American journalist
Ali Vitali
Born (1990-03-22 ) March 22, 1990 (age 34) Nationality American Education Tulane University (BA ) Occupation Journalist
Ali Vitali is an American journalist, television analyst, and author.
Ali Vitali was born on March 22,[ 1] 1990[ 2] to Lou and Angela Vitali. She grew up in Briarcliff Manor, New York with a younger sister.[ 1] [ 3]
Vitali majored in Political Science and Communications with a minor in English and graduated as a Magna Cum Laude Presidential Scholar with Department Honors in 2012[ 2] from Tulane University .[ 4] [ 3]
In 2012, Vitali was a Production and Development Assistant at ABC News . She worked at Sweet Lemon Media (2012–14) as VP and Managing Editor.[ 2] [ 5]
Vitali covered the Donald Trump 2016 presidential campaign and was a White House correspondent .[ 6]
Vitali was an embedded journalist on the Elizabeth Warren 2020 presidential campaign , helping to inform her book Electable. [ 7] She also covered the Amy Klobuchar 2020 campaign , and Michael Bloomberg 2020 campaign .[ 6] Formerly with MSNBC, she presently is a Capitol Hill correspondent with NBC News, and recently appeared as a panelist on "Washington Week".[ 4] [ 3]
She lives in Washington D.C. , with her partner, CNN correspondent, Jeremy Diamond .[ 8]
^ a b "BIRTHDAY OF THE DAY: Ali Vitali, NBC political reporter" . Politico . March 22, 2019.
^ a b c "Ali Vitali: Biography 2021" . biographyhost . 29 July 2021. Retrieved 2023-02-16 .
^ a b c Editorial Team (2021-02-19). "Ali Vitali Bio, Wikipedia, Age ( MSNBC ) Wiki, Ethnicity, Parents, Boyfriend" . Marathi.TV . Retrieved 2023-02-16 .
^ a b "Impression: Ali Vitali" . tulanian.tulane.edu . Winter 2023.
^ "Ali Vitali Bio, Age, NBC, Ethnicity, Height, Parents, Father, Husband, Dating" . ProfileBios . 2022-01-12. Retrieved 2023-02-16 .
^ a b "Ali Vitali" . Washington Week . 2021-10-28. Retrieved 2022-11-05 .
^ "Elizabeth Warren and the 'Electability Question' " . POLITICO . 12 August 2022. Retrieved 2022-08-29 .
^ Montgomery, Mimi; Moeller, Amy (February 11, 2020). "7 of DC's Favorite Couples Tell Us How They Met" . Washingtonian .
^ Métraux, Julia (2022-08-22). "Why don't we see women as "electable"?" . Poynter . Retrieved 2022-08-24 .
^ "NBC's Ali Vitali on how the US can elect its first female president: 'More of them need to run' " . Business Insider . Retrieved 2022-08-24 .
^ "New book 'Electable' explores why a woman still hasn't won the presidency... yet" . NPR.org . Retrieved 2022-08-24 .
^ Haines, Errin (2022-08-19). "What makes someone presidential — and will she ever be elected?" . The 19th . Retrieved 2022-08-24 .
^ "Ali Vitali's "Electable" challenges voters to reconsider who they 'envision' can be president" . MSNBC.com . Retrieved 2022-08-24 .
^ Schizer, Meredith Wolf (2022-08-17). "NBC reporter Ali Vitali says 'just winning' proves women's 'electability' " . Newsweek . Retrieved 2022-08-24 .
Anchors Hosts Correspondents Political analysts Legal analysts Military analysts National security analysts