San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Former labor secretary had long tenure during Reagan era

- By Clay Risen

Ann McLaughlin Korologos, who served as secretary of labor from 1987 to 1989, becoming only the second woman to hold the post, died Jan. 30 in Salt Lake City. She was 81.

Her stepson, Philip Korologos, said the cause of her death, in a hospital, was complicati­ons of meningitis.

Korologos’ time at the Labor Department was brief, just 14 months, but it came at the end of a long tenure within the Ronald Reagan administra­tion. Known as Ann Dore McLaughlin at the time, she had joined the Treasury Department as a spokespers­on in 1981 and spent three years as deputy secretary of the interior before her nomination to run the department in 1987.

Although her name was not widely known outside

Washington, she was well regarded among political insiders from both parties, and her Senate confirmati­on went smoothly. Sen. Edward Kennedy, DMass., who was chair of the Senate Labor and Human Resources Committee, praised her “strong record of public service.” She won confirmati­on by a vote of 94-0.

Her elevation to the Cabinet was seen as the work of Howard H. Baker Jr., a former Republican senator from Tennessee who had been brought into the White House as chief of staff in early 1987 and who wielded significan­t influence over Cabinet nomination­s. Unlike the more ideologica­l conservati­ves who dominated the administra­tion early on, Baker was a pragmatic insider, and he chose Korologos because she fit the same mold.

Since the Labor Department

was founded in 1913, only one other woman had held its top position: Frances Perkins, who served under President Franklin D. Roosevelt from 1933 to 1945. Several women followed after Korologos, though, including her immediate successor, Elizabeth Dole. Dole’s appointmen­t was the first time in U.S. history that one woman had replaced another from the same party in the same Cabinet position.

For all the bipartisan praise, Korologos was a loyal if not doctrinair­e Reaganite, following the legacy of her predecesso­r, Bill Brock, another moderate former senator from Tennessee. She fought against union-backed bills to increase the minimum wage and mandate unpaid maternity leave. But she also supported affirmativ­e action, describing it as a “business necessity,” and called for immigratio­n reform to increase the labor supply.

And she was unafraid to take on one of Washington’s most pugnacious conservati­ve commentato­rs, John McLaughlin — her husband at the time.

In 1988, he invited her on his PBS program, “One on One,” joking beforehand: “We made a deal. She does ‘One on One,’ and I have to host a Cabinet spouse tea.”

Ann Marie Lauenstein was born Nov. 16, 1941, in Newark, New Jersey, the daughter of Edward Lauenstein, who managed sales for defense contractor­s, and Marie (Koellhoffe­r) Lauenstein, a homemaker.

After graduating with a degree in English from Marymount College (later a part of Fordham University) in Tarrytown, New York, in 1963, she worked in public relations in Manhattan

for several years, married William Dore in 1965 and later returned to Marymount to run the college’s office of alumnae relations.

It was there, in 1968, that she met McLaughlin, who was a Jesuit priest at the time and had come to campus to speak. By then she had divorced Dore, and she and McLaughlin struck up a friendship.

Two years later, he hired her to run his unsuccessf­ul U.S. Senate campaign in Rhode Island, and in 1972 they both joined the campaign to reelect President Richard M. Nixon, he as a speechwrit­er and she as a spokespers­on. After Nixon’s victory, she joined the administra­tion as the director of press relations for the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

Nixon’s resignatio­n drove her back out of government, this time to the chemical company Union Carbide, where she worked as the assistant director of government relations.

Her friendship with McLaughlin eventually turned romantic; he left the priesthood, and they married in 1975. Two years later they opened a public relations company, McLaughlin & Co., with her as president.

While McLaughlin pursued a career in conservati­ve media, his wife reentered government after Reagan’s election in 1980. They divorced in 1992; he died in 2016.

In 2000 she married Tom Korologos, who served as U.S. ambassador to Belgium from 2004 to 2007. He survives her. Along with her stepson, she is also survived by her stepdaught­ers, Paula Cale Lisbe and Ann Bazzarone; eight grandchild­ren; and one great-grandson.

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