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Michael Duffy

Michael Duffy

Assistant Managing Editor

Michael Duffy, assistant managing editor for TIME, has been at the center of the magazine’s political coverage for the past 20 years. He has written or co-written more than 40 TIME cover stories, including, most recently, reports on what a U.S. pull-out from Iraq would look like and an examination the U.S.’s relations with Iran.

Duffy was named assistant managing editor of TIME in 2005 and joined the staff in 1985 as a Pentagon correspondent. He served as TIME’s Washington bureau chief from 1997 to 2005 and, before that, served as TIME’s national political correspondent. From 1986 to 1996, he covered Congress and both the Bush and Clinton administrations.

Duffy is the co-author, with TIME editor-at-large Nancy Gibbs, of the The Preacher and the Presidents: Billy Graham in the White House (Center Street, 2007), an account of Billy Graham’s unique and complex relationship with 11 American presidents. He is also the co-author of Marching in Place: the Status Quo Presidency of George Bush (Simon & Schuster, 1992).

Duffy is a two-time recipient of the Gerald R. Ford award for distinguished reporting: once in 1994 for his coverage of the presidency, and again in 2004 for his reporting on national defense. In 1997, he worked nearly full-time on campaign finance scandals with TIME’s Michael Weisskopf and Viveca Novak. The trio earned the 1998 Goldsmith Award for investigative reporting from the Joan Shorenstein Center at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government.

A native of Columbus, Ohio, Duffy graduated from Oberlin College in 1980 and lives in Chevy Chase, Md., with his wife and their three sons.