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C. Power Players Are Paying Thousands of Dollars to Find Dates - POLITICO
Inside the expensive, awkward, and sometimes even romantic world of matchmaking DC’s elite. POLITICO Politico Logo.

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Inside the expensive, awkward, and sometimes even romantic world of matchmaking DC’s elite. Illustrations by John Broadley. By Jessica M. Goldstein. 06/24/2022 04:30 AM EDT. Updated: 06/24/2022 11:24 AM EDT. Jessica M. Goldstein is a freelance writer based in Washington, D.C. She is a contributing editor to Washingtonian and a contributing writer to the Washington Post’s Arts & Style section and Magazine. I n D.C. dating, obstacles abound. Everybody is busy and nobody texts back, or they text and text but never plan a date, or they date once only to ghost. All the “moderates” are secretly conservative, a lot of the liberals are not-so-secretly annoying. The pandemic shut down the party scene, but swiping on the apps is such a drag — and isn’t really an option for D.C.’s more high-profile singles. So perhaps it’s not surprising that an old-timey way of finding love has made something of a comeback: D.C.’s single power players are enlisting matchmakers in their dating searches. You could do it, too. For several thousands of dollars a month — double what the average person spends on rent for a one-bedroom in D.C. — this matchmaker will not only seek out potential soulmates with your exact criteria in mind but will do the sort of investigative work that, coming from you, would seem invasive and creepy — trawling LinkedIn for singles with degrees from prestigious universities, or NextDoor for homeowners in affluent zip codes, or LegiStorm for Congressional staffers’ bios, salaries and contact information. They can also help you navigate the obstacles very particular to dating in D.C., like how to keep your dating life off Twitter and out of the pages of this magazine, or how to make it clear that you don’t share all of your boss’ political views. For the inside intel on how these services work and who uses them, I spent the spring calling up a murderers’ row of D.C. matchmakers. The biggest brand in town is Three Day Rule (named ironically, for the Swingers-era counsel to wait three days before calling a woman you want to see again), a national outfit that launched its D.C. branch in 2015. To be a client and all that entails — a guaranteed minimum of one match per month, plus coaching, a photoshoot and post-date debriefs — costs $5,900 for three months and $9,500 for six. (TDR also offers VIP packages, which start at $18,500 and let daters get more involved in the search and selection process.) “People like this, especially in D.C., they’re used to getting what they want. . It’s very vexing for them, and it’s very vulnerable.” Quin Woodward Pu, matchmaker at Three Day Rule. Who in the capital is signing up? When it launched in the city, TDR’s clientele was mostly 35 and up. But the demographic gets younger by the year, with many twenty-somethings now exploring what their services have to offer. Some clients are low-paid Capitol Hill staffers whose parents, the matchmakers theorize, likely spring for the service. Plenty are upper-middle-class types — lawyers, consultants, more lawyers. And about a quarter of TDR’s clientele are what Jaime Bernstein, a senior matchmaker in D.C., describes as the “very elite, high-profile power players in the D.C. scene.” These matchmakers wouldn’t be in business if they couldn’t be discreet, but they could still share a pretty detailed description of the “elite” daters on their roster. Such clients include: TV hosts, ambassadors, political fundraisers, children of senators, attorneys at the Department of Justice, high-up folks at Treasury, IMF and the SEC, owners of political consulting firms. TDR has been hired by the owner of a D.C. sports team, a speechwriter for Michelle Obama, and politicians in various stages of running for office looking for their campaign trail plus-one. Different matchmakers specialize in different demographics: Kara Laricks is an LGBTQ+ matchmaker, who has some D.C. clients dreaming of being, she told me, “half of a power couple that will be seen on the red carpet, at the Correspondents Dinner,” while Quin Woodward Pu clicks with the uber-rich, AARP-card-carrying female set: heads of foundations, heiresses. “She’s the super wealthy woman that has multiple philanthropies at one time, even if she doesn’t have a job,” Woodward Pu said. “She leads a multi-million or multi-billion-dollar organization.” Want to read more stories like this? POLITICO Weekend delivers gripping reads, smart analysis and a bit of high-minded fun every Friday. Sign up for the newsletter.