Unexpected Presidential Advisors - with Gary Ginsberg

Unexpected Presidential Advisors - with Gary Ginsberg

Who do presidents, prime ministers and business leaders listen to in the midst of managing a crisis? It’s a question that’s always interested me, from my time in government and business and also as a moon-lighting student of history. I thought about that a lot during the covid pandemic. On this podcast series, we’ve talked about how the formal channels in our governments performed these past 18 months. But how about those unofficial channels from outside the government that wind up shaping our leaders' thinking and approach to world-changing events. Think about the number of informed practitioners that government leaders had access to during Covid, outside the regular bureaucracy of government. Practitioners in everything from the markets, to experience with supply chains, to the front lines of medicines. How many of these people had relationships with our leaders from a previous time in their lives, that could or should have made their mark during this moment? We are talking about a different category of presidential advisor. It’s what Gary Ginsberg calls “First Friends”, the title of his new book - the subtitle is “The Powerful, Unsung (And Unelected) People Who Shaped Our Presidents” Gary has a fascinating background, having advised Governor Bill Clinton in his selection of Al Gore as vice-president, and served in the Clinton White House and Justice Department. He also worked for Rupert Murdoch, Jeff Bewkes at Time Warner, Masa Son at Softbank and Mike Bloomberg. He informally advised Israel’s former prime minister during a tumultuous time in US-Israel relations. He’s worked with a lot of leaders up close and observed how they make decisions. Gary’s book is a compelling history of the way US presidents have relied on outside counsel in the midst of chaos. He gives us plenty to think about how our current and future leaders will navigate the next crisis, and who they should rely on.

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From Baby Boom to Baby Bust - with Nicholas Eberstadt

From Baby Boom to Baby Bust - with Nicholas Eberstadt

China is poised to pass one of the great demographic inflection points” – that’s according to the Financial Times. The inflection point the FT is referring to is that of diapers for the elderly growin...

31 Dec 20211h

Revisiting The New Inflation - with Mohamed El-Erian

Revisiting The New Inflation - with Mohamed El-Erian

The Covid-19 recession technically ended in April 2020. At two months, it was one of the shortest economic recessions in history. Since then, we have experienced record inflation. Last summer, we sat ...

30 Dec 202152min

Revisiting China’s Great Wall of Steel - with Matt Pottinger

Revisiting China’s Great Wall of Steel - with Matt Pottinger

This week we are re-posting some of our episodes from 2021 that are most relevant right now. We’ll start with Matt Pottinger on recent developments in China. China’s borders have been sealed for almos...

28 Dec 20211h 2min

How Omicron Stunned The Scientific Community - With Scott Gottlieb

How Omicron Stunned The Scientific Community - With Scott Gottlieb

What about Omicron has most surprised the scientific community? What does it tell us about vaccines and where we’re heading? These are among the big questions we have for Dr. Scott Gottlieb, former Co...

17 Dec 20211h

Russia: In decline or on the march? with Richard Fontaine

Russia: In decline or on the march? with Richard Fontaine

Russia poses a threat to Ukraine, again. But what about Russian President Putin’s threat to the unity of Europe, and what do recent developments tell us about global perceptions of America's geopoliti...

11 Dec 202154min

The American College Crack-Up - with Niall Ferguson

The American College Crack-Up - with Niall Ferguson

In this decade we may finally experience a true crack-up in higher education. There have been comparable periods on American college campuses in the past (in the 1960s and 1980s, for example). But o...

4 Dec 202129min

Lessons for the 2020s - With Historian Niall Ferguson

Lessons for the 2020s - With Historian Niall Ferguson

The first of our two-part conversation with Naill Ferguson is on applied history’s lessons of the 1920s and the 1970s...for the 2020s. Niall is a historian and senior fellow at the Hoover Institutio...

26 Nov 202141min

Dan Senor’s New Podcast  - Call Me Back

Dan Senor’s New Podcast - Call Me Back

Welcome to our new podcast, “Call Me Back”, where we try to zoom out from minute-to-minute news and look back to how we got here, what we can learn from earlier decades and where we might be going in ...

23 Nov 20211min

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