Tom Donilon was in his third year at the University of Virginia School of Law when he sat down for lunch with a friend in Washington, D.C.
By this point – spring of 1985 – Donilon’s résumé already included a degree from Catholic University and work in the Jimmy Carter White House. He had plans to begin a political consulting firm following his time at UVA Law.
While such a proposed future seemed rewarding, Donilon’s lunch mate offered an alternative.
“Why would you do that?” Warren Christopher asked. “You could come work at my law firm.”
Christopher, deputy secretary of state under Carter, was plenty familiar with Donilon – and Donilon considered Christopher a mentor. Trust on both sides led Donilon to soon joining Christopher’s prestigious O’Melveny & Myers firm.
Donilon, who went on to serve in the Clinton (as chief of staff of the U.S. State Department) and Obama (as national security adviser) administrations, told this story to a class of UVA students on Jan. 3, the first day of a January term leadership course called “President Biden’s First Year.”