Tag: shakeup

  • Broadcast bloodbath: Tucker Carlson, Don Lemon are out in major media shake-up

    Broadcast bloodbath: Tucker Carlson, Don Lemon are out in major media shake-up

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    Carlson’s last program was Friday. “Fox News Tonight” will air at 8 p.m. EST — previously the slot for “Tucker Carlson Tonight” — starting Monday as an “interim show helmed by rotating FOX News personalities until a new host is named.”

    Lemon was fiery in his response to being ousted, stating on Twitter that he was “stunned” that he had been terminated by the network.

    “At no time was I ever given any indication that I would not be able to continue to do the work I have loved at the network. It is clear that there are some larger issues at play,” he wrote.

    Though, CNN, in a tweet said Lemon’s statement is “inaccurate” and that he was “offered an opportunity to meet with management but instead released a statement on Twitter.”

    The exits come ahead of the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, slated for Saturday. The annual event, attended for decades by presidents from both parties, celebrates the First Amendment and honors journalists. The headliner usually takes the stage to deliver the traditional WHCA dinner roast. This year’s headliner, Roy Wood Jr., said he already threw out his script following the exits of Lemon and Carlson.

    Both anchors have faced their fair share of controversy in recent months leading up to their departures on Monday.

    Lemon, who had worked at CNN for 17 years, said on-air in February that presidential hopeful Nikki Haley “isn’t in her prime” and that a woman is “in her prime in her 20s, 30s, 40s.” He later apologized for the comments on Twitter and didn’t appear on “CNN This Morning” the next day.

    Earlier this month, Variety published a report claiming that Lemon made other offensive comments about women on air in the past and alleged inappropriate behavior toward female colleagues at CNN.

    News of Carlson’s departure came the week after Fox News settled Dominion Voting Systems’ defamation lawsuit for $787.5 million. Carlson, along with hosts Sean Hannity and Laura Ingraham, privately mocked regular guests such as Donald Trump’s attorneys, Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell, while continuing to promote conspiracy theories to their audience.

    Last month, the White House joined in widespread condemnation of Carlson, singling him out for his misleading portrayal of the U.S. Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021. The revelations were made public as part of the lawsuit by Dominion.

    Former “Tucker Carlson Tonight” producer Abby Grossberg is also suing the network after stating that she was unlawfully fired as an act of retaliation.

    Carlson first joined Fox News as a contributor in 2009, and in 2017, Carlson took over the network’s 8 p.m. hour after Bill O’Reilly was forced out. Carlson was one of the most-watched hosts on the cable news network, with an average audience of 3.2 million viewers.

    On Monday morning, Fox News had still been previewing Carlson’s show, teasing an interview with presidential hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy that would air Monday night.

    Fox News anchor Harris Faulkner addressed Tucker Carlson’s departure Monday by stating, “We have some news from within our Fox family. Fox News Media and Tucker Carlson have mutually agreed to part ways.”

    Politicians as well as former and current TV hosts were quick to react to the news of the exits.

    Former Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly, who left the network in 2017, said the news was “Good for Tucker.”

    “Trust me, he doesn’t need them,” Kelly said in a tweet.

    Fox host Sean Hannity posted to Twitter, “*LATER LEMON!*” but did not address Carlson’s departure.

    “Good News: “The dumbest man on television,’ Don Lemon, has finally been fired from Fake News CNN,” former President Donald Trump said on Truth Social. “My only question is, WHAT TOOK THEM SO LONG?” Trump posted on Truth Social.

    And in a tweet, Russian-backed English-language news outlet RT News appeared to offer Carlson a job.

    “Hey @TuckerCarlson, you can always question more with @RT_com,” RT News wrote.



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    #Broadcast #bloodbath #Tucker #Carlson #Don #Lemon #major #media #shakeup
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Biden faces looming economic threats with staff shake-up

    Biden faces looming economic threats with staff shake-up

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    “Lael and Jared will help bring a seriousness of purpose to the task of building a strong, inclusive, and more resilient economy for the future,” Biden said in a statement Tuesday in announcing the picks.

    With the new team, the president is opting for deep Washington experience and knowledge of how to pull the levers inside the executive branch to boost the economy, with a hostile GOP House poised to block major legislation. Biden is also getting an NEC director with broader international experience than her predecessor, Brian Deese, who could help keep trade disputes with China and the European Union from blowing up.

