David J. Sirota (born November 2, 1975) is the founder and editor-in-chief of The Lever, a reader-supported investigative news outlet focused on exposing the negative influence of corporate corruption on American society. David Sirota (bio page), The Lever, accessed 2024-04-26 Sirota was a speechwriter and senior adviser for the Bernie Sanders 2020 presidential campaign. In 2022, he received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay for conceiving the story for Netflix's Don't Look Up alongside co-writer and director Adam McKay.
Sirota's professional career has spanned politics, media, and journalism. In politics, he has held roles such as campaign manager, fundraiser, spokesperson, strategist, and consultant for a variety of left-leaning Democratic candidates and office holders. He twice worked for Bernie Sanders, both when Sanders was a member of the U. S. House of Representatives and as part of Sanders 2020 presidential campaign. He was also a staff member of the Center for American Progress, a liberal research and advocacy group.
Sirota has also been a columnist for Guardian US, editor-at-large for American left publication Jacobin and senior investigations editor for The International Business Times. He has also worked as television writer and radio host. He has written four books: Hostile Takeover (2006), an exploration of corruption in the U.S. political system; The Uprising (2008), about ordinary citizens frustrations with the U.S. government; Back to Our Future (2011), which explores how the politics and culture of the 1980s influenced the thinking of later generations; and Master Plan: The Hidden Plot To Legalize Corruption In America (2025), co-authored with Jared Jacang Maher. ‘Deep trouble’: The right's secret ‘master plan’ exposed by author, Rawstory, October 13, 2025
In his political career, Sirota has been described by his critics as "an attack dog", and by his allies as "intense, driven, even obsessive", and someone with an "eye for critique and the instinct for the jugular of." In 2003, journalist Richard Wolffe described Sirota as "a man on a mission." In 2023, reflecting on Sirota's varied career, CNN media analyst Brian Stelter wrote, "Sirota's life has been one long campaign against and the corrupt politicians who enable them."
Sirota met the future actor Bradley Cooper, who lived in the neighboring town of Jenkintown, when they both played on the 1985 East Abington Little League Baseball team. Bradley Cooper, David Sirota reminisce about playing on East Abington Little League team, 6ABC Action News Abington Journalist David Sirota and Jenkintown Actor Bradley Cooper Reminisce About Little League at Oscars Lunch, Montco Today Sirota attended the William Penn Charter School in Philadelphia, where he was close friends with Adam F. Goldberg, who went on to create the TV series The Goldbergs. Goldberg's series, about his life growing up in the suburbs of Philadelphia, featured a recurring character based on Sirota in multiple episodes of the series. The character was also named David Sirota. Two Pennsylvania natives, turned Oscar nominees, collaborate on 'Don't Look Up', Eyewitness News, ABC-7 Sirota attended the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University from 1994 to 1998, where he earned a bachelor's degree in journalism and political science. Meet Sirota, davidsirota.com David Sirota, LinkedIn While there, he worked as a reporter for the Daily Northwestern. He also worked on his first political race during his senior year.
From 1999 to 2001, Sirota worked as press aide and spokesperson for Bernie Sanders, who was then serving as the U.S. representative from Vermont. Sirota has stated that working for Sanders was "completely transformative for me as a person". Sirota also said: "When I first worked for him, I was right out of college. It helped me find who I was and what my values are." According to journalist Brian Stelter, "Sirota experienced Congress in all its possibility and all its vulgarity through the eyes of the only registered independent in the institution." From 2001 to 2003, Sirota worked as the communications director for the Democrats on the House Appropriations Committee. He managed press and message development on health care, education, defense, the environment and post-9/11 national security issues.
