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Garrett Haake
Garrett Haake
from Wikipedia

Garrett Haake (/ˈhk/) is an American journalist who has been working as a Senior White House Correspondent for NBC News and MSNBC since January 2025.[1] He previously served as the Senior Capitol Hill Correspondent for NBC News and MSNBC from 2021 through 2025.[2][3]

Key Information

Early life

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Haake was born in either 1984 or 1985.[4] Haake attended Southern Methodist University where he was offered the President's Scholarship. Haake met Anderson Cooper while Haake was a college student. He graduated from the university in 2007. He interned with NBC Nightly News in New York after his junior year of college.[2]

Career

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Haake began working as a desk assistant for NBC Nightly News. He then took on roles as a researcher, associate producer, and an embedded reporter for a presidential campaign.[2]

He covered the Mitt Romney Presidential Campaign during the 2012 U.S. Presidential Election.[2]

Haake has also covered stories about the Impeachment of Donald Trump and the COVID-19 pandemic. He has characterized his work of being a reporter as akin to "drinking from a firehose".[5]

On January 12, 2023, Haake was scolded by MSNBC anchor Andrea Mitchell for characterizing Republican U.S. Congresswoman Nancy Mace as 'pro-life' during a news segment.[6]

Haake at a rally for then U.S. Senate Candidate Beto O'Rourke in Austin, Texas

Personal life

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Haake is married to NewsNation White House correspondent Allison Harris. They have one daughter.[7]

Haake was previously married to CNN correspondent Sara Murray.[8]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Garrett Haake is an American journalist serving as Senior Correspondent for and MSNBC, where he reports on political developments, congressional activities, and executive branch actions. A graduate of with a in journalism earned in 2007, Haake began his professional career as a desk assistant at in New York before advancing to embedded reporting roles, including coverage of the 2012 presidential campaign for . His work has included on-the-ground reporting from key events such as congressional hearings and election cycles, earning him multiple Emmy nominations for journalistic excellence. Previously holding the position of Senior Correspondent, Haake's career trajectory reflects a focus on national politics amid a media landscape often critiqued for institutional biases influencing coverage.

Early Life and Education

Upbringing and Family Influences

Garrett Haake was born in , , and experienced a peripatetic childhood due to his father's career in the energy industry, which necessitated frequent relocations including to , ; ; and multiple stints in , —once around ages 4 to 5 and again before high school. These moves, as recounted by his mother Marylou Haake, cultivated Haake's adaptability and ease in unfamiliar environments from an early age. His family background emphasized intellectual engagement with the world, with nightly news viewings and discussions of current events shaping his early curiosity about , , and global affairs. Haake's mother noted his precocious inquisitiveness, recalling that books had to be hidden under his bed at night to ensure sleep, as he would otherwise demand more reading. The family's routine of watching anchors like —whom his mother admired—further influenced his path toward . A key family influence was his mother's recurring advice, "," a Persian underscoring the transience of both triumphs and hardships, which Haake later had tattooed on his ribcage as a personal for maintaining perspective amid professional volatility. This , instilled during his formative years in the area where the family eventually settled, complemented the resilience built from their nomadic lifestyle and contributed to his grounded approach in high-stakes reporting.

Academic Training and Early Interests

Haake attended in the Houston area, where he developed an interest in and during his later semesters. His family's habit of watching evening news programs, including those hosted by on ABC, contributed to his early exposure to and shaped his professional inclinations. He enrolled at (SMU) in , , selecting the institution specifically for its program and access to advanced facilities such as the Pederson Broadcast Studio, which simulated professional news environments. Haake majored in with an emphasis on , participating in student media through SMU-TV, though he initially explored various journalistic paths without a fixed specialty. Haake earned a in from SMU in 2007, completing coursework that integrated practical reporting with analytical subjects like and history.

Professional Career

Entry into Journalism

Haake began his professional career during his undergraduate studies at (SMU), where he majored in and graduated summa cum laude in 2007. As a student, he contributed to SMU's student-run news program The Daily Update, gaining hands-on experience in broadcast production, scripting, and on-camera reporting. In the summer of 2006, Haake secured an internship at with in , facilitated by his SMU professor , who recognized his interest in national news. During this period, he supported production tasks while living modestly at the , an experience that confirmed his commitment to over other fields. Following graduation, Haake joined full-time as a desk assistant for in New York, handling logistical and research duties that marked his initial entry-level role in network television. He subsequently advanced to positions as a researcher and associate producer within the same program, building foundational skills in fast-paced news environments before transitioning to field reporting.

