Since leaving Clinton's employ in 1996, Morris has said he has become profoundly "disillusioned" with the actions of the Clintons in the late 1990s. He has since formed a career as a political commentator and critic of the Clintons (particularly Hillary), appearing on
Fox News programs such as
Hannity & Colmes,
Hannity, and ''
The O'Reilly Factor'', and on various local and nationally
syndicated radio
talk shows. Morris is also a regular columnist and Pundits Blogger for
The Hill, a nonpartisan daily newspaper based in Washington, D.C., and for
Newsmax, a conservative online news website. Morris regularly makes predictions about candidates' chances of winning elections during these appearances. Regarding the 2004 Democratic presidential nomination, he initially stated that
Howard Dean's candidacy could be written off right away. He had earlier discussed the likelihood of Dean defeating
John Kerry after early strong showings by the former
Vermont governor. Kerry defeated Dean and all his other rivals and won the nomination. In a column in
The Hill on June 22, 2005, Morris predicted that Hillary Clinton would face her "worst nightmare" in her 2006 Senate race against Republican candidate
Judge Jeanine Pirro, whose campaign subsequently collapsed within a matter of two months after repeated crushing defeats in the opinion polls due to her husband's alleged
Mafia ties. He even went so far as to suggest that Hillary Clinton would drop out to focus on her 2008 presidential campaign. In 2005 Morris wrote that
Hurricane Katrina "has the capacity to shape the second
Bush term in the same way
September 11 shaped his first term—not only in rebuilding
New Orleans but in taking preventative steps around the nation to bolster our defenses against natural and man-made disasters and terror strikes. Responding to disasters is a source of presidential strength and popularity, and Bush is about to show how it is done." In August 2011, Morris began a petition on his website opposing federal funding for the
Park51 Muslim community center, claiming that the center is "designed to celebrate the attacks that killed 3,000 Americans", and that the center would "train the same kinds of terrorists who caused the... attacks".
2008 election In a 2005 book on the 2008 presidential campaign, Morris stated that it was most likely that Hillary Clinton would face
Condoleezza Rice for the presidency. Morris's critics reacted by mocking his mistaken predictions of past races. Appearing on Fox News'
Hannity and Colmes on January 29, 2008, Morris said that those voting for
John Edwards were "at the moment... those that can't decide which they don't like more—a black or a woman getting elected". Morris elaborated that
exit polls showed some Edwards voters were unsure if a woman or an African-American, in reference to then Democratic Primary front runners Hillary Clinton and
Barack Obama, could get elected to the presidency for the first time in 2008. In the weeks leading up to the 2008 election, Morris correctly predicted that Obama would win the election in a landslide, but incorrectly predicted that Obama would win
Missouri,
Arkansas,
North Carolina,
Arizona,
Tennessee, and
West Virginia by comfortable margins, while
Louisiana, Georgia and South Carolina would be tossups. Of those states, Obama only won North Carolina, by a close margin. After Obama won the 2008 election, Morris was critical of him. In early 2009, Morris said: "Those crazies in
Montana who say, 'We're going to kill
ATF agents because the UN's going to take over'? Well, they're beginning to have a case." In April 2009, Morris keynoted an animated debate at the
Yale Political Union on the topic "Resolved: Save Capitalism from President Obama".
2012 election During the
2012 United States presidential election, Morris received widespread attention for his inaccurate predictions and controversial statements about candidates. In a March 2011 column for
The Hill, Morris predicted that Obama would not win a second term as president. In July 2012, Morris predicted that Mitt Romney would choose Florida Senator
Marco Rubio as his running mate as an effort to court the Latino vote; Romney ultimately chose
Paul Ryan. In October 2012, Morris was a speaker at a special meeting of the Republican Caucus of the
Georgia House of Representatives to discuss claims that Obama was using
'mind-control' techniques to create a
Communist dictatorship controlled by the United Nations under the guise of promoting
sustainability and
public transportation. Speaking at the event, Morris argued that Obama's aim was to join with the United Nations to "force everyone into the cities from whence our ancestors fled." On the day before the
2012 U.S. presidential election, Morris predicted on his website and in an article in
The Hill that the Republican candidate,
Mitt Romney, would win the presidency in a landslide "approaching the magnitude of
Obama's against
McCain." Specifically, he stated that Romney would win 325
electoral votes and that Obama would win 213. Obama ended up winning 332 electoral votes with Romney winning 206, meaning Morris was off by 119 electoral votes. He explained the logic behind his prediction in a video posted at his website. He made this prediction in the face of an overwhelming consensus among expert pollsters leading up to election night that Obama would win at least the Electoral College and likely the popular vote. Morris wrote on his website, "On Sunday, we changed our clocks. On Tuesday, we'll change our president."
Jon Stewart mocked the idea on
The Daily Show, calling Dick Morris the "King of Wrong Mountain" and claiming that pundits live in a "reckoning-free zone." Morris was the least accurate major pundit in predicting the 2012 presidential election. In Morris's article in
The Hill, he identified some "key mistakes" by the Obama campaign, which he stated would cost Obama the election: • The campaign "bet the farm on negative ads in swing states." • Obama never moved to the political center. • The Obama campaign did not consider Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Michigan or Minnesota swing states. • Obama "became nothing more than a nasty partisan" instead of trying to look presidential. • Obama offered nothing more than "a grab-bag of special-interest pleadings for single women, unions, college kids and minorities". • Obama underperformed in the
first presidential debate. • Obama was slow to release information about the
attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi. • Obama returned to campaigning too quickly after
Hurricane Sandy. On November 7, 2012, the day after the election, Morris published an article in
The Hill titled "Why I was wrong". Morris stated that he had "egg on his face" and that the "key reason for my bum prediction is that I believed, mistakenly, that the 2008 surge in black, Latino and young voter turnout would recede in 2012 to 'normal' levels. Didn't happen. These high levels of minority and young voter participation are here to stay. And, with them, a permanent reshaping of our nation's politics." In a subsequent interview on Fox News, Morris added: "I called it as I saw it from the polling and I did the best I could and I also worked very hard for Romney." He elaborated on the latter point by explaining that he thought it was his duty to help the Romney campaign by countering pessimism about Romney's chances.
Other elections In March 2021, it was reported by
The New York Times that he was meeting with
Donald Trump in New York, "encouraging him to take on the party he once led". == Foreign political consultant ==