In 1958, Champion was appointed press secretary to California governor-elect Pat Brown.[1] In 1961 he was appointed state finance director.[3] He played a major role in shaping policy, including the California Master Plan for Higher Education and improvement of the state's infrastructure.[1]
After Brown left office, Champion became a Kennedy Fellow at the Harvard Institute of Politics.[1] In 1967 he was named director of the Boston Redevelopment Authority by mayor-elect Kevin White.[4] During his tenure as head of the BRA, Champion oversaw the redevelopment of Quincy Market and $1 billion in commitments to commercial development.[2] He resigned in 1969 to become the vice president of planning and operations for the University of Minnesota system.[5] He returned to Massachusetts two years later when he was named Harvard's vice president of finance.[6]
Champion returned to Harvard as an assistant to president Derek Bok. In 1980 he was appointed executive dean of the John F. Kennedy School of Government.[10] He took a leave of absence from the school in 1987 to serve as chief of staff to Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis.[11] He returned to Harvard in the spring of 1989 and taught there until his retirement in 1995.[12][1] From 1990 to 1992, Champion was chairman of the Kaiser Family Foundation.[2]
Personal life
Champion met his wife Marie Ozine Tifft while he was attending Stanford. They had one son and one daughter.[1] Marie Champion served on the Sacramento, California school committee while the family resided there.[4] On July 7, 1965, Champion, his wife, and their infant daughter were kidnapped by two ex-convicts. who were unaware of Champion's government position. They were released two days later after Champion was wounded in an exchange of gunfire in Tonopah, Nevada.[1]