Roles at NBC News and MSNBC


Garrett Haake began his tenure at as an associate producer for following his graduation from in 2007. In 2012, he served as an embedded reporter covering the presidential campaign trail for the network. Haake returned to in 2017 to cover as a correspondent.
In September 2021, NBC News promoted Haake to senior congressional correspondent, a role in which he focused on legislative developments and political reporting from During this period, he also covered the and transition in 2024. In January 2025, Haake transitioned to the position of senior correspondent, succeeding in aspects of White House coverage ahead of the incoming Trump administration. As part of his work for MSNBC, Haake has contributed as a on national politics and , appearing regularly to provide on-the-ground analysis from key events such as congressional sessions and coverage. His MSNBC reporting often intersects with assignments, emphasizing real-time updates from the Capitol and .

Notable Assignments and Reporting

Haake gained prominence for his on-the-ground reporting during the January 6, 2021, breach of the U.S. Capitol by supporters of then-President protesting the certification of the 2020 election results. As ' Capitol Hill correspondent, he described witnessing rioters parading through Statuary Hall from his position in the adjacent , characterizing the scene as haunting amid the building's evacuation and heightened security measures that followed. He later reflected on the event's lasting impact on Capitol operations, including persistent security fencing and restricted access even 100 days later, during interviews marking anniversaries of the . Throughout 2023 and 2024, Haake extensively covered Trump's presidential campaign and legal challenges, embedding with rallies and reporting from courtrooms during multiple arraignments related to election interference and classified documents cases. He observed Trump's demeanor evolving from apparent discomfort to greater ease in the proceedings, attributing it to familiarity with the process across jurisdictions. This work built on his prior two years focused on Trump-related stories, contributing to his promotion in January 2025 to senior correspondent for and MSNBC, where he continued scrutinizing administration statements, such as fact-checking Karoline Leavitt's claims about judicial rulings in March 2025. Earlier in his career, Haake reported on Democratic campaigns in , including Beto O'Rourke's 2018 Senate bid against and his short-lived 2019 presidential run. He profiled O'Rourke's outreach to conservative strongholds like King County—where O'Rourke secured just six votes in the primary—and attended rallies in Austin and other cities, highlighting supporter enthusiasm and strategic focuses like border policy. In the 2020 election cycle, he documented voter challenges, interviewing individuals enduring over five-hour waits at polling sites in amid pandemic-related strains.

Reporting Approach and Impact

Journalistic Style and Techniques

Haake's journalistic style emphasizes confrontation with inaccuracies and a persistent pursuit of clarity in high-stakes political environments. He frequently engages in real-time during press briefings, as demonstrated on March 19, 2025, when he interrupted Karoline Leavitt to correct her characterization of U.S. District Judge as a "Democrat activist," noting the judge's appointment by President in 2002. This approach prioritizes immediate accountability over deference, leveraging on-the-spot knowledge to challenge misleading claims. In describing his broader reporting philosophy, Haake advocates for coverage that is "oppositional…but not ideological," maintaining between scrutinizing power and avoiding partisan infusion. This manifests in techniques such as with campaigns for extended, immersive coverage—evident in his 18-month assignment trailing Mitt Romney's presidential bid across 36 states, where he handled video shoots, interviews, and uplinks as a one-man operation. His methods extend to multimedia integration, including rapid dispatches for live updates, blog posts for context, and visual storytelling to capture events like D.C. protests or election nights. Haake's techniques are underpinned by a rigorous adapted to the 24/7 news cycle, advising aspiring journalists to "stay packed" and avoid fixed plans to enable instant deployment for breaking stories. He stresses "hustle, grit, and strategic patience," confidently pressing lawmakers while relying on production teams for depth in an era of hourly deadlines and audience expectations for both speed and analysis. This hands-on versatility, honed from early internships at , allows him to produce comprehensive reports under pressure, from coverage to Texas elections.

