Floyd Brown Popular Books

Floyd Brown Biography & Facts

Floyd Gregory Brown (born March 10, 1961) is an American author, speaker, and media commentator. He is formerly the CEO of USA Radio Network. Brown founded the conservative website Western Journalism in 2008. Brown in his early career worked as a political consultant and conducted opposition research for political campaigns. Brown is noteworthy for founding Citizens United in 1988 and for his introduction of the "Willie Horton" television ad during the 1988 presidential election campaign. Early life and education The son of a sawmill worker, and the grandson of a member of the Industrial Workers of the World, Brown grew up in the Pacific Northwest in a family of Democrats with 100-year-old roots in the area. He graduated from Olympia High School in Olympia, Washington, in 1979, and from the University of Washington. He holds a bachelor's degree in economics. Brown credits meeting Ronald Reagan at a Masonic Temple in 1976 for sparking his interest in politics when he was 15 years old. He is married to NYT Bestselling author Mary Beth Brown, author of The Faith of Ronald Reagan, with whom he has three children. In 1992, Brown was quoted in the Washington Times: I have a sense of what connects with people like me. We're not culturally Republicans. We're not libertarians. We're not neo-conservatives or former liberals. We're just old-fashioned, blue-collar social conservatives. These are people who couldn't care less about politics, want to be left alone by government, but if their country calls for them to fight abroad, will. You win elections by cultivating people like me. Political activities Citizens United In 1988 Brown founded Citizens United. Several Brown-organized campaigns have been studied for their effectiveness; these include the effort to secure the confirmation of Judge Clarence Thomas, and the independent campaigns against Michael Dukakis and Bill Clinton. The anti-Dukakis effort produced the famous "Willie Horton" commercial. Brown and Citizens United worked on behalf of the nomination of Clarence Thomas to the U.S. Supreme Court. At the time, Brown told the New York Times, "What people don't understand is how bitter conservatives are about Bork," referring to Robert Bork, a conservative federal appellate judge and former Yale law professor nominated by Ronald Reagan to the Supreme Court in 1987 and rejected by the Senate. In a 2007 CNN documentary, Broken Government: Campaign Killers, journalist Campbell Brown, who is not related to Floyd Brown, interviewed him briefly on the subject of the Willie Horton ad, but not about a racy ad with a toll-free number that listeners could call to hear a recording of Gennifer Flowers, a woman who had been the subject of inquiries into President Bill Clinton. Campbell Brown attributed the Flowers ad to David Bossie rather than Floyd Brown, prompting Citizens United to threaten a lawsuit, and to distinguish between its activities, and those of Floyd Brown, the "true" author of the Flowers ad. Republican Party He is active in the Republican Party and was a delegate to both the 2000 and 1996 National conventions. In 1996 he served on the Republican National Convention Platform Committee. He has been an advisor and consultant to the presidential campaigns of George W. Bush, Bob Dole and Steve Forbes. He was Midwest Regional Director of the Dole for President campaign in 1988, managing campaigns in Iowa, Minnesota, South Dakota and Nebraska. In 2016 he served on the National Finance Committee of Mike Huckabee's presidential campaign. 1992 Bush Presidential Campaign In 1992, Brown headed the Presidential Victory Committee, which backed the candidacy of George H. W. Bush. In March 1992, the Bush campaign sought to halt the committee's efforts to raise money. Bobby Burchfield, acting as Bush campaign counsel, wrote to Brown, "Your group has neither asked for nor received permission to solicit funds using the name of George Bush. The president strongly disapproves of this misleading use of his name and reputation." CBS Evening News reported that Brown harassed the family of Susann Coleman, a former law student of Bush's opponent Bill Clinton. Coleman had committed suicide, and Brown was attempting to investigate a rumor that she had had an affair with Clinton. David Bossie reportedly stalked the Coleman family while working for Brown. In April 1992, 30 news organizations received "an anonymous and untraceable letter" by fax "claiming Clinton had had an affair with a former law student who committed suicide 15 years ago." Floyd Brown attempted to investigate any connection between Clinton and Coleman's suicide. Two days after the CBS charges aired, the Bush-Quayle campaign filed a complaint with the Federal Election Commission against Brown, seeking to distance itself from his tactics, and calling Brown and his associates "the lowest forms of life". Whitewater controversy Brown figured prominently in two ways in the Whitewater controversy of the Clinton presidential administration. Brown was investigating Clinton. Brown was contacted by David Hale, a municipal judge facing indictment for fraud, then functioning as a paid informant for the FBI. Under the auspices of Citizens United, Brown issued letters to 100,000 donors to Citizens United, asking for money and saying that he had proof that Clinton had engaged "in a massive cover-up and conspiracy to obstruct justice" in the investigations surrounding the Whitewater controversy. At the same time that Brown was investigating the Clintons, he was using the tax-exempt status of Citizens United to acquire funds, urging his donors to fill out an "emergency impeachment" survey, utilizing a push-poll technique. Brown's fundraising literature said, "Our top investigator, David Bossie, is on the inside directing the probe as Special Assistant to U.S. Senator Lauch Faircloth on the U.S. Senate Whitewater Committee." 2008 McCain-Obama presidential race Brown was a co-founder in 2007, with James V. Lacey, Tim Kelley, and Michael Reagan, of the National Campaign Fund in support of GOP presidential candidates Arizona Sen. John McCain and former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, and in opposition to Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. An affiliated 527 called Citizens for a Safe and Prosperous America was also formed in late 2007. ExposeObama.com is an anti-Barack Obama website created by Brown and his National Campaign Fund. The website purports to show that the Democratic nominee has inconsistent positions regarding abortion, taxes and other issues, in addition to being soft on crime and on what the site calls "Islamo Fascism". The website has been criticized in media accounts for "mudslinging" and misrepresenting Obama's positions. In the spring of 2008, working for The National Campaign Fund, Floyd Brown launched what he called "the most internet-intensive effort for an ad debut ever" to disseminate via what he claimed was three to five million emails to c.... Discover the Floyd Brown popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Floyd Brown books.

