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Matthew Continetti
Matthew Continetti
from Wikipedia

Matthew Joseph Continetti (born June 24, 1981) is an American journalist and Director of Domestic Policy Studies at the American Enterprise Institute[1] and as of 2025, a columnist for The Wall Street Journal and a contributor to its Potomac Watch podcast.[2][3]

Key Information

Early life and education

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Continetti was born in Alexandria, Virginia, on June 24, 1981,[4] the son of Cathy (née Finn) and Joseph F. Continetti.[5] Continetti graduated from Columbia University in 2003.[6] While in college, he wrote for the Columbia Spectator, the Intercollegiate Studies Institute's magazine, CAMPUS, and Columbia Political Review.[6][7] In summer 2002, he did an internship for the Intercollegiate Studies Institute's student journalism program, Collegiate Network, at National Review, where he was a research assistant to its editor, Rich Lowry.[6][8]

Career

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Following college, he joined The Weekly Standard as an editorial assistant, and later became associate editor.[6] In 2011, he was a Claremont Institute Lincoln Fellow.[9] He is now a contributing editor to National Review.[10] He has written for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, National Review, The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, and The Financial Times.[11] He has also been an on-camera contributor to Bloggingheads.tv.[12]

He has criticized Glenn Beck as "nonsense."[13] He has argued the American media turned on Sarah Palin during the 2008 campaign because they had blind allegiance to Barack Obama.[14] He has criticized American academia as uniformly left-wing.[15]

From October 2015 to May 2016, the Washington Free Beacon, under Continetti's stewardship, hired Fusion GPS to conduct opposition research on "multiple candidates" during the 2016 presidential election, including Donald Trump. The Free Beacon stopped funding his research when Trump was selected as the Republican Party nominee.[16]

Personal life

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Continetti lives in Arlington County, Virginia.[11] He is married to Anne Elizabeth Kristol, the daughter of William Kristol, Vice President Dan Quayle's Chief of Staff.[5] Continetti converted to Judaism in 2011, prior to his marriage to Kristol.[10] In May 2023, the Russian Foreign Ministry sanctioned Continetti and barred him from entry, along with 500 other Americans.[17]

Bibliography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Matthew Continetti is an American journalist, author, and policy analyst specializing in the intellectual history and internal debates of American conservatism. As director of domestic policy studies and holder of the Patrick and Charlene Neal Chair in American Prosperity at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), he examines domestic policy issues alongside conservatism's evolution. Continetti authored The Right: The Hundred-Year War for American Conservatism (2022), a comprehensive account tracing conservatism's factions, tensions over nationalism, populism, and establishment priorities from the early 20th century onward. Previously, he founded and served as editor-in-chief of the Washington Free Beacon, a conservative outlet focused on investigative reporting and political commentary, and held the role of opinion editor at The Weekly Standard, where he contributed to shaping neoconservative discourse. His earlier books include The K Street Gang: The Rise and Fall of the Republican Machine (2006), critiquing lobbying influences in GOP politics, and The Persecution of Sarah Palin (2010), analyzing media treatment of the 2008 vice-presidential candidate. Continetti also writes as a columnist for The Free Press and Commentary magazine, and as a contributing editor for National Review, maintaining influence in conservative intellectual circles.

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Upbringing

Matthew Continetti was born on June 24, 1981, in Alexandria, Virginia. He is the son of Cathy Continetti and Joseph F. Continetti, who resided in Springfield, Virginia. Continetti grew up in the Washington, D.C., suburbs during the 1980s and early 1990s, in a household attuned to national politics. The family routinely devoted Saturday evenings to viewing political commentary programs, fostering an early exposure to journalistic analysis of current events. This environment, situated near the political epicenter of the United States, likely contributed to his subsequent career trajectory in conservative journalism, though specific details on his parents' professions or additional family influences remain undocumented in public records.

Academic Training

Continetti attended Columbia University in New York City, where he majored in history. He enrolled as an undergraduate in 1999 and completed his studies in 2003, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree. This program provided foundational training in historical analysis, research methodologies, and critical evaluation of primary sources, equipping him for subsequent work in political journalism and conservative intellectual commentary. No advanced degrees or further formal academic pursuits beyond the bachelor's level are documented in professional biographies.

