Profiles

PROFILE: Queen of the Hill

Meet Kady O’Malley, the digital phenom who’s changing the way politics is covered, one tweet at a time

(Photography: Luther Caverly)

Kady O’Malley can be difficult to pin down. At first she suggests meeting at Brixton’s, a pub just steps from the CBC Radio-Canada centre on Sparks Street. “It’s cute,” O’Malley explains in an email. “I’ll be the stressed-out blond!”

But circumstances change quickly when you’re a CBC parliamentary reporter, and two days later the Hill looks like a better option. “Since it’s starting to look like tomorrow could be shaping up to be a bit zanier than expected, what would you say to changing the venue to the legendary fifth floor cafeteria in Centre Block?” This “legendary” cafeteria turns out to be a lunch counter with some decent seating.

“It’s where people actually eat during the winter because it’s way too much work to walk down to Sparks Street,” O’Malley notes. “There’s also the parliamentary restaurant, but that’s too rich for my blood.” She orders a turkey sandwich while pointing out the key to the cafeteria’s success: it’s open whenever the House of Commons is sitting — by order of Parliament.

Over the past decade, this diminutive journalist with the bleach-blond pixie cut has developed a reputation for typing fast and thinking even faster. She talks fast too. It’s chatter brimming with minutiae — and it’s not all parliamentary procedure. British science fiction series, trashy mystery novels, and horror film theory all fall within her purview. “The best compliment I’ve ever received was from a friend who said, ‘You’re the girl in the horror movie who survived,’” O’Malley says, a reference to the so-called “final girl” of slasher films. In film theory, the girl who survives is considered an “investigating consciousness,” a character who gradually wins over the audience.

O’Malley has certainly been winning over an audience in recent years. But unlike many of her friends and colleagues on the Hill, O’Malley has built the bulk of her reputation through on-the-scene reporting directly to the Internet as a live blogger, with plenty of snarky commentary tossed in for good measure. Her list of followers on Twitter (at last count, 6,803) includes a virtual Rolodex of Ottawa insiders. The Hill Times, the newspaper of record in the parliamentary precinct, has named her one of the 100 most influential people in government and politics for the past two years running. Put simply, O’Malley is trending.

“I think it’s unusual now. I don’t think it will be unusual in the future,” she says of her notoriety as an online source for all things political. These days, she says, news organizations are looking to make the web a destination in itself rather than a spinoff from hard copy or a home for less-than-fresh copy. “The Internet is not the place [journalists] get shuffled off to anymore.”

Born in Guelph and raised in Ottawa, O’Malley was hooked on politics early. Her father, Peter O’Malley, was director of communications to NDP leader Ed Broadbent, while her mother worked as a government economist. It was a kind of government-town immersion that she compares to growing up in the middle of a long-running soap opera.

One of her first jobs out of high school was compiling a summary of what was going on in Parliament, called the Ottawa Daily Fax. “I got hooked on procedural stuff and kept paying attention to it, and then when we hit the minority [government], it suddenly became kind of relevant,” O’Malley says. She went on to freelance for The Hill Times, where she developed a reputation as a hard worker with great instincts — who wrote pretty ordinary copy. She was recruited to macleans.ca following the 2006 election.

“It wasn’t until she started live-blogging that her personality came out,” says senior columnist Paul Wells, who blogs at macleans.ca. “It’s fashionable these days to assume nothing happens in Parliament. Kady grew up here, and she knows different. She keeps showing up, day after day, to find events that are freighted with significance, humour, and craziness.”

Meanwhile, back at the cafeteria, it’s confession time. “I don’t actually eat here,” O’Malley says. “I usually get my food here and go down to the hot room. I’ll show you the hot room. It’s quite nice. I love the hot room, actually. It’s my home.” The “hot room” is the parliamentary press gallery office in Centre Block, a kind of hub for journalism on the Hill. O’Malley has had a desk here for 15 years and certainly seems at home sauntering down the rows of shabby cubicles. In fact, she looks like the town gunslinger, wearing heels and low-slung jeans with two Blackberries clipped to her belt. And if it were an Old West scene, her desk would be the requisite tumbleweed, a chest-high jumble of papers with a netbook perched on top. “I tried it for a little while, but I didn’t like the keyboard,” O’Malley says of the teetering junior-size laptop. “I can only type on a Blackberry or a regular keyboard for some reason.”

