Chris Cillizza

Chris Cillizza
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Credit: alex wong/getty images

Summary

I am an experienced communicator, observer and analyst of American media and politics. I have spent time in my career building brands at the Washington Post and CNN among others. I can write quickly and effectively — and know what messages work in Washington and how to break through the clutter. From Chris Cillizza’s LinkedIn summary

Christopher Michael Cillizza is an American political commentator, who worked for the television news channel CNN from 2017 to 2022. Prior to joining CNN, he wrote for The Fix, the daily political blog of The Washington Post, and was a regular contributor to the Post on political issues, a frequent panelist on Meet the Press, and an MSNBC political analyst. Currently, he maintains a political blog on Substack.
Wikipedia

News

i
SO WHAT: 10/4/24
Chris CillizzaOctober 4, 2024

Donald Trump’s health should scare you

Trump would be the oldest person ever to be president if he serves a full four year term. And yet, we know less about his medical history — or his current health — than any president in modern memory. What gives?

Ted Cruz is fighting for his political life

The Texas Republican finds himself in a real race. And losing is absolutely on the table.

33 days — SECOND LIVSTREAM!

CHRIS CRUCIAL: Is not voting for Trump *enough*?

1. To vote or not to vote?

Two prominent Republicans on Thursday made clear that they won’t be voting for Donald Trump this fall.

That Bolton and Kasich aren’t voting for Trump isn’t surprising. Both have been critical of the former president — and how he has transformed the GOP — for years.

But what is interesting to me is that neither man will vote for Kamala Harris — or, in Kasich’s case, if he is voting for Harris, he won’t say it publicly.

The Morning: What the Jack Smith filing tells us about Trump

Everything can be negotiated.

Trump views the entire world — business, politics, life — as one big negotiation. There are no facts. No hard and fast numbers. No truth. Just spin.

 

i
SO WHAT: Chris Cillizza 10/3/24
Chris CillizzaOctober 3, 2024

Why I *won’t* tell you what you want to hear

CHRIS CRUCIAL: It’s the Blue Wall, stupid
PLUS: Governor Katie Porter?

Yes, that would be the narrowest electoral margin since George W. Bush beat Al Gore 271-268 but it would still be a win for Harris.

Now, here’s the thing: If Harris loses just ONE of those Blue Wall states, her path gets much, much harder. Let’s say she comes up short in Wisconsin, which has 10 electoral votes — the least of the Blue Wall trio.

CNN gets it half right
On paywalls.

And THAT is where I think CNN hasn’t totally figured it out just yet. As in: What, specifically, do people get for becoming paid subscribers. Here’s the official CNN line via digital head Alex MacCallum:

In addition to unlimited access to CNN.com’s articles, subscribers will receive benefits like exclusive election features, original documentaries, a curated daily selection of our most distinctive journalism, and fewer digital ads.

The Morning: The big debate moment that wasn’t
On the ‘democracy’ argument

Personally, I think it is pretty damn close to disqualifying to not be able to say that Joe Biden won and Donald Trump lost in 2020. I think our democracy came under real threat in the wake of the 2020 election and, if Mike Pence had caved to the pressure he was under, we could have seen the results of a free and fair election overturned.

But, putting on my hat as a political analyst, I have to say that my view is simply not shared by voters who haven’t made up their mind about the 2024 election.

The issues those voters care about most — according to poll after poll — are the economy, abortion and immigration. “Democracy” is usually much further down the list.

About

Source: LinkedIn

Interview with Andrew Murfett
Senior Managing Editor at LinkedIn
May 30, 2024
See link above for interview

Introduction by Murfett below.

In the early years of your career, even a modicum of success can leave you with the rightful assumption that generally speaking, you’re climbing a ladder.

Maybe the progress is slower than you would prefer, but it’s moving. And soon enough, you can become accustomed to feeling like this trajectory will always continue upward. And then one day that feeling can come to an abrupt halt.

For former CNN correspondent Chris Cillizza, there was a layer of complication to his exit from the cable news network in November, 2022. As a relatively well-known on-air figure, his departure, one of five notable layoffs at the time, was newsworthy in and of itself and dutifully reported by The Daily Beast and a cluster of news sites and media newsletters.

