Mark Steyn | |
|---|---|
Steyn in 2014 | |
| Born | [citation needed] |
| Occupation(s) | Author, commentator |
| Children | 3 |
| Relatives | Stella Steyn (great-aunt) |
| Website | steynonline |
Mark Steyn (/staɪn/) (born 1959)[1] is a Canadian author and a radio, television, and on-line presenter.[2][3][4] He has written several books, includingThe New York Times bestsellersAmerica Alone,After America, andBroadway Babies Say Goodnight. In the US he has guest-hosted the nationally syndicatedRush Limbaugh Show, as well asTucker Carlson Tonight onFox News, on which he regularly appeared as a guest and fill-in host.
In 2021, Steyn began hosting his own show on British news channelGB News. He left GB News in early February 2023, saying that the channel wanted him to pay fines issued by the UK media regulatorOfcom, which was investigating complaints ofCOVID-19 vaccination scepticism aired onThe Mark Steyn Show.[5][6][7][8][9] He has since moved his show to his own website.[10]
Steyn was baptized aCatholic and was later confirmed in theAnglican Church, which he left to become a Baptist.[11] He has stated that "the last Jewish female in my line was one of my paternal great-grandmothers" and that "both my grandmothers were Catholic".[12] His parents were married inElliot Lake, Ontario.[13] Steyn's great-aunt was artistStella Steyn.[14] His mother's family wasBelgian.[15]
Steyn was educated atKing Edward's School, Birmingham, in the United Kingdom, the same school that authorJ.R.R. Tolkien attended and where Steyn was assigned a Greek dictionary that had also been used by Tolkien.[16] Although it was reported byThe Age in 2006 that Steyn had left school at age 16,[17] his name appears in the King Edward's School yearbook for 1977-78 as a member of "Cl.VI", that is, the "Classics [Upper] 6th form", which is the normal final year for students at that school.
Steyn worked as a disc jockey before becoming musical theatre critic at the newly establishedThe Independent in 1986.[18] He acted as TV critic for Channel 4's breakfast showThe Channel 4 Daily and was appointed film critic forThe Spectator in 1992. After writing predominantly about the arts, Steyn shifted his focus to political commentary and wrote a column forThe Daily Telegraph, a conservativebroadsheet, until 2006.
He has written for many publications, includingThe Washington Post,The Jerusalem Post,Orange County Register,Chicago Sun-Times,National Review,The New York Sun,The Australian,Maclean's,The Irish Times,National Post,The Atlantic,Western Standard, andThe New Criterion. He subsequently stepped back from writing and now devotes most of his time to his show.
Steyn's books includeBroadway Babies Say Goodnight: Musicals Then and Now, a history of the musical theatre, and the politicalAmerica Alone: The End of the World as We Know It, aNew York Times bestseller which predicts the downfall of the West. He has also published collections of his columns and celebrity obituaries, as well as profiles fromThe Atlantic.
Steyn held a Eugene C. Pulliam Visiting Fellowship in Journalism atHillsdale College in spring 2013.[19] As of 2010, Steyn was no longer the back-page columnist for the print edition ofNational Review, conservative writerJames Lileks having taken over that space. Steyn's back-page column forNational Review, "Happy Warriors", resumed with the issue of March 21, 2011.[needs update]
Steyn has contributed to the blogRicochet.com and recorded numerouspodcasts with the organization.[20]
From December 2016 to February 2017, Steyn hostedThe Mark Steyn Show on theCRTV Digital Network.[21] CRTV abruptly cancelled the show after two months and went to arbitration, with both sides claiming breach of contract. Steyn also sued to keep the show on the air during arbitration, saying it was on behalf of his employees. Former show supervisor Mike Young called this "bullshit" when quoted inThe Daily Beast.[22] Former employees provided sworn declarations that Steyn was "incredibly disorganised", tyrannical, and impossible to work with.[22] Steyn was awarded damages for breach of contract, which was confirmed on appeal, as well as attorneys' fees.[23][24][25]
In October 2021, Steyn began covering forNigel Farage on hisprime time showFarage onGB News on Fridays and was a relief presenter for Farage on other days. On November 19, 2021, Steyn received a permanent prime time host billing on GB News, with the Friday show renamedMark Steyn. In January 2022, the show began airing five nights a week, Monday to Friday, which in February was reduced to Monday to Thursday. In March 2022, during theRussian invasion of Ukraine, Steyn presented the show fromWestern Ukraine.
