Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Madam President by Nicolle Wallace Nicolle Wallace Bio, Age, Height, Husband, Fired, MSNBC, Bush, Salary, Instagram. Nicolle Wallace is an American television host and author. She is known for her work as the anchor of the MSNBC news. In her former political career, she served as the White House Communications Director during the presidency of George W. Bush and in his 2004 re-election campaign. She also served as a senior advisor for John McCain’s 2008 presidential campaign. In addition, she is the author of the contemporary political novels Eighteen Acres, It’s Classified, and Madam President. Nicolle Wallace Age. She was born on February 4, 1972 in Orange County, , U.S. Nicolle Wallace Height. She is 5 feet 6 inches tall. Nicolle Wallace Education. She graduated from Miramonte High School in 1990, received a Bachelor of Arts in mass communications from the University of California, Berkeley in 1994, and a master’s degree from ’s Medill School of Journalism in 1996. Nicolle Wallace Parents. Her mother was a third-grade teacher’s assistant in public schools, and her father was an antiques dealer. Nicolle Wallace Siblings. She is the eldest of four children. Nicolle Wallace Husband. She married American businessman, former diplomat, and lawyer in 2005. Nicolle Wallace Kids. She has one child, a son, who was born in 2012. Nicolle Wallace Fired. On September 3, 2014, ABC announced Wallace would join as a new co-host alongside newcomer . She made her debut as a co-host on the premiere of the series’ 18th season on September 15, 2014. She exited the series at the end of the season. In a new interview with the Los Angeles Times, Wallace broke down why she believes she was fired from The View after just one season as a co- host. She said that she “loved” her time on the ABC talk show, but explained that the network felt she was too “calm” for that format. “I think the problem was it wasn’t contentious that season I was on,” Wallace said. “Being fired from a TV show where you think you’re kind of baring your soul feels personal because it is. It’s like being broken up with. Because I never worked in entertainment I think what I didn’t understand is: It really was a casting, and it was a casting they didn’t like. Nicolle Wallace MSNBC. Following her departure from The View, she joined NBC News and its cable network MSNBC as a political analyst. She is also a frequent contributor and guest host on MSNBC programs The 11th Hour with and as well as on NBC’s Today Show. In November 2016, she served as an analyst for MSNBC’s live coverage of election results, which was anchored by Brian Williams, , and . Since May 9, 2017, she has been the anchor of the afternoon news and opinion program Deadline: White House on MSNBC. Deadline: White House garnered a total of 2 million viewers in July 2020, and in the following month, it was expanded to two hours. Nicolle Wallace George W. Bush. Wallace joined the White House staff during George W. Bush’s first term, serving as Special Assistant to the President and Director of Media Affairs at the White House, where she oversaw regional press strategy and outreach. In 2003, she joined Bush’s 2004 presidential campaign as its Communications Director, wherein according to she “delivered her political attacks without snarling.” On January 5, 2005, Bush named Wallace White House Communications Director. The New York Times story announcing her presidential appointment carried the headline: “New Aide Aims to Defrost the Press Room” and described Wallace’s intentions “to improve the contentious relationship between a secretive White House and the press.” According to , she served as “a voice for more openness with reporters”, and former colleagues describe her as having been “very persuasive in the halls of the .” She left the White House in July 2006 to relocate to New York City, where her husband Mark was representing the Bush Administration at the United Nations. Nicolle Wallace McCain. She served as a senior advisor for the John McCain 2008 presidential campaign. She appeared frequently on network and cable news programs as the campaign’s top spokesperson and defender. In late October 2008, campaign aides criticized vice-presidential candidate . One unnamed McCain aide said Palin had “gone rogue,” placing her own future political interests ahead of the McCain/Palin ticket, directly contradicting her running mate’s positions, and disobeying directions from campaign managers. In response to reports of dissension within the McCain-Palin campaign, Wallace issued a statement to both and CNN saying: “If people want to throw me under the bus, my personal belief is that the most honorable thing to do is to lie there.” Nicolle Wallace Novels. She is the author of the 2010 novel Eighteen Acres (a reference to the 18 acres on which the White House complex sits), a fictional narrative about three powerful women at the top of their careers: the first female U.S. President, her chief of staff, and a White House correspondent. Wallace said, “It’s my best attempt at a story that I hope people will pick up and read and enjoy and maybe feel like they’re getting to see what it’s really like in the White House in this entirely fictional story.” Patrick Anderson of The Washington Post wrote, “To say that Nicolle Wallace’s ‘Eighteen Acres’ is one of the best novels I’ve read about life in the White House may be faint praise—there haven’t been many good ones—but her book is both an enjoyable read and a serious look at what high-level political pressures do to people.” Craig Wilson of USA Today wrote, “Nicolle Wallace actually knows what she’s talking about” and Ashley Parker of The New York Times called the book “an engaging, easy read.” TV personalities such as , Rachel Maddow, , and also praised Eighteen Acres. In September 2011, she published the sequel to Eighteen Acres, It’s Classified, about a fictional presidential campaign troubled by a mentally ill vice presidential candidate. Wallace said the premise was inspired by her experience as a senior adviser to the McCain/Palin campaign. Her third novel, Madam President, was released in April 2015. Madam President — Nicolle Wallace. With Madam President, current cohost of The View and former White House Communications Director Nicolle Wallace returns with an electrifying portrait of three powerful