“People at my kid’s Little League baseball knew about it,” Cillizza told me recently. “My wife’s friends who aren’t in journalism knew. Early on, it felt like a double whammy of humiliation. It’s hard enough being laid off and all that entails. But then, everyone also knows your business.”

After he left CNN, the week after Thanksgiving, Cillizza took stock, decompressed and spent the holidays with his family. On the first day following the winter break, he dropped his children off at school at 7am. His only other commitment that day was a 3.45pm return pick-up. Thirty years into his career, he was, for the first time, staring into the abyss of an empty day ahead.

“I had worked from the time I was 18 until 47,” he says. “I needed to find a way to fill up my days to keep my brain active. So I started to think about doing something as a way to interact with the world.”

The way Cillizza has always processed the biggest parts of his life is to write. Some 15 months later, Cillizza’s newsletter, So What, is now gathering some momentum. When he began writing the Substack newsletter, he envisioned it as curating and disseminating the day’s political headline news. But what he found, particularly in the early days, was that what really drove interaction, engagement and subscribers — especially paid subscribers — was writing about his personal experiences amid his sudden career shift.

Experience

Content Creator
Cillizza Media · Self-employed
Jan 2023 – Present · 1 yr 9 mosJ
Washington DC-Baltimore Area · Remote
I write a newsletter at chriscillizza.substack.com.
I also make YouTube videos here:

CNN Editor-at-Large
Apr 2017 – Feb 2023 · 5 yrs 11 mos
Washington D.C. Metro Area

Founder, The Fix
The Washington Post
Sep 2006 – Mar 2017 · 10 yrs 7 mos
Washington D.C. Metro Area

Source: LinkedIn

Education

Georgetown University
Bachelor’s degree, English Language and Literature/Letters
1994 – 1998

Web Links

Videos

Introducing: “So What?” with Chris Cillizza

January 18, 2023 (01:28)
By: Chris Cillizza

I’m starting a YouTube channel to take you beyond the “what” of the news cycle and into the “so what” and “now what” — why a specific piece of news actually matters to you and what to look for next.

Subscribe and join me on this journey!

One guy has given Donald Trump $125 MILLION in this election

September 27, 2024 (07:24)
By: Chris Cillizza

Meet Timothy Mellon, the single largest donor in American politics.

3 things I liked (and 3 things I didn’t like) from the Kamala Harris CNN interview

September 29, 2024 (05:00)
By: Chris Cillizza

Late-night analysis of the Democratic presidential nominee’s first media interview.

Friday Livestream!

August 30, 2024 (01:00:00)
By: Chris Cillizza

Let’s talk about Kamala Harris’ first media interview since becoming the nominee. And the state of the 2024 race. And anything else you want to talk about!

So What – Substack

Mission Statement

What makes this newsletter distinct is that I am not going to tell you what you want to hear. I am not going to platform only views that agree with me — or you. I am going to make sure you are exposed to a variety of views, under the belief that the only way we move forward is to listen to each other.

From newsletter

Why ‘So What?’

Source: Substack

I spent the better part of two decades working for big media companies like CNN and the Washington Post. And I noticed something: We spent so much of our time telling people what happened and so little explaining why it mattered and what might be coming next.

I wanted to change that. So I launched “So What?” — my personal newsletter designed to taking you behind the scenes of big events in Washington and the country.

I am convinced that people want analysis with their news now. They want to know why something matters to them or is deserving of their time almost simultaneously with learning the news.

We live in an over-stuffed media ecosystem. It’s hard to know where to look, when and why. That’s where I come in.

Every day I will try to take you past the headlines, providing insight about what motivates Washington’s power players and where to look next in the story.

This is a passion project. Most of my content is free and will stay that way. I want to make sure that as many people are reading — and sharing — it as possible.

So please subscribe!

Recent Post

Source: Substack

It’s getaway day for the long Labor Day weekend. Given that, I thought I would do something a little different tonight. Rather than give you three big stories from the day, I am going to give you 7 charts/maps/graphics that I think, when taken together, do a pretty good job of explaining where we are and where we are going in the 2024 race.

I hope you enjoy them. Be safe and have fun this weekend. See you after Labor Day!

