American journalist
Anthony R. Dolan (born in Norwalk, Connecticut , July 7, 1948) is a Pulitzer Prize -winning journalist and was a speechwriter for President Ronald Reagan from March 1981 until the end of Reagan's second term in 1989.[ 1] Dolan served as the Director of Special Research and Issues and in the Office of Research and Policy at the Headquarters of the Reagan-Bush Committee. Under the name Tony Dolan he had been, for a time, a conservative folk-singer who put out the album "Cry, The Beloved Country" and appeared on The Merv Griffin Show .[ 2] [ 3]
He won the 1978 Pulitzer Prize for Local Investigative Specialized Reporting [ 1] for a series of articles on municipal corruption published in The Stamford Advocate . During the presidency of President George W. Bush , Dolan served as Senior Advisor in the office of Secretary of State (December 2000 to July 2001) and Special Advisor in the Office of the Secretary of Defense (August 2001 to December 2007). As Reagan's speechwriter, he wrote the speeches "Ash Heap of History " (1982) and "Evil Empire " (1983).[ 4] [ 5]
His late brother Terry Dolan was co-founder and chairman of the National Conservative Political Action Committee (NCPAC).[ 6]
Notes
^ a b Appointment of Anthony R. Dolan as Special Assistant to the President and Chief Speechwriter , UCSB American Presidency Project, November 17, 1981
^ Key Records
^ Boing Boing article of 2012
^ Warner, Frank (March 5, 2000). "The Battle of the Evil Empire" . The Morning Call (Allentown, Pa.). Hosted at Free Frank Warner.
^ Glass, Andrew (March 8, 2018). "Reagan brands Soviet Union 'evil empire,' March 8, 1983" . Politico . Retrieved November 27, 2024 .
^ Elizabeth Kastor (1987), The Cautious Closet of the Gay Conservative; In the Life and Death of Terry Dolan, Mirror Images From the Age of AIDS, The Washington Post , 5/11/1987
External links
Previously the Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting, No Edition Time from 1953–1963 and the Pulitzer Prize for Local Investigative Specialized Reporting from 1964–1984
1953–1975 1976–2000
Chicago Tribune (1976)
Acel Moore & Wendell Rawls Jr. (1977)
Anthony R. Dolan (1978)
Gilbert M. Gaul & Elliot G. Jaspin (1979)
Stephen Kurkjian , Alexander B. Hawes Jr. , Nils Bruzelius , Joan Vennochi & Robert M. Porterfield (1980)
Clark Hallas & Robert B. Lowe (1981)
Paul Henderson (1982)
Loretta Tofani (1983)
Kenneth Cooper , Joan Fitz Gerald , Jonathan Kaufman , Norman Lockman , Gary McMillan , Kirk Scharfenberg & David Wessel (1984)
Lucy Morgan , Jack Reed & William K. Marimow (1985)
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Daniel R. Biddle , H.G. Bissinger , Fredric N. Tulsky & John Woestendiek (1987)
Dean Baquet , William C. Gaines & Ann Marie Lipinski (19)
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Joseph T. Hallinan & Susan M. Headden (1991)
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Jeff Brazil & Steve Berry (1993)
Providence Journal-Bulletin (1994)
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The Orange County Register (1996)
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Miami Herald (1999)
Sang-Hun Choe , Charles J. Hanley & Martha Mendoza (2000)
2001–2025
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The Washington Post (2018)
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Staff of The Wall Street Journal (2023)