 |  |
 |
 National Counsel to the Bush-Cheney Presidential Campaign
While attending the University of Pennsylvania, Ginsberg worked as a reporter,
contributing editor and editor in chief for the campus newspaper. After graduating in
1974, he spent five years as a reporter for the Boston Globe, Philadelphia Bulletin and
other papers before attending law school at Georgetown University. He devoted eight
years to the Republican national, senatorial and congressional committees until he took a
position at lobbying and law firm Patton Boggs in 1993.
 After the 2000 election, Ginsberg shifted his focus to congressional redistricting. He resumed his role as counsel to the Bush-Cheney presidential campaign in 2004, but
resigned as chief counsel after reports that he concurrently gave legal advice to the Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, which John Kerry's camp branded as a smear campaign. While the situation raised ethical questions, Ginsberg did not break any laws. He still practices
at Patton-Boggs, representing clients on Capitol Hill.
|  |
 |
 |
|
 |
|