— Chris

1. Democratic enthusiasm soaring

The swap of Kamala Harris for Joe Biden has sent Democratic excitement about this election through the roof. It’s now at Barack Obama-2008 levels, which is astounding.

2. The Kamala glow up

I’ve never seen something like this before. Kamala Harris was regarded unfavorably — and consistently so — for almost the entire time she was VP. Then she became the Democratic nominee and, suddenly, people started to like her much more.

3. The electoral map leans GOP

According to Amy Walter at the Cook Political Report:

In fact, when looking exclusively at the Electoral College map, Republicans are enjoying a stronger advantage than at any point in the 25-year history of the Cook PVI. In 1997, the median Electoral College vote (located in Iowa) had a PVI score of D+1; meaning that the median Electoral College vote was one point more Democratic than the nation as a whole. By 2005, the median Electoral College state (Florida) had a PVI of R+1. In 2021, Wisconsin, with a PVI score of R+2, is the median Electoral College vote. So, if, for example, a Republican presidential candidate were to get 49 percent of the national popular vote, we should expect that Republican to get 51 percent of the vote in Wisconsin.

4. Economic Pessimism Reigns

Despite positive news on inflation and job creation — broadly — the average American feels little confidence about where we are or where we are headed economically.

5. Trump is running better than he did in 2016 or 2020

Here’s the 2016 national polling average at the end of August:

And here it is at this point in 2020:

And HERE it is for 2024:

Hillary Clinton was ahead by 4. Joe Biden was ahead by 7. Kamala Harris is ahead by 3. Due to the GOP lean of the electoral college (see chart #3) most independent analysts believe Harris needs to win the popular vote by at least 4 points in order to ensure she wins the electoral college as well.

6. Two Americas

Image

People voting for Kamala Harris see society — and American values — in a fundamentally different way than people who are voting for Donald Trump.

7. This thing is going to be CLOSE

The presidency in 2020 was decided by tens of thousands of voters in 6 swing states. Literally. I think we are headed to something very similar this time around.

Videos

This guy has called 9 out of the last 10 elections right. He thinks Biden is going to win.

May 13, 2024 (05:08)
By: Chris Cillizza

Meet Professor Allan Lichtman.

Donald Trump is the world’s GREATEST golfer

(03:22)
By: Chris Cillizza

Eye roll.

Why Kamala Harris is on track to win the presidencyTuesday was a VERY good day for Kamala Harris. National and swing state polling makes clear she is on the trajectory to win the race. Which doesn’t mean she WILL win. But it DOES mean she is on the right path to win.

(08:25)
By: Chris Cillizza

Tuesday was a VERY good day for Kamala Harris. National and swing state polling makes clear she is on the trajectory to win the race.

Which doesn’t mean she WILL win. But it DOES mean she is on the right path to win.

Wikipedia

Christopher Michael Cillizza (/sɪˈlɪzə/; born February 20, 1976)[1] is an American political commentator, who worked for the television news channel CNN from 2017 to 2022. Prior to joining CNN, he wrote for The Fix, the daily political blog of The Washington Post, and was a regular contributor to the Post on political issues, a frequent panelist on Meet the Press, and an MSNBC political analyst.

Currently, he maintains a political blog on Substack.[2]

Early life and education

Cillizza was born and raised in Marlborough, Connecticut.[3][4][5] He attended The Loomis Chaffee School an independent boarding school in Windsor, Connecticut, and graduated in 1994.[6][5] He attended Georgetown University from 1994 to 1998, where he graduated with a B.A. in English.[7] He currently resides in Falls Church, Virginia with his wife and two children.[8] He is of Sicilian and Irish descent.[9]

Career

After working as a novelist and later an intern for conservative writer George Will,[10] Cillizza began his career in journalism. He later worked on the Washington, D.C. newspaper Roll Call prior to joining The Washington Post.[11] For The Cook Political Report he covered gubernatorial races and southern House races. He wrote a column on politics for Congress Daily. During his four years at Roll Call, which he joined in June 2001, he reported on campaign politics from the presidential to the congressional level, finishing his time at Roll Call as the paper's White House correspondent.[12]

His freelance work has appeared in publications such as The Atlantic Monthly, Washingtonian, and Slate.[13] He has also been a guest on CNN, Fox News Channel and MSNBC.[12] After multiple guest appearances on the network, he was named a MSNBC Political Analyst, a position he resigned when he accepted a position at CNN.[14] He is also a frequent panelist on Meet the Press.

