Brittany Beaulieu brings her experience serving on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for Ranking member Ben Cardin (D-MD) over to Rasky Baerlein's Washington, D.C., office.
|
|
As VP, Beaulieu will provide strategic counsel to the firm’s multinational clients on the increasingly complex geopolitical environment.
Under Cardin, Beaulieu worked on the Ukraine Freedom Support Act and legislation to address international parental child abduction and global health. She also served on the foreign policy staff of Senate Finance Committee Chairman Senator Max Baucus, current U.S. Ambassador to China.
“Brittany’s deep understanding of global issues will have an immediate benefit for our clients and be invaluable to multinational companies seeking to navigate Washington,” Larry Rasky, chairman and CEO, said.
Rasky Baerlein is a nationally recognized PR and bipartisan government relations firm with more than two decades of experience. It comes in at #27 in O'Dwyer's ranking of PR firms with $14.1M in 2015 net fees.
The firm is headquartered in Boston.


The principles of liberty, self-government and individual rights are often discussed as matters of history. Last week in Odesa, Ukraine, I was reminded they are also very much matters of the present.
How risks and opportunities have evolved for communicators in the second Trump administration.
Too many executives view public affairs as a technical task. They think that if their policy is strong, their facts are correct, and their lawyers are ready, the outcome will naturally follow. That’s a dangerous misconception.
A majority of Americans (52 percent) say president Trump launched the invasion of Iran in part to distract voters from the Jeffrey Epstein sex scandal. Forty percent disagree, according to Drop Site/Zeteo/Data for Progress survey conducted March 6-8.




