Larry Kudlow was chosen by Donald Trump to be the President's new top economic aide. Photo / AP
President Donald Trump has chosen Larry Kudlow to be his top economic aide, elevating the influence of a longtime fixture on the CNBC business news network who previously served in the Reagan Administration and has emerged as a leading evangelist for tax cuts and a smaller government.
Kudlow told The Associated Press on Wednesday that he has accepted the offer, saying the US economy is poised to take off after Trump signed US$1.5 trillion ($2t) worth of tax cuts into law.
"The economy is starting to roar and we're going to get more of that," he said.
But Kudlow's career has been an eventful one to say the least.
The television personality was thrust into the spotlight in 1994 after he admitted to having a long battle with alcohol and cocaine addiction.
Kudlow will join an Administration in the middle of a tumultuous remodelling as a wave of White House staffers and top officials have departed in recent weeks.
Trump on Tuesday dumped his secretary of state, former Exxon Mobil CEO Rex Tillerson.
The famously pinstripe-suited Kudlow would succeed Gary Cohn, a former Goldman Sachs executive who is leaving the post in a dispute over Trump's decision to impose tariffs on imported steel and aluminum.
With Trump's tax cuts already being implemented, Kudlow would be advising a president who appears increasingly determined to tax foreign imports — a policy Kudlow personally opposes. Kudlow said he is "in accord" with Trump's agenda and his team at the White House would help implement the policies set by the president.
Trump has promised to reduce the trade imbalance with China and rewrite the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico. Kudlow declined to say what advice he would give the President on trade issues, saying instead that Trump is "a very good negotiator."
Kudlow, 70, has informally advised the Trump Administration in the past and he has spoken with the President "at some length in recent days," so he is ready "to hit the ground running".
Kudlow told CNBC that he will be going to Washington tomorrow to meet with Trump. White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders said the Administration was preparing for an orderly transition and "will keep everyone posted" on when Kudlow officially assumes the job.
Friends and colleagues said Kudlow possessed two critical attributes prized by the President: He was a bluntly spoken debater and resolutely loyal.
"He's a very sensitive man and a very logical man, which is exactly what Trump needs," said Arthur Laffer, a well-known economist and longtime friend of Kudlow.
The two men and their wives used to celebrate New Year's Eve together outside San Diego, where Laffer lived at the time. In the Reagan Administration, Kudlow worked in the White House budget office and Laffer served on an economic policy advisory board.
Both built their economic visions around the notion that tax cuts are critical for maximising economic growth, a principle at the heart of the US$1.5t tax reduction Trump signed into law late last year.
In 1987, Kudlow moved to Wall Street and, though he never completed a master's program in economics and policy at Princeton University, served as chief economist at Bear Stearns. He left that position in the early 1990s to treat an addiction to alcohol and drugs, after which he worked at Laffer's research and consulting firm.
Kudlow soon settled comfortably into the world of political and economic punditry, working at the conservative National Review magazine and ultimately becoming a host of CNBC shows beginning in 2001.
He has remained a contributor to CNBC and a colleague and friend for many at the network. Indeed, among the first to report on Kudlow's possible move to the White House was Jim Cramer, the stockmarket guru and his former co-host on "Kudlow & Cramer".
It was on CNBC that Kudlow gained a high-profile platform for explaining, defending and — at times — faulting Trump's economic agenda.
Kudlow channeled his push for lower taxes into a 2016 book he co-wrote, in which he argued that President John F. Kennedy's tax cuts had boosted economic growth. The book, JFK and the Reagan Revolution, asserted that Reagan's 1980s tax cuts followed the same template.
When Trump's own tax cuts ran into resistance over the higher budget deficits that would result, Kudlow downplayed the risks of debt. He argued on CNBC that Reagan ran even higher deficits to finance tax cuts and military spending — a formula that Kudlow contends helped accelerate growth.
Kudlow has, at times, been overly optimistic — if not outright mistaken — about what Republican administrations can achieve for the economy. He declared in a December 2007 column for National Review that George W. Bush's presidency was ushering in a new golden era.
"There's no recession coming," Kudlow wrote. "It's not going to happen."
Economists later concluded that the Great Recession and the financial meltdown it triggered began the month that column was published.
Laffer described Kudlow as someone who would be inclined to offer "unvarnished" advice to the president on the appropriate path for economic policy.
"And if by chance, he doesn't convince the president of something, he will be a loyal employee," Laffer said. "He stays loyal even if the decision goes against him."
Kudlow has shown himself willing to embrace personal transformations. He converted from Judaism to Catholicism, according to a 2000 interview with the religious magazine Crisis.
After graduating as a history major from the University of Rochester in 1969, he worked on Democratic campaigns in New York. But he evolved into a committed Republican who considered entering the 2016 race to challenge Senator Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticut Democrat.
Jared Bernstein, who was an economic adviser to Vice President Joe Biden during Barack Obama's presidency, said he's been debating Kudlow from the opposite side of the ideological fence for decades and still likes him.
Bernstein said he has never managed to convince Kudlow that that tax cuts that he has zealously championed have failed to deliver the promised growth, a view shared by many academic economists. But Kudlow understands trade, the Federal Reserve, employment, inflation and the financial markets, Bernstein said.
"And, at least on those issues, he listens," said Bernstein, a senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a liberal think tank.
For a President who pays close attention to image and wants advisers who look every inch the part, Kudlow seems to fit the role of high-powered presidential aide. Customarily attired in narrow-lapelled suits, Kudlow has relied on the same Savile Row-trained, New York-based tailor, Leonard Logsdail, for 26 years.
Logsdail said Kudlow still wears some of the first suits he made for him.