In December 2022, Steyn suffered a heart attack while broadcasting the Mark Steyn Show on GB News TV. He did not recognise the symptoms as a heart attack, but later suffered a second, while in France, where he was hospitalised.[26]
Steyn quit GB News in February 2023, in protest at the channel wanting to change his contract to make him personally liable for any fines issued by the UK's media regulator Ofcom, which was then investigating 411 complaints from viewers about Covid vaccine scepticism aired on Steyn's show, in potential breach of theBroadcasting Code.[5][27] Steyn also complained changes in his contract would force him and his staff to attend regulatory compliance training sessions, which he referred to as "re-education classes".[5]
On 6 March 2023, Steyn was found byOfcom to have breached its rules during a GB News programme aboutCOVID-19 vaccines. Ofcom said the Steyn programme had "presented a materially misleading interpretation of official data without sufficient challenge or counterweight".[28]
In a May 2004 column, Steyn commented that editors were encouraging anti-Bush sentiments after theDaily Mirror andThe Boston Globe had published faked pictures, which originated on American and Hungarian pornographic Web sites,[29] of British and American soldiers supposedly sexually abusing Iraqis.[30] Steyn argued that the media only wanted to show images to Westerners "that will shame and demoralize them."[31]
In a July 2005 column forNational Review, Steyn criticizedAndrew Jaspan, then the editor ofThe Age, an Australian newspaper. Jaspan was offended byDouglas Wood, an Australian kidnapped and held hostage in Iraq, who after his rescue referred to his captors as "arseholes." Jaspan claimed that "the issue is really largely, speaking as I understand it, he was treated well there. He says he was fed every day, and as such to turn around and use that kind of language I think is just insensitive." Steyn argued that there is nothing at all wrong with insensitivity toward murderous captors, and that it was Jaspan, not Wood, who suffered fromStockholm syndrome. He said further, "A blindfolded Mr. Wood had to listen to his captors murder two of his colleagues a few inches away, but how crude and boorish would one have to be to hold that against one's hosts?"[32]
Steyn wrote articles and maintained a blog[33] forMaclean's covering the 2007 business fraud trial of his financial patronConrad Black in Chicago, from the point of view of one who was adamantly convinced Black never committed any crime. Doing this, he later wrote, "cost me my gig at the [Chicago]Sun-Times" and "took me away from more lucrative duties such as book promotion".[34] Steyn expressed dismay at "the procedural advantages the prosecution enjoys—the inducements it's able to dangle in order to turn witnesses that, if offered by the defence, would be regarded as the suborning of perjury; or the confiscation of assets intended to prevent an accused person from being able to mount a defence; or the piling on of multiple charges which virtually guarantees that a jury will seek to demonstrate its balanced judgment by convicting on something. All that speaks very poorly for the federal justice system."
After Black's conviction, Steyn published a long essay inMaclean's about the case, strongly criticizing Black's defense team.[35]
Steyn opposes Muslim immigration to theUnited States, which he describes as dangerous. According to Steyn, theWest faces a choice "between liberty and mass Muslim immigration."[36]
Steyn believes that if mass Muslim migration to Europe is not stopped, Europe will turn into what he calls "Eurabia", a future society where the European continent will be dominated by Islam.[37] He has written: "much of what we loosely call the Western world will not survive this century, and much of it will effectively disappear in our lifetimes, including many, if not most Western European countries."[38]
In his bookAmerica Alone, Steyn likened Europe toBosnia in the lead-up to itscivil war andgenocide:[39][38][40]
Why did Bosnia collapse into the worst slaughter in Europe since thesecond World War? In the thirty years before themeltdown,Bosnian Serbs had declined from 43 percent to 31 percent of the population, whileBosnian Muslims had increased from 26 percent to 44 percent. In a democratic age, you can't buckdemography—except throughcivil war. The Serbs figured that out, as other Continentals will in the years ahead: if you cannot outbreed the enemy, cull 'em. The problem that Europe faces is that Bosnia's demographic profile is now the model for the entire continent.[note 1]
When some critics[who?] claimed that Steyn was advocatinggenocide in this passage, he wrote:[41]
My book isn't about what I want to happen but what I think will happen. GivenFascism,Communism andethnic cleansing in theBalkans, it's not hard to foresee that theneo-nationalist resurgence already under way in parts of Europe will at some point take a violent form. ... I think any descent intoneo-fascism will be ineffectual and therefore merely a temporary blip in the remorseless transformation of the Continent.
