In 2005,
The Washington Post hired Ed O’Keefe as a home page editor. Later he served Washington Post Radio as a producer and on-air contributor before covering the 2008 presidential campaign as a multiplatform reporter contributing blog reports and video dispatches from the campaign trail while also producing and hosting The Post's first podcast, “The Post Politics Podcast” that also aired on Sirius XM's POTUS Channel. After the elections, he spent four years covering federal agencies and federal employees as author of The Federal Eye blog. He spent part of the summer of 2011 covering the war in Iraq before shifting to cover Congress. He covered the 2016 presidential campaign with a focus on Republican candidates and later returned to covering Capitol Hill. Before being hired by CBS News, he frequently appeared as a guest or panelist on news programs on
BBC,
CBS,
CNN,
Fox News,
France 24,
MSNBC,
NPR,
PBS, and
Sirius/XM. In 2017, O'Keefe became a contributor to CBS News, and in 2018 joined CBS News full-time as a
Washington-based political correspondent. He continues to serve as an occasional panelist on the PBS program
Washington Week, including at times as co-moderator. Since joining CBS News, O’Keefe has covered the 2018 midterm elections, with reports from across the country and contributed to coverage of other major events in Washington including the State of the Union, the confirmation hearings for Supreme Court nominee
Brett Kavanaugh, dramatic testimony from former
Donald Trump associate Michael Cohen. He covered the funerals of former Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) and former president
George H. W. Bush. In the early months of the 2020 presidential campaign cycle, O’Keefe interviewed several candidates including
Republican William Weld and
Democrats Steve Bullock,
Julian Castro,
Kamala Harris,
Kirsten Gillibrand,
Amy Klobuchar,
Bernie Sanders and
Elizabeth Warren. In his first national television interview on the subject, Maryland Gov.
Larry Hogan told O’Keefe he was strongly considering a Republican primary challenge to President Trump, but later dropped plans to run. O’Keefe also interviewed independent
Howard Schultz in the early days of the former
Starbucks CEO's exploratory phase. ==References==