After graduating from law school, Smerconish co-founded a title insurance agency with his brother Wally. At 29, he was appointed regional administrator for Philadelphia Region III of the
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development under
Secretary Jack Kemp, during the
George H. W. Bush administration. Following George H. W. Bush's 1992 election loss, Smerconish spent a decade practicing law with renowned trial attorney
James E. Beasley, Sr. specializing in complex tort litigation. His clients ranged from the Philadelphia Fraternal Order of Police to professional boxer
Orlin Norris. He also successfully sued abortion provider
Kermit Gosnell in a
medical malpractice case. Today, Smerconish is of counsel at the law firm Kline & Specter. On October 19, 2008, after previously supporting only Republican presidential candidates, Smerconish endorsed
Barack Obama for
president. In a
Salon essay, he criticized the Republican Party's failure to capture
Osama bin Laden and expressed his frustrations, which led to his endorsement. He called for the GOP to adopt moderation on social issues to align with suburban voters. In 2010, Smerconish announced he had left the Republican Party, later voting for
Gary Johnson in the 2016 election. Commentators noted his shift to the political center, with
The Washington Post writing that he bet his career on there being "a great untapped center" in politics.
Media In the spring of 1990, Smerconish made his first radio appearance as a guest on Philadelphia's
96.5 FM WWDB, eventually transitioning from guest to guest-host. By 1993, he hosted his own Sunday night program, balancing this with his legal career. After broadcaster Dominic Quinn's death in 1996, Smerconish moved to weekend mornings, but left WWDB in 1997 when the station began airing infomercials disguised as programs. He then joined CBS affiliate
WPHT, initially on afternoons, later taking over the morning slot in 2003 after
Don Imus was fired. in October 2002 (on radio station 1210 AM WPHT) about whether there is a connection between the events of
September 11 and the
Oklahoma City bombing. In February 2009, Smerconish's radio show went into national syndication, and on August 20, 2009, he became the first talk radio host to interview President Barack Obama live from the
White House. He also interviewed Presidents
Jimmy Carter, George H. W. Bush,
Bill Clinton, and
George W. Bush, as well as Vice Presidents
Al Gore,
Dick Cheney, and
Joe Biden. Smerconish's television career began with local appearances in Philadelphia, eventually leading to national exposure on CNN and
MSNBC. He appeared regularly on CNN's
TalkBack Live and guest-hosted
Scarborough Country on MSNBC. In 2007, he hosted Don Imus's time slot on MSNBC following Imus's firing, and later became a regular substitute for Chris Matthews on
Hardball. in the
Oval Office on October 26, 2012 In 2013, Smerconish moved his radio show to Sirius XM's POTUS Channel, citing his desire for nonpartisan discussions after leaving the Republican Party in 2010. In 2014, he left MSNBC to host his own program on CNN titled "Smerconish", which airs on Saturdays. He also runs daily political and current events polls which he discusses on his daily Newsletter, YouTube channel, daily SiriusXM show and CNN show. The questions usually touch on the main topic of discussion of the day. To mark 30 years in talk radio, Smerconish released an autobiographical, one-man film,
Things I Wish I Knew Before I Started Talking, which initially aired on
CNN in July 2020, and then became a special on
Hulu. == Books ==