Steyn has written about Muslim demographic projections to back upBat Ye'or'sEurabia theory and has been on the board of advisors of theInternational Free Press Society, both key components of the internationalcounter-jihad movement.[42][43][44] In 2012, he also participated in the international counter-jihad conference in Brussels,[45][46] billed as the "International Conference for Free Speech & Human Rights".[47]
Steyn was an early proponent of the2003 invasion of Iraq.[48][non-primary source needed] In 2013, Steyn blamed the United States' lack of success in Iraq on poor communication.[49]Conor Friedersdorf, responding in a column forThe Atlantic, noted that Steyn had declared victory in Iraq in 2004, incorrectly stating that the US had left the country at that time.[50][non-primary source needed]
In one of his first books,The Story of Miss Saigon (1991) co-written with Edward Behr, Steyn offered up his stance on theMiss Saigon controversy of 1990. Steyn accused the Asian-American activists opposed to the musicalMiss Saigon of a "new tribalism" that threatened to bring in "a new era of conformity and sanctimoniousness".[51]
Steyn's workAmerica Alone: The End of the World as We Know It is aNew York Times bestselling nonfiction book published in 2006. It deals with the globalwar on terror and wider issues of demographics in Muslim and non-Muslim populations. It was recommended byGeorge W. Bush.[52] The paperback edition, released in April 2008 with a new introduction, was labeled "Soon to Be Banned in Canada", alluding to a possible result that Steyn then anticipated from the Canadian Islamic Congress'human rights complaints against Maclean's magazine.
In an essay aboutAmerica Alone,Christopher Hitchens wrote that "Mark Steyn believes that demography is destiny, and he makes an immensely convincing case," then detailed many points at which he disagreed with Steyn.[53] Hitchens believed Steyn erred by "considering European Muslim populations as one. Islam is as fissile as any other religion, and considerable friction exists among immigrant Muslim groups in many European countries. Moreover, many Muslims actually have come to Europe for the advertised purposes; seeking asylum and to build a better life." Nevertheless, Hitchens expressed strong agreement with some of Steyn's points, calling the book "admirably tough-minded."[53]
In 2011, Steyn publishedAfter America: Get Ready for Armageddon, a follow-up toAmerica Alone. In it, he argues that the U.S. is now on the same trajectory towards decline and fall as the rest of the West due to unsustainable national spending and the subsequent borrowing involved to pay for expanding government.[54][55] Within its pages,After America discusses theU.S. federal debt specifically and more generally the rise ofbureaucratic state control as individual initiative declines.[54][55]
Should decline continue to affect peoples' lives and the expansion of debt go on, Steyn's ultimate worries areapocalyptic, with him declaring,
There will be no 'new world order', only a world without order, in which pipsqueak failed states go nuclear while the planet's wealthiest nations are unable to defend their borders and are forced to adjust to the post-American era as they can.[54]
After America peaked at number four on theNew York Times bestseller list for non-fiction, but tagged with a dagger for bulk orders.[56] Although written in apolemical style about controversial issues,[54][55] praise came from publications such asThe Washington Times, where Steyn received comparison toGeorge Orwell,[55] andThe Spectator, where Steyn's sense of prose received comparison topyrotechnics.[54]
On August 17, 2011, Steyn discussed the book and a variety of related issues while delivering the first lecture inThe NHIOP Bookmark Series, a program of the New Hampshire Institute of Politics atSaint Anselm College inManchester,New Hampshire.C-SPAN recorded Steyn's comments.[57]
In 2007, a complaint was filed with theOntario Human Rights Commission related to Steyn's article, entitled "The Future Belongs to Islam",[58] published inMaclean's magazine. The complainants alleged that the article and the refusal ofMaclean's to provide space for a rebuttal violated their human rights. The complainants also claimed that the article was one of twenty-two (22)Maclean's articles, many written by Steyn, about Muslims.[59] Further complaints were filed with theCanadian Human Rights Commission, later stripped of its mandate by the Canadian parliament in 2011,[60] and theBritish Columbia Human Rights Tribunal.
