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Cenk Uygur

Cenk Kadir Uygur (/ˈɛŋkkəˈdɪərˈjɡər/;Turkish:[ˈdʒeɲckaˈdiɾˈujɡuɾ]; born March 21, 1970) is an American political commentator, media host, and attorney. He is the co-creator ofThe Young Turks, apopulist[2] sociopolitical news and commentary program.

Cenk Uygur
Uygur speaking at AmericaFest 2024
Born
Cenk Kadir Uygur

(1970-03-21)March 21, 1970 (age 55)
Istanbul, Turkey
EducationUniversity of Pennsylvania (BS)
Columbia University (JD)
Occupations
  • Political commentator
  • media host
  • attorney
  • businessman
Political partyDemocratic (since 2007)
Other political
affiliations
Independent (2000–2007)
Republican (1988–2000)[1]
SpouseWendy Lang
Children2
RelativesHasan Piker (nephew)

In 1996, Uygur worked briefly as an associate attorney. He launched and began hostingThe Young Turks in 2002. In 2011, he worked briefly forMSNBC as a political commentator (he was replaced byAl Sharpton), and then from 2011 to 2013 he appeared on a weeknight commentary show onCurrent TV. In 2017, Uygur co-founded the progressivepolitical action committeeJustice Democrats.

In 2020, Uygur was a candidate in both thespecial election as well as theregularly scheduled election forCalifornia's 25th congressional district. Some considered his candidacy controversial due to his past comments about women and minority groups, including the LGBTQ+ community, religious Jews, and Muslims, which some found offensive but which he said were taken out of context by the media.[3][4] He lost both elections, placing fourth overall and second among Democrats after receiving six and seven percent of the vote, respectively.[citation needed]

Uygur announced his candidacy in the2024 Democratic presidential primaries in October 2023 to pressurePresident Biden to withdraw, despite not being anatural-born U.S. citizen as required, claiming that the courts could overturn the requirement.[5] Uygur suspended his campaign on March 6, 2024.[6]

Early life and education

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Cenk Uygur was born inIstanbul to a wealthyTurkish family. His mother's maiden name was Yavaşça,[7] and his father, Dogan, started life as a rural olive and grape farmer inKilis, a city in southern Turkey near the Syrian border, later winning a scholarship to a technical university in Istanbul, becoming a mechanical engineer, and starting a company. The family emigrated to the United States when Cenk was eight years old, and there Dogan worked as a commercial real estate developer.[8] He spent the remainder of his upbringing inEast Brunswick, New Jersey, and graduated fromEast Brunswick High School.[8] Uygur was raised in a secularMuslim household, but became more religious during college.[9] He says that he then becameagnostic, and is now a "stone-coldatheist,[10] although he still identifies as acultural Muslim.[8][9][11]

Although a D in high schoolcalculus almost kept Uygur out, he transferred into the undergraduateWharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, where he majored inmanagement and graduated in 1992.[12][13] There, he wrote a school paper column in 1991 in which he criticizedaffirmative action for blacks and other minorities.[14][15] He also criticized campusfeminists for "makingAnita Hill their patron saint" and made disparaging comments about women[16][17][14] and said that the discussion aboutrape on campus was making men afraid.[14]

Representing the Turkish Students Association on the university's Student Activities Council, Uygur argued against a $228 allocation to the Armenian Club in the council budget; council members overwhelmingly voted against him, and uncharacteristically applauded after his defeat was announced.[18][14] In November 1991, he wrote an article inThe Daily Pennsylvanian titled "Historical Fact or Falsehood?", in which hedenied the Armenian genocide and asserted: "The claims of anArmenian genocide are not based on historical facts. If the history of the period is examined it becomes evident that in fact no such genocide took place."[19] He has since recanted these statements and reversed his position.[20][17][21] He received aJuris Doctor degree fromColumbia Law School.[22]

Career

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Early career

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Uygur worked briefly in 1996 as an associate attorney. He practiced first at the law firmDrinker Biddle & Reath inWashington, D.C., and then at Hayes & Liebman inNew York City.[8][14]

He then worked in 1996 as a weekend/fill-in radio talk show host onWRKO inBoston,Massachusetts, and also that year in a similar position onWWRC in Washington, D.C.[23] He bought time on a local access channel in Washington, D.C., where he made political commentary on his show calledThe Young Turk.[24]