Professional Career

Entry into Journalism

Continetti began his journalism career during his undergraduate studies at , where he interned in the Washington, D.C., offices of National Review through the Collegiate Network program in the summer of 2002. There, he assisted editors including John J. Miller, , and the late Kate O'Beirne. O'Beirne subsequently recommended him to National Review editor for a research position upon his return to campus that fall. Following his graduation from Columbia in 2003 with a bachelor's degree in history, Continetti transitioned to a full-time role at The Weekly Standard as a Collegiate Network fellow, starting on July 7, 2003. Initially serving as an editorial assistant, he advanced within the publication, which was a prominent conservative magazine during the George W. Bush administration. This position marked his entry into professional journalism, focusing on political reporting and opinion writing amid the era's debates over Iraq policy and Republican governance.

Tenure at The Weekly Standard

Continetti joined in 2003 shortly after graduating from , initially serving as an editorial assistant and writer. He advanced rapidly within the magazine, becoming an associate editor and eventually opinion editor, a position he held by 2011. As opinion editor at the publication, which exerted significant influence within the administration's conservative policy circles, Continetti oversaw commentary on domestic and foreign policy issues, including critiques of narratives, federal debt under President Obama, and in the executive branch. His own contributions included reporting and analysis on political movements, such as the dual populist and libertarian strains within the emerging Tea Party in 2009, and historical assessments like media coverage of Ronald Reagan. Continetti's work emphasized empirical scrutiny of policy claims, often challenging left-leaning media framings on topics like income disparity without conceding to redistributionist premises. During this period, The Weekly Standard maintained a neoconservative editorial line supportive of interventionist foreign policy and free-market domestic reforms, with Continetti's role contributing to its reputation for rigorous, idea-driven conservatism amid partisan debates. Continetti departed The Weekly Standard in 2012 to found the Washington Free Beacon, marking the end of his approximately nine-year tenure at the magazine.

Founding and Leadership of the Washington Free Beacon

The Washington Free Beacon was co-founded by Matthew Continetti, Michael Goldfarb, and Aaron Harrison, launching on February 7, 2012, as a conservative online news outlet focused on investigative reporting into government affairs, public policy, national security, and media coverage of progressive causes. Initially structured as a project of the Center for American Freedom, a conservative advocacy group, the publication positioned itself as a for-profit enterprise dedicated to exposing what its founders viewed as overlooked stories and biases in mainstream reporting. Continetti served as the founding editor and editor-in-chief from the outlet's inception through 2019, directing its editorial voice toward aggressive scrutiny of left-leaning policies, institutions, and media narratives. Under his leadership, the Free Beacon developed a reputation for rapid, pointed coverage of political scandals and policy critiques, often employing opposition research tactics, including commissioning Fusion GPS in 2015 for investigative work on Republican primary candidates prior to the general election cycle. This approach emphasized empirical exposure of factual discrepancies in elite discourse, contrasting with what Continetti and his team perceived as systemic omissions in legacy media. During Continetti's tenure, the publication grew into a key digital platform for conservative journalism, prioritizing verifiable data and primary sourcing to challenge prevailing narratives on issues like government spending and cultural shifts. He stepped down in 2019, succeeded by Eliana Johnson as editor-in-chief, amid the outlet's evolution into a more established media entity funded in part by donors such as hedge fund manager Paul Singer.

Role at the American Enterprise Institute

Matthew Continetti is the director of domestic policy studies at the (AEI), where he holds the inaugural Patrick and Charlene Neal Chair in American Prosperity. In this capacity, his work centers on American political thought and history, with particular emphasis on the Republican Party, the conservative movement, and 20th-century conservatism. On August 29, 2023, AEI President appointed Continetti to the directorship, tasking him with leading the institute's team of domestic policy experts. Prior to this elevation, Continetti served as a senior fellow at AEI. Doar highlighted Continetti's leadership and vision, noting his expertise in translating scholarly ideas into media and political influence. Continetti's responsibilities include guiding research on the historical development of American conservatism and its implications for contemporary policy debates. His tenure has involved contributing to AEI's broader agenda on domestic issues, drawing from his background in journalism and conservative intellectual history.

