BusinessMirror

FULL-SCALE REVOLT: MSNBC PERSONALIT­IES OBJECT TO NBC NEWS’ HIRING OF RONNA MCDANIEL AS A CONTRIBUTO­R

- By David Bauder

NEW YORK—THE internal furor over NBC News’ decision to hire former Republican National Committee head Ronna Mcdaniel as a paid contributo­r spread on Monday, with MSNBC personalit­ies Rachel Maddow, Jen Psaki, Nicolle Wallace, Lawrence O’donnell and Joe Scarboroug­h all using their shows to publicly object.

Maddow, MSNBC’S most popular personalit­y, compared it to putting a mobster to work in a district attorney’s office.

“I find the decision to put her on the payroll inexplicab­le and I hope they will reconsider that decision,” she said on her weekly program on Monday night.

There was no immediate comment on Monday from NBC News or Mcdaniel about the extraordin­ary public revolt against network management that began with former Meet the Press moderator Chuck Todd a day earlier.

Todd said that many NBC News journalist­s were uncomforta­ble with the hiring because of Mcdaniel’s “gaslightin­g” and “character assassinat­ion” while at the RNC.

The network announced Mcdaniel’s hiring on Friday, two weeks after she stepped down as the RNC leader, saying Mcdaniel would add to NBC News’ coverage with an insider’s perspectiv­e on national politics and the future of the Republican Party.

Maddow said she’d been told that MSNBC management had signed off on the hiring, but that when staff “expressed outrage,” it was made clear that Mcdaniel would not appear on the cable network, which appeals primarily to liberal viewers. Since then, she said there’s been an effort in other parts of the company to “muddy that up in the press” and make it seem like that’s not what happened.

“I can assure you, that is what happened at MSNBC,” she said.

Maddow told her viewers—and presumably her bosses—that “it is a sign of strength, not weakness, to acknowledg­e that you’re wrong.”

The on-air MSNBC rebellion stretched from predawn to late in the evening, starting with Morning Joe hosts Scarboroug­h and Mika Brzezinski promising viewers they would not see Mcdaniel in her NBC News capacity. Brzezinski said it’s fair to seek Republican voices to balance election coverage, but “not a person who used her position of power to be an anti-democracy election denier.”

Wallace said that with the hiring, NBC has said to election deniers “not just that they can do that on our airwaves, but that they can do that as one of us, a badge-carrying employee of NBC News, as a paid contributo­r to our sacred airwaves.”

Said O’donnell: “There is an easy way to avoid the controvers­y that NBC News has stumbled into. Don’t hire anyone close to the crimes.”

Psaki said she decided to speak up because, as a former press secretary to President Joe Biden, her name has been used by Mcdaniel supporters to point out that a former Democratic political appointee was hired by MSNBC without internal objection.

She said that for a television personalit­y, that kind of experience in government “only matters and only has value to viewers if it is paired with honesty and good faith.”

One of those GOP critics was US Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, who mentioned Psaki among several others who switched to news after working in politics for Democrats, including the late Meet the Press moderator Tim Russert.

“But NBC hired a Republican??!!” he wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “It’s the end of the world.”

In a social media posting on Monday, Todd said that those who are trying to make it an issue of left vs. right were being intentiona­lly dishonest. “This is about whether honest journalist­s are supposed to lend their credibilit­y to someone who intentiona­lly tried to ruin ours,” he said.

The Morning Joe hosts aired an exchange from Mcdaniel’s interview the day before on Meet the Press with current moderator Kristen Welker, who wondered why the former RNC chairman didn’t speak up earlier after saying Sunday she disagreed with Trump’s contention that people jailed for their part in the January 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol should be freed.

“When you’re the RNC chair you kind of take one for the whole team, right?” Mcdaniel said. “Now I get to be a little bit more myself, right? This is what I believe.”

It’s not unusual for television news outlets to hire politician­s as analysts and commentato­rs. One of Mcdaniel’s predecesso­rs at the RNC, Michael Steele, is an MSNBC contributo­r who hosts a weekend news program there.

CBS News faced some backlash for hiring two former officials in the Trump administra­tion, Reince Priebus and Mick Mulvaney, as analysts. Alyssa Farah Griffin, a former White House communicat­ions director during the Trump administra­tion, became a CNN political commentato­r.

But Mcdaniel’s tacit endorsemen­t of Trump’s false claims that the outcome of the 2020 presidenti­al election was fraudulent makes her hiring even more sensitive, given the continuing legal and political ripples of the January 6, 2021, siege at the US Capitol that was an outgrowth of the fraud allegation­s.

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