    Brainard, Bernstein and new White House chief of staff Jeff Zients, a businessman, will lead a team charged with implementing sweeping laws passed the last two years while playing defense against House Republicans bent on forcing spending cuts in return for raising the debt limit.

    “The White House sees moderate Republicans as gettable on certain issues,” said one White House official in explaining the pick. “So they want adults with some gravitas in the room.”

    Still, Brainard may have her work cut out for her, with some Republicans seeing her as a big-government Democrat. Rep. Patrick McHenry, the new GOP chair of the powerful House Financial Services Committee, called her selection “misguided.”

    “Throughout her career, Dr. Brainard has made her political agenda clear and has attempted to expand executive regulatory authority and control to accomplish it,” he said in a statement.

    She served in the Clinton administration, where she was involved in implementing the North American Free Trade Agreement and negotiating China’s entry to the World Trade Organization — both achievements that have since come under fire from many progressives, who have viewed them as threats to American workers.

    She also served at Treasury under former President Barack Obama, where she was the department’s top diplomat from 2010 to 2013, dealing with the euro crisis and pressuring China to allow the value of its currency to be more influenced by market forces.

    White House officials say Brainard’s international experience — while troubling to many progressives and even some Republicans — will be critical in helping avoid any global disputes that could tip the economy toward recession.

    She enters the White House as inflation is coming down, though slowly, and the job market remains hot. But the Fed, where Brainard served as Chair Jerome Powell’s No. 2, is continuing to push up interest rates to battle inflation.

    While economists are boosting their odds for a so-called soft landing following the rate hikes, there remains a significant chance that all the tightening could push the economy into recession as Biden launches his expected reelection bid.

    Larry Summers, the former Treasury secretary under Clinton who has warned of a coming recession, praised the pick. “She will be a great successor to Brian Deese,” Summers wrote in a text to POLITICO. “She has the macroeconomic and global experience crucial in the complex times that lie ahead, along with the savvy necessary to succeed in today’s Washington.”

    Inside the administration, progressives who preferred someone like NEC deputy Bharat Ramamurti, a former top aide to Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), for the job, were only mildly critical of Brainard.

    “The left will be concerned about the transformation at the Fed and what that means,” said another White House official, who requested anonymity in speaking about a new colleague. “And she’s just a black box on a lot of domestic policy issues.”

    Brainard, 61, is a Harvard-trained Ph.D. economist whose expertise in international matters will be relevant as the administration faces renewed tensions with China over alleged espionage, Russia’s war in Ukraine and a global food crisis brought about by soaring prices around the world and continued supply chain issues. The daughter of a U.S. diplomat, she spent her childhood in West Germany and Poland before the Soviet Union fell.

    A prominent player in policymaking circles for decades, Brainard joined the White House for the first time in the late 1990s.

    She juggled a demanding career alongside child care — she has three daughters — once telling a story about taking a trip to Japan for a G-7 meeting with an infant in tow.

    According to her retelling at a conference in 2020, she would sneak out at breaks to breastfeed her child, who was then less than 3 months old, without letting on that’s what she was doing.

    Since her stint in the Clinton administration, she has steadily risen through the strata of economic policy, including serving as undersecretary of the Treasury for international affairs under Obama. She joined the Fed in 2014, where she worked alongside fellow board member Powell. Both of them would eventually be promoted, Powell to chair in 2018 and Brainard to vice chair in 2022.

    She speaks in a measured and deliberate manner that can come off as guarded. At both the Treasury Department and the Fed, she has gained a reputation for working her aides particularly hard.

    “She has very high standards for herself and her staff,” wrote Claudia Sahm, a former Fed economist who worked under Brainard, in a blog post in 2021. “Everything that I and others worked on with her had a clear purpose. Strategic thinking and a clear vision are how you get the most out of your resources,” she added, dismissing characterizations that Brainard has a “sharp elbow.”

    “I think she’s very pragmatic,” Sen. Catherine Cortez Masto (D-Nev.) said in an interview. “She sees both sides of it and is willing to work and bring people together to really solve problems and address the issues that we need to.”

    Eleanor Mueller contributed to this report.

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    #Biden #faces #looming #economic #threats #staff #shakeup
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )