Kayleigh McEnany

Journalist

Kayleigh McEnany was born in Tampa, Florida, United States on April 18th, 1988 and is the Journalist. At the age of 36, Kayleigh McEnany biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

  Report
Date of Birth
April 18, 1988
Nationality
United States
Place of Birth
Tampa, Florida, United States
Age
36 years old
Zodiac Sign
Aries
Networth
$500 Thousand
Salary
$183 Thousand
Profession
Pundit, Writer
Social Media
Kayleigh McEnany Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 36 years old, Kayleigh McEnany has this physical status:

Height
168cm
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Blonde
Eye Color
Green
Build
Slim
Measurements
Not Available
Kayleigh McEnany Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Not Available
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
Academy of the Holy Name; Georgetown University, Harvard University
Kayleigh McEnany Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Sean Gilmartin ​(m. 2017)​
Children
1
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Kayleigh McEnany Life

Kayleigh McEnany (born April 18, 1988) is a political analyst and writer in the United States.

She is a former CNN contributor.

She was appointed national spokesperson for the Republican National Committee in 2017.

She was announced as the Donald Trump presidential national press secretary in February 2019.

Early life and education

McEnany was born in Tampa, Florida, and was raised in Tampa. She is the niece of commercial roofing company owner Michael and Leanne McEnany. McEnany attended the Academy of the Holy Names, a private Catholic preparatory academy in Tampa. She concentrated in international politics at Georgetown University's School of Foreign Service in Washington, D.C., after graduating, and she studied abroad at St Edmund Hall, Oxford. While at Oxford, she was taught politics by future British Labour politician Nick Thomas-Symonds. McEnany, a Georgetown alumnus, spent three years as a producer on the Mike Huckabee show.

McEnany attended the University of Miami School of Law for one year before transferring to Harvard Law School after completing her first (1L) year at the University of Miami. McEnany was a recipient of the Bruce J. Winick Award for Excellence, a scholarship given to students in the top 1% of their class. She graduated from Harvard in 2016.

Personal life

In November 2017, McEnany married Sean Gilmartin, a pitcher in Major League Baseball. They have one child, who was born in November 2019. McEnany underwent a preventive double mastectomy in 2018 due to a BRCA mutation that put her at a high risk of breast cancer. She revealed that she was pregnant with her second child in June 2022.

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Kayleigh McEnany Career

Career

McEnany interned for many politicians, including Tom Gallagher, Adam Putnam, and George W. Bush, and later worked in the White House Office of Communications, where she wrote media briefings.

McEnany spent time in law school and appeared on CNN as a paid commentator. In the 2016 presidential race, she endorsed Donald Trump. However, McEnoughty was highly critical of him in early 2015, claiming that "Donald Trump has shown himself to be a showman" and "inauthentic" to call him a Republican." McEnany referred to Mexican immigrants as "racist." After accepting Marcantonio's counsel, which he gave to her over cocktails, Michael Marcantonio, a fellow summer associate at a law firm, started supporting Trump, she began supporting her. Marcantonio recalls telling McEny, "Donald Trump is going to be your nominee" and that "a savvy, young, blond Harvard undergraduate" would want to "be on television and have a career as a political pundit" as a "better pundit" and "be an early backer."

McEnany resigned from CNN on August 5, 2017. On Trump's personal Facebook page, she hosted a 90-second webcast, Real News Update. Throughout the program, she praised Trump, saying she had brought the "true news" to the American people.

Mike Huckabee, a former employee, has described her as a "intelligent researcher" and "extraordinarily prepared." Van Jones, CNN commentator and liberal activist who worked with her at CNN, praised her rapid career. "I'm not trying to defend the messages, but I hope people understand that there are very few people in either party that have succeeded in such a short time..."

McEnany has been closely affiliated with the Republican Party since she was in college. She was critical of the Obama presidency and took to Twitter in 2012 a series of tweets ridiculing Barack Obama's birthplace, repeating the "birther" conspiracy theorist movement. McEnany, a Kenyan who lives in Kenya, wrote a tweet about Obama's half-brother Malik Obama: "How I Met Your Brother" – "I forget he's still in Kenya's hut."

