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Dylan Loewe

Dylan Loewe is a former White House speechwriter and a #1 New York Times bestselling ghostwriter.

Dylan joined the Obama administration in 2012, serving as special assistant to President Obama and chief speechwriter to then-Vice President Joseph R. Biden. In 2013, the National Journal named him one of the administration’s top decision-makers.

In the years since, Dylan has advised presidents and prime ministers, presidential candidates and royalty, the CEOs of Fortune 50 companies, the leaders of global foundations, and some of the world’s most celebrated athletes and entertainers.

In 2018, Dylan collaborated with then-Senator Kamala Harris on her memoir, The Truths We Hold: An American Journey, and in 2019 was credited with writing her announcement speech for president of the United States. During the 2020 campaign, he added his words to her Democratic National Convention speech and assisted her and her team with vice presidential debate prep. In 2020, Politico described Dylan as a “useful expert” on what the Biden/Harris partnership could look like, as the only person at the time who had worked closely with both of them.

Dylan has collaborated with numerous authors on their book projects over the years, and has made The New York Times bestseller list on three occasions. He worked with Sir Elton John on his 2012 memoir, Love is The Cure, as well as with Secretary Pete Buttigieg on his book Trust: America’s Best Chance. In 2016, he worked with former Israeli president and prime minister Shimon Peres on his memoir, No Room for Small Dreams, which The New York Times described as “amounting to a kind of ideological will and testament.” His work has been praised as “vivid” and “evocative” by The New York Times, “genuine and heartfelt” by The Washington Post, and “remarkably well written” by the Financial Times.

Dylan has been a featured TV political commentator on CNN, CBS, Sky News, and the BBC, and has been published under his own byline in numerous outlets. He has taught the Art and Science of Effective Speechwriting at Stanford University and holds a J.D. from Columbia Law School, a master’s in public policy from Harvard University, and a bachelor’s in political science from UCLA.