Herbert Weston Scott Howell III is an American conservative political consultant, whose recent clients include Meg Whitman[1] and Rudy Giuliani.[2]
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Married in 1994 to Julie L. Feaster). They reside in the Dallas-Fort Worth area and have two children.
In a 2006 interview, Howell discussed his early career in some detail. Recruited by Lee Atwater to work for the RNC after his 1988 work for presidential candidate Bob Dole, Howell spent four years as a campaign operative before moving to Texas in 1992 to work for Karl Rove, then running a direct-mail firm. In 1993, Howell started his own political consulting firm, which has since grown into Scott Howell and Company.[3]
He has run successful United States Senate campaigns for Republicans such as:
Failed clients have included:
Recent or current clients (2010) include:
In 2002, Howell's client Saxby Chambliss defeated incumbent Senator Max Cleland.[4] Supporters of Cleland blamed a Chambliss TV ad featuring the likenesses of Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein, while criticizing Cleland's votes against homeland security measures.[5] The ad, which Cleland supporters claimed questioned the senator's patriotism,[6] was removed after protests from prominent politicians including Republicans like John McCain and Chuck Hagel.[7] Chambliss supporters claimed the ad didn't question Cleland's patriotism, but rather his judgment.[6][8] Although these ads are frequently mentioned as examples of work by Scott Howell, Howell has repeatedly denied that he produced this particular ad.[3][9]
In October 2006, Howell was revealed as the producer, with Terry Nelson, of the "Harold, Call Me" attack ad used against democratic Tennessee Senatorial candidate Rep. Harold Ford Jr. in which a white woman said that she had met Ford at a Playboy party. The ad concludes with the woman speaking to the camera and saying to Ford "Call me."[10]
Coverage of the controversy characterized Howell as a "protégé" of Karl Rove.[11]