Margaret Warner is the daughter of Brainard Henry Warner III and Mildred Warner of
Chevy Chase, Maryland. She is a graduate of the
Holton-Arms School of
Bethesda, Maryland,[1] and graduated from
Yale University with a BA, cum laude,[1] in English in 1971. Her father was a partner in the Washington law firm of Ogilby, Huhn & Barr. Her mother, Mildred Warner, was a trustee of the
Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington.[1]
Warner is a great-granddaughter of the founder of the Washington Loan and Trust Company, which was consolidated into the
Riggs National Bank.[1]
During the 1980s and 1990s, Warner worker as a reporter for Newsweek magazine.[1][3]
Since 2006, Warner has compiled on-the-ground reports for the PBS NewsHour. Much of her reporting is low-budget[4] and covers civil liberties and politics in South Asia, China and Russia.[5] Between 2009 and 2013, she was one of the program's rotating group of co-
anchors.[6]
She is a member of the
Council on Foreign Relations, a trustee of the Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges,[7] and she serves on the President's Council on International Activities at Yale University.[8][9]
Awards and honors
2008. Warner won an Emmy Award for her coverage of the turmoil in Pakistan and the Edward Weintal Prize for International Reporting from Georgetown University's Institute for the Study of Diplomacy for her overseas reporting
1990. Her diplomatic coverage for Newsweek during the Gulf War made her runner-up for the
National Press Club's 1990 Edwin M. Hood Award for Diplomatic Reporting.
She also shared, with a Newsweek team, the prestigious
George Polk Award for coverage of terrorism, and the Best Reporting Award from the
Overseas Press Club.
For her July 2009 reports on the shifting political climate in Russia between President Dmitry Medvedev and former President Vladimir Putin's rule, see: