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Ronald Borek Kessler (born December 31, 1943) is an American journalist and author. He is chief Washington correspondent of the conservative news and commentary website Newsmax.com.
Personal lifeKessler was born in New York City in 1943. He attended Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts from 1962 to 1964, before embarking on a career in journalism. He is married and has two children.1 JournalismEarly careerKessler began his career in 1964 as a reporter with the Worcester Telegram, followed by three years as an investigative reporter and editorial writer with the Boston Herald. In 1968, he joined the Wall Street Journal as a reporter in the New York bureau. During these years, his reporting won awards from the American Political Science Association (public affairs reporting award, 1965), United Press International (1967) and the Associated press (Sevellon Brown Memorial award, 1967).1 Washington PostIn 1970 Kessler joined the Washington Post as an investigative reporter and continued as a staff writer until 1985.2 In 1972, he won a George Polk Memorial award for Community Service because of two series of articles he wrote—one on conflicts of interest and mismanagement at Washington area non-profit hospitals, and a second series exposing kickbacks among lawyers, title insurance companies, realtors, and lenders in connection with real estate settlements, inflating the cost of buying homes.34 He was also named a Washingtonian of the Year by Washingtonian magazine that year.5 In 1979, Kessler won a second Polk Award, this one for National Reporting for a series of articles exposing corruption in the General Services Administration; he won even though his editor, Ben Bradlee, had not submitted his stories for consideration.46 NewsmaxIn June, 2006 Kessler became chief Washington correspondent of Newsmax, a conservative website and magazine.7 He writes the Washington Insider column for the publication, and his stories for Newsmax have included interviews with President Bush, Donald Trump, Andy Card, CIA Director Michael Hayden, Mitt Romney, Sen. Joseph Lieberman, Lynne Cheney, Jim Cramer, Deborah Norville, Dana Perino, FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III, Brian Lamb, Margaret Spellings, Juan Williams, and Secret Service Director Mark Sullivan.8 Kessler also writes Wall Street Journal op-eds, including "The Real Joe McCarthy," which attacked efforts by some conservative writers to vindicate the late Sen. Joseph McCarthy.9 AuthorAfter leaving the Washington Post, Kessler authored seventeen nonfiction books on politics and current affairs. Three of his books reached the general nonfiction New York Times Best Seller list: Laura Bush (2006), a biography of the first lady; A Matter of Character (2004), an admiring look at George W. Bush's presidency; and Inside the White House (1995), a behind-the-scenes expose of presidencies from Lyndon B. Johnson to Bill Clinton. A fourth book, The Season (1999), an investigative report of the lives of millionaires in Palm Beach, Florida, made the bestseller list for business books.10 ControversyIn an article for Newsmax, on March 16, 2008, Kessler incorrectly reported, based on a previous Newsmax story by a freelance writer, that Senator Barack Obama attended a service at Chicago's Trinity United Church of Christ on July 22, 2007, during which Rev. Jeremiah Wright gave a sermon that blamed world suffering on "white arrogance."11 The story appeared in the context of a week in which the news media focused intently on Wright's sermons in their coverage of Obama's presidential campaign. Kessler's false report was cited by Bill Kristol in a New York Times' op-ed piece12 and, months later, in The Obama Nation by Swift Boat Veterans for Truth associate Jerome Corsi.13 The Obama campaign denied that Obama had attended the church on the day that sermon was delivered and other reporters discovered that Obama was in fact in transit to Miami, Florida on that day.14 Kristol posted a correction and an apology at the online version of his article later in the day.15 Newsmax posted a "clarification" standing by the story, suggesting that perhaps the sermon occurred on a different day in July.11 Shortly after the controversy broke, Kessler attempted to remove information documenting it from his Wikipedia biography.16 Books
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