Name Kimberley Strassel Books Leaving women behind | Role Author | |
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Wsj s kimberley strassel clinton s continue to think rules don t apply to them
Kimberley A. Strassel (born July 24, 1972) is an author, journalist, and member of the Wall Street Journal editorial board. She writes a weekly conservative column, "Potomac Watch", which appears on Fridays.
Contents
- Wsj s kimberley strassel clinton s continue to think rules don t apply to them
- Kimberley strassel of the wsj praises boehner on budget
- Early life
- Journalism career
- Personal life
- References

Kimberley strassel of the wsj praises boehner on budget
Early life

Strassel grew up in Buxton, Oregon, where she graduated in 1990 from Banks High School in nearby Banks. She graduated from Princeton University in 1994 with a B.A. in Public Policy and International Affairs and immediately took a position at the Wall Street Journal.
Journalism career

Before joining the Editorial Board she was a news assistant for the European edition of The Wall Street Journal in Brussels (1994–1996) and a staff writer covering technology for The Wall Street Journal Europe in London (1996–1999). She moved to New York in 1999 to cover real estate before quickly joining the editorial page as an assistant features editor.

In 2001, Strassel was the first mainstream journalist to cover problems with historian Michael Bellesiles's book Arming America (2000). Bellesiles resigned his professorship at Emory University in 2002 following an investigation launched by the university, and the Bancroft Prize for the book was revoked.
She became a senior editorial writer and member of the editorial board of the Wall Street Journal in 2005.
In 2006, Strassel co-wrote Leaving Women Behind: Modern Families, Outdated Laws (ISBN 0-7425-4545-8), which argues that government regulation interferes with marketplace initiatives to provide women with economic opportunity.
In 2007, Strassel began writing the long-running "Potomac Watch" column for the Wall Street Journal.
Strassel favorably profiled then-candidate for US vice president Sarah Palin shortly before the 2008 election in an article entitled "'I Haven't Always Just Toed the Line'". The article originally appeared in the Weekend Interview section of The Wall Street Journal on November 1, 2008.
In 2012, Strassel wrote an editorial in the WSJ that alleged the Obama campaign was targeting Frank L. VanderSloot, a national finance co-chair for Mitt Romney's 2012 presidential campaign and a top campaign donor. Strassel's editorial was disputed by journalists and liberal commentators. In May 2013, as part of the IRS targeting controversy, Strassel reported that the IRS (not the Obama campaign) targeted conservatives, including Frank L. VanderSloot.
In 2014, Strassel won the $250,000 Bradley Prize, a prize awarded by a right wing organization. Columnist George Will and former CEO of Fox News Roger Ailes have also received this prize.
In February 2016, Strassel was among the panelists for the South Carolina Republican presidential debate.
In June 2016, she published a book called The Intimidation Game: How the Left Is Silencing Free Speech, detailing her assertions about the IRS's alleged harassment of conservatives and other similar events.
Personal life
Strassel married journalist Matthew Rose in Buxton, Oregon on July 15, 2000.