There is now an official start date for Kristen Welker as moderator of “Meet the Press.” Welker’s first show as full-time host will be Sept. 17. (Here is NBC News’ first promo announcing her start date.)
Welker takes over for Chuck Todd on the iconic show, which has been on the air since 1947. She becomes the 13th moderator, and the first Black journalist to host the show. She also is just the second woman. (Martha Rountree was the original moderator from 1947 to 1953.)
Welker told Symone Woolridge of TMJ4, the NBC affiliate in Milwaukee, that she hopes “to reflect the voices all across this country from different backgrounds. And I think that that’s a part of the responsibility and a part of the tradition that I will carry.”
With a new moderator comes a bit of a new look. Variety’s Brian Steinberg wrote, “NBC News plans to make a few subtle changes to the program once Welker joins. A new logo, which incorporates some modern design elements, has already been created. Welker will sit behind a new desk at ‘Meet The Press’ and the structure of the program is getting an update, though NBC News declined to offer additional details.”
A quick hot take: Welker is going to do well as moderator of “Meet the Press,” but I’m going to miss Todd. He’s a pro, always prepared, fair and I believe what is said about him in the future is going to be far more favorable than what is typically said on any given Sunday on Twitter (or X) by those who like to yell because “MTP” guests don’t say what they want to hear.
Speaking of Todd …
Todd’s run on “Meet the Press” is certainly going out with a bang. He had quite the interview with Republican presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, who made the rounds on the Sunday morning news shows.
During the Republican presidential debate last Wednesday, Ramaswamy called Donald Trump the greatest president of the 21st century. Todd smartly asked the follow-up that Fox News moderators Bret Baier and Martha MacCallum dropped the ball on during their mediocre-at-best performance.
Todd asked if Ramaswamy believed Trump was so great, “Why are you running against him? Why do you think his second term won't be as good as his first?”
Ramaswamy repeated that he thought Trump was better than George Bush, Barack Obama and Joe Biden, then added, “That being said, I believe I can take the America First agenda even further than Donald Trump did. I think I will be more effective in uniting this country in the process.”
Ramaswamy also bizarrely answered Todd’s questions about Vice President Mike Pence’s role on Jan. 6 by saying Pence should have done what he didn’t have the power to do — overturn the election and institute nationwide voting reform.
Ramaswamy said if he was Pence, “… in my capacity as president of the Senate, I would have led through that level of reform, then, on that condition, certified the election results, served it up to the president, President Trump then, to sign that into law, and on Jan. 7, declared the reelection campaign pursuant to a free and fair election. I think that was a missed opportunity.”
This was just one of the combative interviews Ramaswamy had on Sunday. He also clashed and lost his cool when CNN’s Dana Bash confronted him on several points, including his comments last week comparing Black Democratic Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts to the grand wizard of the KKK.
He told Bash, “I stand by what I said to provoke an open and honest discussion in this country. … I think it is the same spirit to say that, ‘I can look at you and based on just your skin color, that I know something about the content of your character, that I know something about the content of the viewpoints you’re allowed to express.’”
Mediaite’s Joe DePaolo has a recap of the “5 Wildest Moments” of Ramaswamy’s Sunday interviews.
By the way, I just had to include this tweet about Ramaswamy from author and CNN contributor Bill Carter, who has written several books (including “The Late Shift,” about the late-night TV wars): “Do not understand serious journalists taking this man seriously. He’s a cartoon character w cartoonish ideas.”
Pressley’s response
Appearing on MSNBC’s “PoliticsNation,” Pressley responded to Ramaswamy’s KKK remarks by telling host Rev. Al Sharpton, “It is deeply offensive. And it is dangerous. It is not that long ago that we were besieged by images of white supremacists carrying tiki torches in Charlottesville. It was not that long ago that a white supremacist mob seized the Capitol, waving Confederate flags and erecting nooses on the West Lawn of the Capitol.”
Pressly added, “In one of my childhood memories that is deeply embedded in that my own ancestors and living family members have been brutalized, lynched, raped by the Ku Klux Klan. I recall when my family member had moved into a predominantly white cul-de-sac in the ’80s when I was a child. And we had a cross burned in our lawn. So, for me, as deeply shameful and offensive and dangerous as his words are, he is not occupying any real estate in my mind. I remain squarely focused on the work of undoing the centuries of harm that has precisely been done to Black Americans and charting a path of true restorative justice and racial justice forward.”
That’s not debatable