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Marcy Wheeler

American journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Marcy Wheeler
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Marcy Wheeler, long known by the handle "emptywheel",[1] is an American independent journalist specializing in national security and civil liberties. Wheeler publishes on her own site, Emptywheel,[2] established in July 2011. She has reported on United States v. Libby (the trial of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby) and the investigation of President Donald Trump's connections to Russia, among other national security matters.

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Early life

Wheeler grew up with parents who worked for IBM.[3] Wheeler graduated with a BA from Amherst College in 1990. With an interest in the way businesses use language, Wheeler worked for the next five years in corporate consulting, specifically teaching employees to compose large documents.[3]

She moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan from her native New York City for graduate school in 1995.[4] In 2000, she earned a Ph.D. in comparative literature from the University of Michigan, writing her dissertation on the feuilleton, a literary-journalistic essay form that is often self-published.[5][6] In her online "Prologue" to Anatomy of Deceit, she observes that the feuilleton essay is an important medium for expressing opinions that might ordinarily be censored due to government displeasure, citing recent examples such as those by former Czechoslovak dissident Václav Havel, who later served for a period as President of the country.

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Career

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Wheeler makes occasional contributions to the commentary and analysis section of The Guardian,[7] Daily Kos, The Huffington Post, Democracy Now!, and Michigan Liberal. Between early December 2007 and July 2011 Wheeler published primarily on Jane Hamsher's FireDogLake (FDL) and prior to that on The Next Hurrah.[8] Many of Wheeler's 2007 blog entries at The Next Hurrah focused on the congressional hearings into the dismissal of eight U.S. attorneys subsequent to the November 2006 U.S. midterm election.[9] Wheeler received a 2009 Sidney Hillman Foundation Journalism Award.[10]

During United States v. Libby, the trial of I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby, Wheeler reported on the testimony as one of the few press-accredited bloggers allowed in the courtroom.[11] In her account, she describes her entries as "not a transcript"; nevertheless, such bloggers' eye-witness accounts served as sources of reliable information about the trial for readers.[12] In his column/blog White House Watch, published in The Washington Post, Dan Froomkin cited the efforts of FiredogLake in live-blogging the Libby trial as "essential reading" (page 3).[13] During the trial, she appeared on camera in video reports posted online on PoliticsTV.com, along with other accredited Libby trial blogger-correspondents such as TalkLeft creator Jeralyn Merritt and FDL creator Jane Hamsher and FDL principal blogger Christy Hardin Smith.[14][15]

Wheeler held an unpaid, part-time position as "Senior Policy Analyst"[16] at The Intercept for several months after its February 2014 launch. She has described that period as a "chaotic time," and said that working there "was a pain in the ass." In particular, she came into conflict with editor-in-chief John Cook, who refused to pay for her work and expertise, was reluctant to publish what she believed was an important surveillance story, and excluded her from the first meeting of all staff reporters—which she construed as Cook's opinion that she was not a worthy journalist. Consequently, she resigned.[17]

Wheeler became a witness in Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation of President Donald Trump's possible connections to Russia after outing one of her sources to the FBI in 2017.[18][19] Wheeler stated that she had "concrete evidence he was lying to [her]" and that her source was "doing serious harm to innocent people".[19]

She campaigned for Democratic presidential candidate Howard Dean in 2004, and is a former vice chairwoman of the Washtenaw County Democratic Party.[4]

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Personal life

Wheeler is married to an engineer.[3] She lives in Limerick, Ireland.[20]

Bibliography

  • Wheeler, Marcy (2007). Anatomy of Deceit: How the Bush Administration Used the Media to Sell the Iraq War and Out a Spy. Berkeley: Vaster Books [Dist. by Publishers Group West]. ISBN 978-0-9791761-0-4.

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