Rachel Marsden (born December 2, 1974) is a Canadian conservative political columnist and television commentator based in Paris. She is the former host of a talk show on Sputnik News[1] and is a columnist for the Toronto Sun.[2] Her column is syndicated by Tribune Content Agency[3][4] and she is a regular contributor to the English and French services of the RT news channel.[5]
Marsden was inspired to go into journalism by listening to Canadian radio personality Jack Webster when she was growing up.[8] In 2002, she took a political journalism training course at the National Journalism Center in Washington, DC.
Marsden graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree from Simon Fraser University (SFU) with a minor in French language.[9] As an SFU student, Marsden came to public attention when she was at the centre of the Simon Fraser University 1997 harassment controversy, in which she and a swimmingcoach publicly accused each other of sexual harassment.[10][11]
The coach was dismissed, then exonerated and re-hired by the university after doubts were raised about the credibility of Marsden's accusations against him.[12][8][13] Over ten years later, Marsden was interviewed by the university's newspaper and said of the events: "[The administration] were more interested in quelling negative PR than defending the truth. I was told by SFU to keep quiet and say nothing to the media. My only regret is that I listened to them."[14]
Before the 2004 federal election in Canada, she was hired under an alias by Gurmant Grewal, a Conservative member of the Parliament of Canada, to assist his constituency office with press releases, but was forced out when her identity was revealed by the press while criminal charges of harassment were pending against her.[16][8]
In 2007, she moved from Toronto to New York City[28] and was hired as one of five panelists on Red Eye w/ Greg Gutfeld,[29]
a late-night talk show, where she stayed for five months.[27] On May 30, 2007, Marsden was dismissed from Red Eye and escorted out of the Fox studio by security guards.[27] She explained that her departure was due to a change in the show's format, and that being escorted out was standard procedure.[27] She appeared once in October 2007, as a guest panelist on CNN's The Situation Room.[30] Marsden has been compared to Ann Coulter in opinion, presentation and appearance.[31][32]
In 2009 Marsden moved to France, and since then she has been a regular panelist on LCP Politique Matin, carried on the state-owned parliamentary television channel La Chaîne parlementaire in France.[33] She taught some classes at Sciences Po as enseignante, or adjunct member of the teaching staff.[34]
In November 2011, she self-published a novel, American Bombshell: A Tale of Domestic and International Invasion[35] through Createspace.
In September 2007, a relationship between Marsden and an Ontario Provincial Police officer ended. She posted his photo and identified him on her blog as an anti-terrorism officer and wrote he had leaked secret anti-terrorism documents to her.[42] The officer filed a complaint of harassment against Marsden, but this was later dropped. The OPP launched a separate internal investigation into the alleged conduct of the officer. His lawyer declared that he was cleared of any wrongdoing.[6][28][43]
Marsden contacted Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales in 2006 and said that her Wikipedia biography was libelous. Wales stated his involvement with her article was handled through the normal channels, and was "routine". He also says he "recused [himself] from any further official action", after their relationship became personal.[44][45]
On February 29, 2008, the Gawker news and gossip blog Valleywag claimed Wales and Marsden had entered into a relationship, and published instant messaging chats they allegedly exchanged.[46] On the following day, Wales announced on his Wikipedia user page that he had broken up with her. Marsden, who learned about the breakup by reading about it on Wikipedia, turned to eBay and put up a T-shirt and sweater for auction that she said belonged to Wales.[11][45][43][47][48]
^ ab
Goddard (December 21, 2007). "claims harassment by the 'Babe for Bush'". Toronto Star. Retrieved July 4, 2015. [Const. Tony] Backhurst [. . .] acknowledges a brief love affair with Marsden two years ago – not one that continued until nearly three months ago, as Marsden maintains. [. . .] Marsden grew up in Port Coquitlam, B.C., and was enrolled at Simon Fraser in 1995 when she accused swimming coach Liam Donnelly of sexual harassment over a 16-month period and date rape. [. . .] Donnelly was fired. Two months later, he was exonerated, paid compensation and rehired, and the university president resigned over mishandling the case. [. . .] .
^"Recipients". gg.ca. The Governor General of Canada. June 11, 2018. Retrieved May 22, 2024.
^ ab
Anne Kingston (June 25, 2008). "Agent Provocateur". Macleans. Archived from the original on March 1, 2014. Retrieved March 10, 2014. She moved to New York in early 2007. . . . An internal investigation cleared Backhurst of wrongdoing, says [Backhurst's lawyer Andrew McKay]. . . .
^
Rebecca Traister (March 31, 2009). "May contain a past". The Ontario Star. Retrieved March 1, 2008.