Experts

Mary Kate Cary

Practitioner Senior Fellow

Fast Facts

  • Former speechwriter for President George H.W. Bush
  • Provides political commentary for NPR, CNN, Fox News Channel, and CTV (Canada)
  • Executive producer of 41ON41, a documentary about President George H.W. Bush
  • Expertise on presidential communications, speechwriting

Areas Of Expertise

  • Domestic Affairs
  • Media and the Press
  • Governance
  • Elections
  • Leadership
  • Politics
  • The Presidency

Mary Kate Cary, practitioner senior fellow, served as a White House speechwriter for President George H. W. Bush from 1989 to early 1992, authoring more than 100 of his presidential addresses. She also has ghostwritten several books related to President Bush’s life and career and served as senior writer for communications for the 1988 Bush-Quayle presidential campaign.

Currently an adjunct professor in the University of Virginia’s Department of Politics, Cary teaches classes on political speechwriting; the greatest American political speeches; and the 2020 presidential election. In her first year in the politics department, she was recognized by the UVA Student Council for excellence in teaching.

Cary currently chairs the advisory board of the George and Barbara Bush Foundation, where she has been a member since 2004. The Bush Foundation oversees the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum and the Bush School of Government & Public Service, with campuses at Texas A&M University and in Washington, D.C.. In 2014, she was the creator and executive producer of 41ON41, a documentary about President George H. W. Bush, which premiered internationally on CNN. She is also a producer of President in Waiting, a documentary about the modern vice presidency that features interviews with all of the living vice presidents, which debuted on CNN in December 2020.

Following her tenure at the White House, Cary served as spokesman and deputy director of policy and communications for U.S. Attorney General William Barr and deputy director of communications at the Republican National Committee under Chairman Haley Barbour. She also served as a long-time columnist at US News & World Report, writing on politics and the presidency.

Cary is currently a member of the Ronald Reagan Institute's Women in Civics Advisory Council; UVA's Darden School of Business Leadership Communication Council; and the national advisory board of The Network of Enlightened Women, which supports conservative female leaders on more than 50 college campuses. She is a long-time member of the Judson Welliver Society of former presidential speechwriters.

Mary Kate Cary News Feed

This behind-the-scenes Virtual Field Trip features Inauguration Day questions from real students and answers from real experts. Spark student interest and dive deeper into Inauguration Day topics, including:
What is it like at a Presidential Inauguration?
Why do we have inaugurations?
Why do they happen on January 20?
Why is the inauguration held at the Capitol?
What is it like to move into the White House?
Mary Kate Cary Discovery Education
Anymore these days, it’s hard for people on opposite ends of the political spectrum to talk civilly about American politics. So the cards were stacked against Jennifer Lawless–a democratic candidate for Congress and board member of Planned Parenthood–and Mary Kate Cary–who worked as a speechwriter for President George H.W. Bush and communications director for the Republican National Committee–when they signed up to co-teach a course about the 2020 election at the University of Virginia.
Mary Kate Cary BYU Radio
“The danger for the Biden team is if they come in and try to get as much as they can now without reaching across the aisle,” said Mary Kate Cary, a top White House adviser to President George H.W. Bush who is now a senior fellow at the nonpartisan Miller Center at the University of Virginia. “If they do that, they’re going to get a lot of backlash.”
Mary Kate Cary San Francisco Chronicle
Senior Fellow Mary Kate Cary is interviewed on Canada's CTV News about the January 6 invasion of the U.S. Capitol.
Mary Kate Cary CTV News
As Americans end one year and begin another, one of the most controversial topics of conversation will be the presidential election. We experienced the election season from a unique perspective. We each taught college courses on the 2020 campaigns while they were underway, and as a result had a sort of three-month-long focus-grouplike conversation with the newest American voters.
Mary Kate Cary The Conversation
Worried that 2021 could be filled with cringe-worthy political conversations around the virtual dinner table and, post-pandemic, in real life? Dreading the moment that an outspoken neighbor, work colleague or family member pops off? Well, the two of us — one a card-carrying liberal and the other a self-avowed conservative — just survived 13 weeks of hour-long political conversations, twice a week every week. And get this: We actually enjoyed it.
Mary Kate Cary USA Today