Jay Byrne

Jay Byrne (born 1962) is an American writer, former senior government official and entrepreneur. Byrne is president and founder of v-Fluence Interactive, an online market research and software development firm. He is a frequent public speaker on the use of the Internet and has published several articles on new media and communications. He is a contributing author to “Let Them Eat Precaution” published by the American Enterprise Institute.

Career

As former political campaign operative Byrne is credited with executing a range of aggressive communications tactics, including the 1992 presidential campaign’s Chicken George (politics) attack on George H. W. Bush.[1] Byrne was Deputy Assistant Administrator for Legislative and Public Affairs at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) in the Clinton Administration from 1993 to 1997.[2] During this time he also served as a White House spokesperson for numerous presidential and administration foreign policy initiatives including the 1994 G7 Jobs Summit and the Greater Horn of Africa Famine Initiative.[3] Prior to joining USAID Byrne held communication positions on the Clinton-Gore presidential campaign, for Boston Mayor Raymond Flynn and for Congressman Joseph Patrick Kennedy II (D-MA). After serving in the Clinton Administration, Byrne headed up corporate communications for Monsanto Company from 1997 to 2001.[4] Born in Boston, Massachusetts) Byrne attended St. John's Preparatory School and graduated from Tufts University.

Books

  • Byrne, Jay; et al. (2005). Let Them Eat Precaution: How Politics Is Undermining The Genetic Revolution in Agriculture. AEI Press. ISBN 0-8447-4200-7.

Other publications

  • Byrne, Jay (2007). Blogs & Beyond: A guide to understanding and engaging consumer-generated media outlets. Association of Cable Communicators: ACC Briefs.
  • Byrne, Jay (2007). New Search Trends Affect Online PR & Marketing Efforts. O'Dwyers: Public Relations Report.
  • Byrne, Jay (2003). Attack of the Killer Labels. Public Relations Society Press: PR Reporter Magazine.
  • Byrne, Jay (1999). When You're Serious About Culture Change. Ragan Press: Journal of Employee Communications.
  • Byrne, Jay (1999). Empowering People, Improving Profits and Breaking Barriers. Phillips Publishing: PR News Journal.
  • Byrne, Jay (1999). How Internal Communications Transforms a Culture. Ragan Press: Journal of Communications Management.
gollark: Not everyone likes computer games, but there are for most people likely to be better ways to have fun than lotteries.
gollark: Well, I pick good ones.
gollark: Generally more.
gollark: Meanwhile, I can obtain a "computer game" on sale for £8ish which will plausibly be entertaining for at least 10 hours.
gollark: Lottery tickets cost £2ish. You might feel happy about some probability-related delusion for... let's be nice and say 30 minutes, which makes it £4/hour of happiness.

References

  1. Why the Chickens Have Come Home To Roost This Campaign Season, by Reid Epstein, Wall Street Journal, September 17, 2014.
  2. Foreign Aid's Impact Is Felt Close to Home, by Marc lacey, Los Angeles Times, October 23, 1995.
  3. President Clinton's Greater Horn of Africa Initiative Archived March 12, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  4. Debate Between Monsanto and Jeremy Rifkin, Democracy Now Radio, February 22, 1999.
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