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Chris Hayes

Christopher Loffredo Hayes (/hz/; born February 28, 1979)[1][2][3] is an American political commentator, television news anchor, and author.[4] Hayes hosts All In with Chris Hayes, a weekday news and opinion television show on MSNBC. Hayes also hosts a weekly MSNBC podcast, Why Is This Happening?[5] Hayes formerly hosted a weekend MSNBC show, Up with Chris Hayes. He is an editor-at-large of The Nation magazine.[6]

For other people named Chris Hayes, see Chris Hayes (disambiguation).

Chris Hayes

Christopher Loffredo Hayes

(1979-02-28) February 28, 1979
The Bronx, New York, U.S.
  • Political commentator
  • news anchor
  • author
  • editor

2001–present

Up with Chris Hayes (2011–2013)
All In with Chris Hayes (2013–present)

(m. 2007)

3

Early life[edit]

Hayes was born in the Norwood, Bronx,[2] one of three sons of Roger and Geri Hayes. His mother is of Italian descent and his father is of Irish Catholic ancestry.[7] His father moved to New York from Chicago while studying at a Jesuit seminary, and began community organizing in the Bronx.[8] Roger Hayes spent several years leading community organizing at the Community Service Society of New York and works as an assistant commissioner for the NYC Department of Health. Hayes's mother was a school teacher and works for the NYC Department of Education.[8] Hayes was raised Catholic,[9] but stopped attending services in college[9] and does not consider himself to be religious.[10]


He is a childhood friend and schoolmate of comedian Desus Nice.[11] Hayes attended New York City's prestigious Hunter College High School;[12] his classmates included Immortal Technique[13] and Lin-Manuel Miranda. Hayes directed the latter in Miranda's first musical.[14]


Hayes attended Brown University majoring in philosophy and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 2001. Speaking of "intellectual formation" at Brown with Ezra Klein, Hayes stated, "I was a philosophy major, but I was very much in this sort of analytic school. But the intellectual culture of the place I was with and the people I was with was very influenced by postmodern critique, by Foucault... particularly."[15] At Brown Hayes met his future wife, Kate A. Shaw. [16]

Journalism career[edit]

Print[edit]

Beginning in August 2001,[17] for four years Hayes was a contributor to the independent weekly newspaper Chicago Reader, where he covered local and national politics. In late 2003,[18] he began a four-year stint at In These Times, a labor-focused monthly magazine based in Chicago where he was a senior editor.


From 2005 to 2006, Hayes was a Schumann Center Writing Fellow at In These Times.[19] From 2006 through 2007, Hayes was a Puffin Foundation Writing Fellow at The Nation Institute,[20] and a contributing writer for The Nation. On November 1, 2007, The Nation named him its Washington, D.C. editor, succeeding David Corn.


Hayes wrote extensively on issues central to the liberal community, including what ails the Democratic Party in the post-9/11 era[21] and how the labor movement is changing.[22] He also reported on progressive activists' work to resuscitate the "public option" during the 2009–2010 health care fight when many political insiders wrote it off as dead.[23]


Hayes was an adjunct professor of English at St. Augustine College in Chicago and a Bernard L. Schwartz fellow at New America Foundation from 2008 to 2010.[19]

Cable news[edit]

Hayes guest-hosted The Rachel Maddow Show in July 2010 while Maddow was traveling in Afghanistan and later often filled in for Maddow when she was absent. Hayes has also hosted other MSNBC shows such as The Ed Show, Countdown with Keith Olbermann, and The Last Word with Lawrence O'Donnell.[19]


On November 5, 2010, MSNBC announced that Hayes would be filling in for Keith Olbermann during Olbermann's suspension. However, the network later backtracked after finding out that Hayes had also made political contributions—the issue over which Olbermann was suspended.[24]


Hayes credits Maddow with his becoming a host at MSNBC, saying, "I absolutely would not be doing this if it weren't for her."[6]


Chris Hayes is also the most frequent guest on Late Night with Seth Meyers.[25]

Personal life[edit]

Hayes is married to Kate Shaw, currently a professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania Law School and Supreme Court contributor for ABC News. Shaw had previously clerked for U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens. Shaw and Hayes met while attending Brown together.[53] Her father is veteran Chicago reporter Andy Shaw.[54] Hayes and Shaw resided in Washington, D.C., until they moved to New York City, where All In with Chris Hayes is produced.[55] They have three children.


Hayes' brother Luke worked on Barack Obama's 2008 and 2012 presidential campaigns,[56] and served as the campaign manager for U.S. Congressman Jamaal Bowman in 2020.[57]


As of 2019, Hayes is a member of the Democratic Party.[58]

New Yorkers in journalism

personal site

Chris Hayes

MSNBC site

All In with Chris Hayes

Chris Hayes bio on MSNBC

on C-SPAN

Appearances