From 2003 to 2005, Sirota worked at the Center for American Progress (CAP), a liberal research and advocacy group, where he was responsible for rapid response and media outreach. Sirota was hired for the job by former Clinton White House chief of staff John Podesta. According to journalist Richard Wolffe, Podesta said of Sirota: "I didn't know him. I just saw he had an eye for critique and the instinct for the jugular." Wolffe wrote a profile of Sirota in Newsweek in Oct 2003, in which he described Sirota as "the Internet child of the Clinton war room generation." Wolffe also described Sirota as a "political operative" skilled at "hacking out a daily barrage of anti-Bush media clips, commentary, and snappy quotes" who made "guerrilla attacks on the Bush administration", and who was "well schooled in the art of Washington warfare." According to the article, Sirota's main weapons were computer emails. For example, Sirota unearthed a two-year-old comment that Colin Powell had made to the effect that "Iraq posed no threat to its neighbors, and possessed no 'significant capability' in weapons of mass destruction." Sirota made Powell's statements more widely known. Reporters pounced, and it became a public relations blow to the Bush administration. Sirota was credited with having revealed that $87 billion for Iraq could have been used to erase huge state deficits at home, a fact that was repeated by Democrats nationwide. Sirota also created the CAP publication Progress Report. Boston Globe, 12/12/03
Sirota served as a senior strategist for Brian Schweitzer unsuccessful 2000 Senate campaign and successful 2004 gubernatorial campaign. In September 2006, Sirota worked as a political consultant for Ned Lamont U.S. Senate campaign. Lamont defeated Joe Lieberman in the primary, but Lieberman ran as an independent and defeated Lamont in the November election. In 2008, Sirota was co-chair of the Progressive Legislative Action Network (now renamed the Progressive States Network). He was a senior fellow at the Campaign for America's Future.
From 2009 to 2012, Sirota was the morning host at the Denver progressive talk station KDFD. Sirota was initially filling in for Jay Marvin on his eponymous program; but Marvin was ultimately unable to return, and Sirota became the permanent host in 2010. Sirota also guest hosted for Thom Hartmann and Norman Goldman. On July 16, 2012, Sirota moved to sister station KHOW to co-host an afternoon drive program with former George W. Bush administration FEMA director Michael D. Brown, The Rundown with Sirota and Brown. In January 2013, after nearly four years in radio, Sirota parted ways with KHOW/Clear Channel. Insiders speculate the reason for the abrupt departure was friction between the two co-hosts; it left Brown with his own show. In March 2017, Sirota joined The Young Turks online broadcast network as a contributor, providing periodic investigative reports. In early 2018, after four years of reporting for the International Business Times as senior editor of investigations, Sirota left that publication.
In addition to speech writing, Sirota helped to "plan campaign strategy" and functioned "as a rapid-response war room." Sirota also published the email newsletter Bern Notice and the podcast Hear the Bern. The newsletter and podcast were ways "through which the campaign has tried to bypass traditional news outlets and reach voters directly." The Sanders campaign was notable for its criticism of the mainstream media outlets and their coverage of the issues surrounding the campaign. Writing in the New York Times, journalist Marc Tracy stated:
As an example of the campaign's media criticism, Tracy cited an instance of the campaign's newsletter ("Bern Notice"):
Soon after Sirota joined the Sanders campaign, the journalist Edward-Isaac Dovere published an article in The Atlantic accusing Sirota of secretly working on behalf of the Sanders campaign while he was still working as a journalist for The Guardian and Capital & Main. Sirota, The Guardian, and the Sanders campaign refuted these accusations; the editors of Capital & Main declined to comment on the accuracy of the story. Dovere's accusations were also refuted by other investigative journalists. According to journalist Walker Bragman, "Dovere's story hinged on an unverifiable quote which the speaker claims was misrepresented, along with innuendo stemming from the fact that Sirota deleted thousands of tweets following his employment. Paste spoke to multiple campaign insiders familiar with the matter, all of whom disputed Dovere's timeline and narrative. Their accounts lined up with what we found through our own reporting on unrelated matters over the last few months. Other individuals have also come forward to publicly refute the article’s claims." Journalist Glenn Greenwald wrote, "Most critically, the key claim that made the article such a sensation – that Sirota's 'informal work for Sanders goes back months' and included 'quietly writing speeches' for the Senator – is entirely and demonstrably false." Sanders suspended his presidential campaign on April 8, 2020. He endorsed Joe Biden on April 13.
