After graduation, she served as a judicial clerk for Judge Richard A. Levie of the
Superior Court of the District of Columbia.
Pollster and consultant Conway entered the polling business when she was in law school, working as a research assistant for
Wirthlin Group, a Republican polling firm. As a student at Trinity College, she met and became friends with
Frank Luntz, the firm's founder, on a year abroad at
Oxford University. Speaker of the House
Newt Gingrich, and U.S. representative (later Vice President)
Mike Pence. She worked as the senior advisor to Gingrich during his unsuccessful 2012 United States presidential election campaign. Later, in 2012, she represented U.S. Senate candidate
Todd Akin. She also directed demographic and attitudinal survey projects for trade associations and private companies, including
American Express,
ABC News,
Major League Baseball, and
Ladies Home Journal. Her firm also included WomanTrend, a research and consulting division. and was credited with setting forth Washington, D.C.'s "sexual awakening." In a review of the era in the capital, Conway (then known as Fitzpatrick) said that her "broad mind and small waist have not switched places". Conway, Ingraham, and Coulter were sometimes called "
pundettes", and appeared on
Bill Maher's
Politically Incorrect.
2016 presidential election Ted Cruz support and endorsement In 2016, Conway endorsed
Ted Cruz's
presidential candidacy, even though she became acquainted with
Donald Trump when living in
Trump World Tower years earlier, from 2001 to 2008, and serving on its condo board. Conway's organization criticized Republican presidential candidate
Donald Trump as "extreme" and "not a conservative". On January 26, Conway criticized Trump's use of
eminent domain, saying, "Donald Trump has literally bulldozed over the little guy to get his way." In early May 2016, Cruz suspended his campaign.
2016 Trump campaign On July 1, 2016, Trump announced that he had hired Conway for a senior advisory position on
his presidential campaign. Conway was expected to advise Trump on how to better appeal to female voters. She served in this capacity for ten weeks, through the November 8 general election, and was the first woman to successfully run an American presidential campaign, and the first woman to run a Republican general election presidential campaign. In a January 2017 interview, Conway acknowledged the
SNL parody by noting that, "Kate McKinnon clearly sees the road to the future runs through me and not
Hillary."
Presidential transition On November 10, 2016, Conway publicly tweeted that Trump had offered her a
White House job. "I can have any job I want", she said on November 28. On November 24, Conway tweeted that she was "Receiving deluge of social media & private comms re:
Romney. Some Trump loyalists warn against Romney as sec of state" with a link to an article on Trump loyalists' discontent for the 2012 nominee. Conway told CNN she was only tweeting what she has shared with President-elect Donald Trump and Vice President-elect
Mike Pence in private. On November 28, two top sources at the Trump transition team told media outlets that Trump "was furious" at Conway for media comments she made on Trump administration cabinet appointments. The following day, however, Trump released a written statement stating that the campaign sources were wrong and that he had expressed disappointment at her critical comments on Romney.
CNBC reported on November 28 that senior officials in the Trump transition "have reportedly been growing frustrated by Conway's failure to become a team player." In early December, Conway said that Hillary Clinton supporters were making death threats against her. Consequently, Trump assigned
Secret Service to protect her. Conway gave up her Secret Service protection in September 2017 due to "reduction in threats."
White House advisor "Alternative facts" During a
Meet the Press interview two days after
Trump's presidential inauguration, Conway used the phrase "
alternative facts" to defend statements made by
White House press secretary Sean Spicer regarding the inauguration's crowd size. Conway's phrase reminded some of "
Newspeak", an obfuscatory language style that is a key element of the society portrayed in
George Orwell's dystopian novel
1984. Soon after Conway's interview, sales of the book had increased by 9,500%, which
The New York Times and others attributed to Conway's use of the phrase, making it the number-one
bestseller on
Amazon.com. In January 2017,
The Guardian reported that, "[a] search of several online legal dictionaries, however, did not yield any results for the term."
Bowling Green massacre On February 2, 2017, Conway appeared in a
television news show interview on
Hardball with Chris Matthews. In order to justify
President Trump's immigration ban, she referenced an event allegedly perpetrated by Iraqi terrorists she termed the "
Bowling Green massacre". Such an event never took place.
Vox suggested Conway was referring to the 2011 arrest of two Iraqi refugees in
Bowling Green, Kentucky. There was never any suggestion that they had planned to carry out attacks in the United States. On February 5, 2017,
New York University journalism professor
Jay Rosen argued that, given repeated misstatements of fact, Conway should cease being booked as a guest on television news shows.
CNN opted not to book Conway as a guest that day because of what the network said were "serious questions about her credibility."
