Timothy
E. Wirth President, United Nations Foundation
and Better World Fund
Timothy Wirth is the President of the United
Nations Foundation and the Better World Fund.
Both organizations were founded in 1998 through
a major financial commitment from Ted Turner to
support and strengthen the work of the United
Nations.
Wirth began his political career as a White House
Fellow under President Lyndon Johnson and was
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Education in the
Nixon Administration. In 1970, Wirth returned
to his home state and ran successfully for the
U.S. House of Representatives in 1974. He represented
Denver suburbs in Congress from 1975-1987. As
a first term Congressman, Wirth organized the
“Freshman Revolt” in 1975, and with
colleagues Norman Mineta, Leon Panetta and Dick
Gephardt, he was part of “The Gang of Four”
challenging the budget process and developing
a high technology and alternative budget in 1982.
As Chair of the Communications Subcommittee, he
was the lead legislator in restructuring the cable
television and telephone industries. Wirth also
authored the Indian Peaks Wilderness Act of 1978.
Wirth was elected to the U.S. Senate in 1986 where
he focused on environmental issues, particularly
global climate change and population stabilization.
In 1988, he organized the historic Hansen hearings
on climate change. With his close friend, the
late Senator John Heinz (R-PA), he authored “Project
88”, outlining the groundbreaking “Cap
and Trade” idea which became law in the
Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990. He authored
the far-reaching Colorado Wilderness Bill which
became law in 1993, and with Senator Alan Simpson
(R-WY) he authored major legislation focused on
population stabilization. Wirth also organized
the Senate Task Force on the Expansion of Major
League Baseball, which became a major factor in
the awarding of a new expansion franchise to Denver.
He chose not to run for re-election in 1992, citing
in a front page cover story in the Sunday New
York Times Magazine (August 9, 1992), frustration
with the ever increasing role of money in politics
to the exclusion of focus on public policy.
Following these two decades of elected politics,
Wirth was national Co-chair of the Clinton-Gore
campaign, and served in the U.S. Department of
State as the first Undersecretary for Global Affairs
from 1993 to 1997. He helped organize U.S. foreign
policy in the areas of refugees, population, environment,
science, human rights and narcotics. He chaired
the United States Delegation at the 1994 Cairo
Conference on Population and Development, and
was the lead U.S. negotiator for the Kyoto Climate
Conference until he resigned from the Administration
in late 1997 to accept Ted Turner’s invitation
to be President of the newly created United Nations
Foundation.
As President of the UN Foundation (UNF) since
its inception in early 1998, Wirth has organized
and led the formulation of the Foundation’s
mission and program priorities, which include
the environment, women and population, children’s
health, and peace, security and human rights.
The Foundation also engages in extensive public
advocacy, fundraising, and institutional strengthening
efforts on behalf of the United Nations. By mobilizing
these diverse resources, the UN Foundation works
with many public and private partners and manages
a variety of campaigns to help solve major problems
facing the UN and the world community, including:
• Mobilizing resources in support of the
eradication of polio with Rotary International,
the Gates Foundation, and the World Bank;
• Initiating a global campaign to diminish
the impact of measles with the American Red Cross,
the Centers for Disease Control and UN Agencies;
• Stimulating a nationwide grassroots program
for the purchase of anti-malaria bed nets (“Nothing
But Nets”) with many partners (including
the World Health Organization and the National
Basketball Association);
• Organizing support for the special needs
of adolescent girls within the UN and many private
sector partners with Nike and lead UN Agencies;
• Supporting the United Nations Population
Fund, and working with Congress to increase U.S.
funding and bring greater focus to AIDS prevention;
• Developing standards for better managing
tourism’s impact on the environment and
contribution to climate change in close partnership
with UNESCO and with Expedia and other industry
leaders;
• Leading work to develop the UN framework
for the post-Kyoto climate negotiations through
a close partnership with the UN’s leadership
and retired heads of State throughout the world
(The Club of Madrid);
• Managing a public-private effort with
major segments of the agriculture community and
UN agencies for better understanding of the promise,
challenge and economics of bioenergy; and
• Advancing aggressive standards for energy
efficiency in the U.S. and abroad with the U.S.-centered
Energy Future Coalition.
Prior to entering politics, Wirth was in private
business in Colorado. The son of teachers, he
was a scholarship student and graduate of Harvard
College, served as a Harvard “Baby Dean”
after graduation, and received a Ph.D. from Stanford
University. The recipient of numerous awards and
honorary degrees, he also served as a member of
the Harvard Board of Overseers. He was recently
honored as a Champion of the Earth by the United
Nations Environment Programme. Wirth is married
to Wren Wirth, the President of the environmentally
oriented Winslow Foundation; they have two grown
children and four grandchildren.