Mark McKinnon

Television producer

Birthday May 5, 1955

Birth Sign Taurus

Birthplace Boulder, Colorado, U.S.

Age 68 years old

Nationality United States

#60143 Most Popular

1955

Mark David McKinnon (born May 5, 1955) is an American political advisor, reform advocate, media columnist, and television producer.

He was the chief media advisor to five successful presidential primary and general election campaigns, and is a co-founder of No Labels, an organization dedicated to bipartisanship and political problem solving.

He served as vice chairman of Public Strategies, Inc., which was acquired by the international communications consultancy Hill & Knowlton Strategies, and was president of Maverick Media.

McKinnon is the co-creator, co-executive producer, and co-host of Showtime's The Circus: Inside the Greatest Political Show on Earth and consulted on the HBO series The Newsroom and Netflix's House of Cards.

He was a regular columnist for The Daily Beast and The Daily Telegraph (London).

McKinnon has worked for many causes, companies and candidates, including former President George W. Bush, Senator John McCain, Texas Governor Ann Richards, Congressman Charlie Wilson, and musician and philanthropist Bono.

He has served on the boards of numerous organizations dedicated to reforming the influence of money in politics.

1975

He was named the "New Folk" winner at the 1975 Kerrville Folk Festival.

1976

In 1976, McKinnon moved to Austin, Texas, where he earned a living as a musician.

1980

McKinnon enrolled at the University of Texas at Austin and served as editor of the student newspaper The Daily Texan during 1980–1981.

While working for the newspaper, he was jailed briefly on a First Amendment issue after refusing to provide to police unpublished photographs of an Iranian student protest.

During this period he also investigated Child prostitution rings he alleged operated within Texas, discussing his findings on the public access TV show, Alternative Views.

He left the university before completing his undergraduate work.

In the late-1980s, he went to work for the New York-based international political media consulting company Sawyer Miller Group.

1984

McKinnon's first political campaign experience was volunteering for then Texas State Senator Lloyd Doggett's 1984 U.S. Senate campaign, where he worked with James Carville and Paul Begala, who promoted McKinnon to the role of press secretary.

1985

McKinnon then worked for former Texas Governor Mark White during his 1985–1986 re-election campaign, followed by former Louisiana Governor Buddy Roemer's campaign in 1987.

1990

After returning to Texas, McKinnon joined the firm Public Strategies, Inc. in 1990, serving as its vice chairman beginning in 1991.

He spent the next several years working on many Texas Democratic winning campaigns, including those of Governor Ann Richards (1990), former Houston Mayor Bob Lanier (2001), and the Congressman Charlie Wilson.

1994

In 1994, McKinnon worked on Bob Bullock's re-election campaign for Lieutenant Governor of Texas.

1996

In 1996, he announced that he was shifting gears and leaving partisan politics.

In his Texas Monthly article entitled "The Spin Doctor Is Out", McKinnon wrote that he "won't miss desperate candidates, manic campaign managers and last-minute attack and response ads".

McKinnon returned to politics after meeting then Governor George W. Bush at a dinner at the governor's mansion.

Following this encounter, McKinnon and Bush developed a personal relationship.

According to Karl Rove, "Bush and McKinnon clicked from moment one. In a bow to McKinnon's cool image, Bush dubbed him 'M-Kat. Of his relationship with Bush, McKinnon said, "We had a personal relationship before we had a professional relationship.

And when Texas' Democratic lieutenant governor Bob Bullock endorsed Bush over the Democratic gubernatorial nominee — his own god-son — well that's when I crossed the bridge.

But it was not an easy decision."

During a Frontline interview describing the former president's ascendance into the national political arena, McKinnon said, "Governor Bush was doing some things that really got my attention. He was talking about education reform. He was talking about immigration reform. He was talking about issues that had typically been Democratic issues. He was talking about them in a really compassionate way."

McKinnon said that he was particularly "impressed with how he'd gotten ahead of the Republican Party".

1998

After being recommended to Bush by Bullock, McKinnon led the advertising and media team for Bush's gubernatorial campaign in 1998.

That same year, he became president of Maverick Media, which was created for the purpose of electing Bush as president.

2000

He worked on Bush's first presidential campaign as the chief media advisor, directing the advertising effort in 2000, a role he would reprise in the 2004 elections.

President Bush appointed McKinnon to serve as a member of the Broadcasting Board of Governors, the independent, autonomous entity responsible for all U.S. government sponsored, non-military, international broadcasting.

2012

McKinnon was on the advisory board of Americans Elect, a defunct political organization known primarily for its efforts to stage a national online primary for the 2012 United States presidential election.

2014

In 2014, McKinnon launched Mayday PAC to force ethics reform in the United States Congress, along with Harvard Professor Larry Lessig—who would later run for president on a related push for ethics and campaign finance reform—and tech moguls Steve Wozniak, Fred Wilson, Peter Thiel, and Reid Hoffman.

McKinnon and Julian Castro served as co-chairs of Southerners for the Freedom to Marry, before Obergefell v. Hodges affirmed that the fundamental right to marry is guaranteed to same-sex couples.

He currently serves on the boards of Take Back Our Republic and the Austin Film Society, and is a member of the George Foster Peabody Awards board of jurors as well as the Advisory Council of Represent.Us, a nonpartisan anti-corruption organization.

Mark McKinnon was born in Boulder, Colorado, and was raised in Denver.

He performed in a band called Daybreak and, following his junior year, dropped out of high school and hitchhiked to Nashville, Tennessee.

There he began his career as a songwriter and worked alongside Kris Kristofferson.

McKinnon returned to Denver to complete high school, then made his way back to Nashville to continue pursuing music.