He is an adjuct faculty at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications of Syracuse University.[15]

The Fix

Cillizza founded the blog The Fix in 2005 and wrote for it on a regular basis until he joined CNN in 2017.[16] The blog's focus was American electoral politics, with Cillizza commenting on gubernatorial, Congressional and presidential elections. He hosted the weekly Fix live chat.

Media

From 2007 to 2008, Cillizza was a co-host of the MySpace/MTV Presidential Dialogues, which hosted John McCain, Barack Obama, and others in a live-streamed, interactive Presidential event series. Cillizza and fellow The Washington Post columnist Dana Milbank appeared in a series of humor videos called Mouthpiece Theater, hosted by The Washington Post. An outcry followed a video in which, during a discussion of the White House "Beer Summit", they chose new brands for a number of people, including "Mad Bitch Beer" for Hillary Clinton. Both men apologized for the video and the series was canceled.[17]

In July 2012, Broadway Books (a division of Penguin Random House) released his book, The Gospel According to the Fix.[18] Written in a blog-like format,[19] it contains lists such as "The 10 Best/Worst Negative Ads", as well as coverage of the "deep personal hatreds that politics provoke" and predictions for the 2012 and 2016 presidential elections.[20]

Since 2014, Cillizza has served a regular co-host of The Tony Kornheiser Show.[8][21]

CNN

On April 3, 2017, Cillizza joined CNN as a "political reporter and digital editor-at-large," contributing online and on television.[16][22]

On June 28, 2017, CNN Politics announced the launch of "The Point with Chris Cillizza." According to the official press release, the new "multiplatform brand" will include "daily columns, on-air analysis, an evening newsletter, [a] podcast, and the launch of trivia night events in Washington, DC."[23][24] The show which is on YouTube releases political analysis videos hosted by Cillizza every Tuesday and Thursday.

Cillizza also runs political trivia on his personal Instagram account on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays.

On December 1, 2022, Cillizza was laid off from CNN.[25]

Reception

Columbia Journalism Review has described Cillizza's informal, "everyman" style as being popular with readers.[10] According to reviewers, "Chris Cillizza might be the only person in America who can have goofy fun talking about Trumpcare, Russian election interference, and the emoluments clause... Consequently, Cillizza tends to be a fly trap for criticism about his criticism."[10] Jay Rosen has compared his approach to infotainment which turns political analysis into gamesmanship detached from real-world implications.[26][10] Former CNN host Soledad O'Brien has described Cillizza's work as facile.[27][28] David Weigel has criticized Cillizza for focusing on predictions rather than factual analysis.[29] In September 2020, Cillizza wrote an article stating that election models showed Donald Trump as having "almost no chance" in the upcoming election.[30] Political commentator Nate Silver criticized Cillizza's interpretation, tweeting "If you don't do any reporting, have never demonstrated any insight about politics, and don't even write particularly well, you'd think you could at the very least understand that 20% ≠ 0%."[31] Cillizza, along with Mark Halperin and Ron Fournier, was cited by Felix Biederman and Virgil Texas as one of the inspirations for their parody political pundit Carl Diggler.[32]

