BIOGRAPHY
Carol Platt Liebau is an attorney, political analyst
and commentator based near Los Angeles, California. She has served as a
guest host for the nationally-syndicated “Hugh
Hewitt Show,” for KABC radio in Los Angeles, and for KFTK 97.1 FM Talk
in St. Louis. Carol has also provided analysis and commentary on television
for PBS, CNN, the Fox News Channel, MSNBC and on “The Dennis Miller
Show.” She is a regular commentator for “The Al Rantel Show” on
KABC and for “Allman and Crane in the Morning” on KFTK.
A columnist for Townhall, Carol has also contributed to the editorial pages
of The Los Angeles Times, The Washington Times, The Orange County Register,
The Sacramento Bee and The St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Her work has appeared
online in National Review, The American Spectator, Human Events and FrontPage
Magazine, as well.
Born on February 13, 1967 and raised in St. Louis,
Missouri, Carol attended Princeton University, where she was Editorial
Chairman of The Daily Princetonian
and graduated in 1989 with a degree from The Woodrow Wilson School of
Public and International Affairs. The summer before her sophomore year,
she joined
the first Senate campaign for former Governor (and current U.S. Senator)
Christopher “Kit” Bond
(R-MO), where she spearheaded the opposition research on his opponent,
then-Lt. Governor Harriett Woods.
After Princeton, Carol headed off to Harvard Law School, where she served
as the first female managing editor of the Harvard Law Review and graduated
in 1992.
Carol then moved to Washington, D.C. to become a law clerk for Reagan appointee
Judge David B. Sentelle of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.
In that capacity, she assisted Judge Sentelle with matters arising from his
status as chief of the three-judge panel charged with appointing prosecutors
under the now-defunct Independent Counsel Act.
At the conclusion of her clerkship, Carol went to Capitol Hill. She served
as legislative assistant to Senator Bond, specializing in Judiciary, Crime,
Tax, Small Business and Nominations matters and handling the legal issues
pertaining to oversight of the Executive Office of the President. Carol also
consulted on judiciary and crime issues for the 1994 U.S. Senate campaign
of John D. Ashcroft.
She subsequently returned to St. Louis in 1994, and practiced law in St.
Louis at Armstrong, Teasdale LLP, as part of the firm's appellate and litigation
departments. Consistent with her ongoing political interests, she also served
as Spokesman for Missouri Women for Dole in 1996, and later directed Senator
Bond's office in eastern Missouri. In that capacity, Carol acted as a surrogate
for the senator at official events, and advised on and oversaw the implementation
of assorted policy matters. She left St. Louis in 1998, upon her marriage
to F. Jack Liebau - a third generation Californian.
Since moving to California, Carol has served as a
policy advisor and counsel for Tom Campbell's U.S. Senate campaign
in 2000. She has also enjoyed having
the opportunity to travel widely throughout California to present speeches,
including keynote addresses for the Golden State Republican Women Leaders'
Forum; the California Federation of Republican Women's biennial conference;
the San Diego County Federation of Republican Women's 76th Annual Convention;
and the San Bernardino County Federation of Republican Women's Conference
in 2003. Carol also assists on a variety of free-lance projects, including
providing advice on the script for Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde,
and participates extensively in volunteer work for organizations as diverse
as Children’s Chain, the Junior League of Pasadena and Soldiers’ Angels.