In 1999, he wrote for, produced, and appeared on aWAMI-TV news show,The Times inMiami,Florida.[23][25] He then startedThe Young Turks (TYT) onSirius Satellite Radio.[23][25] That year, Uygur wrote on a blog post on the TYT website: "It seems like there is a sea of tits here, and I am drinking in tiny droplets. Obviously, the genes of women are flawed. They are poorly designed creatures who do not want to have sex nearly as often as needed for the human race to get along peaceably and fruitfully."[14] He also wrote, in a letter to the editor inSalon, that talk of an Armenian genocide was simply propaganda.[19] In the 2000s, Uygur maintained a weekly blog onThe Huffington Post and wrote entries that were critical of the2003 Iraq war.[26][27]

The Young Turks

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Main article:The Young Turks
 
Uygur in 2010

Uygur created theleft-wing,progressive talk showThe Young Turks with the goal of starting a liberal-leaning political and entertainment show.[28][29][30][31] It launched on theSirius Satellite Radio network on February 14, 2002, and was also on theAir America radio network between 2006 and 2008.[30][32][33] Uygur and his co-hostAna Kasparian applied apopulist-left branding and programming strategy that made TYT a global online organization.[34][35][36]

Armenian-Americans havecriticized the show's name because the originalYoung Turks political movement in theOttoman Empire was responsible for theArmenian genocide.[37][38][39] Executive Director of theArmenian National Committee of AmericaAram Hamparian said of Uygur and the show's name:

Denying a genocide, belittling its survivors, and then naming your political show after its perpetrators should be troubling not only toArmenian Americans, but anyone concerned abouthuman rights. Cenk Uygur... did just this ....[19]

The Young Turks began a daily news video show onYouTube in 2005, and claims to have been the first on the streaming service.[40] Uygur regularly says thatThe Young Turks is the largest online news show in the world, and has claimed so since at least 2011.[41] It has amassed over 5 billion views on YouTube, and over 5 million subscribers, for a U.S. rank of #5,566.[42][43][44] Leveraging the strength ofThe Young Turks talk show, Uygur expanded it into a network of channels and shows, beginning with Pop Trigger on July 5, 2007.[45] Video of the show is streamed daily on its website, as well as on YouTube, YouTubeTV, via various streaming platforms, broadcast on a handful of local television channels throughout the U.S., and is apodcast.[46][47]

In September 2011, when Uygur had been seeking a television platform forThe Young Turks for years, a weeknight TV edition of the show was announced on fledgling Current TV, which had low ratings,[48][29] at 7 p.m. EST (M–F) on the network beginning sometime in the fourth quarter of 2011.[49][50][51] The show on Current TV began in December 2011, to low viewership,[52] and ended on August 15, 2013, with the end of all live programming on Current TV.[citation needed]

In 2015, Uygur hosted ex-Ku Klux Klan leader andwhite supremacistneo-NaziDavid Duke on the show in an antisemitic segment about “how Jews control everything."[53][52] Cenk stated on the Lex Friedman show in 2024 he was arguing against David Duke's views.[54] In 2019, he tweeted thatEvangelical Christians harbored the worst antisemitism in the world.[55]

In May 2018,The Young Turks launched its own TV-format 24-hour channel on YouTube TV, which includes both live and prerecorded programming.[56]

Uygur hired his nephew,Hasan Piker, to work for the show.[57]

MSNBC

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MSNBC hired Uygur as a contributor and substitute anchor for the network on October 21, 2010.[58][59][60] On January 21, 2011, Uygur was appointed as the host of the 6 p.m. Eastern slot on MSNBC as the anchor of a new prime time edition ofMSNBC Live, resulting in a rearrangement of the time slots of MSNBC's other prime time shows. Uygur filled the time slot for six months, from January through June 2011.[61][62][63]

Management saw the style of several hosts, including Uygur, as off-base from MSNBC's branding objectives, resulting in their demotion.[64] According to Uygur, MSNBC PresidentPhil Griffin disliked his "aggressive style" and told him the network's audience "require different manners of speaking".[64] MSNBC denied that the network desired censorship of his anti-corporate stances, and both sides agreed that their main differences of opinion were about the style of communication.[64] His contract ended when he was offered a weekend slot and declined. He was replaced byAl Sharpton, who by September had attracted 4% higher ratings.[65][64][66][67] After leaving cable news, Uygur devoted his attention to TYT.[64] Uygur over time became disillusioned with traditional media establishments.[59]

