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Institutional
Affiliations
Citizens
for America: Co-Founder and President (5)
American
Enterprise Institute: Board
of Trustees (2)
Morgan
Library: Board
of Trustees (2)
Manhattan
Institute:
Board of Trustees (2)
Heritage
Foundation:
Board of Trustees (2)
Lincoln
and Soldiers Institute at Gettysburg College:
Co-Founder (3)
Yale
University Council:
Chairman, Committee on Humanities (2)
Conservative
Network (5)
Council
for National Policy (6)
Democratic
International: Organizer
of insurgent leaders in Angola, 1985 (7)
Republican
and Conservative Party:
Candidate for New York Governor, 1982 (1)
Corporate
Connections/Business Interests
L.E.
Lehrman & Co.: Chairman (1)
Gerson
Lehrman Group: Board of Directors (2)
Ten
Squared Investment Fund: Founder (1)
Lehrman,
Bell, Mueller, & Cannon (financial forecasting firm) (3)
Morgan
Stanley Asset Management (Morgan Stanley & Co.): Managing
Director and CEO, 1988-?; Senior Adviser and Director, 1987-1988
(1)
Arbusto
Energy (George W. Bush’s Texas oil business): Partner,
1979 (4)
Rite
Aid: President, 1968-1977 (1)
Education
Yale
University: B.A. (1)
Harvard
University: M.A., Woodrow Wilson Fellow (1)
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Highlights
& Quotes
Lehrman is
a former drugstore executive turned conservative economic theorist
turned Heritage Foundation big wig. He helped found Citizens for
America, which was formed in 1983 by various conservative heavy
hitters such as Holly Coors (the wife of Joseph Coors) to promote
conservative causes. According to GroupWatch, CFA “worked
closely with Oliver North in North's Contra supply efforts,”
organizing briefings by Contra speakers that targeted congressional
offices and encouraged congressional members to vote Contra aid.
CFA was also the principal U.S. sponsor for a 1985 meeting of anticommunist
‘freedom fighters’ held in Angola. This conference produced
at least three memoranda -- one from speechwriter Dana Rohrabacher
to White House communications director Patrick Buchanan, one from
Buchanan to National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane, and one
from National Security Council staffer Walter Raymond to McFarlane.
The memos discussed whether the president should send a personal
message to the Angola meeting via Lehrman and whether Rohrabacher
should attend the meeting. The conference was considered instrumental
in pressuring the Reagan administration to authorize a $15 million
aid package for UNITA in 1986. The conference also exerted pressure
on the U.S. Congress and public to support the Nicaraguan Contras
and the guerrillas in Afghanistan.” (5)
Lehrman has
long advocated the return to the gold standard, a position that
may have cost him a chance to serve in the Reagan administration,
which considered him as a candidate for treasury secretary. (8)
He authored
the 1993 book Real Money: The Case of the Gold Standard,
and has published articles in Harper’s, the Washington
Post, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal,
National Review, and Policy Review. (1)
He served in
the U.S. Army. (1)
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