As of April 2024, The Lever has more than 112,000 active free and paying subscribers, and a staff of nineteen. The Lever's mission, according to Sirota, is to "hold power accountable." According to Managing Editor Joel Warner, The Lever's "bread and butter" reporting and "core area of success" is reporting on "how corporate power is making everything worse for the rest of us".
The investigative reporting from The Lever is frequently cited by other news outlets, including citations in The New York Times, NPR, The Washington Post, Politico, Al Jazeera, Rolling Stone, and The Baltimore Sun. The Lever's reporting has also been cited in tweets and press releases by politicians such as Senator Sheldon Whitehouse,Whitehouse, Sheldon @SenWhitehouse. (2022, June 25). More and more people are understanding what I’ve been saying is going on — how the Court got captured by special interests using gobs of dark money.
In describing the message of the film, Sirota stated: "Every politician is asked questions about the economy. What we have to do is bake that same attitude about climate into the coverage. The economy is the way we talk about politics. The livable atmosphere needs to be at the same level." In January 2022, Don't Look Up became Netflix's second biggest film of all time. Regarding the success of film, Sirota stated: "I never expected the movie to become a cultural phenomenon. ... I think the reason that happened is because it’s a movie about the here and now. This movie feels a lot like reality. Everybody has strong opinions on the here and now." Sirota also stated:
Sirota responded to Harshaw's review in a letter to the editor. Sirota denied his book was critical of mainstream Democrats but aimed squarely at "exposing Republican hypocrisy". He described his position as a "centrist exploration of the corruption of the entire system" that "isn't the fault of just one party or another". There was controversy in Washington, D.C., in 2007 about whether Sirota was a "journalist" or an "activist". While the Washington press corps tends to see him as an "activist", at one point he was criticized for skirting the rules about access to Congress, which would on some occasions deny activists access, by getting a "temporary intern's ID"; this gave him access to the Senate chamber, but he was criticized in The Washington Post afterward. He was described as having "pulled an end-run around the press galleries". Sirota denied he got "special access" and that such a claim was "just bizarre". He added: "I think a lot of reporters on the Hill want to monopolize access to our government as a way to preserve their monopoly on news I guess." Some analysts observed that conservative journalists were activists as well; one noted "''Weekly Fred Barnes has credentials, he espouses political views."
A mostly positive review of The Uprising from Publishers Weekly described the book as chronicling "how ordinary citizens on the right and the left are marshaling their frustrations with the government into uprisings across the country." The reviewer cited "entertaining case studies" with a "conversational" tone and a fast-paced narrative with "numerous high notes." Sirota gave a "fine elucidation of continuing Democratic support for the Iraq War" and examined the " echo chamber qualities of beltway television shows like Hardball." The book presents "a rousing account of the local uprisings already in effect."
A Newark Star-Ledger political critic reviewing the book described Sirota as an "enterprising" reporter who used "resourceful" tactics to get entry into such venues as Capitol Hill, the Microsoft campus, an ExxonMobil stockholders meeting, and the Mexican border. In the book, Sirota attacks CNN star Lou Dobbs less for his "endless broadcasts on illegal immigration" but more for the way he "browbeats his staff and runs roughshod over the CNN management". The critic felt the book's "search for a national uprising is somewhat out of focus" but was a "lively read".