She responded to allegations that Trump visited his golf course as president by mistakenly saying that Obama rushed off to a golf tournament following Daniel Pearl's 2002 beheading. At the time of Pearl's assassination, Obama was a state senator. McEnany later apologised for the remark, noting that Obama went golfing after the assassination of James Foley, another journalist, who was reportedly assassinated by ISIS in Syria in 2014. After making a press statement on Foley's death, Obama, who was vacationing on Martha's Vineyard at the time, admitted that he should have "anticipated the optics" of golfing right away. The Republican National Committee (RNC) named McEnany as the country's national spokesperson on August 7, 2017. McEnany, RNC spokeswoman, praised Trump for his remarks about a white supremacist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, in which he suggested that white supremacists and anti-racist protesters shared responsibility for violence; in a tweet, McEnany said the Republican Party endorses Trump's "message of love and compassion."

"I don't believe the president has lied" McEnany told CNN's Chris Cuomo in August.

McEnany lauded Trump's treatment of the COVID-19 pandemic, saying, "This president will always put America first and always shield American citizens." We will not see diseases similar to the coronavirus here, we will not see terrorism, and it isn't surprising when compared it to Barack Obama's tumultuous presidency? The disease had been present in the United States for at least a month before McEnany's assertion that the virus would not "arrive here"; in December 2020 Politico ranked McEnany's forecast as one of "the most audacious, tenacious, and spectacularly inaccurate prognostications about the year." In March 2020, McEnany said that Democrats were trying to "politize" the coronavirus and that Democrats were practically "rooting for" the result.

McEnany was chastised for her remarks in the weeks that followed. "Kayleigh McEnany is coming to the White House with a new 'alternative truth' about #coronavirus, according to author Grant Stern. They're lying to the rest of the world." McEncounter said she was referring to Trump's travel ban.

Meadows' first staff change, after Mark Meadows replaced Mick Mulvaney as White House chief of staff in April 2020, was recruiting McEnany as White House press secretary on April 7, 2020, which was first reported the next day. Stephanie Grisham, who had been in office and as White House communications director since June 2019, became First Lady Melania Trump's chief of staff and spokesperson.

"She has made it abundantly clear from her first briefing that she is able to defend her boss's image as well as his most flagrant misstatements," McEnany said two months into his tenure.

McEnany defended Trump's assertion that the World Health Organisation had demonstrated a "clear bias against China" during the coronavirus pandemic and said that the WHO put Americans in jeopardy by "repeating inaccurate claims peddled by China during the coronavirus pandemic" and "opposing the US' life-saving travel restrictions."

McEnany was asked by an Associated Press reporter on May 1, 2020, "will you promise not to lie to us from the podium," she said during her first public press briefing and the first one by a White House press secretary in 417 days. "I will never lie to you," McEnany said. You have my word on it." "This president has always supported the facts" in terms of Trump's reactions to the coronavirus pandemic," she wrote. McEnany said, "He has always told the truth" in reaction to Trump's sexual assault allegations. "The Mueller Report," McEnany mistook it for "complete and complete exoneration of President Trump" as part of the larger probe into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election."

McEnany said that the White House was "shelving" the publication of COVID-19 re-opening guidelines amid rumors on May 8, 2020, that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)'s Robert Redfield, the administrator of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, declined the recommendations. Redfield had previously approved the publication of the guidelines, but not for public release, according to the Associated Press, who said that the documents were still in "draft form" and not for public broadcasting. In a private phone call with members of his former administration, Obama described the Trump administration's response to the coronavirus outbreak as "an absolute chaos." McEnany responded the next day by tweeting a statement to CNN that the "response has been unprecedented and saved American lives."

McEnany denied Trump's false belief that Joe Scarborough had been killed in May 2020, but gave no evidence in favor of the allegation. McEnany denied allegations that Trump advised about the dangers of voting by mail this month, repeating his assertion that a vote by mail has a "high risk of voter fraud." McEnany has voted by mail 11 times in ten years.

