What We Do
As the largest speaker’s forums in Southern California, we deliver a robust slate of nonpartisan programming on international, national, and regional affairs. We provide informed learning on the most timely and compelling issues through livestream, in-person, and hybrid programming. Our programs are balanced, nonpartisan, and provide our audience the opportunity to engage with respected leaders and subject experts in the fields of government, business, science, and many more.
Our articles of incorporation define us as a 501(c)3 civic education organization that cannot advocate for an individual, issue, or any policy. As a non-partisan organization, the Council does not endorse any point of view or take any institutional stand on issues of public debate.
Our Mission
The mission of the Los Angeles World Affairs Council (LAWAC) is to educate our members and the public on the most important international, national, and regional issues through engaged nonpartisan conversation.
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Founding And History of the Los Angeles World Affairs Council
In September of 2019, two of Los Angeles' most iconic speakers’ organizations — the Los Angeles World Affairs Council and Town Hall Los Angeles — merged to form the Los Angeles World Affairs Council & Town Hall. With a combined 150 years of shared experience on debate and public discussion, and combined speakers spanning over 250+ international heads of state and eight U.S. Presidents, the merger was a re-commitment to lively, topical forums designed for public attendance and participation.
Prominent Speakers Throughout the Years
Over the last eight decades, the Los Angeles World Affairs Council & Town Hall has hosted an impressive feat of speakers. Legacy programs of that live on in our organization’s collective memory include:
- U.S. President Harry Truman (1944)
- Civil Rights Leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (1965)
- Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall (1966)
- U.S. President Ronald Reagan (1967)
- Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir (1969)
- Senator Edward M. Kennedy (1974)
- His Royal Highness Charles, the Prince of Wales (1977)
- The Dalai Lama(1979, 1984)
- Los Angeles Mayor Thomas Bradley (1982)
- Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel (1993)
- King Hussein of Jordan(1959, 1995)
- British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher(1991)
- Prime Minister of Pakistan Benazir Bhutto (1991)
- U.S. President George W. Bush (2001)
- British Prime Minister Tony Blair (2006)
- Colonel Buzz Aldrin (2009 and 2013)
- Tesla and SpaceX Founder Elon Musk (2013)
- Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor (2014)
- U.S. President Bill Clinton (1992, 2014)
- U.S. Senator John McCain (2014)
- Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe (2015)
- United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon (2016)
The Los Angeles World Affairs Council’s Founding
The Los Angeles World Affairs Council was founded at a meeting on September 8th 1953 in Room 3 of the California Club in downtown Los Angeles. The idea of the four founders – Paul Hoffman, Preston Hotchkis, John McCone and Louise F. Pellissier, was to present speakers to help Americans better understand the outside world, and the role the US could play in the world. It was part of a loosely affiliated movement nation-wide to form World Affairs Councils to counter the rise of isolationist tendencies that occurred after both World Wars when many Americans were inclined to turn their backs on what some saw as the problems of others.
The founders of the Council had broadly outward-looking views, seeing both opportunities and threats around the world as US corporations looked for export markets at the same time as the Cold War set in. Paul Hoffman, who had been head of the Marshall Plan for Europe and president of the Ford Foundation, summed up the Council’s vision at the first meeting. According to the minutes: “Mr. Hoffman outlined briefly the necessity at the present time that adequate information be brought to the American public so that intelligent decisions regarding United States foreign policy should be made…”
At that first meeting, the directors voted to expand the board to 35 members, and decided to invite Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and Vice President Richard Nixon as some of their first speakers.
Read more on Town Hall Los Angeles' Founding
Town Hall Los Angeles was founded in 1937 by the Los Angeles business community, committed to presenting issues that affect the daily lives of Angelenos and provide a platform for the discussion of solutions from a nonpartisan viewpoint. Town Hall Los Angeles’ archive of nearly 5000 speakers boasts a rich depth of conversation about the economy, infrastructure, education, and more.