Ongoing Media and Commentary Work

Continetti holds the position of director of studies and the inaugural Patrick and Charlene Neal Chair in American Prosperity at the (AEI), where he publishes op-eds analyzing contemporary political developments, including Republican stances on and U.S. engagements. Since 2025, he has served as a for The Free Press, contributing weekly pieces that dissect factions, dynamics, and figures within the American right, such as examinations of and national cohesion. Examples include his September 10, 2025, article framing a hypothetical as evidence of deepening national divisions. Continetti maintains a long-standing role as a columnist for Commentary magazine since 2014, authoring articles on topics ranging from domestic crises to international relations, including a October 2025 piece on Donald Trump's diplomatic maneuvers. He co-hosts the Commentary Magazine Podcast, discussing current events like Middle East policy and cultural shifts. As a contributing editor to since 2018, he provides ongoing commentary on conservative intellectual history and policy debates. Additionally, Continetti appears regularly as a commentator on outlets such as Fox News' and NBC's , offering analysis of American political thought and historical context.

Key Intellectual Contributions

Analysis of Conservatism's History

In The Right: The Hundred-Year War for American Conservatism (2022), Matthew Continetti presents American conservatism as a dynamic, factionalized movement defined by perpetual internal conflicts rather than a unified , tracing its evolution from the onward as a series of "wars" among competing visions for preserving , tradition, and against progressive encroachments. He begins with the post-World War I era under Presidents and , portraying early conservatism as a default governing emphasizing hands-off business policies, patriotism, and normalcy, akin to modern national populism but vulnerable to economic shocks like the , which empowered statism and forced the right into opposition. This period, Continetti argues, set the template for recurring tensions between elitist intellectualism and mass appeals, with isolationist and protectionist strains emerging as responses to globalism and immigration. Continetti identifies the post-World War II era as pivotal, crediting and with forging a "fusionist" coalition in the 1950s and 1960s that merged traditionalism, free-market , and into a counter-elite force capable of electoral success. By the 1960s, however, populism resurfaced through the "," exemplified by figures like opposing cultural liberalism and elite conservatism, while internal rifts—such as Richard Nixon's reframing of Joseph McCarthy's legacy in 1954 or Goldwater's 1972 primary clash with —highlighted enduring divides over demagoguery, nationalism, and racism. This culminated in Ronald Reagan's 1980s coalition, which Continetti views as a high-water mark of pragmatic governance blending anti-Soviet hawkishness with , though strained by 1980s clashes between traditionalists and neoconservatives, as seen in Patrick Buchanan's critiques of Irving Kristol's interventionism. Post-Cold War developments, in Continetti's analysis, fragmented the movement further, with paleoconservatives decrying neoconservative adventurism and free-trade orthodoxy, paving the way for the Tea Party's 2009-2010 backlash against bailouts and Obamacare as a revival of anti-elite populism. He interprets Donald Trump's 2016 rise not as a rupture but as an intensification of these historical patterns—echoing McCarthyite tactics and Wallace's appeals—exacerbated by elite-mass disconnects, yet warns that tethering to Trump's persona undermines policy coherence, competence, and intellectual rigor, quoting his own assessment: "A conservatism anchored to Trump the man will face insurmountable obstacles." Overall, Continetti emphasizes 's adaptive resilience through generational "New Rights," but cautions against its vulnerability to factional purges that prioritize enmity over enduring principles like ordered .