In Wired, Jenny Williams states:
Sirota has been a strong supporter of the economic stimulus efforts of the Obama administration. David Sirota: What a Second Stimulus Should – and Shouldn't – Look Like. The Huffington Post. Retrieved on 2011-06-25. However, he has criticized such efforts as insufficient and has strongly supported further stimulus efforts. Sirota was criticized by Fox News hosts and commentators Mark Steyn, Bill O'Reilly, Greg Gutfeld, and Robert Spencer in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombing for an article he wrote for Salon entitled "Let's Hope the Boston Marathon Bomber Is a White American". These critics asserted that Sirota downplayed the Islamic nature of the attack. Some other journalists and political analysts have criticized Sirota. In his article comparing two approaches to progressive politics, statistician Nate Silver disparaged Sirota's approach as "playing fast and loose with the truth and using some of the same demagogic precepts that the right wing does." Regarding Sirota's political analysis and projections, including his predictions during the 2008 presidential election, Al Giordano derided him as "an inverted compass: when Sirota says 'heads,' you can make a lot of money betting on 'tails.
In 2016, right-wing commentators at the conservative National Review and libertarian Reason upbraided Sirota for his 2013 Salon article entitled "Hugo Chavez's economic miracle". Sirota wrote in 2013 that Chavez was "no saint" but also that his socialist and redistributionist policies had led to Venezuela's GDP more than doubling and reduced poverty to the third-lowest level in South America. According to critics, Sirota overlooked that Venezuela's economic gains were based almost entirely on petroleum exports. In 2018, Sirota argued immediate action must be taken against the influence and power of oil and gas corporations to fight climate change, and Democrats must choose a side. He asked: "Will our political class behold the fossil fuel industry's sociopathy and realize that we face an existential choice between profits and ecological survival?"
Journalism and media career, 2005–2019
Sanders campaign 2019–2020
Mr. Sirota ... has amplified the campaign's consistent focus on criticizing news outlets that most regard as mainstream, targeting stories that he considers unfair.
When the first in-house newsletter of Bernie Sanders's campaign landed in inboxes last August, its chief antagonist was neither President Trump nor a rival for the Democratic presidential nomination, but rather The Washington Post and, as the email said, "the Washington pundits who are paid by the corporations and billionaires who own the media."
Campaigning in Iowa a few days earlier, Mr. Sanders, the senator from Vermont, had accused The Post of withholding positive coverage because of his efforts to raise the minimum wage at Amazon, the internet retail giant founded by the newspaper's owner, Jeff Bezos. Several prominent journalists objected to the comment—a "full freak out," as the newsletter, which is called Bern Notice, put it.
"Reporters don't have to receive a call from Jeff Bezos," the said, "to know that their paychecks are signed by a billionaire with a well-known personal and corporate agenda—and knowing that agenda exists can shape overall frameworks and angles of coverage."
Jacobin
The Lever (news outlet)
/ref> Congressman Ro Khanna,Khanna, Ro @RoKhanna. (2023, May 9) .@DavidSirota & @AndrewPerezdc capture why Congress needs to pass my #SCOTUS term limit bill.
/ref> and Congressman Chris Deluzio. Following Disastrous Train Derailment in East Palestine, Deluzio, Khanna Introduce Bill to Protect Americans and Hold Railroads Accountable, Press release from congressman Chris Deluzio.
Don't Look Up (film)
Books
Hostile Takeover
The Uprising
Back to Our Future
Sirota argues that the combination of Ronald Reagan, the "candidate of nostalgia"; hypermilitarist movies that re-demonized communism; and sophisticated marketing campaigns glorifying the cult of the individual led to our current culture's narcissism and obsessive pursuit of wealth and celebrity. In his effort to fit current trends to his overriding thesis, Sirota occasionally makes some sweeping statements, such as claiming the military's public relations campaign was so successful that Americans "never dare question" the military, ignoring the numerous anti–Iraq War protests and the outrage over the Abu Ghraib photographs. But the many of his arguments are well informed and sparkle with wit and irreverence.
Back to Our Future is about much more than just the decade of the '80s. The author also dives into how society brought back the culture of the '50s and '60s in different ways, for different purposes. He talks about how society is manipulating our memories and using the rhetoric to guide people's thinking and voting habits.
Political views
Personal life
Depiction in fiction
Bibliography
Filmography
Miniseries Film writing debut
Also co-producer
Nominated — Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay
External links
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