Wolf-PAC

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Uygur speaking at thePeople's Climate March inWashington, D.C. in April 2017
Main article:Wolf-PAC

Uygur has supported the removal of corporate donations from the political system, and he said that "campaign finance reform" is the "only one issue" in the United States.[68][69] SeveralSupreme Court rulings (1976,1978,2010) oncampaign finance motivated Uygur[70][71] during theOccupy Wall Street movement to launch a long-term project, apolitical action committee named Wolf-PAC, on October 19, 2011, in New York City.[72][73] Wolf-PAC aims to lobby state legislators to pass resolutions calling for aConvention of the States under Article V of the U.S. Constitution. Its slogan is "A super-PAC to end all super-PACs". The aim of the convention would be to pass an amendment to theUnited States Constitution that would endcorporate personhood and publicly finance all elections in the United States.[74] As of 2017[update], five states had passed a resolution calling for such a convention, though not all states used identical language in their convention call.[75]

According to filings with theFederal Election Commission, during the 2016 and 2018 election cycles, Wolf-PAC devoted nearly 80% of its disbursements to salaries and administrative costs. Jonah Bennett quipped inThe Daily Caller: "Cenk Uygur is so intent on keeping money out of politics his own PAC spends virtually all its donor money on personnel and operating expenses."[76]

Justice Democrats

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Main article:Justice Democrats

On January 23, 2017, Uygur co-founded theJustice Democrats along withKyle Kulinski, a political commentator who had been affiliated with Uygur'sYoung Turks network.[77][78][79] The group seeks to steer the Democratic Party in the strongly progressive,social democratic ordemocratic socialist[79] direction espoused by U.S. SenatorBernie Sanders. The group has supportedprogressive candidates in primaries against politicians whom they consider to bemoderate andconservative Democrats,[80][79] such asJoe Manchin,[81]Joe Crowley,[82] andDianne Feinstein.[83]

Uygur was forced out of the Justice Democrats on December 22, 2017, following the discovery of blog posts that he had written in the early 2000s in which he made statements that were described by Justice Democrats leadership as "sexist and racist".[84][3][85][86][87] The next day, Uygur apologized and denounced his past statements in a video on The Young Turks channel on YouTube. In an interview withTheWrap, Uygur said he had deleted the "ugly" posts a decade ago, and added: "The stuff I wrote back then was really insensitive and ignorant. If you read that today, what I wrote 18 years ago, and you're offended by it, you're 100 percent right. And anyone who is subjected to that material, I apologize to. And I deeply regret having written that stuff when I was a different guy".[88] Uygur said that he wrote the posts while he was still a conservative, before he underwent a political transformation and became a liberal; he asserted that he "had not yet matured" and "was still a conservative who thought that stuff was politically incorrect and edgy". Uygur added, "If someone said that today, I would heavily criticize them on the show and rightfully so, and I have. I've criticized myself over the years".[88][89]

Rebellion PAC

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In 2020, he co-founded Rebellion PAC, a political action committee with a focus on running advertisements in support of progressive electoral candidates, alongsideBrianna Wu.[90]

Political campaigns

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2020 U.S. House of Representatives candidacy

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Uygur withBernie Sanders at a campaign rally in California in 2016

In mid-November 2019, Uygur filed to run forCongress inCalifornia's 25th district, a seat recently vacated by the resignation ofKatie Hill. He did this despite the fact that he did not live in the district.[84] Other candidates included Democratic AssemblywomanChristy Smith and former Trump campaign aideGeorge Papadopoulos.[91][92][93] Uygur ran in two primary elections on March 3, 2020: the special election primary to fill the vacant seat through January 2021 and the Democratic primary for the next full term (decided in the 2020 November election). Uygur raised over $100,000 in small donations in the first three hours after announcing his candidacy.[94] That figure rose to $796,000 in the remainder of the quarter.[95]

Uygur positioned himself as left-wing, supporting single-payer healthcare, raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour, and overturningCitizens United v. FEC. In the wake of the2019 Saugus High School shooting, he supported strict gun control laws.[96] He criticized his Democratic opponent, Christy Smith, for her opposition to Medicare for All.[97][98] Uygur's primary issue was to get money out of politics.[99] He also opposed war with Iran and supported passing the Green New Deal.[100][101][102]