The Ontario Human Rights Commission refused in April 2008 to proceed, saying it lacked jurisdiction to deal with magazine content. However, the Commission stated that it "strongly condemns the Islamophobic portrayal of Muslims ... Media has a responsibility to engage in fair and unbiased journalism."[61] Critics of the Commission claimed thatMaclean's and Steyn had been found guilty without a hearing. John Martin ofThe Province wrote, "There was no hearing, no evidence presented and no opportunity to offer a defence—just a pronouncement of wrongdoing."[62]
The OHRC defended its right to comment by stating, "Like racial profiling and other types of discrimination, ascribing the behaviour of individuals to a group damages everyone in that group. We have always spoken out on such issues.Maclean's and its writers are free to express their opinions. The OHRC is mandated to express what it sees as unfair and harmful comment or conduct that may lead to discrimination."[63]
Steyn subsequently criticized the Commission, commenting that "Even though they (the OHRC) don't have the guts to hear the case, they might as well find us guilty. Ingenious!"[64]
Soon afterwards, the head of theCanadian Human Rights Commission issued a public letter to the editor ofMaclean's magazine. In it, Jennifer Lynch said, "Mr. Steyn would have us believe that words, however hateful, should be given free reign [sic]. History has shown us that hateful words sometimes lead to hurtful actions that undermine freedom and have led to unspeakable crimes. That is why Canada and most other democracies have enacted legislation to place reasonable limits on the expression of hatred."[65] TheNational Post subsequently defended Steyn and sharply criticized Lynch, stating that Lynch has "no clear understanding of free speech or the value of protecting it" and that "No human right is more basic than freedom of expression, not even the "right" to live one's life free from offence by remarks about one's ethnicity, gender, culture or orientation."[66]
The federal Canadian Human Rights Commission dismissed the Canadian Islamic Congress' complaint againstMaclean's in June 2008. The CHRC's ruling said of the article that, "the writing is polemical, colourful and emphatic, and was obviously calculated to excite discussion and even offend certain readers, Muslim and non-Muslim alike." However, the Commission ruled that overall, "the views expressed in the Steyn article, when considered as a whole and in context, are not of an extreme nature, as defined by the Supreme Court."[67]
Steyn later wrote a lengthy reflection of his turmoil with the commissions and the tribunals. The reflection appears as the introduction toThe Tyranny of Nice,[68] a book authored byKathy Shaidle andPete Vere on Canada's human rights commissions.
In February 2024, a civil trial jury in Washington found that Mark Steyn andCompetitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) bloggerRand Simberg defamed and injured climatologistMichael E. Mann in blog posts. The jury awarded Mann $1 in compensatory damages from each writer. It awarded punitive damages of $1,000 from Simberg and $1 million from Steyn, after finding that the pair made their statements with "maliciousness, spite, ill will, vengeance or deliberate intent to harm."[69] In 2025 the D.C. Superior court reduced the Steyn punitive damages payment to $5000, based in part on the discrepancy with the compensatory damages.[70]
Mann also sued theNational Review andCompetitive Enterprise Institute, which had published Steyn and Simberg's blog posts. In 2021 these two defendants were held not liable for defamation,[69] and Mann was later ordered to pay $530,000 in legal expenses to the National Review.[71]
The defamatory statements were from 2012, when Simberg accused American climatologist Mann of "deception" and "engaging in data manipulation" and alleged that the Penn State investigation that had cleared Mann was a "cover-up and whitewash" comparable to the recentJerry Sandusky sex scandal, "except that instead of molesting children, he has molested and tortured data." The CEI blog editor then removed the sentence as "inappropriate", but aNational Review blog post by Steyn cited it and alleged that Mann's hockey stick graph was "fraudulent".[72][73][74]
Mann asked CEI andNational Review to remove the allegations and apologize, or he would take action.[72] The CEI published further insults, andNational Review EditorRich Lowry responded in an article headed "Get Lost" with a declaration that, should Mann sue, the discovery process would be used to reveal and publish Mann's emails. Mann's lawyer filed thedefamation lawsuit in October 2012.[73]
Before the case could go todiscovery, CEI andNational Review filed a court motion to dismiss it underanti-SLAPP legislation, with the claim that they had merely been using exaggerated language which was acceptable against a public figure. In July 2013, the judge ruled against this motion,[75][76] and when the defendants took this to appeal a new judge also denied their motion to dismiss, in January 2014. National Review changed its lawyers, and Steyn decided to represent himself in court.[72][77] Journalist Seth Shulman, at theUnion of Concerned Scientists, welcomed the judge's statement that accusations of fraud "go to the heart of scientific integrity. They can be proven true or false. If false, they are defamatory. If made with actual malice, they are actionable."[78]
