Floyd
Brown is a writer, speaker, broadcaster
and business owner.
Time
magazine said: “Brown
has stature among devoted conservatives
that almost matches his physical heft (6
ft. 6 in. and 240 lbs.)”
He is president of Excellentia Inc., a
consulting company specializing
in non-profit organizational strategy,
development and the marketing of ideas.
Brown is also a contributor to InvestmentU.com and Worldnetdaily.com.
He is a syndicated columnist with Cagle
Cartoons, and his articles have appeared
in countless publications including the
San Francisco Chronicle,
the
Washington Times,
National Review and
Human Events.
Brown is president of the Western
Journalism Center, and as a media
commentator, he has appeared on many
network and cable TV shows including the
CBS Evening News,
ABC’s Primetime,
NBC’s Today Show,
FOX News,
CNN,
MSNBC
and more. Since 1995, he has
worked as a talk show host on Seattle’s
Talk radio KVI 570 AM.
As a speaker, he has traveled coast to
coast speaking at many universities and
conferences including Dartmouth,
University of Pennsylvania, Notre Dame,
University of Miami and the California
Polytechnic University (Cal-Poly).
Brown is the author of three books and
wrote the first bestselling Clinton
expose
Slick Willie: Why America Cannot Trust
Bill Clinton in
1992. He later launched the impeachment
movement against President Clinton as
president of Citizens United Inc., a
conservative citizens’ action
organization he founded in 1988. Brown
organized other national campaigns,
including the effort to secure the
confirmation of Judge Clarence Thomas,
and the independent campaigns against
Michael Dukakis and Bill Clinton.
Academics study these campaigns because
of their effectiveness. The anti Dukakis
effort produced the now famous
“Willie Horton” commercial.
From 2001 until 2006, he served as the
executive director of Young America’s
Foundation, which saved Rancho del Cielo,
also known as Ronald Reagan’s Ranch or
Western White House. As executive
director, Brown oversaw the preservation
of the historic ranch and the building
of the 20 million dollar Reagan Ranch
Center in downtown Santa Barbara,
California.
He was a delegate to the 2000 and 1996
National Conventions. In 1996, he served
on the Republican National Convention
Platform Committee. He was an advisor to
the Bush, Dole and Forbes for President
Campaigns. He managed the Dole for
President Campaign in Iowa, Minnesota,
South Dakota and Nebraska in 1988.
He currently serves on the nonprofit
boards of the American Conservative
Union, the National Campaign Fund, The
Reagan Legacy Foundation, and Policy
Issues Institute.
He served in President Reagan’s
campaigns and as a political appointee
in the Reagan administration. Brown
credits a meeting with President Reagan
in 1976 for sparking his interest in
public service. |