women on a day that will change the country forever. Charlotte Kramer, the forty-fifth President of the United States, has done the unprecedented in allowing a network news team to document a day in her life -- and that of her most senior staff. But while twenty news cameras are embedded with the president, the unthinkable happens: five major attacks are leveled on US soil. Her secretary of defense, Melanie, and her press secretary, Dale, must instantly jump to action in supporting the president and reassuring the country that the safety they treasure is in capable hands. But secrets have always thrived in President Kramer's White House. With all eyes on them and America's stability on the line, all three women are hiding personal and professional secrets that could rock the West Wing to its very foundations…and change the lives of the people they love most. With an insider's sharp eye and her trademark winning prose, Nicolle Wallace delivers a timely novel of domestic and political intrigue that is impossible to put down. POLITICO. Nicolle Wallace of “The View” visits “Good Morning America” last month to promote her new book. A warm welcome for Nicolle Wallace. By KATE BENNETT. 05/07/2015 05:43 AM EDT. It will be a bipartisan shindig at CNN chief congressional correspondent Dana Bash’s Northwest Washington home tomorrow night to toast the new book by former Bush White House communications chief (and current co-host of chatfest The View ) Nicolle Wallace . Guests from the left ( Donna Brazile , White House communications director ) and the right (former U.S. ambassador to the EU, and current adviser, Kristen Silverberg , newly married former George W. Bush chief of staff Josh Bolten ) will be among the 40 or so friends of Wallace’s who are gathering to celebrate the launch of her third novel, Madam President , about a fictional president, her press secretary and her secretary of defense, all of them women. Bash and Wallace’s mutual media friends will be there as well; CNN’s Gloria Borger , NBC’s Kelly O’Donnell, ABC’s Jon Karl , and Mark Leibovich of the New York Times have all RSVP’d to attend. This article tagged under: White House CNN George W. Bush The View Dana Bash Donna Brazile Jen Psaki Nicolle Wallace KGB File. Missing out on the latest scoops? Sign up for POLITICO Playbook and get the latest news, every morning — in your inbox. 'The View' Co-Host on New Novel 'Madam President' This transcript has been automatically generated and may not be 100% accurate. Nicolle Wallace, ABC News political analyst, on what the State of the Union is. Rosie O'Donnell, Rosie Perez and Nicolle Wallace kicked off a new season with Whoopi Goldberg. Rep. Tom Cole, Rep. Keith Ellison, Stephanie Cutter, Nicolle Wallace, and Martha Raddatz. Now Playing: Nicolle Wallace: The State of the Union is. Now Playing: A New 'The View' Debuts for Season 18. Now Playing: Roundtable II: Drama Over Drones. Now Playing: Why the NYC mayoral race is moderates' to lose | FiveThirtyEight. Now Playing: ABC News Live Update: Tropical storm takes aim at Gulf Coast. Now Playing: Breaking down Supreme Court's rejection of challenge to Obamacare. Now Playing: Supreme Court upholds Affordable Care Act. Now Playing: By the Numbers: Obamacare upheld. Now Playing: The Breakdown: Supreme Court upholds Affordable Care Act for 3rd time. Now Playing: What Supreme Court’s latest ruling means for people on Obamacare. Now Playing: Juneteenth to become 1st new federal holiday since 1983. Now Playing: Supreme Court rules to uphold Affordable Care Act. Now Playing: Secretary of Education talks reversal of sex-based discrimination Trump policy. Now Playing: Biden signs law making Juneteenth a federal holiday. Now Playing: Juneteenth becomes a national holiday. Now Playing: What to know about Lina Khan. Now Playing: Supreme Court upholds Obamacare, maintaining health insurance for millions. Now Playing: ABC News Live Update: Biden, Putin call meeting a positive step forward. Now Playing: Family of jailed American says Putin meeting 'best result they could have asked for' A female president stars in new novel. The 45th president of the United States has a thick shock of blond hair and a husband who strayed. Calm down, Republicans: This isn't the "inevitable" Hillary Clinton. President Charlotte Kramer is the Republican head of state in Madam President (**½ out of four), Nicolle Wallace's latest capital dish about life in the White House. A co-host of TV's The View , Wallace was communications director for President George W. Bush and most famously, an adviser to vice presidential hopeful Sarah Palin who later revealed unflattering traits of the former governor of Alaska. In her third novel about Washington, Wallace tells the story of President Kramer and the women who serve her: Melanie, her secretary of defense, who is pregnant with her first child, and Dale, the president's press secretary, a former White House correspondent. President Kramer is a uniter, not a divider. So after revealing to the American people that the first gentleman had an affair with Dale during her first term in office, Kramer naturally makes the now-disgraced White House reporter one of her closest aides. If you can get past that unlikely event, this novel will prove a breezy romp through the corridors of power town. President Kramer is dealing with the aftermath of a post-9/11 terror attack on five U.S. cities as Melanie jets home from Iraq. Dale is trying to manage the press. Madame President swirls with characters who will have readers speculating over who inspired them. And Wallace provides another dig at Palin, when Kramer crosses party lines to choose a Democrat to replace a vice president who stepped down due to mental health issues. It turns out terrorists take a back seat to the pushy press corps who dog Dale, including a CBS duo — Lucy and Richard — filming a "day in the life" special the day of the attacks. These two read like a mashup of Charlie Rose and Gayle King and Morning Joe 's and . But even demanding journalists have their soft sides, and when personal disaster strikes Dale, Lucy proves herself a friend. Wallace knows her way around Washington and the type-A plus women you find there. This well-timed book about a president who happens to be female is bound to get attention as campaign 2016 steams forward. But it's no replacement for a good episode of West Wing .