She is a Republican who served as a top advisor to U.S. Vice-President Dick Cheney from 2001-2003. Resigned to open a Washington, D.C.-based political consulting firm with her husband, former Bill Clinton advisor James Carville . Carville and she have two daughters, Matalin Mary Matty Carville and Emerson Normand Emma Carville . In 2008, they moved their family to New Orleans.
Has two daughters with James Carville : Matalin Mary Matty Carville and Emerson Normand Emma Carville .Grew up in Calumet, City, Illinois. Attended Thornton Fractional North High School and attended Western Illinois University. Was homecoming queen her junior year of high school.Chief editor of Threshold Editions, a conservative publishing imprint at Simon & Schuster, since March, 2005.In April 2006, was appointed Treasurer of Virginia Republican Senator George Allen 's re-election committee. Worked on the presidential campaign of Fred Dalton Thompson until January 2008, when Thompson dropped out of the race.Favorite songs: "Signed, Sealed, Delivered - I'm Yours", "Uptight - Everything's Alright" by Stevie Wonder , "Can't Find My Way Home" by Blind Faith , "Stairway to Heaven" by Led Zeppelin .Former chief-of-staff, Republican National Committee.Named as one of the "Top 100 Most Important Talk Show Hosts".
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The Murrow, Polk, and IDA Award-winning documentary Boogie Man is about Lee Atwater, a blues-playing rogue whose rise from the South to Chairman of the GOP made him a political rock star. He mentored George W. Bush and Karl Rove while leading the Republican party to historic victories, helping make liberal a dirty word, and transforming the way America elects our Presidents. In interviews with Republicans and friends of Atwater, Boogie Man examines his role in America's shift to the right. To Democrats offended by the 1988 Willie Horton controversy, Atwater was a remorseless political assassin dubbed by one Congresswoman "the most evil man in America." The film examines his irreverent sense of humor, his understanding of the American heartland, and his unapologetic vision of politics as war. It ends with a portrait of a cynic's deathbed search for meaning.