Last Updated on September 11, 2023 by Admin
Julia Ioffe Wiki
Julia Ioffe is an American journalist who covers national security and foreign policy topics for The Atlantic and GQ. Previously her writing has appeared in The Columbia Journalism Review, The Washington Post, The New Yorker, Foreign Policy, Forbes, The New Republic, Politico, and Russia!
Thank you for visiting our website, if you find any misinformation or inaccuracy, or you would wish to send any material for corrections feel free to contact our editorial team via radarfoxinc@gmail.com
Julia IoffeJulia Ioffe Biography
Ioffe joined Princeton University and earned an undergraduate degree, with a major in history, specializing in Soviet history. In Princeton, she was vice-president of the Princeton Israel Public Affairs Committee and publicly supported the construction of the Israeli West Bank barrier.
Julia Ioffe CNN
Ioffe appeared on The Lead with Jake Tapper on CNN commenting that “this president has radicalized so many more people than ISIS ever did” pointing to a 60% rise in antisemitism attacks during 2017. That comment received pushback from fellow panelists David Urban and Mona Charen. However, she later apologized for the comment during the broadcast and on Twitter calling her comments “hyperbole”. Trump called Ioffe a “some kind of a sick woman” in a Fox News interview with Laura Ingraham.
Julia Ioffe Age
He was born in 1982 in Moscow, Russia.
Julia Ioffe Family
Ioffe was born in 1982 in Moscow, to a Russian Jewish family. n 1990 when Ioffe was 7 years her family immigrated to the United States. They were legal immigrants who according to Ioffe were “fleeing anti-Semitism” in the Soviet Union. They settled in Columbia, Maryland.
Julia Ioffe Husband
More information about her husband is not available at this moment. However, we shall update it as soon as possible.
Julia Ioffe Children
More information about her children is not available at this moment. However, we shall update it as soon as possible.
Julia Ioffe Height
More information about her height is not available at this moment. However, we shall update it as soon as possible.
Julia Ioffe Salary Range
More information about her salary is not available at this moment. However, we shall update it as soon as possible.
Julia Ioffe Net Worth Range
More information about her net worth is not available at this moment. However, we shall update it as soon as possible.
Julia Ioffe Politico
Ioffe became a contributing writer at Politico in May 2016. Ioffe issued a tweet aimed at then-president elect Donald Trump in December 2016 , implying that he was involved in a sexual relationship with his daughter, for which after being criticized she later apologized, deleting it and describing it as “tasteless and offensive”.Ioffe was subsequently fired from Politico. The Atlantic later on announced that it was hiring Ioffe to cover national security, foreign policy, and politics, with editor in chief Jeffrey Goldberg describing her as “an indefatigable reporter”. In early 2017 she joined The Atlantic. She is currently a political reporter for GQ.
Julia Ioffe New Republic
Ioffe won a Fulbright Scholarship to return to Russia and worked as the Moscow correspondent for The New Yorker and Foreign Policy. She became a senior editor for The New Republic in Washington D.C. in 2012.
Ioffe’s work is usually critical of Russian president Vladimir Putin and Moscow ex-mayor Yuri Luzhkov. She wrote on how she received angry emails and letters from Russians upset over her coverage of the country. Ioffe has also written about the Russian state-funded news network RT, which she has described as a Kremlin mouthpiece.
Ioffe’s media appearances and writing have drawn public attention, including a 2013 segment on MSNBC’s The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell, in which the two argued about Putin’s control of Russian media. Her story about contracting whooping cough, which she blamed partly on Jenny McCarthy in 2013 , was The New Republic’s most-read story of the year.
Ioffe was one of the many staff members at The New Republic to resign in protest against owner Chris Hughes’s planned changes at the magazine in December 2014 . She joined The New York Times Magazine as a contributor the following month.