Uygur's candidacy was initially endorsed by U.S. SenatorBernie Sanders, then a leading candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, on December 12, 2019.[103] However, on December 13, 2019, Sanders retracted his support after offensive sexual comments that Uygur had long made about women, demeaning comments that he had made about blacks (using theN-word on his show multiple times), and provocative statements that he had made aboutfundamentalist Muslims and Jews in years prior were brought to his attention.[3][9][104][103] The same day, RepresentativeRo Khanna (D-Calif.) withdrew his endorsement of Uygur, saying that Uygur's statements "were wrong and hurtful."[53]

At least a dozen women's,LGBTQ, and Democratic organizations denounced comments he had made as sexist, racist, homophobic, anti-Islam, and anti-Semitic.[53] Mark Gonzalez, the chairman of theLos Angeles County Democratic Party, said of him: "This man has spent decades, including up until recently, attacking women, the LGBTQ community, Jews, Muslims, Asian-Americans and African Americans. His vulgarity, his hate speech and divisive rhetoric have no place in our party." Will Rodriguez-Kennedy, the chairman of California Young Democrats, said "Cenk has a history of racist and homophobic and misogynistic comments that are inconsistent with the Democratic Party."[3] Uygur claimed that there was a coordinated campaign against him by the media and political establishments.[9][105][failed verification]

Uygur ultimately lost both elections, receiving 6% and 7% of the vote, respectively.[106][107][108][109] As no candidate earned 50 percent of the vote or more, the top two vote-earners, Christy Smith and navy officerMike Garcia, advanced to the runoff,[110] with Garcia eventually winning the election.

2024 presidential campaign

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Cenk Uygur
 
Campaign2024 United States presidential election (Democratic Party primaries)
CandidateCenk Uygur
StatusSuspended
AnnouncedOctober 11, 2023
SuspendedMarch 6, 2024
Website
cenkforamerica.com

Uygur has said that he will run for president of the United States. As of early December 2023, he has failed in his efforts to be listed on a number of state primary ballots, because he does not meet the U.S. constitutional requirement to be a natural-born citizen in order to serve as president.[111][112]

In September 2023, Uygur said that he was preparing to launch a potential challenge to PresidentJoe Biden in the2024 Democratic Party presidential primaries.[113][114] Asserting that Biden is too old and will be unable to defeat Trump, Uygur has encouraged Biden not to seek re-election.[115] Uygur said that, if no progressive challenger announced a campaign, he would start his own campaign to attempt to encourage other Democrats to challenge Biden.[114]

Uygur would not meet the constitutional requirements to serve as U.S. president underArticle II, Section 1 of the U.S. Constitution. He is a naturalized U.S. citizen, that is to say he became a citizen after his birth. Not being a citizen at his birth precludes him from being considered a "natural-born U.S. citizen," which is a requisite for presidential eligibility.[116] Uygur has claimed his eligibility, citing a 2006UIClaw review paper by a law school graduate on a 1964 case entitledSchneider v. Rusk.[117][118][119] He claims that he has a "slam dunk" legal case.[120][121] Writing inThe Daily Targum in October 2023, Kiran Subramanian questioned Uygur's ability to make this case and gain popular support, concluding that "his calculations are completely absurd and put his view of the world into question."[122]

On October 11, Uygur officially announced his presidential campaign.[120][123] He filed for theNevada ballot that same day, but was not allowed on it after he submitted an altered form.[124] Similarly, Uygur's New Hampshire ballot application was denied byNew Hampshire Secretary of StateDavid Scanlan on October 18; Uygur said that he would file lawsuits, but did not specify any jurisdictions.[125] Uygur appealed the New Hampshire decision to the state's Ballot Law Commission, which unanimously rejected his appeal on November 2, noting that theU.S. District Court for the District of New Hampshire has held that because the natural born citizen clause has not been repealed, New Hampshire state laws requiring all presidential candidates to affirm that they are natural born citizens are constitutional."[126][127][128] Similarly, Uygur filed, but was not certified, for theSouth Carolina Democratic Party presidential primary ballot, given that he does not meet constitutional requirements to hold the office of president of the United States.[129] Uygur unsuccessfully sued the South Carolina Election Commission and the South Carolina Democratic Party over his exclusion from the ballot.[130][131] After Uygur had submitted his paperwork to Arkansas and theArkansas Democratic Party,[132] the state's election officials denied him ballot access on December 4.[133] On December 18, 2023, Uygur's campaign issued a press release[134] indicating that he was on primary ballots for the following states:Minnesota,[135]Oklahoma,[136]Texas,[137] andVermont.[138] It was confirmed in January that Uygur was placed on the ballot inConnecticut.[139]