Achievements and Recognitions

Haake earned four Emmy nominations in 2012 for his reporting while embedded with Mitt Romney's presidential campaign for NBC News. He has won two regional Emmy Awards for environmental and documentary reporting during his tenure at MSNBC. In 2019, Haake received an Emmy nomination for outstanding coverage of a breaking news story in a newscast, specifically NBC Nightly News' reporting on "State of Emergency: Hurricane Florence." As a member of ' Capitol Hill and teams, Haake contributed to coverage honored at the 43rd Annual in 2022 for outstanding live coverage of current news stories. That year, the Hill team, including Haake, also received Awards from the Radio Television Digital News Association for excellence in reporting. These recognitions highlight his role in high-stakes political and coverage, though individual contributions within team efforts are not always separately delineated in award citations.

Criticisms, Bias Allegations, and Controversies

In January 2023, during coverage of the contentious House Speaker election, senior Capitol Hill correspondent described Republican lawmakers opposing Kevin McCarthy's bid as engaging in a form of "election denialism," a statement highlighted by as an overreach that conflated intra-party procedural dissent with skepticism over the 2020 outcome. Haake has faced accusations from conservative outlets of defending establishment narratives on foreign election interference. In July 2025, he publicly criticized for allegedly "attempting to rewrite the history of Russia's interference," a remark cited as emblematic of media reluctance to revisit Russiagate claims amid later disclosures questioning their evidentiary basis. His reporting has drawn scrutiny for perceived leniency toward critics. In April 2025, Haake's on-air emphasis on the emotional plea from the wife of a deported individual—framed sympathetically amid Trump administration policies—was flagged by opinion pieces as prioritizing personal hardship narratives over broader security rationales, aligning with patterns of coverage accused of downplaying consequences. A minor controversy arose in December 2023 when the Trump campaign disseminated an edited video clip falsely attributing anti-Republican sentiments to Haake, prompting to denounce it as fabricated and demand its removal from , underscoring tensions between the press and political operatives but vindicating Haake's original reporting. In a separate on-air moment that month, MSNBC anchor interrupted Haake's report quoting a Republican's use of "pro-life" terminology on abortion policy, deeming it "not an accurate description" of the position; conservative media, including , portrayed the exchange as revealing network bias against neutral quotation of conservative phrasing, though the rebuke targeted Mitchell's intervention rather than Haake's phrasing. Haake has not been implicated in personal ethical lapses or major scandals, but as part of and MSNBC—networks routinely charged by conservative analysts with institutional left-leaning tilt due to selective framing and terminology preferences—his assignments on Trump-era events invite generalized regarding .

Personal Life and Philosophy

Family and Relationships

Garrett Haake was previously married to Sara Murray, a political correspondent. The couple began dating in 2011, became engaged on November 28, 2015, and wed on April 22, 2017, near . They divorced after approximately six years of marriage. Haake has one daughter from this union, though her name has not been publicly disclosed. Haake married Allison Harris, a White House correspondent for NewsNation, in a ceremony referenced in his September 2021 social media post describing an "unforgettable night" with his bride. The couple welcomed their daughter, Lane Loree Haake, on June 28, 2022. Haake has described himself as a "Girl Dad" on social media, reflecting his role as father to his daughters amid a demanding journalism career.

Personal Motivations and Public Persona

Haake's interest in journalism stemmed from an early curiosity about the world, nurtured by family discussions of news and a love for books during his childhood in a mobile household that included stints in , , and , which fostered adaptability and global awareness. In high school at in , he was influenced by journalism teacher Sheila Alexander, who encouraged his entry into media. Upon selecting (SMU), Haake committed to a journalism major, drawn by its professional-grade Pederson Broadcast Studio and a President's Scholarship, confirming a longstanding aspiration to pursue journalism in some form, though he refined his focus on political reporting through campus experiences like producing for The Daily Update and internships. These formative steps aligned with Haake's motivation to "get your hands dirty" in reporting, viewing as a non-glamorous but essential outlet for innate curiosity about an "interesting" world, rather than a pursuit of fame. Internships, particularly at facilitated by SMU professor , solidified his passion, leading directly to his first industry job and emphasizing hands-on skills over theoretical study. Haake's public persona reflects resilience and perspective, embodied by a ribcage tattoo of ""—advice from his reminding him that "everything changes, good or bad," a principle aiding navigation of the volatile D.C. news cycle, from congressional addresses to insurrections. Influenced by ABC anchor , he projects a , rapport-building demeanor, as seen in leveraging shared SMU golf ties to engage subjects like , while prioritizing audience trust through credible red-state political insight. Off-duty, he maintains balance via fitness and live music, underscoring a grounded, family-focused outlook amid high-stakes reporting.

References

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