Critiques of Media Bias and Elite Institutions

Continetti has argued that mainstream media outlets exhibit a persistent liberal bias that distorts coverage of conservative figures and ideas, often prioritizing ideological narratives over factual reporting. In his 2009 book The Persecution of Sarah Palin: How the Elite Media Tried to Bring Down a Rising Star, he detailed how national media organizations, including The New York Times and The Washington Post, launched an unrelenting assault on Sarah Palin after her selection as John McCain's vice-presidential running mate in August 2008, amplifying unverified claims about her family, ethics, and competence while downplaying similar scrutiny of Democratic counterparts. This bias, Continetti contended, reflected a broader elite media consensus hostile to outsiders challenging establishment norms. To counter such imbalances, Continetti co-founded the Washington Free Beacon in 2012, positioning it as a platform for aggressive, fact-based that mainstream outlets often avoid, such as exposing government waste, university scandals, and policy failures under progressive administrations. Unlike traditional conservative responses limited to op-eds, the Free Beacon under his editorship aimed to produce scoops that force , as when it revealed undisclosed partisan funding in advocacy research or biases in resource allocation favoring racial criteria. During his tenure at Commentary magazine, Continetti contributed a monthly media column that dissected instances of slant, such as selective and narrative framing in coverage of political events, underscoring how these practices erode public trust. Continetti extends his critiques to elite institutions like universities and the federal bureaucracy, portraying them as ideologically captured entities insulated from broader societal accountability. He has highlighted universities' failure to combat antisemitism following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks, describing an "appalling silence" from administrators amid campus protests and harassment of Jewish students, which he attributes to entrenched progressive orthodoxies prioritizing identity politics over civil discourse and safety. Regarding the administrative state, Continetti views it as a sprawling, unaccountable apparatus bloated by decades of expansion, advocating for its reform to curb executive overreach and ideological entrenchment, as evidenced in his support for efforts to "de-wokeify" government agencies infiltrated by progressive mandates. In a July 2025 Free Press article, he attributed the "progressive implosion" in these institutions to internal rot—self-inflicted through dogmatic conformity and detachment from empirical realities—rather than solely external pressures, arguing that such decay has eroded their legitimacy and fueled populist backlash. These critiques frame elite institutions as perpetuating a disconnect between governing classes and ordinary Americans, with media bias amplifying this rift by shielding insiders from scrutiny. Continetti maintains that conservatism's historical tension arises from outsiders challenging institutional gatekeepers, a dynamic he traces in works like The Right, where he notes conservatives' perennial position outside power centers, reliant on alternative media to pierce elite filters. He cautions against overreliance on grievance narratives, urging instead substantive policy reversals to realign institutions with constitutional limits and public will.

Perspectives on Trumpism and the Modern Right

In his 2022 book The Right: The Hundred-Year War for American Conservatism, Matthew Continetti frames Trumpism as an extension of longstanding tensions within American conservatism over nationalism, populism, and demagoguery, rather than a radical departure. He argues that the modern right has periodically embraced fringe leaders who pull it toward extremism, but Trump represents a populist strain emphasizing secure borders and economic protectionism that echoes earlier figures like Pat Buchanan. Continetti cautions that conservatism overly dependent on Trump's personal charisma risks policy incoherence and institutional instability, as historical precedents show such movements struggle with governance. Continetti identifies three core elements defining contemporary under : stringent controls, skepticism of globalist elites, and assertive to restore American deterrence. In a , 2025, New York Times opinion piece, he asserts that Trump's crackdown is essential for sustaining his fractious coalition, distinguishing Trumpism 2.0 from prior fusionist models by prioritizing border security as a unifying issue amid urban protests and militarized responses. This view aligns with his analysis that the modern Republican Party's viability hinges on translating populist rhetoric into tangible results, avoiding the pitfalls of seen in past right-wing surges. Following Trump's 2024 reelection, Continetti's assessments evolved toward qualified endorsement of Trumpism's executive efficacy. In an April 28, 2025, The Free Press article on Trump's first 100 days, he describes the second term as a revolutionary shift, with Trump remaking federal institutions and unhindered by prior investigations like the Mueller probe, pursuing a "golden age" vision less tethered to traditional conservative priorities. By June 30, 2025, he portrayed Trump's policy wins—including nuclear strikes on June 21, trade victories, and a July 4 tax-spending bill—as peak validation of MAGA populism, cementing it as a governing and enhancing U.S. , though he questions the streak's longevity. Continetti critiques the modern right's lack of an intellectual-policy nexus, noting in 2023 discussions that fragmented think tanks fail to channel ideas into coherent agendas, exacerbating 's reliance on over . Yet he acknowledges populism's necessity for electoral success, warning against dismissing it as mere demagoguery given conservatism's historical adaptation to mass sentiments. This balanced perspective underscores his belief that endures by delivering on voter priorities like and deterrence, but requires institutional discipline to avoid self-inflicted fringes.