O’Malley says the first Blackberry is her personal phone, the second her corporate one, but then she admits that isn’t how she actually uses them. “You never know when you’re going to need a backup. Batteries die,” she explains. Indeed, it seems difficult to imagine her having that kind of neat separation between her personal and work lives. Her list of friends sounds like a roll call of political reporters.

“I do spend many off-hours — too many, in the opinion of some — thinking and talking about this stuff, but really, it’s as relaxing for me as knitting or watching hockey or assembling tiny ships in bottles might be for someone else,” she says. Other sidelines? Reading trashy mystery novels and walking her dog, a three-year-old Boston terrier named — you guessed it — Blackberry.

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  • Monctonsnowman

    I have observed Kady’s posts on twitter, and have yet to see anyone pull any wool over her clever eyes. She’s one of the best Journalists in Canada and she should be proud of it.
    After all, she worked hard to be where she is today. She’s a shining example of what a journalist should be, truthful and no hankypanky!!
    I remember meeting her Dad years ago at a fund raiser for Ed Broadbent, in Oshawa. I recall his wittiness and his ‘direct approach’ style when engaging in conversations. I can see the resemblance. (God I’m feeling old). High Tweets too you Kady. Keep them on their toes in Ottawa. We need you there!

  • Gene Adam

    Kady O’Malley is probably the best journalist in Canada. She tells is like it is and is not a partisan hack like so many floating around. She is not likely to sell her soul for a plumb senate appointment either.

    Thanks for keeping a critical eye on Ottawa for us Kady.

  • MH

    All journalists have a political bent. Kady is following her fathers political orientation.

  • Greg

    I love how people like MH project their own paranoia into the world around them. Of course some journalists are guilty of sliding their own political perspectives into their pieces, but Ms O’Malley isn’t one of them. This objectivity is what gives her credibility and respect. Even if MH wants to believe she is biased, the overwhelming counter-argument comes from the fact that she clearly maintains equidistant friendly relationships with all corners – viz Stephen Taylor of the National Citizens’ Coalition. So a tip of the hat to Ms O’Malley!

  • @RamaraMan

    Kady is making politics cool for my teenage nieces and nephews. When this cohort starts tuning in, this makes Canada a better nation!

  • Grant

    for ppl like MH, anyone who doesn’t praise Harper is of a leftward bent

  • Laura

    Kady is fantastic! I remember seeing her on Newman’s Politics show years ago, and I’ve followed her writings ever since. She make the nitty gritty fun and interesting. She has me repeating “Do you know what happened in committee…” far too often, or at least so says the husband :) Keep up the great work Kady!

  • mindenhills

    Kady is a gem. She is the very centre of the Twitterverse explosion, pointing her 4700 followers to the precise events that will move politics forward every day, and also pointing us to the primary sources. She has invented Twitter-era journalism to the great benefit of her employer. She’s amazing on The House each Saturday and the segment should keep growing to give her the scope she needs to bring politics alive for the listeners.

  • Brian Kilgore

    Monctonsnowman knew her dad.

    That’s nothing!

    I knew her grandfather.

    (And I came from Moncton myself, a long time ago)

    If he’s feeling old, imagine me.

    And he’s right about the quality of her reporting and related commentary.

  • hollinm

    Pretty bad when the media has to write about the media. One thing we do know is given O’Malley background she is a socialist.

  • JoeFrmEdm

    Yes I wish I could get paid for Blogging like Kady but I don’t work for Pravada (CBC)……….

  • Jared Smith

    Kady O’Malley isn’t a journalist..she drinks Red Bull and squaks on her blackberry like any 17 year old girl would. Only difference is a 17 year old would hate the cheerleaders, Kady hates Conservatives.

  • ricky joe

    Kady rocks. More Kady on TV please … !!!

    ….. and you Harper shills really should stop attacking everybody …. it’s getting really boring …..

  • Don

    Kady is horribly partisan, and talks way too fast for TV.

  • Peter

    Kady O’Malley is not much more than a typical CBC hack that follows the whim’s of the Liberal Party. She is no more original or intelligent than they permit her to be. As long as she continues her bias she will be on CBC. And who knows, some day if the Kady and the Libs (sounds like a band) are successful at snowing the Canadian people and Canada returns to the good old days of Liberal largess, she will no doubt be rewarded by being appointed Governor General!