References

  1. ^ "Chris Cillizza on Twitter". Twitter. Retrieved November 4, 2016.
  2. ^ Cillizza, Chris. "So What | Chris Cillizza | Substack". chriscillizza.substack.com. Retrieved February 25, 2024.
  3. ^ House, Dennis (December 27, 2009). "Chris Cillizza on 'Face the State'". The Hartfordite. Retrieved July 10, 2016.
  4. ^ Cillizza, Chris (February 12, 2014). "How 'Red Sox vs. Yankees' explains Connecticut politics". The Washington Post. Retrieved July 10, 2016.
  5. ^ a b Blair, Russell (March 13, 2017). "Connecticut Native, Political Reporter Jumps To CNN". Hartford Courant. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  6. ^ "The Loomis Chaffee Class Of 1994". Hartford Courant. June 4, 1994. Retrieved July 10, 2016.
  7. ^ "Chris Cillizza". Georgetown University Institute of Politics and Public Service. Archived from the original on July 28, 2020. Retrieved July 10, 2016.
  8. ^ a b Van Zandt, Emily (August 29, 2016). "Why Chris Cillizza Doesn't Read the Comments". Arlington Magazine. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  9. ^ "The Fix Faceoff: Video Q&A with Chris Cillizza". Retrieved July 10, 2016.
  10. ^ a b c d Lenz, Lyz (July 27, 2017). "Enthusiastic, prolific, simplistic Chris Cillizza reaches new heights". Columbia Journalism Review. Retrieved March 11, 2018.
  11. ^ "About Chris Cilizza" (biosketch), The Washington Post; retrieved September 11, 2011.
  12. ^ a b "Meet the Reporters | Ohio River Ramble: Nine Districts in Nine Days | Campaign 2006 | washingtonpost.com". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  13. ^ "Chris Cillizza | Interviews | Tavis Smiley | PBS". Tavis Smiley | PBS. March 31, 2011. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  14. ^ Gold, Hadas (March 14, 2017). "CNN hires Chris Cillizza". Politico. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  15. ^ "About: Directory: Chris Cillizza". Newhouse School at Syracuse University. Retrieved November 11, 2023.
  16. ^ a b Wemple, Erik (March 13, 2017). "CNN hires Chris Cillizza away from The Washington Post". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  17. ^ Howard Kurtz, "Post's Video 'Theater' Ends Its Run: Hosts Apologize for Off-Color Clinton Joke", washingtonpost.com, August 6, 2009; accessed March 15, 2014.
  18. ^ "Press Release: Gospel According to The Fix by Chris Cillizza". The Crown Publishing Group. August 16, 2011. Retrieved July 10, 2016.
  19. ^ "Nonfiction Book Review: The Gospel According to the Fix: An Insider's Guide to a Less than Holy World of Politics by Chris Cillizza". Publishers Weekly. PWxyz LLC. Retrieved July 10, 2016.
  20. ^ Kurson, Ken (July 23, 2012). "Politics as a Spectator Sport". The Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved July 10, 2016.
  21. ^ Casselberry, Ian (June 2, 2016). "Tony Kornheiser ending D.C. radio show, starting podcast in September". Awful Announcing. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  22. ^ Balluck, Kyle (March 13, 2017). "Chris Cillizza jumps from Washington Post and MSNBC to CNN". The Hill. Retrieved March 14, 2017.
  23. ^ "CNN Politics Launches 'The Point with Chris Cillizza'". CNN. June 28, 2017. Archived from the original on June 28, 2017. Retrieved June 29, 2017.
  24. ^ Balluck, Kyle (June 28, 2017). "CNN launching brand around Chris Cillizza". The Hill. Retrieved June 29, 2017.
  25. ^ Steinberg, Brian (December 1, 2022). "HLN Gutted By CNN Layoffs". CNN executives were expected to inform staffers about layoffs at the network Thursday morning, according to these people. CNN correspondents Alison Kosik, Martin Savidge, Alex Field, Mary Ann Fox and Chris Cilizza are among the staffers who have been let go, according to two people familiar with the matter.
  26. ^ Rosen, Jay (February 7, 2014). "Behold how badly our political journalists have lost the freakin' plot - PressThink". PressThink. New York University. Retrieved March 11, 2018.
  27. ^ "Ex-CNN host Soledad O'Brien hits Chris Cillizza for 'terrible analysis'". March 7, 2018.
  28. ^ Aran, Isha (March 7, 2018). "RIP Chris Cillizza, Owned To Death by Soledad O'Brien, We Hardly Knew Ye".
  29. ^ Weigel, David (February 5, 2014). "CBOghazi: Journalists Have No Idea "What Will Matter" in an Election". Slate. Retrieved March 11, 2018.
  30. ^ Cillizza, Chris (September 30, 2020). "*Every* election model shows Donald Trump is a long shot | CNN Politics". CNN. Retrieved November 2, 2023.
  31. ^ "Nate Silver on Twitter". X (formerly Twitter). October 1, 2020. Retrieved November 2, 2023.
  32. ^ Marantz, Andrew (October 10, 2016). "The Parody Pundit We Deserve". newyorker.com. Retrieved January 10, 2019.

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