Major Works

The Persecution of Sarah Palin

The Persecution of Sarah Palin: How the Elite Media Tried to Bring Down a Rising Star is a book authored by Matthew Continetti, published on November 12, 2009, by Sentinel, an imprint of Penguin Books. The 240-page work analyzes the intense media scrutiny faced by Sarah Palin following her selection as the Republican vice presidential nominee on September 3, 2008, arguing that elite journalists engaged in systematic distortion and personal attacks to derail her political ascent and, by extension, the McCain-Palin ticket. Continetti, then an associate editor at The Weekly Standard, contends that the coverage exemplified liberal media bias, where Palin's evangelical faith, family values, and outsider status provoked a visceral reaction from urban, secular elites, leading to caricatures that bore little resemblance to her actual record as Alaska's governor. He documents how outlets like The New York Times, ABC News, and NBC amplified unverified claims, such as allegations surrounding Palin's handling of "Troopergate"—an ethics probe into her firing of a state official—and spun policy positions on issues like energy and foreign affairs into perceived ignorance. Specific incidents highlighted include the October 2008 Katie Couric interview on CBS, where Palin's responses were edited and framed as evasive flubs despite context showing competence, and relentless focus on her daughter Bristol's out-of-wedlock pregnancy and son Trig's Down syndrome birth as evidence of hypocrisy rather than personal resilience. The book's core argument frames this as not mere scrutiny of a novice candidate but a "" driven by ideological snobbery, where media figures dismissed Palin's appeal to working-class conservatives as emblematic of flyover-country backwardness, thereby revealing their own detachment from mainstream America. Continetti draws on contemporaneous reporting, internal campaign memos, and journalistic ethics critiques to assert that such tactics constituted malpractice, prioritizing narrative over facts— for instance, inflating minor ethical questions into scandals while ignoring Barack Obama's associations with figures like . He positions Palin's survival amid over 1,000 negative stories in the first month post-nomination as a testament to her authenticity, serving as a point for conservatives wary of establishment media. In broader terms, Continetti uses Palin's case to illustrate a pattern of adversarial against Republican figures embodying cultural traditionalism, warning that unchecked elite media power erodes democratic discourse by alienating non-coastal voters. The work received praise from conservative commentators for exposing double standards, such as lighter treatment of Democratic nominees' families, though critics later viewed it as overly sympathetic to an "unpolished" whose own errors contributed to vulnerabilities.

The Right: The Hundred-Year War for American Conservatism

The Right: The Hundred-Year War for American Conservatism is a 496-page book authored by Matthew Continetti and published by Basic Books on April 19, 2022. It offers a chronological intellectual history of the American right from the Progressive Era through the Trump presidency, emphasizing conservatism's development from fragmented intellectual circles into an organized political movement amid persistent internal divisions. Continetti contends that these divisions—over issues like nationalism, populism, elitism, and responses to liberalism—constitute an enduring "war" within conservatism, rather than a unified ideology, challenging narratives that portray the movement as static or solely Reagan-era in origin. The book traces early 20th-century precursors, such as opposition to Progressive reforms under figures like Herbert Hoover, and interwar isolationism, before detailing the mid-century fusion of traditionalism, libertarianism, and anti-communism spearheaded by William F. Buckley Jr. and National Review. Continetti highlights Buckley's role in marginalizing extremist elements, including nativists and segregationists, to forge a coalition capable of influencing policy during the Cold War, as evidenced by the 1964 Barry Goldwater campaign and Ronald Reagan's 1980 victory. Post-Cold War, the narrative shifts to challenges like the neoconservative ascendancy in the 1990s, the Tea Party revolt against establishment Republicans in 2009–2010, and the populist disruptions under Donald Trump from 2015 onward, where Continetti argues that elements like economic nationalism and anti-elitism echo pre-existing tensions rather than representing a radical break. Continetti structures the work around key eras and biographical vignettes of influential thinkers and politicians, such as chapters on "Normalcy and its discontents" addressing reactions to and early chapters referencing National Review's address at 1150 Seventeenth Street. He draws on primary sources including periodicals, speeches, and correspondence to illustrate how adapted institutions like think tanks and magazines to counter progressive dominance, while critiquing the movement's recurring vulnerability to demagoguery and factionalism. The analysis underscores causal factors like economic dislocations and cultural shifts driving these debates, positioning as a symptom of unresolved debates over the right's relationship to mass politics and establishment power.

