Author, Ronald Reagan in Private: A Memoir of My Years in The White House
Mr. James Kuhn develops policy and business initiatives through government relations, lobbying, strategic planning and business development. He utilizes his strong bipartisan, working relationships with the Senate and the House of Representatives to affect key public policy which includes outreach to agencies throughout the federal government.
With 35-plus years of professional experience in leadership positions in both the public and private sectors, and close working relationships with Congress and Administration officials, Mr. Kuhn engages legislators and agency executives on behalf of corporations, national associations and organizations. He has helped with such legislation as the development and passage of The Telecommunications Act of 1996, (the first rewrite of telecommunications law since 1934).
Representing the Washington-based Asia Pacific Policy Center, Mr. Kuhn helped major U.S. corporations successfully engage with the Asia-Pacific region fostering business relationships between senior governmental and business representatives throughout Asia Pacific. Additionally, for a number of years Mr. Kuhn represented the Government of Iceland and the Icelandic Heart Association.
Currently, Mr. Kuhn is engaged with clients in the areas of public works infrastructure, project management and veterans’ issues (Vietnam Veterans of America). Additionally, Mr. Kuhn has worked with Offices of Governors and State Legislatures on legislation at the state level to change state statutes on procurement of major transportation projects along with capital (facilities) projects. For an eight-year period Mr. Kuhn represented the Design-Build industry through his close work with the Design-Build Institute of America.
Formerly, in his capacity as Assistant to The President in the Reagan White House (Second Term), Mr. Kuhn had the honor of being an integral part of President Reagan’s inner circle serving by his side in the Oval Office interfacing with the White House Chief of Staff, the National Security Advisor and other key White House senior staff to ensure the constant, effective flow of information to the President while providing precision and continuity on the President’s daily agenda. In this same capacity, Mr. Kuhn traveled with the President on all domestic and international trips while accompanying the President and Mrs. Reagan on 91 weekend trips to Camp David.
Mr. Kuhn is from the farmlands of northwestern Ohio and is the author of Ronald Reagan in Private: A Memoir of My Years in The White House which was published by Penguin Group USA/Sentinel in 2004.
Author, Lady in Red: An Intimate Portrait of Nancy Reagan (April 2018)
Sheila Tate served for twenty years as president and vice chairman of Powell Tate, the firm she co-founded in 1991 with Jody Powell, Presidential Press Secretary to President Jimmy Carter. She retired in 2012.
Mrs. Tate’s political and government experience ranges from her 1981-85 service as White House Press Secretary to First Lady Nancy Reagan to the 1988-89 Presidential campaign and transition during which she served as press secretary for President-elect George H. W. Bush. She was also communications director for the successful 1996 Republican convention in San Diego.
Most of Mrs. Tate’s business career has been devoted to agency work. She was twice affiliated with Burson-Marsteller, and was also employed twice by Hill.
She served two five-year terms on the Board of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), appointed by both Presidents Reagan and Bush. She served as vice chairman from 1990-92 and chairman from 1992-94. She also served nine years on the National Advisory Board of the Salvation Army where she chaired the Community Relations and Development Committee.
Mrs. Tate was a member, an officer and director of the National Press Foundation for 10 years. She also served as chairman of the Civilian Public Affairs Committee for the United States Military Academy. During the George H. W. Bush administration she was a member of the United States Information Agency’s private sector public relations committee.
In 2001, the Washingtonian magazine named her one of the “100 Most Powerful Women in Washington.” In 1999, PRWeek selected her as one of the “50 Most Powerful Women in Public Relations” and one of the “100 Most Influential PR People of the 20th Century.”
She was named to the Public Relations Society of America’s National Capitol Hall of Fame in 2015.
Mrs. Tate, a native of Washington, DC, holds a B.A. in journalism from Duquesne University and has done graduate work in mass communications at the University of Denver.
Author, Movie Nights with the Reagans
Mark Weinberg is a former spokesman, advisor and speechwriter to President Ronald Reagan. He served on the 1980 Reagan campaign, all eight years on the Reagan White House staff, and two years thereafter as Director of Public Affairs in the office of former President Ronald Reagan. He currently works as a communications consultant in the private sector. Mr. Weinberg and his wife live in the New York City area with their two children.
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