Hatch Act The
Hatch Act of 1939 states that federal government employees must not advocate for their political party while representing a public office. Violating such a law can result in such an employee being removed from public office, but not jailed. Conway has been accused of breaching the act on several occasions. On February 9, 2017, during an appearance on
Fox & Friends, Conway discussed department store
Nordstrom's decision to drop products supplied by
Ivanka Trump's business. "Go buy Ivanka's stuff is what I would tell you", said Conway; she elaborated "It's a wonderful line. I own some of it. I'm going to give a free commercial here: Go buy it today, everybody. You can find it online". Within hours, two organizations filed formal ethics complaints against Conway for violating federal law prohibiting use of a federal position "for the endorsement of any product, service or enterprise".
Public Citizen asked the
Office of Governmental Ethics (OGE) to investigate, saying that Conway's remarks reflected "an on-going careless regard of the conflicts of interest laws and regulations of some members of the
Trump family and Trump Administration". The group's president, Robert Weissman, declared, "Since she said it was an advertisement, that both eliminates any question about whether outsiders are unfairly reading into what's being said, and two, it makes clear that wasn't an inadvertent remark".
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington filed a similar complaint with the OGE and with the White House Counsel's Office; the group's executive director, Noah Bookbinder, stated "This seems to us to be about as clear-cut a violation as you can find".
Harvard constitutional law professor
Laurence Tribe told
The New York Times "You couldn't think of a clearer example of violating the ban of using your government position as kind of a walking billboard for products or services offered by a private individual," adding "She is attempting quite crudely to enrich Ivanka and therefore the president's family." also saying on
Twitter that, under Obama, "If we did what @KellyannePolls did, we would've been fired".
Richard Painter, chief ethics attorney for
George W. Bush, declined to say whether he thought Conway's statements broke the law, but that such actions would not have been tolerated in the Bush administration. "The events of the past week demonstrate that there is no intent on the part of the president, his family or the White House staff to make meaningful distinctions between his official capacity as president and the Trump family business". In a direct rebuke to Spicer, Conway tweeted that Trump "likes 'counselor' more than 'counseled.'" Conway's comments drew bipartisan congressional condemnation. Chaffetz, a Republican, called them "clearly over the line" and "unacceptable". Cummings, a Democrat and the committee's ranking member, called them "jaw-dropping". Both Chaffetz and Cummings wrote the OGE on February 9, 2017, requesting that Conway's behavior be investigated and that the office recommend "suggested disciplinary action, if warranted". On November 24, 2017,
Walter Shaub, the former director of the OGE, said that he filed an ethics complaint against Conway. He argued that Conway violated the Hatch Act when she criticized
Doug Jones, a candidate in the
2017 U.S. Senate special election in Alabama. Conway continued to make frequent television appearances and comment on political topics. In May 2019, Conway declared: "If you're trying to silence me through the Hatch Act, it's not going to work ... Let me know when the jail sentence starts". On June 13, 2019, the OSC formally recommended that Conway be removed from federal service, citing multiple Hatch Act violations by Conway since the preparation of its 2018 report, "by disparaging Democratic presidential candidates while speaking in her official capacity during television interviews and on social media". The OSC noted her criticism from February to May 2019 of candidates such as
Amy Klobuchar,
Bernie Sanders,
Beto O'Rourke,
Cory Booker,
Elizabeth Warren,
Joe Biden and
Kirsten Gillibrand, and also called her violations "egregious, notorious, and ongoing". The OSC noted that this was the first time they "had to issue multiple reports to the President concerning Hatch Act violations by the same individual". In an interview, Kerner characterized his agency's recommendation as unprecedented, adding, "You know what else is unprecedented? Kellyanne Conway's behavior." The White House immediately rejected the finding and demanded that it be withdrawn by the OSC. Trump said he thought the recommendation was "very unfair, it's called freedom of speech." On June 26, 2019, Conway did not appear at a hearing by the House Committee on Oversight and Reform, leading that committee to issue a subpoena for her. At that hearing, Special Counsel Henry Kerner testified that Conway had been found guilty of two Hatch Act violations in 2018 and 11 in 2019. In comparison, during the eight years of the Obama administration, only two federal employees were found guilty of violating the Hatch Act, with one violation each.
Michael Flynn comments On February 13, 2017, Conway claimed that former national security advisor
Michael Flynn had the president's "full confidence". Hours later, Flynn resigned. The following day, Conway claimed Flynn had offered to resign, but White House press secretary Sean Spicer said Trump had asked Flynn for his resignation. On February 15, the MSNBC news show
Morning Joe officially banned Conway from future appearances. The show's primary host
Joe Scarborough said the decision to ban Conway from the show was based on her being "out of the loop" and "in none of the key meetings". ==Subsequent activities==