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After working as a producer, anchor, camerawoman, and reporter for a cable news outlet in her hometown, and as a videographer for [[Rugby Canada]] and [[BC Rugby]], her first major media position was with [[ABC News]]’ [[20/20]] in New York City, where she apprenticed under [[Connie Chung]].  Marsden worked in DC as a Director of a conservative think-tank that was a key component of President [[George W. Bush]]’s beltway coalition during the lead-up to the [[Iraq War]].
 
After working as a producer, anchor, camerawoman, and reporter for a cable news outlet in her hometown, and as a videographer for [[Rugby Canada]] and [[BC Rugby]], her first major media position was with [[ABC News]]’ [[20/20]] in New York City, where she apprenticed under [[Connie Chung]].  Marsden worked in DC as a Director of a conservative think-tank that was a key component of President [[George W. Bush]]’s beltway coalition during the lead-up to the [[Iraq War]].
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[[Image:whletter.jpg|right|thumb|200px|White House letter to Rachel Marsden]]  
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[[Image:whletter.jpg|right|thumb|200px|White House letter to Rachel Marsden]]
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She returned to her native [[Canada]] to work as an operative on two simultaneous federal campaigns for [[Stephen Harper]]’s [[Conservative Party]] in the province of [[British Columbia]].  At the same time, she began hosting a call-in talk-radio show in [[Vancouver]], [[BC]], where she interviewed guests ranging from Canada’s Deputy Prime Minister to [[Watergate]] figure [[G. Gordon Liddy]] from the [[Richard Nixon]] administration.
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It was this hour-long interview with Liddy – in which he talked in-depth about his role in [[Watergate]] and the scandal’s aftermath – that caught the attention of [[David Asper]], the Executive Vice-President of the [[CanWest Global]] media empire, who offered her a Toronto-based political columnist position at the [[National Post]], in conjunction with then publisher [[Lester Pyette]].
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Having quickly established a unique, controversial, populist conservative voice in the Canadian media, she switched to a regular column in the [[Sun Media chain]], and started her own public relations and communications company on [[Toronto]]’s [[Bay Street]].
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While based in [[Toronto]], Marsden started out with the [[Fox News Channel]] in 2004 as the Canadian Correspondent for [[The O'Reilly Factor]] -- the top-rated cable news show in the world -- after she was spotted as a regular panelist on [[Dennis Miller]]'s [[CNBC]] show in [[Los Angeles]].  She was recruited by [[Rupert Murdoch]]’s chief lieutenant and former [[Ronald Reagan]] communications strategist, [[Fox News]] CEO [[Roger Ailes]], who personally selected her to be the only conservative (and only woman) on a daily talk show with three other co-hosts.  She immigrated to the USA on a rare visa, typically reserved for [[Nobel Prize]] recipients, [[Academy Award]] winners and leading world experts.
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Marsden soon became regarded as one of the most influential conservative voices in North America.  Her defense of new French President [[Nicolas Sarkozy]] was cited by the nation’s top radio talk-show host, [[Rush Limbaugh]], in encouraging Americans to stop their criticism of [[France]].  Her column “Since Jesus Isn’t Running, Why Not Rudy?” chided far-right conservatives for their lack of initial support for [[Republican]] presidential candidate [[Rudy Giuliani]] – a politician whose positions and policies Marsden has admitted most closely resemble her own.
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After several months, Marsden left the show, stating, “The show has drastically changed direction since its inception and no longer has a place for a political expert.”
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Marsden has since returned to her entrepreneurial roots, preferring to pick and choose interviews, appearances and projects, and working with various television and radio networks as a free-agent.  She continues to work as a political and media consultant.
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She is currently authoring her first book about politics, due in [[2009]].
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Since arriving in the USA, Marsden has been named  “Worst Person In The World” by [[NBC]]’s [[Keith Olbermann]], a leader of the liberal media.  She’s often the object of speculation by the [[New York]] gossip media, alongside A-list celebrities like [[Nicole Kidman]] and [[Paris Hilton]] – a fact that Marsden has called “a puzzling, and frankly extremely stupid phenomenon.”
    
==References==
 
==References==
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