John Carlson (radio host)

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John Carlson (born June 3, 1959) is an American politician and talk radio host on KOMO 1000 Newsradio by Fisher Broadcasting from the state of Washington. He also co-hosted a show from 12:00PM to 2:00PM pacific time called The Commentators, with John Carlson and Ken Schram.[1] The Commentators was discontinued in September, 2010, and starting September 20, 2010, Carlson and Schram each began hosting separate, new shows on the same station, with Carlson on from 9:00AM to Noon and Schram from Noon to 3:00PM.[2]

Politics

Carlson is "right leaning" or "conservative" and often at odds with what he terms Seattle's "liberal elite." He believes that the left leaning political trends that permeate much of urban Seattle are too tolerant of high taxation and criminal behavior.[3]

History

Biographical

Carlson graduated in 1981 with a bachelor's degree in Political Science Honors Program at the University of Washington. In late 1999 he was listed as one of the university’s one hundred “Alumni of the Century”.[4] In 2008 the UW’s alumni magazine listed him as one of its “Wondrous 100” living alumni.[5]

After a brief stint in the Reagan Administration in ’81-’82, Carlson served as Communications Director for Republican Washington State Chairman Jennifer Dunn.

Carlson also became a KIRO-TV commentator on the evening news, doing a debate segment with local liberal historian Walt Crowley.[6] His newspaper column began in 1990 and continues today.

In 1993 Carlson shifted from TV to radio, taking the afternoon drive-time slot on KVI. Several times he was listed in Talkers Magazine as one of America’s 100 leading talk radio hosts. He currently co-hosts a daily program with television commentator Ken Schram from KOMO-TV.[1]

On June 2, 2011, on the 9 am to noon broadcast of his singular news/talk effort on KOMO 1000 AM radio, among various topics Carlson stood steadfastly by his claim of an emerging scandal involving Anthony Weiner Anthony Weiner, D-NY, as involves allegations raised by Andrew Breitbart.

Political activism

In 1993, Carlson co-authored and led the drive for a new anti-crime initiative he called "Three Strikes You're Out", which began putting three-time violent criminals in prison for life. The initiative soon spread to California and several other states. Two years later, Carlson and his partner on “Three Strikes”, David Lacourse, passed another initiative called “Hard Time for Armed Crime”, which increased sentences for felons caught using or possessing weapons.[7]

In 1998, State Representative Scott Smith and conservative activist Tim Eyman launched Initiative 200, which attempted to prohibit affirmative action preferences. The campaign was soon handed over to Carlson. Within three months, the initiative received enough signatures to qualify for the ballot, and in November 1998, voters approved it overwhelmingly, 58%-42%.[8]

In 2000, Carlson ran for Governor against popular incumbent Gary Locke. He won the Republican primary against State Senator Harold Hochstedder, but lost the general election to Locke. Washington has not elected a Republican Governor since 1980.[9]

In 2005, Carlson and KVI morning host Kirby Wilbur encouraged listeners to support initiative 912 to roll back a nine-cent a gallon increase in the state fuel tax. The initiative gathered 420,000 signatures in 33 days[10] but failed to pass at the polls in November.[11] Chris Wickham (a Thurston County, Washington, Superior Court Judge) ruled that the comments and activities by Carlson and Wilbur on behalf of the initiative were in-kind contributions that must be reported to the Public Disclosure Commission.[12] The ruling was later overturned unanimously by the Washington State Supreme Court.[13]

Carlson's articles appear on Crosscut.com, The Seattle Times and his own website, JohnCarlson.com. He maintains both Facebook and Twitter accounts (@KVIJohnCarlson).

Personal

Carlson rides Indian motorcycles. He has climbed Mt. Rainier three times[14][15][16] to benefit the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center's Climb to Fight Breast Cancer.[1] He has served on several charity and civic boards. He is married with two sons and lives in Bellevue, Washington, a Seattle suburb.[6]

References

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  3. Seattle Voices, interview with John Carlson, March 3, 2009
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External links