Ingraham has promoted conspiracy theories about topics such as the COVID-19 pandemic and the 2021 U.S. In June 2019, Ingraham mocked reports that Trump had delayed his participation in D-Day commemoration activities to sit for an interview with her, strongly dismissing them as "patently false-fake news", despite video of the interview showing Trump saying, "These people are so amazing, and what they don't realize is that I'm holding them up because of this interview, but that's because it's you." Business Insider has referred to Ingraham's on-air style as "wad into debates on racism and gun violence".
Ingraham has been described as "no stranger to generating controversy" by Variety and as a "name-brand provocateur" by Politico. Ingraham has said that her influences include Ronald Reagan, Robert Bork and Pat Buchanan. She opposed the proposed bipartisan 2013 US Senate comprehensive immigration reform plan. In 2014, she was a fierce critic of the immigration reform then proposed, saying that allowing more immigrant workers to come to the United States would be "obscene to the American experience". During his presidency, she acted as an informal advisor to the administration, flouting journalistic ethical norms. She is known for her strong support for Donald Trump. In 2017, Ingraham was described by The New York Times as an "ardent nationalist". In January 2018, Ingraham confirmed that she had sold the majority stake in LifeZette to The Katz Group, owned by Canadian billionaire Daryl Katz. LifeZette is a conservative American website founded in 2015 by Ingraham and businessman Peter Anthony.
Ingraham continues to produce podcast material for Courtside's PodcastOne division. Her new program, syndicated by Courtside Entertainment Group, began airing on January 2, 2013, and went off the air in December 2018. She was the second major host from TRN's lineup to leave the network that year: TRN's other major program, The Savage Nation, left TRN two months earlier. In November 2012, she announced her departure from Talk Radio Network, declining to renew her contract with TRN after nearly a decade of being associated with the network. 5 radio show in America by Talkers Magazine. It was originally syndicated by Westwood One, but moved to Talk Radio Network in 2004. The show was heard on 306 stations and on XM Satellite Radio. Ingraham launched The Laura Ingraham Show in April 2001. In October 2017, she became the host of a new Fox News Channel program, The Ingraham Angle.
LAURA INGRAHAM PODCASTS FREE TRIAL
In 2008, Fox News Channel gave her a three-week trial run for a new show entitled Just In. Several years later, on her radio program, Ingraham began campaigning for another cable television show. In the late 1990s, she became a CBS commentator and hosted the MSNBC program Watch It!. She first became a host on MSNBC in 1996. Ingraham has had three stints as a cable television host. Lefkowitz organized the first Dark Ages Weekend in response to Renaissance Weekend. In 1995, she appeared on the cover of The New York Times Magazine in connection with a story about young conservatives. She then worked as an attorney at the New York-based law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in New York and subsequently clerked for U.S. After law school, in 1991, she served as a law clerk for Judge Ralph K. She also briefly served as editor of The Prospect, the magazine issued by Concerned Alumni of Princeton. In the late 1980s, Ingraham worked as a speechwriter in the Reagan administration for the Domestic Policy Advisor. Ingraham at a political conference in December 2018