Rachel Hoff

Rachel Hoff

Contributor

Rachel Hoff is a young conservative activist based in Washington, D.C. She developed and implemented a strategy for national media outreach that has established the Young Republicans as the prominent voice of young conservatives, with YR leaders appearing on Fox News, CNN, MSNBC, NBC, and CBS totaling over $2 million of earned media coverage. <br /> <br /> During the 2006 and 2007 mid-term and off-year election cycles, Rachel served as National Field Director and Campaign Committee Chairman for the YRNF, coordinating a nationwide effort to elect and re-elect Republican candidates at all levels of government. She worked with state and local YR Chairs from every region in the country to execute the program that deployed hundreds of YR volunteers into targeted states for intensive campaign weekends. For her commitment to achieving excellence on behalf of the YRNF, Rachel was named 2006 Young Republican Woman of the Year. <br /> <br /> Professionally, Rachel serves as Director of External Affairs for the Foreign Policy Initiative in Washington, D.C. She previously worked at a think tank, on Capitol Hill, and for the National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC). For the 2008 election cycle, Rachel was Media Coordinator for the NRCC's Independent Expenditure unit, in which role she coordinated a $20 million program of TV, radio, and mail advertising in 35 Congressional districts around the country. On Capitol Hill, she served as a Legislative Assistant and Research Analyst for Congressman Mac Thornberry (R-Texas), focusing specifically on foreign affairs and national security issues. Prior to that, Rachel worked at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), doing research with several of AEI's prominent foreign policy experts on issues in the Middle East, democracy promotion, anti-terrorism strategies, and weapons nonproliferation. <br /> <br /> Rachel was born and raised on a U.S. military base near Tokyo, Japan. She has also lived abroad in England and Ireland. She holds a BA from Tufts University in Political Science and Philosophy and a Certificate in Irish Politics from the University College of Cork. In 2004, Rachel was awarded the Dan Dutko Fellowship for public policy, which brought her to Washington.