NBC and MSNBC, questions swirl over the Ronna McDaniel hire? MSNBC President Rashida Jones told her hosts they would never have to book the former RNC chair. But people familiar with the hiring said she helped court McDaniel with the promise she would appear on the cable network Ronna McDaniel in Washington in 2022. Two days after NBC News’s decision to reverse its hiring of former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel, network staffers were coming to terms with the controversy — and placing bets on where the blame may lay. “There’s no clear internal consensus on who people are more mad at,” one employee, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to be candid, said A long line of MSNBC‘s most popular anchors spent Monday calling out the network’s corporate sibling, NBC News, for its hire of former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel in a stunning display of internal rifts laid bare on the TV screen. The hire of McDaniel as a contributor is “inexplicable,” Rachel Maddow said on MSNBC Monday night as part of a half-hour commercial-free monologue that painted the former politico as one in a line of fascists and would-be usurpers who have tried to take over America’s political process. McDaniel, who during her time as RNC head helped former President Donald Trump in his efforts to nullify the 2020 presidential election, said Maddow, “is part of an ongoing project to get rid of our system of government.” NBC News raised hackles late last week when it disclosed it had hired McDaniel as a political contributor. Within days, prominent staffers at NBC News and MSNBC pushed back on the decision, charging that McDaniel’s efforts to assist Trump and cast aspersions on journalists made her unfit to serve at in a paid position at a journalism organization. The on-screen outrage makes McDaniel’s tenure at NBC untenable, according to people familiar with the workings of the news division, with most hard-pressed to think what producer or program would still have her make an appearance. Internally, some staffers are surprised that Cesar Conde, the chairman of NBCUniversal News Group, or Rebecca Blumenstein, the president of newsgathering at NBC News, have not reversed course on McDaniel. Maddow’s remarks came after other segments delivered on MSNBC’s schedule on Monday from Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski of “Morning Joe”; Nicolle Wallace on “Deadline: White House”; Joy Reid on “The ReidOut” and Jennifer Psaki on “Inside.” Of the group, only Psaki delivered relatively succinct comments, telling viewers that while she and McDaniel may both have backgrounds as political operatives, they could not be more different in their efforts in a news organization. McDaniel, said Psaki, “does not get us closer to anything in the political debate.” Wallace and Reid, for their part, brought on guests, including a Yale legal scholar and conservative commentator Charlie Sykes, to question the decision to put McDaniel on air as a paid contributor.
Ronna McDaniel in Washington in 2022. Two days after NBC News’s decision to reverse its hiring of former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel, network staffers were coming to terms with the controversy — and placing bets on where the blame may lay. “There’s no clear internal consensus on who people are more mad at,” one employee, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to be candid, said A long line of MSNBC‘s most popular anchors spent Monday calling out the network’s corporate sibling, NBC News, for its hire of former Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel in a stunning display of internal rifts laid bare on the TV screen. The hire of McDaniel as a contributor is “inexplicable,” Rachel Maddow said on MSNBC Monday night as part of a half-hour commercial-free monologue that painted the former politico as one in a line of fascists and would-be usurpers who have tried to take over America’s political process. McDaniel, who during her time as RNC head helped former President Donald Trump in his efforts to nullify the 2020 presidential election, said Maddow, “is part of an ongoing project to get rid of our system of government.” NBC News raised hackles late last week when it disclosed it had hired McDaniel as a political contributor. Within days, prominent staffers at NBC News and MSNBC pushed back on the decision, charging that McDaniel’s efforts to assist Trump and cast aspersions on journalists made her unfit to serve at in a paid position at a journalism organization. The on-screen outrage makes McDaniel’s tenure at NBC untenable, according to people familiar with the workings of the news division, with most hard-pressed to think what producer or program would still have her make an appearance. Internally, some staffers are surprised that Cesar Conde, the chairman of NBCUniversal News Group, or Rebecca Blumenstein, the president of newsgathering at NBC News, have not reversed course on McDaniel. Maddow’s remarks came after other segments delivered on MSNBC’s schedule on Monday from Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski of “Morning Joe”; Nicolle Wallace on “Deadline: White House”; Joy Reid on “The ReidOut” and Jennifer Psaki on “Inside.” Of the group, only Psaki delivered relatively succinct comments, telling viewers that while she and McDaniel may both have backgrounds as political operatives, they could not be more different in their efforts in a news organization. McDaniel, said Psaki, “does not get us closer to anything in the political debate.” Wallace and Reid, for their part, brought on guests, including a Yale legal scholar and conservative commentator Charlie Sykes, to question the decision to put McDaniel on air as a paid contributor.