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ulianna Goldman is a reporter for Bloomberg Television and serves as chief White House correspondent for Bloomberg News and Bloomberg Businessweek. She also participates as a panelist on the weekly television program "Political Capital with Al Hunt". Goldman joined Bloomberg in 2003 and held the role of associate producer for Bloomberg Television’s Washington, D.C.-based programming.
Born in Bethesda, Maryland, in 1981, Goldman is the daughter of Barbara Goldberg-Goldman and Michael Goldman. Her father is a partner in Silverberg Goldman & Bikoff, a Washington law firm. Her mother is the founder and president o
ulianna Goldman is a reporter for Bloomberg Television and serves as chief White House correspondent for Bloomberg News and Bloomberg Businessweek. She also participates as a panelist on the weekly television program "Political Capital with Al Hunt". Goldman joined Bloomberg in 2003 and held the role of associate producer for Bloomberg Television’s Washington, D.C.-based programming.
Born in Bethesda, Maryland, in 1981, Goldman is the daughter of Barbara Goldberg-Goldman and Michael Goldman. Her father is a partner in Silverberg Goldman & Bikoff, a Washington law firm. Her mother is the founder and president of a human resources agency and sits on the board of the National Jewish Democratic Council.[1] She attended Charles E. Smith Jewish Day School in Rockville, Maryland, for all of her primary and secondary schooling. She attended Barnard College Columbia University in 2003 and graduated magna cum laude. She currently is pursuing a master’s degree in government with a concentration in national security studies from Johns Hopkins University. She was married on May 27, 2007 to MSNBC journalist David Shuster at the Sixth & I Historic Synagogue in Washington, D.C.[1][2] On January 10, 2011, the Washington Post published a report that Goldman and Shuster had separated, they subsequently divorced in the same year. The couple had no children.[3]
Most notably, Goldman reported on President Barack Obama’s signing of the START Treaty, his acceptance of the Nobel Prize in Oslo, as well as Obama's first economic summit in China. Goldman also writes on White House domestic policy including coverage of the Administration's handling of the BP Oil Spill and the President's economic policy agenda.[4][5] She was dubbed one of the Obama "Originals" for her coverage of the 2008 campaign.[6]
In October 2010, she was named one of The Power 30 Under 30, a ranking of the most influential people in Washington D.C. under the age of 30.[7] In addition, she was featured in the Capitol File profile of White House correspondents under 40
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