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・ Paul Billings
・ Paul Bilokapic
・ Paul Bilzerian
・ Paul Binder
・ Paul Bindrim
・ Paul Bins, comte de Saint-Victor
・ Paul Biondi
・ Paul Biran
・ Paul Birch
・ Paul Birch (actor)
・ Paul Birch (basketball)
・ Paul Birch (footballer)
・ Paul Birch (footballer, born 1968)
・ Paul Beeson
・ Paul Beeston
Paul Begala
・ Paul Begaud
・ Paul Begley
・ Paul Begley (pastor)
・ Paul Behncke
・ Paul Behr
・ Paul Behrens
・ Paul Beier
・ Paul Beirne
・ Paul Bekker
・ Paul Belasik
・ Paul Beliën
・ Paul Belk
・ Paul Bell
・ Paul Bell (baseball)


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Paul Begala : ウィキペディア英語版
Paul Begala

Paul Edward Begala (born May 12, 1961) is an American political consultant and political commentator. He was an adviser to President Bill Clinton. Begala was a chief strategist for the 1992 Clinton–Gore campaign, which carried 33 states and made Clinton the first Democrat to win the White House in twelve years. As counselor to the President in the Clinton White House, he coordinated policy, politics, and communications.
Along with James Carville, Begala gained national prominence as the political consulting team Carville and Begala. Until June 2005, Begala was a co-host of CNN's political debate program ''Crossfire''. He is an Affiliated Professor of Public Policy at Georgetown University's McCourt School of Public Policy. Currently, he is teaching at the University of Georgia School of Law as a Sanders Political Leadership Scholar.
== Early life and education ==
He was born in New Jersey to an Irish American mother, Margaret "Peggy" (née Cass), and a Hungarian American father, David Begala. He was raised in Missouri City, Texas, where his father was an oil-field equipment salesman.〔()〕 In 1979, Begala graduated from Dulles High School in Sugar Land, Texas.
He earned both his Bachelor of Arts and Juris Doctor from the University of Texas at Austin, where he taught briefly. While at the University of Texas, Begala was a candidate for student government president. However, he finished second to a write-in campaign for Hank the Hallucination, a character from the campus comic strip ''Eyebeam''. Following his loss, Begala wrote a tongue-in-cheek complaint for the ''Daily Texan'', arguing "I cannot help but feel Hank's platform is illusory at best...I must say that the candidate himself lacks substance". Begala was declared the human winner, following a ruling that imaginary characters could not hold the position.〔(SG helps foster future leaders ), ''The Daily Texan'', April 19, 2004; accessed February 5, 2008.〕

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