on left In 1970, at the age of 26, Jordan ran Jimmy Carter's successful gubernatorial campaign, which included a
Democratic primary election fight against former Governor
Carl Sanders and a less eventful general election against the
Republican Hal Suit. While serving as Governor Carter's executive assistant, Jordan wrote a lengthy memorandum detailing a strategy for winning the 1976 Democratic Primary. Years later, Jordan's memo served as the "game plan" for Carter's 1976 presidential bid. Jordan was a key advisor and strategist for Carter during the 1976 presidential campaign and during Carter's administration, serving as
White House Chief of Staff in 1979–1980 (Carter, who took office in 1977, had previously not seen the need formally to appoint an aide to such a post). Jordan played a powerful role in the formulation of election strategies and government policies. According to one often repeated story from this period, Jordan stared at the breasts of the Egyptian ambassador's wife at a Washington reception and remarked, "I have always wanted to see the pyramids". The story was told in various versions, all based on anonymous sources. Jordan denied it ever took place in his memoir
No Such Thing as a Bad Day. (Jordan's associate,
Timothy Kraft, the 1980 Carter campaign manager, was accused of cocaine use at a party in
New Orleans and left the campaign some five weeks before the general election. He was cleared in 1981 by
special prosecutor Gerald J. Gallinghouse, a Republican former
U.S. Attorney who had earlier prosecuted corruption in the Louisiana state government.) In 1986, Jordan ran for the
Democratic nomination for one of
Georgia's seats in the
United States Senate. He lost the primary to Representative
Wyche Fowler, who went on to win the general election against the Republican incumbent
Mack Mattingly. In 1992, he became a high-level staffer on the
presidential campaign of independent candidate
Ross Perot. In later years he served both as a member of the founders council and as an important public advocate for
Unity08, a political movement focused on reforming the American two party system. Jordan was portrayed by
Kyle Chandler in the 2012 film
Argo. ==Later life==