Background
Darling grew up in Andover, Massachusetts and attended the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where he launched a conservative student publication, The Minuteman, with fellow student Tony Rudy.
author politics chief Republican Senator
Darling grew up in Andover, Massachusetts and attended the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where he launched a conservative student publication, The Minuteman, with fellow student Tony Rudy.
University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Darling has been involved in United States. politics since the early 1990s, in roles as a congressional aide, lobbyist and legal counsel Darling came to national media attention when he resigned as legal counsel to Republican Senator Mel Martinez of Florida after admitting he was the author of the ""
Darling received his Juris Doctor from the New England School of Law. Darling joined the United States. Congress as an aide to Idaho Senator Steve Symms in 1992.
The following year, Darling worked for Georgia Senator Paul Coverdell.
Darling became General Counsel to New Hampshire Senator Bob Smith in 1999. In January 2000, he and Senator Smith visited Cuban refugee Elián González before proposing legislation to grant González permanent residency.
He was a chief strategist for Senate legislation permitting airline pilots to carry handguns on the job. In 2005, Darling became a legal counsel to Florida Senator Mel Martinez.
He resigned from the position in May of that year following a controversy involving a strategy memo he had written based on the Terri Schiavo case.
Later that year, Darling became director of United States Senate relations for The Heritage Foundation, where he is responsible for educating Senators and their staff about Heritage"s latest research and policy recommendations. Darling began writing a regular column for Human Events in 2008. He is also a contributor to the web sites RedState.com and BigGovernment.com.
Senator Martinez, who claimed not to have read the memo, had inadvertently passed it to Iowa Senator Tom Harkin, a Democratic supporter of the legislation to keep Schiavo alive.
National media outlets began reporting the existence of the memo shortly thereafter on March 18, 2005. On April 6, 2005, Darling admitted to writing the memo and resigned his position as legal counsel to Martinez.
The was a talking points memorandum on behalf of the Republican party, which described the ongoing Terri Schiavo case as "a great political issue" that could appeal to the party"s base.
He was also a member of the Bush-Cheney recount team in Florida during the 2000 presidential election controversy and co-chairman of the Conservative Working Group, a weekly legislative strategy meeting of staffers from House and Senate offices.