Uygur indicated toThe Hill in late November 2023 that his campaign had raised more than $250,000 since it started.[140]

On March 6, 2024, Uygur ended his presidential campaign.[141]

Political affiliation and views

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Once a Republican, Uygur says that he has "enormous disdain for theRepublican Party."[23] At the same time, he said ofBarack Obama: "He’s conservative in his bones, so I’ve got no love for Obama whatsoever."[4] Uygur is critical of theNew Democrats wing of the Democratic Party, which he regards as the incumbent political establishment.[142] He has called for theDemocratic Party to undergo a revitalization process.[59]

Uygur slowly transitioned away from the Republican Party andconservative politics. He has cited the decision toinvade Iraq as a "seminal moment" in that transition.[143] A progressive, Uygur is known for criticizing both Democratic and Republican politicians, accusing many of them for being influenced by donors.[144][87][145]

In 2000, Uygur voted forJohn McCain in the Republican primaries; however he did not vote for McCain in the2008 United States presidential election due to his perceived proximity to theChristian right and his views on taxes andwaterboarding.[146] Uygur supported the presidential campaigns of Bernie Sanders in2016 and2020.[147][148][149]

Following the2024 United States presidential election, Uygur has expressed disdain with theDemocratic Party, believing that they have strayed from populist ideals and become more elitist than theRepublican Party, specifically citingElon Musk's reception to criticism.[150][151]

Awards

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In 2010, along withAyaan Hirsi Ali, Uygur accepted the "Emperor Has No Clothes Award" from theFreedom From Religion Foundation[152] and later the Humanist Media Award from theAmerican Humanist Association.[153]

Controversies

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Comments about women

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In the early 2000s, Uygur posted a series of blog posts which were described as sexist. One post said, "I had one of the best nights of my life atMardi Gras. I kissed over 23 different women, saw and felt countless breasts, and was in a wonderful drunken stupor thanks to my friend John Daniels." Another post said, "It seems like there is a sea of tits here, and I am drinking in tiny droplets. I want to dive into the whole god damn ocean." Uygur would delete and later apologize for his comments.[154]

In a 2011 episode ofThe Young Turks, Uygur and his cohost Ana Kasparian dismissed actressOlivia Munn's sexual harassment allegations against directorBrett Ratner, and Uygur defended Ratner bragging about having sex with Munn, saying that she likely "drove him crazy". Uygur would later apologize for his comments.[155][156] In one episode in 2013, Uygur ranked women on a scale of 1-to-10 on how likely men would be to let them performoral sex on them.[157] That same year, Uygur said a model looked “like she’d just come out of a [concentration] camp.”[53]

In 2013, Uygur made lewd remarks about women's physical appearances in Miami, saying "the women on this island are outrageously, almost unacceptably, hot."[158][159] In 2017, an unnamed TYT employee toldTheWrap that Uygur spoke inappropriately about women.[158][160]

In 2016, Uygur defended the Harvard University men's soccer team for ranking the sexual appeal of female students on a scale of 1-to-10 on a widely shared “scouting report”, including explicit descriptions of potentialsex acts with the women.[157][158] Uygur defended his comments, tellingThe Los Angeles Times that he should not be criticized for having "frank conversations about sex."[161]

Armenian Genocide denialism and TYT name controversy

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The show's nameYoung Turks has been criticized and called for change[162] due to the originalYoung Turks political movement in the Ottoman Empire being responsible for committing theArmenian genocide, theAssyrian genocide, and theGreek genocide.[163][38] Alex Galitsky, who works for theArmenian National Committee of America, stated "If a group decided to call themselves ‘the Young Nazis’, and pitched themselves as a disruptor or anti-establishment news outlet, people would be rightly outraged".[163]

