Ali Velshi presented the lecture “Political and Economic Transition at Home and Abroad” on October 18, 2017 at Iowa State University.
MSNBC anchor and business correspondent Ali Velshi discussed the impact of the Trump administration’s domestic and international policy shifts when he presented the fall 2017 Manatt-Phelps Lecture in Political Science on Oct. 18, 2017.
Velshi – who was a primetime anchor at Al Jazeera America after a long career with CNN as an anchor and chief business correspondent before joining MSNBC in 2016 – presented “Political and Economic Transition at Home and Abroad” at 8 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 18, in the Great Hall of the Memorial Union.
Velshi is known for his ability to explain in plain terms the causes of the global financial crisis, the debt ceiling and the budget debates. He reported on the U.S. presidential campaign and provided overseas coverage of ISIL, the Syrian refugee crisis and the Iran nuclear deal as the host of Al Jazeera America’s “Ali Velshi on Target.” On MSNBC, Velshi co-hosts “Velshi & Ruhle”—which examines the intersection of business, politics and the economy – on Monday through Saturday mornings and is the host of “MSNBC Live” on Monday through Friday afternoons. He also appears as an economic analyst on other MSNBC and NBC television shows.
“We were very pleased that Ali Velshi delivered the Manatt-Phelps lecture this year,” said Tom Phelps, who established the lecture series in 2002 with the late Ambassador Charles T. Manatt and their spouses Kathleen Manatt and Elizabeth Phelps. “He brings a unique perspective to the campus, having covered the global economy, American business and finance, and U.S. politics – including how technology is impacting all three. He has a front-row seat to history as a network anchor, and shared his perspective on how the world sees the United States at this most interesting time in our history.”
Michele Manatt, the daughter of Charles and Kathleen Manatt, noted that Velshi has served as an anchor at some of the world’s most influential media organizations. “He knows how these networks make decisions about their news coverage,” she said. “It was important to give him a sense of what matters here on the ISU campus and in Iowa.”
Velshi is the author of Gimme My Money Back and co-authored How to Speak Money with former CNN colleague and Iowa State alumna Christine Romans. In 2016, Velshi was nominated for two Emmy Awards for his work on disabled workers and Chicago’s red-light camera scandal. In 2010, he was honored with a National Headliner Award for Business and Consumer Reporting for “How the Wheels Came Off,” a special on the near collapse of the American auto industry. In addition, CNN was nominated for a 2010 Emmy for Velshi’s breaking news coverage of the attempted terror attack on Northwest airline’s flight 253 into Detroit.
Born in Kenya and raised in Canada, Velshi graduated from Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, with a degree in religion. He was awarded an honorary doctorate by his alma mater in 2016.
Previous Manatt-Phelps lectures have featured ambassadors from crucial American allies and friends – France, Germany, India, Spain and Sweden – as well as distinguished leaders from America’s largest trading partners, such as Mexico’s secretary of foreign affairs and Canada’s former minister of foreign affairs. Other lectures have been presented by then-U.S. Sen. Joseph Biden (D-Del.); then-U.S. Sen. Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.); former U.S. Rep. Lee Hamilton (D-Ind.); Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne; and counterterrorism expert Malcolm Nance.
In addition to the Manatt and Phelps families, the fall 2017 Manatt-Phelps Lecture in Political Science is co-sponsored by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; Department of Political Science; Carrie Chapman Catt Center for Women and Politics; and the Committee on Lectures, which is funded by the Student Government.