In June 2020, she defended the Trump administration's decision to forcibly ban peaceful protestors from smoking canisters, pepper balls, riot shields, batons, and rubber bullets from horseback and rubber bullets so that Trump could stage a photo op in front of St. John's Episcopal Church, Lafayette Square in Washington. She likened Trump's move to that of Winston Churchill, who was walking the streets to assess bomb damage during World War II. When McEnany, the Trump administration's former defense minister, condemned Trump's conduct, Mattis' remarks were described as "less than a self-promotional stunt to enrage the DC elite."

On September 9, 2020, news organizations released audio recordings of interviews with Trump that former Washington Post journalist Bob Woodward undertook in February and March 2020 for his book Rage, in which Trump admitted to Woodward that he was deliberately downplaying the severity of the SARS-CoV-2 corona virus, which CNN had obtained ahead of the book's release on September 15, 2020. "The president never downplayed the virus," McEnany said in the aftermath of this growth. In fact, Trump has consistently and flatly denied the dangers of the virus and its severity, and Woodward's interview with Woodward on March 19, 2020 said, "I want to always play it down." I still enjoy playing it down because I don't want to cause panic." Monica Wemple, a Washington Post media analyst, wrote that she had sacrificed her credibility in reaction to McEnany's remarks, although Joe Lockhart, who served as White House Press Secretary during the Clinton administration, described her as a "state propagandist."

McEnany was positive for COVID-19 on October 5, 2020. Despite knowing she had worked with people who had been diagnosed with coronavirus days before, McEnany began to speak with the public on several occasions but not wearing a mask until she finally tested positive for the coronavirus. Chad Gilmartin, the cousin of McEnany's husband, was one of McEnany's employees to test positive for COVID-19.

Though voting was still being counted on election day, McEncounter made an early victory for Trump. McEnany denied allegations of fraud in the 2020 election after Joe Biden gained the nomination and President Donald Trump refused to retaliate, triggering McEncounter's allegations of misconduct. McEnany incorrectly stated that Trump was not given a "orderly transition of power" on November 20, 2020. Hillary Clinton conceded to Trump within two days of his election, while then-President Obama congratulated Trump as president-elect and welcomed Trump at the White House. "For their generous support during this transition," Trump said of Obama and his wife. President Trump sacked Chris Christie, the head of his transition team, who stymied months of transition planning and refused to offer support from the Obama administration. McEnany's comment came as Trump himself was refusing to acknowledge Joe Biden's victory as legitimate; Trump was also actively delaying the delivery of power to president-elect Biden for two weeks.

Randall Lane, a writer for Forbes, warned companies against recruiting McEnany or other individuals "who lied for Trump," meaning that "Forbes will assume that everything your company or company talks about is a lie." We're going to scrutinize, double-check, investigate with the same skepticism we'd display in a Trump tweet. Want to know that the world's most influential business media company brand is approaching you as a potential channel of disinformation? "Then was fired from the company immediately."

McEnany, on March 2, 2021, joined Fox News as an on-air contributor. She was later named co-host of Outnumbered alongside Harris Faulkner and Emily Compagno.

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Kayleigh McEnany reveals the horror of her cancer scare - and how a phonecall from Trump as she recovered from breast-removal surgery changed everything

www.dailymail.co.uk, August 31, 2024
Former White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany elected to have a double mastectomy in 2020 after finding out she, like her mother, had the BRCA2 gene, which increases the risk of developing breast cancer. She said she was 'blown away' by the support she received from Donald and Ivanka Trump as she recovered from surgery.

Where are Trump's first White House team and will they vote for him in 2024?

www.dailymail.co.uk, May 12, 2024
Top Trump officials have followed different paths since the dramatic conclusion of Trump's term. One became governor of Arkansas. Another is serving time in a Florida prison. Prominent critics landed plum TV spots.

Trump slams his former White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany as a 'RINO' after she criticized his New Hampshire victory speech and suggested he adopt a more 'general election tone'

www.dailymail.co.uk, January 24, 2024
After she begged Donald Trump to change his tone, she morphed into his former press secretary, Kayleigh McEnany, branding her a RINO and saying he doesn't 'need any advice.' Trump triumphed in the New Hampshire primary, but McEnough advised him to look "under the hood" and tailor his message to independents in an attempt to unify the nation. During a large portion of his victory speech, Trump chastised rival Nikki Haley.
Kayleigh McEnany Tweets