The defendants again appealed against the decision, and on August 11, 2014, theReporters Committee for Freedom of the Press with 26 other organizations, including theACLU,Bloomberg,Gannett (USA Today),Comcast (NBCUniversal),Time,Fox News andThe Seattle Times Company, filed anamicus brief arguing that the comments at issue wereconstitutionally protected as opinion.[79][80] Steyn chose to be represented by attorney Daniel J. Kornstein.[81]
An appeal to have the lawsuit thrown out, filed by Steyn's co-defendants (National Review, CEI and Simberg), was heard in theD.C. Court of Appeals on November 25, 2014.[82] Steyn was present for oral arguments but did not join the appeal, preferring to go to trial. On December 22, 2016, the D.C. appeals court ruled that Mann's case against Simberg and Steyn could go ahead. A "reasonable jury" could find against the defendants, and though the context should be considered, "if the statements assert or imply false facts that defame the individual, they do not find shelter under the First Amendment simply because they are embedded in a larger policy debate.".[83] A counterclaim Steyn filed through his attorneys on March 17, 2014, was dismissed with prejudice by the D.C. court on August 29, 2019, leaving Steyn to pay litigation costs.[84]
The defendants filed forcertiorari with theU.S. Supreme Court in the hope it would hear their appeal. On November 25, 2019, it denied the petition without comment. In a dissenting opinion,associate justiceSamuel Alito wrote that he had favored hearing the case on the basis that, even though the defendants might yet prevail in the case or the outcome itself come before the Court for review, the expense of litigating the case this far may itself have achilling effect which would deter speakers. Mann said that he looked forward to the trial.[85]
On February 8, 2024, after a jury trial in theSuperior Court of the District of Columbia, each of the co-defendants Simberg and Steyn was ordered to pay Mann $1 incompensatory damages. Mann was awarded $1,000 inpunitive damages from Simberg and $1 million from Steyn. Steyn, who hadself-represented, said through his manager he would be appealing the punitive damages, as did Simberg, through his lawyer.[69]
Regarding the one dollar compensatory damage award, Steyn indicated it vindicated his belief that Mann never suffered any actual injury. The two writers had argued during the trial that Mann become famous in the years after their remarks.[69]
In 2025 a D.C. Superior Court judge reduced the Steyn punitive damages payment to $5000. Law commentatorEugene Volokh wrote that the court did not disagree with the jury verdict that Steyn had libeled Mann through reckless and knowingly false statements. The court based the new figure on precedents and the actual damages to Mann.[70]
Steyn's writing has drawn supporters and detractors for both content and style.Martin Amis, who was harshly criticized inAmerica Alone but gave it a positive review, said of the style: "Mark Steyn is an oddity: his thoughts and themes are sane and serious—but he writes like a maniac."[86][87] His style was described byRobert Fulford as "bring[ing] to public affairs the dark comedy developed in theTheatre of the Absurd."[88] Longtime editor and admirer Fulford also wrote, "Steyn, a self-styled 'right-wing bastard,' violates everyone's sense of good taste."[88] According to Simon Mann, Steyn "gives succour to the maxim the pen is mightier than the sword, though he is not averse to employing the former to advocate use of the latter."[18] Dan Kennedy, professor of journalism at North Eastern University, has described Steyn's journalistic technique as "write, twist, smear and sneer, repeat!"[89]Charlie Pierce told theBoston Phoenix in 2004 that "If a guy who is that nakedly, intellectually dishonest can become a successful conservative writer, then conservative intellectualism is dead in this country. If it began with Buckley and the people who taught him, it ends with the likes of Mark Steyn."[90]
Susan Catto inTime believed Steyn had an interest in controversy: "Instead of shying away from the appearance of conflict, Steyn positively revels in it."[91] Canadian journalist Steve Burgess wrote: "Steyn wields his rhetorical rapier with genuine skill" and that national disasters tended to cause Steyn "to display his inner wingnut."[92]
In 2009, Canadian journalistPaul Wells accused Steyn of dramatically exaggerating the rise of fascist political parties in Europe. Wells also accused Steyn of repeatedly "shrieking" about Islam in his political writings.[93]
Steyn was awarded the 2006Eric Breindel Award for Excellence in Opinion Journalism for writing which "best reflects love of this country and its democratic institutions".[94][95]
Steyn has also received awards from theClaremont Institute in 2005,[96] theCenter for Security Policy in 2007,[97] theInternational Free Press Society in 2010,[98] and theJustice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms in 2018.[99][non-primary source needed]
Steyn lives and works mainly inWoodsville, New Hampshire, U.S.[100][101] He has three children.[11]
As readers may know, the Steyn worldwide corporate headquarters is located in Woodsville, which is part of the township of Haverhill, New Hampshire.
National conservative political pundit Mark Steyn, who works in Haverhill (which includes the Woodsville community), wrote a scathing appraisal of the situation on his website, linking the flub to a broader decline in the ability of Americans to think independently and solve problems.