Hannaford cast his first presidential vote in 1956 for DemocratAdlai Stevenson II, of Illinois, whose rhetoric and English diction greatly impressed him. Two years later, Hannaford re-registered as a Republican, but 1958 was one of the worst years in history for the GOP in California and nationally as well. The party lost one of its two U.S. Senate seats and the governorship, when Governor Goodwin J. Knight and Senator William F. Knowland tried to switch offices. In 1960, Hannaford volunteered to work on the Republican phone bank to get out the vote for presidential nominee Richard M. Nixon, whom he had voted against as vice president four years earlier. In 1964, Hannaford supported Barry Goldwater over the Governor Nelson Rockefeller in the showdown California presidential primary. In the 1966 Republican gubernatorial primary, Hannaford supported not Goldwater's heir apparent, Reagan, but Moderate Republican former San Francisco MayorGeorge Christopher, the last Republican thus far to have held that particular office since January 1964. Hannaford quickly switched to Reagan in the general election against Governor Edmund G. Brown, Sr., and thereafter stood with the conservativefaction of the party. In 1972, midway in Reagan's second term as governor, Hannaford was a candidate for California's 7th congressional district seat. In the primary election, he won the Republican nomination with 39 percent of the vote against four opponents, the strongest of whom was Craig Bull. Hannaford was then defeated 60 to 38 percent in the general election by the Democrat Ron Dellums, a liberalAfrican American, who won his second term and was subsequently the mayor of Oakland. In defeat, Hannaford still ran ten thousand votes in his district ahead of Republican presidential nominee Richard Nixon, who otherwise carried forty-nine states that year against the Democrat George McGovern. During the Reagan gubernatorial administration, Hannaford was an administrative aide and director of public affairs, in which capacity he supervised the gubernatorial press office. From 1972 to 1973, he was the chairman of the California Governor's Consumer Fraud Task Force. Hannaford assisted Reagan in the unsuccessful 1976 presidential campaign as the director of issues and research. In Reagan's successful 1980 campaign, Hannaford was the senior communications adviser. From 1981 to 1992, Hannaford was a member of the public relations advisory committee of the United States Information Agency. From 1981 to 1989, he was a trustee of the White House Preservation Fund. He served on the advisory committee of Mount Vernon, the Virginia estate of George Washington, from 1986-91. For a time he was in business with another Reagan aide, Michael Deaver, in the public relations firm Deaver and Hannaford. He move the business from California to Washington, D.C. in 1984. Hannaford served as a member of the foreign policy interest group, the Committee on the Present Danger In 2004, Hannaford saw a "parallel" between the national security threat posed by the former Soviet Union and the danger from terrorism. CPD conveys through its lobbying and media activities the message that the war on terror must be won. He also served as a director of Citizens for the Republic, a political action committee founded by Reagan in 1977, operated by Lyn Nofziger, disbanded after the 1980 campaign, and revived in 2009 in Alexandria, Virginia by Craig Shirley, the author of two books on Reagan's presidential campaigns.
Publications
Hannaford's books, which focus on U.S. presidents and the media, include:
The Essential George Washington: Two Hundred Years of Observations on the Man, the Myth, the Patriot
My Heart Goes Home: A Hudson Valley Memoir by Thomas Sweet Lossing, editor
The Quotable Calvin Coolidge: Sensible Words for a New Century
The Quotable Ronald Reagan
The Reagans: A Political Portrait
Recollections of Reagan: A Portrait of Ronald Reagan
Presidential Retreats: Where the Presidents Went and Why They Went There
Hannaford has contributed many articles over the years to conservative publications such as Human Events and The American Spectator.
Hannaford today
Hannaford resided in Eureka in northwestern California, where for a time he was the editor of the editorial pages of the Eureka Reporter, a daily newspaper which ceased publication on November 8, 2008. Hannaford was president since 2001 of his own company, Hannaford Enterprises, Inc., formerly Deaver and Hannaford, whose clients have included the New York Stock Exchange, Citibank, 3M, and General Motors. He was senior counsel to APCO Worldwide, a public affairs and strategic communications firm based in Washington, D.C. In 2014, he was honored as the Humboldt County Republican of the Year. Hannford died unexpectedly on September 5, 2015 at his home in Eureka, several weeks before his 83rd birthday.