Ann M. O'Leary is an American political advisor, attorney, and nonprofit leader, currently serving as Chief of Staff to California GovernorGavin Newsom. Earlier in her career, she served as a senior policy advisor in the Clinton Administration and as legislative director to Senator Hillary Clinton. Following her federal government service, she helped establish multiple non-profit organizations promoting progressive policy related to income inequality, healthcare, education, and workforce development. She served as a senior policy advisor to Hillary Clinton's 2016 Presidential Campaign and as co-executive director of the Clinton-Kaine Transition Project. After the 2016 Presidential election, O'Leary became a partner at the Palo Alto office of Boies, Schiller, & Flexner, where her practice focused on strategic consulting and crisis management. Following the swearing-in of California Governor Gavin Newsom in January, 2019, O'Leary was appointed Chief of Staff to the Governor.
Following her service in the U.S. Senate, O'Leary attended and graduated from the University of California, Berkeley School of Law in 2005. She clerked for Judge John T. Noonan, Jr. of the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. Following her judicial clerkship, O'Leary served as a deputy city attorney for the City of San Francisco, where she provided counsel to city agencies and served on the City Attorney's Affirmative Litigation Task Force. As a deputy city attorney, she helped develop the strategy to combat predatory lending practices by payday lenders, which resulted in a $7.5 million settlement for low-income victims.
Policy Leadership
In 2008, O'Leary was appointed as a Lecturer and the founding Executive Director of the Center on Health, Economic & Family Security at the University of California, BerkeleySchool of Law. From 2008 to 2015, she also served as a Senior Fellow with the Center for American Progress. She published work regarding a variety of policy issues, including the international competitiveness of the American workforce. After President Barack Obama was elected, O'Leary advised his transition team on early childhood education. In 2011, O'Leary was appointed as a Senior Vice President at Next Generation, a non-profit organization promoting progressive policy to address economic inequality and climate change. O'Leary was recognized for her policy leadership in 2015 as one of Politico's Top 50 Thinkers, Doers, and Visionaries Transforming American Politics.
During the 2016 Presidential Campaign, O'Leary served as one of three senior policy advisors to Hillary Clinton, focusing on developing policy related to health, education, labor, and economic security. For her role in the campaign, O'Leary was named to the Politico Top 50 list for a second consecutive year. In August 2016, O'Leary was appointed as co-executive director of Clinton's transition team in Washington, D.C,
Post-2016
After the 2016 election, O'Leary joined the Palo Alto office of an international law firm as a partner, where her practice focused on strategic consulting and crisis management. She has advised multiple high-profile organizations, including the Silicon Valley Community Foundation as it investigated and navigated allegations of a toxic work environment. A team of lawyers led by O'Leary published a report that found "many allegations from current and former employees were substantiated," and made recommendations for reform that were adopted by the Foundation's board in full. O'Leary also represented numerous clients on a pro bono basis, including law professors in defending California's Sanctuary City laws, the National Women's Law Center in combating workplace sexual harassment, and Mark Barnes and Leana Wen in providing a public health perspective to a case involving Connecticut's response to the threat of an Ebola outbreak. In November 2018, Governor-elect Gavin Newsom announced that O'Leary would serve as the leader of his transition team and as Chief of Staff in his administration.
Personal life
In 2002, O'Leary married Goodwin Liu, now a justice on the California Supreme Court. They have two children. On August 30, 2016, O'Leary and Liu announced in a joint statement that they were separating.