Margaret Warner

BIO_Margaret-Warner_MAIN_122x160_CVPXKi2d Margaret Warner is senior correspondent of the PBS television program, The NewsHour. She also spent ten years at Newsweek magazine, holding the positions of political correspondent in several presidential campaigns; White House correspondent during the Reagan presidency; and chief diplomatic correspondent during the first Bush presidency. During that time, she was also a regular panelist on two television commentary shows, CNN's The Capital Gang and PBS's Washington Week in Review.

Before Newsweek, Warner covered regulatory, congressional and business issues for The Wall Street Journal. Previously, she had covered everything from statehouse politics to murder trials for The San Diego Union in California and The Concord Monitor in New Hampshire. Warner's reporting has been recognized with numerous awards. Her diplomatic coverage during the Gulf War made her runner-up for the National Press Club's 1990 Edwin M. Hood Award for Diplomatic Reporting. She also shared, with other Newsweek reporters and editors, the prestigious George Polk Award for coverage of terrorism and the Best Reporting Award from the Overseas Press Club. Most recently, during the 2000 presidential campaign, she won two Hess Awards (given by Stephen Hess of the Brookings Institution) - one for a tape piece and studio debate on the surplus as an issue in the campaign, the other for her field-reported piece on the Bush-Gore battle for the state of Florida. A graduate of Yale University, Warner is married to a lawyer, and lives in Washington, D.C.

In The News

AAM President Aaron Lobel spoke at the National Strategy Forum in Chicago.
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