Name: Dan McLaughlin
Class Year: 1993
Title: Senior Writer
Organization Name: National Review
1. In one sentence, what does your job entail?
I write arguments, analyses, and commentary on matters of politics, law, history, and culture for the nation’s flagship conservative publication.
2. What planned and unplanned events connected you to your industry and your first employer after Holy Cross? How did you learn/decide it was a good fit for you?
I went straight to law school after doing a semester in DC, meeting Clarence Thomas ’71, and seeing how many lawyers were in politics. I ended up staying in legal practice for 23 years, partly because of law school debts and starting a family, and partly because the work was interesting. I started writing on the internet in 2000, doing a weekly baseball column for a website run by Bill Simmons ’92, who had been the Crusader’s chief sports columnist. After my law office in the World Trade Center was destroyed on 9/11, I got back into political writing. Eventually, I wound up bringing my writing to National Review in 2016, and left the law to take a full-time position as a writer in 2020.
3. What were you involved in when you were on campus?
I was a weekly op-ed columnist for the Crusader (now the Spire), writing largely about politics. I also did work-study in Kimball, intramural softball, and competed against other schools in debate and quiz bowl.
4. What was your major and how did it affect your career decisions?
History. It was good preparation for law school, and I’ve returned to a lot of historical writing in my work. I’ve written a good deal about Woodrow Wilson, whose intervention in the Russian Revolution was the subject of my senior thesis.
5. What are one or two skills that you developed at Holy Cross that you use in your work?
The discipline of a weekly column with a deadline, no assigned topic, and really nobody I answered to but myself if I didn’t write something on time was great preparation for what I do now. So was taking Constitutional Law and learning to read judicial opinions and think about how the Constitution works.
6. What advice do you have for students on campus today?
One, get to know a lot of people on campus. You’ll discover at your reunions how many cool and interesting people you wish you’d gotten to know better. And you never know where people will go: it was mutual friends putting me in touch with Bill Simmons that launched my writing career. I also met my wife at HC. Two, don’t be afraid to stand for something even if it’s out of fashion. People didn’t always agree with my columns in the Crusader, and they don’t always agree with them now, but I’ve always had an audience that appreciated where I stood and how I defended my positions.