Pete Wilson of California.
In recent years, Morris worked for foreign campaigns and served as chief strategist for Mexico’s Vicente Fox in his upset victory in July 2000 over the PRI Party that had ruled the nation for 71 years. He also was the chief strategist for the winning campaign of Argentina’s former president, Fernando de la Rua, in November 1999. Additionally, Morris founded the website Vote.com, where people can log on to vote on the major issues of the day.
Morris is the author of the 1997 best-selling memoir of the Clinton administration titled, “Behind the Oval Office, Winning the Presidency in the Nineties,” as well as, “Power Plays.” Morris’ newest book, “Rewriting History,” released in May by Regan Books, is a powerful and critical response to Hillary Clinton’s “Living History.”
Unlike other syndicated columnists who deliver a column on the same schedule every week, Morris’ columns are written in response to breaking news and may be found on WorldNetDaily’s commentary page during different days each week.