USA TODAY US Edition

Here’s what you might not know about Kristen Welker

- Erin Jensen

The NBC News White House correspond­ent is moderator for the presidenti­al debate.

Kristen Welker will host the final presidenti­al debate showdown Thursday, though it appears that President Donald Trump may spar with her almost as much as he will with his Democratic rival, Joe Biden.

The NBC News White House correspond­ent and “Weekend Today” co-anchor will moderate the debate at Belmont University in Nashville (9 EDT/6 PDT). The second presidenti­al debate was axed after Trump declined to participat­e virtually, following his COVID-19 diagnosis. Instead, he and Biden held dueling town halls , and the former vice president beat Trump in the Nielsen ratings.

Welker, a target of Trump’s Twitter rage last week, will be the first Black woman to moderate a presidenti­al debate in nearly 30 years. (Journalist Carole Simpson moderated the face-off between George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Ross Perot in 1992.)

Here are five things to know about Welker:

Her journalism career: Welker, 44, studied American history at Harvard and interned at “Today” in 1997. Before beginning her full-time NBC News tenure in 2010, Welker worked for local TV stations in Providence, Rhode Island; Redding, California; and later Philadelph­ia, her hometown. In 2011, she became a White House reporter and reported on the 2016 presidenti­al election. She was named “Weekend Today” coanchor alongside Peter Alexander last January.

2019 debate performanc­e: Welker, along with MSNBC hosts Andrea Mitchell and Rachel Maddow and Ashley

Parker, the White House reporter for The Washington Post, moderated a face-off among Democratic presidenti­al hopefuls last November. Welker asked about health care, race and the high price of housing. The foursome were praised for the performanc­e.

What inspired her to become a reporter: Welker was one of eight Black journalist­s Glamour sought out for a story, published in June, to uncover what life is like for reporters amid a fight for racial equality and a pandemic.

Welker’s mother is Black, and her father is white, so “growing up as a biracial child, the idea of helping people of different races and background­s better communicat­e inspired me to become a journalist,” she told the magazine.

Her mom is her No. 1 fan: Welker is one of the participan­ts who shared “The Best Advice My Mother Gave Me” for a Mother’s Day piece published on Maria Shriver’s website. She describes her mom, Juliet Welker, as “my biggest supporter, my best friend, and my greatest inspiratio­n.” Welker said her mom, who was the first Black president of the women’s student associatio­n at Penn State University, instilled in her the importance of believing in oneself.

Trump’s criticism: In January, the president congratula­ted Welker on nabbing the “Weekend Today” hosting gig at a news conference. “They made a very wise decision,” he said. But last weekend, he abruptly reversed course, firing off a tweet bashing her.

“Yikes! Here we go again” Donald Trump Jr. commented on a New York Post story highlighti­ng her alleged “deep Democratic ties” by citing her family’s donations to some of the party’s candidates. The president piled on: “She’s always been terrible & unfair, just like most of the Fake News reporters, but I’ll still play the game,” the president posted. “The people know!”

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