In 1991, Cenk Uygur wrote an article inThe Daily Pennsylvanian, thestudent newspaper of theUniversity of Pennsylvania, in which he promotedArmenian genocide denial.[164] In 2016, Cenk Uygur posted a statement on TYT's website in which he rescinded his Armenian Genocide denial statements, arguing: "My mistake at the time was confusing myself for a scholar of history, which I most certainly am not. I don’t want to make the same mistake again, so I am going to refrain from commenting on the topic of the Armenian Genocide, which I do not know nearly enough about."[165][166] In response to the criticism he has explained that the name of the show was chosen because it is a popular colloquialism traditionally meaning a young radical who fights the status quo.[38]

Response to unionization of TYT staff

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In February 2020, when theInternational Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees sought to unionizeThe Young Turks, Uygur controversially urged his employees not to do so.[167][168] Uygur allegedly fired employee Jacorey Palmer for his pro-union activities, and, according to an anonymous TYT employee, Uygur allegedly withheld bonuses and increases from employees who were involved in the union drive. Uygur denied the charges. Uygur's position toward the union was criticized as hypocritical byThe New Republic due to his claims of support for unions and progressive causes.[169][170]

Electoral history

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2020 California's 25th congressional district special election[171]
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticChristy Smith58,56336.2%
RepublicanMike Garcia41,16925.4%
RepublicanSteve Knight27,79917.2%
DemocraticCenk Uygur10,6096.6%
DemocraticAníbal Valdez-Ortega7,3684.6%
RepublicanCourtney Lackey3,0721.9%
DemocraticRobert Cooper III2,9621.8%
RepublicanDavid Lozano2,7581.7%
RepublicanDaniel Mercuri2,5331.6%
RepublicanKenneth Jenks2,5281.6%
DemocraticGetro F. Elize1,4140.9%
DemocraticDavid Rudnick1,0850.7%
Total votes161,860100%
2020 California's 25th congressional district election[172][173]
Primary election
PartyCandidateVotes%
DemocraticChristy Smith49,67931.7%
RepublicanMike Garcia37,38123.9%
RepublicanSteve Knight29,64518.9%
DemocraticCenk Uygur9,2465.9%
DemocraticGetro Franck Elize6,3174.0%
RepublicanDavid Lozano6,2724.0%
DemocraticAnibal Valdéz-Ortega4,9203.1%
DemocraticRobert Cooper III4,4742.9%
RepublicanGeorge Papadopoulos2,7491.8%
No party preferenceOtis Lee Cooper2,1831.4%
DemocraticChristopher C. Smith(withdrawn)2,0891.3%
RepublicanDaniel Mercuri9130.6%
RepublicanKenneth Jenks6820.4%
Total votes156,550100.0%

Personal life

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Uygur isTurkish-American and is fluent both in Turkish, his native language, and in English.[52] He is married to Wendy Lang—a marriage and family therapist who is the founder ofBeverly Hills Child and Family Counseling—and they have two children.[174][175]