  • Rod in Forfar

    O’Malley and Welles make the news worth reading.

  • Patsplace

    Kady? Y’mean the one that hadn’t even heard of ClimateGate, weeks after it broke, that one. The same one that gets her talking points hand delivered? Yeah, that’s the one I thought you meant. Queen of the Hill? You gotta be bloody kidding!! Another leftie Mother Corp parasite sucking on the taxpayer teat.

  • Ben

    She exemplifies reporting from the shallow end of the pool.

  • turtle’s back

    Kady works for CBC, she is a Liberal. She shows her Liberal colours when reporting.

  • Kate

    Kady makes politics enjoyable because you know she loves it. She is intuitive, sees through the B.S., and tells it like it is. Keep up the great work Kady. Some people think telling it like it is has become “Liberal” supporter and if it is or has then we all know who we should be voting out.

  • Paul Szabo MP

    Kady is very quick on the keyboard (Red Bull lover) but the content is also reflective of the fact that she knows what is going on and what is important. She can make you think and even laugh with her cutting humour. Her coverage of the “Mulroney Schrieber” and “In and Out” Ethics Committee hearings were a must read to appreciate the tactics that were being played out. She is surely the mother of live blogging.

  • Bill Oates

    The comments left by Kady’s detractors are good indicators of the mean-spirited low brows in the Harper Regime. Kady reports what she sees and offers her own impressions. I have said this before and I will say it again, ignorant ideologues should stay out of public life. They soil the terrain.

  • Arron

    ” The comments of Kady’s detractors are a good indicators of the mean-spirited low brows…. ” So it’s either love her or shut up?
    I always wondered how old she was when she realized she had nothing to contribute to society, so she should write about other people doing real things?
    So far as her bias, look where she works, it’s not like Pravda has ever denied what it is.

  • Doug Kursk

    Still waiting for Kady to find the time to inquire about climate gate..

    Kady and co. are one of the major reasons why the Liberals are never really out of power.

    Why strain yourself when your lapdog media will cover for you?
    The CBC is the propaganda arm of the Liberal party.

    C’mon Kady!..put the heat on that convicted Liberal senator..you know you would if he was a Conservative..show us your ‘unbiased nature’ by turning this into a 3 week story..

  • max

    I have no problem with hyper-partisan ideologues like Kady O’Malley remaining in public life, but they should get their hands out of the taxpayers’ pockets.

    The only tenable publicly funded ideologues in a democracy are on the ballot. Those who believe otherwise are in for a long overdue reality check.

  • Frank

    I get the impression that O’Malley thinks that she is important, which immediately, and necessarily, means that she is not a real journalist.

  • Lucy

    A perfect example of a useless CBC “journalist”.

    Biased & hateful . . . she fits right in.

    Her next job could be at the NPR . . she’d love that hate mongering company.

  • Stan

    Millions of people blog for free, but for some reason the we have the CBC paying Kady with our tax dollars to share her socialist opinions with us.

    Time to shut down the CBC, it only speaks for the far left.

    Or is there a right/left balance at the CBC?

  • Stan

    Ooooooooohhhhhhh!!!!!
    She ordered a turkey SANDWICH!!!!!

    These are the kinds of details and news that we just can’t live without!!!!

    Is she going to the mall after math class to hang out with Tiffany and Amber?

    What a hilarious farce.
    Thanks for the laughs.

    This was a joke column, wasn’t it?

  • Stan

    Why didn’t Kady ever mention the Judy Sgro rent scam where $100,000.00 of your tax dollars went missing?

    Funny how senior Liberal MP’s scandals don’t get mentioned at the CBC.
    Go to their site and use the search function, there is no mention of it but Judy’s name comes up in stories several years older than that.

    The faked and fabricated Wafergate story got weeks of coverage, but an actual scandal gets no coverage because it is a liberal involved.

  • Left-wing CBC’er

    Kady O’malley is a partisan socialist. Anyone who claims otherwise, such as the liberals on this board, are partisan socialists.

