Career Growth

How getting sick on live TV, 7 weeks pregnant, sparked a Know Your Value moment

NBC News correspondent Julia Ainsley said the moment taught her to put aside her pride, place her health first and lean on supportive colleagues.

Julia Ainsley

I am NBC News’ Senior Homeland Security Correspondent covering all activities of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. My coverage areas include immigration enforcement, counterterrorism, the Secret Service and drug trafficking across U.S borders.  Experience Prior to joining NBC News, I was a reporter for Reuters, covering financial markets, the White House and finally the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security. At Reuters, I was the first to break news on the first Trump travel ban and the separation of immigrant families at the U.S.-Mexico border. At NBC News, I have worked with a team of reporters and producers to uncover conditions for immigrant minors working in U.S. slaughterhouses, immigrants on the U.S. terror watchlist mistakenly released by Border Patrol under the Biden administration, and plans for the Trump administration to ramp up deportation operations. I attended Davidson College for my undergraduate education and Northwestern University for my master’s in journalism. Awards The Hillman Prize for Journalism, the National Press Foundation’s award for Economic Justice Journalism, the National Association of Hispanic Journalists Elaine Rivera Civil Rights and Social Justice Award, and the New York Press Club Documentary Award.

White House

Trump’s apartheid-friendly ambassador to South Africa takes role


A whistleblower complaint about Tulsi Gabbard has been kept from Congress for months

DOJ’s misconduct complaint dismissed against judge in Alien Enemies Act case

Congress

Pressed on religious bigotry, Speaker Johnson makes an ugly problem even worse


House Democrat unveils impeachment resolution targeting Pam Bondi

As too many Republicans push anti-Muslim messaging, GOP leaders remain silent

Supreme Court

Why Gorsuch brought up how drunk John Adams and James Madison got ‘back in the day’


The Supreme Court rulings that could help Luigi Mangione avoid execution

Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito’s financial moves cause needless problems