References

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  1. ^Jesse Ventura (April 10, 2014)."Cenk Uygur Goes #OffTheGrid".Jesse Ventura Off The Grid. Ora TV. Archived fromthe original on December 28, 2015. RetrievedSeptember 11, 2015 – via YouTube.
  2. ^"Populist Plank FAQ".The Young Turks. RetrievedFebruary 28, 2025.Why are we saying Populist instead of Progressive? Words like progressive and liberal still have meaning in our country. They are used to identify ourselves, and they are also used to ostracize others. The above definition (#1) [appealing to ordinary people who feel that their concerns are disregarded by establishment elite groups] is the best fit for what we are trying to achieve which is bringing people together to fight for what we believe in and what we deserve.
  3. ^abcdMedina, Jennifer (December 13, 2019)."Bernie Sanders Retracts Endorsement of Cenk Uygur After Criticism".The New York Times.Archived from the original on March 21, 2024. RetrievedJanuary 26, 2024.
  4. ^abSommer, Will (November 21, 2019)."Dems Fear 'Carpetbagger' Cenk Uygur Will Lose Them California Seat".The Daily Beast.Archived from the original on September 5, 2024. RetrievedNovember 13, 2023.
  5. ^Porter, Steven (October 27, 2023)."Candidate blocked from N.H. presidential primary ballot".The Boston Globe.Archived from the original on November 3, 2023. RetrievedNovember 3, 2023.Uygur isn't the first to make such a case. Abdul Karim Hassan, a naturalized US citizen from Guyana, filed several lawsuits ahead of the 2012 presidential election, including one against New Hampshire, unsuccessfully seeking ballot access on 14th Amendment and other grounds
  6. ^Timotija, Filip; Robertson, Nick (March 6, 2024)."Cenk Uygur drops long-shot presidential bid".The Hill. RetrievedMarch 6, 2024.
  7. ^"Transcript for Cenk Uygur: Trump vs Harris, Progressive Politics, Communism & Capitalism | Lex Fridman Podcast #441". August 30, 2024.
  8. ^abcdAsra Q. Nomani (2023).Woke Army; The Red-Green Alliance That Is Destroying America's FreedomArchived September 5, 2024, at theWayback Machine
  9. ^abcdMichael Finnegan (December 13, 2019)."Bernie Sanders retracts endorsement of Californian who defends crude sex ratings of women".The Los Angeles Times. RetrievedJuly 19, 2020.
  10. ^"Transcript for Cenk Uygur: Trump vs Harris, Progressive Politics, Communism & Capitalism | Lex Fridman Podcast #441". August 30, 2024.
  11. ^Uygur, Cenk (2021)."Cenk says he is a Muslim".YouTube.Archived from the original on December 21, 2021. RetrievedFebruary 21, 2021.
  12. ^Kelner, Braden (January 1, 2004)."Making News".Wharton Magazine.
  13. ^Cenk Uygur (October 18, 1991)."Where are the White Christians?".The Daily Pennsylvanian.Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. RetrievedJune 15, 2014.
  14. ^abcdefAmanda Whiting (September 12, 2018)."Cenk Uygur Just Might Be the Future of Liberal Media".Washingtonian.
  15. ^Cenk Uygur (October 18, 1991)."Column: Where are the White Christians?".www.thedp.com.Archived from the original on November 14, 2023. RetrievedNovember 14, 2023.
  16. ^Homan, Timothy R. (December 3, 2019)."Young Turks founder: Past remarks on women were attempt 'to be a stupid, politically incorrect Republican'".The Hill. RetrievedJuly 23, 2020.
  17. ^abTavana, Art (May 18, 2018)."The Complicity of The Young Turks' Ana Kasparian When She Ignores the Armenian Genocide".Playboy. RetrievedJuly 23, 2020.
  18. ^Zoller, Drew W. (April 25, 1991)."Turk, Armenian dispute raised at SAC".The Daily Pennsylvanian. Archived fromthe original on January 21, 2013. RetrievedJuly 22, 2011.
  19. ^abc"Cenk Uygur, The Young Turks, and The Denial of The Armenian Genocide".HyeTert. April 2, 2016.Archived from the original on September 5, 2024. RetrievedNovember 11, 2023.
  20. ^Cenk Uygur (November 22, 1991)."Historical Fact or Falsehood?".The Daily Pennsylvanian. RetrievedJuly 23, 2020.
  21. ^Siranush Ghazanchyan (November 29, 2019)."CNN's Chris Cuomo grills Cenk Uygur on his record of Armenian Genocide denial".Public Radio of Armenia.Archived from the original on July 23, 2020. RetrievedJuly 23, 2020.
  22. ^"Cenk Uygur".The Huffington Post.Archived from the original on February 22, 2011. RetrievedFebruary 28, 2011.
  23. ^abcdAndrea K. Hammer (September 1, 2010)."Rebel with a URL".The Pennsylvania Gazette.Archived from the original on November 11, 2023. RetrievedNovember 11, 2023.
  24. ^Rapold, Nicolas (February 5, 2015)."The Righteous Ranter, Howling at Left and Right".The New York Times.Archived from the original on September 5, 2024. RetrievedNovember 15, 2020.
  25. ^abUygur, Cenk (c. 2007)."User Profile for Cenk Uygur (cuygur)". Confabb. Archived fromthe original on July 18, 2011. RetrievedFebruary 28, 2011.
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Further reading

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External links

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Cenk Uygur at Wikipedia'ssister projects
Media offices
Preceded by Chief News Officer ofCurrent TV
2012–2013
Position abolished

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