Minyon Moore | |
---|---|
Director of the Office of Public Liaison | |
In office June 29, 1998 – February 5, 1999 |
|
President | Bill Clinton |
Preceded by | Maria Echaveste |
Succeeded by | Mary Beth Cahill |
Personal details | |
Born |
Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
May 16, 1958
Political party | Democratic |
Education | University of Illinois, Chicago (BA) |
Minyon Moore (born May 16, 1958 in Chicago, Illinois) is a founder of Women Building for the Future, and heads Dewey Square Group's state and local practice. She was formerly chief executive officer and before that chief operating officer of the Democratic National Committee, and before that, assistant to the President of the United States, director of the White House Office of Public Liaison, and director of White House political affairs under President Bill Clinton.
Previously, Moore worked as an advisor to the presidential campaigns of Rev. Jesse Jackson in 1984 and 1988. She also served as Governor Michael Dukakis' national deputy field director.
Moore was a senior political consultant to the 2008 Hillary Rodham Clinton presidential campaign, and was considered a member of her inner circle, "Hillaryland". Moore has been called a power player in Hillary Clinton's inner circle as Hillary Clinton began her 2016 campaign for president as well.
Moore serves on the Democratic National Committee’s executive committee. On February 21, 2015 they unanimously voted to adopt a resolution calling for “Right to Vote” Amendment to the U.S. Constitution to explicitly guarantee an individual’s right to vote.
Moore is a native of Chicago and has been a guest lecturer at the Harvard University Kennedy School of Government. Minyon Moore graduated from Boston University’s Film School with a certificate in digital film-making and sits on the board of the Writers’ Guild Foundation with leaders in the film and television industry such as Shonda Rhimes, Matthew Weiner, and Sally Wilcox.
Together with Donna Brazile, Leah Daughtry, Tina Flournoy and Yolanda Caraway, Moore is a member of the informal group the "Colored Girls," described by political columnist Matt Bai as "several African-American women who had reached the highest echelons of Democratic politics." Governor Howard Dean, former chair of the DNC, who had one of his dinners with the Colored Girls on the night of the 2014 midterm elections, said their perspective was important. “They’re very rare Washington insiders who understand the rest of the country,” Mr. Dean said. “That’s part of what makes them so valuable. These women have not lost their connections with where they came from.”