Best Seller Floyd Brown Books of 2024

  • The Courage to Hope synopsis, comments

    The Courage to Hope

    Shirley Sherrod

    In the summer of 2010, Shirley Sherrod was catapulted into a media storm that blew apart her life and her job doing what she’d done for decades: helping poor, hardworking people li...

  • Metaracism synopsis, comments

    Metaracism

    Tricia Rose

    The definitive book on how systemic racism in America really works, revealing the vast and often hidden network of interconnected policies, practices, and beliefs that combine to d...

  • Floyd Brown v. Bailus M. Tate synopsis, comments

    Floyd Brown v. Bailus M. Tate

    Western District Court of Appeals of Missouri

    Plaintiffs, who are the parents and minor child respectively, of Alfonso Brown, deceased, filed a wrongful death action against Kathryn Larson, a police officer of Kansas City, Mis...

  • Tales from the Denver Broncos Sideline synopsis, comments

    Tales from the Denver Broncos Sideline

    Andrew Mason

    This updated edition in the bestselling “Tales from the Sidelines” series captures the memorable moments, colorful characters, outstanding players, and championship seasons that ar...

  • The ABCs of Black History synopsis, comments

    The ABCs of Black History

    Rio Cortez & Lauren Semmer

    A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER B is for Beautiful, Brave, and Bright! And for a Book that takes a Bold journey through the alphabet of Black history and culture.   Letter by lett...

  • Blue synopsis, comments

    Blue

    Joe Domanick

    From awardwinning investigative journalist and author Joe Domanick, Blue explores the history of police culture and reform in the United States and the systems that enable racially...

  • Poetry of a Black American Muslim synopsis, comments

    Poetry of a Black American Muslim

    Floyd Brown II

    This book of poetic rhymes deals with some of the beliefs, experiences, feelings, and observations of a Black man, of the Islamic faith, in the United States of America. In it he m...

  • Heads of the Colored People synopsis, comments

    Heads of the Colored People

    Nafissa Thompson-Spires

    Winner of the PEN Open Book Award Winner of the Whiting Award Longlisted for the 2018 National Book Award and Aspen Words Literary Prize Nominated for the PEN/Robert W. Bingham P...

  • Game of My Life Denver Broncos synopsis, comments

    Game of My Life Denver Broncos

    Jim Saccomano

    How do you measure the soul of a city? In Denver, for the better part of five decades it’s been by the Broncos. From an ugly and inauspicious beginning to the first nationally tele...

  • Nobody synopsis, comments

    Nobody

    Marc Lamont Hill

    Named a Best Book of the Year by Kirkus ReviewsA New York Times Editor’s ChoiceNautilus Award Winner“A worthy and necessary addition to the contemporary canon of civil rights liter...

  • Standing Our Ground synopsis, comments

    Standing Our Ground

    Lucy McBath

    From the national spokesperson for Everytown for Gun Safety and a mother who “turned her sorrow into a strategy and her mourning into a movement” (Hillary Clinton) comes the riveti...

  • State of Emergency synopsis, comments

    State of Emergency

    Tamika D Mallory

    Social justice leader Tamika D. Mallory states her case for action and reveals “the power we all have to win transformative change” (Marc Lamont Hill, New York Times bestselling au...

  • Tales from the Denver Broncos Sideline synopsis, comments

    Tales from the Denver Broncos Sideline

    Andrew Mason

    This new addition to the bestselling “Tales from the Sidelines” series captures the memorable moments, colorful characters, outstanding players, and championship seasons that are p...

  • The Audacity of Inez Burns synopsis, comments

    The Audacity of Inez Burns

    Stephen G. Bloom

    THE VIVID, SCANDALFILLED STORY OF A SHREWD, RAGSTORICHES MILLIONAIRESS AND THE RUTHLESS POLITICIAN WHO PURSUED HER, TOLD AGAINST THE EFFERVESCENT BACKDROP OF AMERICA’S GOLDEN CITYS...

  • Still Breathing synopsis, comments

    Still Breathing

    Suzette Llewellyn & Suzanne Packer

    ‘A timely book and a conversation starter on race in Britain.’ Rachel Edwards, Author of Darling and Lucky‘A timely book in a year that has made clear that Britain still has a very...

  • War Dogs synopsis, comments

    War Dogs

    Keith Cory-Jones

    Equally courageous, equally deadly, the British mercenaries in Bosnia have a story to tell as amazing as 'The One That Got Away', but a story without official blessing. ...