Then there’s Benjamin Ginsberg, the preeminent election lawyer in the country and McGahn’s mentor and Jones Day co-worker. Ginsberg, who made his name in 2000 arguing the Republican side in Bush v. Gore, started the election cycle working for Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker.
Shortly after McGahn started at Jones Day he picked up a new client: Aaron Schock, the congressman who was reeling from a scandal involving the misuse of federal funds and has since left office. To this day, according to FEC reports, Schock has still not paid Jones Day the nearly $750,000 he owes them.
Don McGahn, left, a top Washington election lawyer, was caught in the spotlight when Donald Trump pulled him up on stage for his New Hampshire primary night party on Feb. 9. (David Goldman/Associated Press) The night Donald Trump notched his first win as a presidential candidate, he took the stage in New Hampshire between Ivanka and Melania ...
His wife, Shannon McGahn, is staff director for the House Financial Services Committee, a role that makes her a magnet for the very lobbyists that Trump regularly pillories. As a possible convention fight looms, Trump has attempted to professionalize his campaign, hiring veteran lobbyist Paul Manafort, who wrangled Gerald Ford’s delegates in 1976.