Reception and Influence

Praise from Conservative Circles

Continetti's historical account in The Right: The Hundred-Year War for American Conservatism (2022) received endorsements from prominent conservative figures. Rich Lowry, editor-in-chief of National Review, described it as "not just an engaging history and incisive analysis of the intra-conservative debate, but an essential contribution to it." R. R. Reno, editor of First Things, called the book "a superb work of scholarship and a delight to read," noting that conservatives would relish its mastery of the material while liberals could learn from it how conservatives think. Reviews in conservative publications highlighted Continetti's synthesis of conservatism's intellectual and political strains. A Carolina Journal assessment portrayed him as "a master at synthesizing information" in tracing a century of conservative , emphasizing its value for understanding ongoing debates. Similarly, the Independent Review praised his nuanced treatment of libertarian thinkers like , avoiding caricatures common in some right-wing critiques. Continetti's founding and editorship of the Washington Free Beacon (launched in 2012) drew acclaim from conservatives for providing rigorous investigative journalism countering perceived liberal media dominance. The outlet's focus on exposing progressive advocacy groups and policy influences was seen as a vital service to conservative discourse, with Continetti credited for establishing its unapologetic tone and commitment to factual reporting.

Criticisms and Debates

Continetti's skeptical stance toward Donald Trump's brand of populism has drawn rebukes from MAGA-aligned conservatives, who view him as emblematic of an establishment "Never Trump" resistance that prioritizes institutional norms over voter-driven disruption. In a 2025 essay reflecting on a MAGA event, Continetti described the Never Trump faction's departure from the Republican Party as a consequence of Trump's dominance, prompting accusations from Trump supporters that such analysts like him undermine the movement's electoral mandate by clinging to pre-2016 fusionist ideals. Reviews of The Right: The Hundred-Year War for American Conservatism (2022) highlighted internal conservative debates over his historical framing, with critics in outlets like contending that Continetti disproportionately spotlights early-20th-century nativism, demagoguery, and racism—such as Father Coughlin's radio broadcasts and the America First Committee's —to implicitly critique modern , thereby diluting the movement's principled anti-elitism. This approach, they argued, risks equating legitimate nationalist impulses with fringe extremism, echoing broader tensions between traditionalists who emphasize and moral order against nationalists favoring economic and cultural preservation. Progressive reviewers, conversely, faulted Continetti for minimizing parallels between and European illiberalism, such as omitting references to figures like or , which they interpret as an evasion of MAGA's authoritarian leanings despite his explicit reservations about Trump's demagogic tendencies. Other critiques, including from , questioned the book's chronological scope starting in the , arguing it compresses a century of ideological evolution—encompassing anti-New Deal , the Goldwater insurgency, and Reagan's coalition—into a narrative that underplays libertarian nuances and overgeneralizes factional conflicts. Continetti has participated in forums debating conservatism's post-Trump trajectory, notably a 2022 exchange with Chris DeMuth, where he defended classical liberal institutions against national-conservative calls for and cultural retrenchment, underscoring causal divides over whether Trump's ascent represented a rupture from or continuity of the right's strains dating to the . These exchanges reveal ongoing disputes on causal realism in policy: Continetti attributes conservatism's internal wars to recurring populism-versus-elitism dynamics, supported by archival evidence of past fractures like the 1964 Goldwater schism, rather than viewing as an unprecedented aberration. Such positions, while praised for empirical depth in sympathetic circles, fuel accusations of status-quo bias amid data showing Republican voters' sustained preference for Trump-style rhetoric, as in 2024 primary results where he secured over 76% of delegates despite legal challenges.

Personal Life

Family and Relationships

Matthew Continetti married Anne Elizabeth Kristol on February 19, 2012. Anne is the daughter of neoconservative commentator William Kristol and his wife Susan S. Kristol. The couple met through mutual friends in Washington, D.C., and dated for approximately one and a half years before their engagement. Continetti and his wife reside in McLean, Virginia, with their two children, son Leo and daughter Charlotte. Anne Continetti serves on the board of Gesher Jewish Day School, where their children are enrolled. No public details are available regarding prior relationships or additional family members.

References

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