  • Stan

    Where was the CBC and Kady on Liberal MP Pablo Rodriguez’s DUI?
    Odd, they were on the Jaffer story like stink on a hippy, but they ignore it when a Liberal MP crashes his car while drunk.

  • grok

    Um, something’s wrong if a reporter is influential. I guess that’s how they euphemize the fact that she is politically biased to the Left.

  • Stan

    Strange how the CBC missed that whole NPR sting…
    And the whole Jourolist scam.

  • Kate

    Geez Stan, get a room, a padded room.

  • Dante

    This article is a joke, right? There is no way anyone could take this article seriously.

  • JG

    If a political journalist is judged by the number of events that a journalist attends on Parliament Hill, then Kady is an excellent journalist. But journalists are judged by the content of their writing and for this reason Kady is not even in the top ten of Parliament Hill reporters. Too often, her postings are gossipy fluff. She thrives on things like Jaffer-gate but fails to provide readers with substantive information on issues of importance instead reporting on juicy tidbits of information. These tidbits are completely irrelevant if you are outside of the Ottawa bubble. Sorry but it’s the truth – Kady O’Malley is a second rate journalist.

  • max

    Word around the campfire is that she’s an evil reptilian kitten-eater from another planet.

  • Privatize the CBC

    This woman obviously doesn’t do as good a job as the author of this article claims, as CBC news garners fewer viewers than both Global and CTV. Canadians can see the institutionalized left-wing bias and untruth. The CBC is a complete waste of money: this “Kady Omalley” person is uncapable of landing a job outside of the CBC or perhaps Al Jazeera or MSNBC. She is highly partisan. The problem with CBC employees is that they are paid regardless of quality: when they produce little-watched garbage (as they do now), they still receive a paycheque. The CBC badly needs accountability.

  • Rodd

    I love how all the vultures come out to squawk about CBC-bias-this and Kady-O’Malley-is-a-Socialist-that. Yup. To some people, anything and anyone left of Attila the Hun is a CommieSocioStalinist Tree hugger.

    Has anyone of these folks read, oh, say, the Calgary Sun? You want blatant and overt bias, go read that editorial section. It doesn’t get more obviously one-sided, mean-spirited and propagandizing than that.

    seriously, some of you don’t even know what the word ‘Bias’ means.

  • Scott M.

    You guys do realize that she was writing for Maclean’s (a Rogers publication) for many years? CBC grabbed her from there.

    BTW, the fact that “CBC news garners fewer viewers than both Global and CTV” has little to do with Kady, she is a liveblogger on the internet. She’s not a reporter on television (though occasionally appears). They’re different mediums, don’tcha know.

    And yes, she tends to speak very fast on TV and radio. However, I do note that on the last few weeks of “the House” her pace has slowed a little, making it easier to follow. Hopefully that will continue and, as mentioned by another poster, we can hear more of her (or perhaps have her own 1/2 hour show).

  • http://www.eyestir.com/ Bill Owen

    What a post! You’re amazing! What a mind you have. How’s that “crazy” mirror working for you?  You forgot to mention “socialism”. You’re right though, she is “uncapable” of working for a real news org like Fox or Sun Media.

    What if George Soros buys the CBC? Would you choke on your bone? lol

  • Cobalt545

     Actually that should be INCAPABLE but the i is next to the u and I didn’t go back to spell check my error. But thanks to you it was pointed out. Good for you. You’re a great spell checker. Too bad most leftists are bad fact checkers. But that makes them great assets at the CBC which is heavily slanted to “socialist” thinking anyway.

    And it would be great if George Soros bought the CBC. The programming wouldn’t change at all but the great thing is I wouldn’t have to support their network with my tax dollars. I’m sure you pay a huge amount of your income to taxes and don’t mind getting fleeced to support a top heavy organization that produces little and shows a lot of syndicated programs from the US. Great value for our $1.1 billion we waste on it per year. Unsubsidized networks get by with a fraction of the money that CBC eats up. I still believe they should be cut loose to sink or swim on their own merit. Too bad the word merit is not in their vocabulary.

  • http://www.facebook.com/robert.hanlon.33 Robert Hanlon

    How does one find out what our Federal Goverment spends yearly on its Action Plan Ads.

  • http://www.facebook.com/robert.hanlon.33 Robert Hanlon

    Kaddy, you do a great job on P&P. keep up yhe good work.