James Rosebush

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PresidentRonald Reagan
First LadyNancy Reagan
Succeeded byLee L. Verstandig
James Rosebush
Rosebush in 2022
2nd Chief of Staff to the First Lady of the United States
In office
1981–1986
PresidentRonald Reagan
First LadyNancy Reagan
Preceded byEdith H. J. Dobelle
Succeeded byLee L. Verstandig
Personal details
Born
EducationBoston University
Principia College
Websitegrowthstrategy.us

James Rosebush is an American author and political aide who served simultaneously as a deputy assistant to U.S. President Ronald Reagan, Chief of Staff to the First Lady of the United States, Nancy Reagan, and Senior White House Advisor, making him the only White House office staff ever to hold all three positions at once. He is a public speaker on leadership, politics, philanthropy, and business.[1][2]

Rosebush is a native of Flint, Michigan. His mother, Jacqueline Rosebush, was a homemaker, and his father, Kenneth Rosebush, was a General Motors executive and Dale Carnegie instructor. At age 20 Rosebush was cited as an Outstanding Young Man in America and selected as a Rotary International Scholar, where he traveled to the Soviet Union to meet with high ranking government officials and tutor Russians in English. He later earned an MA degree in Public Affairs from Boston University, and a Bachelor of Arts in Business from Principia College.[3]

Reagan White House

Rosebush with Nancy Reagan and First Lady of South Korea Lee Soon-ja at the "First Ladies to fight drug abuse globally" conference in White House East Room in 1982
Rosebush (top left), Ronald Reagan, William Verity Jr., Jay Moorhead and Michael Deaver discussing Public-Private partnerships in the President’s private office in 1982

Entering the White House at age 32 in 1981, Rosebush served as the deputy assistant to Ronald Reagan, where he had daily one-on-one access to the President. He was also the President's point-person when it came to philanthropy and Public-private partnerships. During his tenure he managed the President's domestic policy program Private Sector Initiatives, he was appointed to become US Ambassador to UNESCO, and he negotiated with Russian officials for the historic bi-lateral meeting between Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev. He was also invited by the Austrian Government to tour Austria as a Goodwill ambassador.[4]

In addition to his role as advisor to the President, Rosebush simultaneously served as Chief of Staff to First Lady Reagan, making him the only White House staffer to ever hold both positions at the same time. In his latter role he managed Mrs. Reagan's official activities including press and media, scheduling, projects and policy, as well as overseeing the "Just Say No" drug campaign she spearheaded in 1982. Rosebush was the longest-serving Chief of Staff to Nancy Reagan. He left the White House in 1986.[5]

1986-Current

After leaving the White House, Rosebush founded the international advisory firm GrowthStrategy, Inc, which builds and grows corporate, family office, and philanthropic organizations. He also serves as an advisor to individual families on wealth management. In 2018 he launched Intersection Impact Fund, which centers on impact investing and philanthropy. He lectures around the world and is a frequent guest on news programs and podcasts.[6][7]

Books

Rosebush has written three books. Published in 1988, First Lady, Public Wife was the first book to explore the role of the First Lady as a demanding and rigorous job. Published in 2016 by Hachette Book Group, True Reagan: What Made Ronald Reagan Great and Why It Matters is a first-hand account of what made Reagan tick. In 2020, also by Hachette, Winning Your Audience: Deliver a Message with the Confidence of a President shows how to give President-caliber presentations.[8][9]

Advisory boards

Personal life

References

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