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MS NOW anchor Stephanie Ruhle debuts her new show 'Money, Power, Politics' today, part of a slate of new shows debuting on the network.
MS NOW
After a successful run hosting one of MS NOW’s most influential--and most-watched--shows, The 11th Hour, Stephanie Ruhle shifts to mornings starting today with the debut of Money, Power, Politics with Stephanie Ruhle, a show she pitched to the network despite loving the show she inherited from Brian Williams in 2022.
In April, The 11th Hour delivered its highest ratings since 2024, posting double-digit gains, including a 39% year-over-year increase in viewers 25-54, the key demo valued by advertisers.
Stephanie Ruhle hosts The 11th Hour at Rockefeller Center in New York, NY on Tuesday May 10, 2022. Photographer: Christopher Dilts / NBC
Christopher Dilts / NBC Universal
“I thought, girl, you got a good thing, do you really want to rock the boat?” she told me. “But the answer is yeah, these are the greatest jobs out there at a really important time, and I loved making The 11th Hour. It’s time. It’s time to make a new thing.”
A focus on affordability and accountability
The “new thing” debuts Monday at 9 a.m., a tw0-hour block that effectively doubles the hours Ruhle spends in the anchor chair. With Morning Joe as a lead-in, Ruhle plans to build on that show’s devoted and politics-heavy audience while drawing her own.
“People can get information anywhere,” she told me. “What they want is insight and a trusted relationship.” The show will be driven by two core themes--and a word that seems to fascinate the president: affordability and accountability—how people are living day to day, and how those in power are being held to account.
It’s a show Ruhle hopes will drive real conversation, rather than a desire to create social media clips. “Things that are going viral are making us sick,” she said. “What I admire—and what I want to be involved in—are people who are trying to create long-term solutions.”
ForbesMSNBC Rebrand: MS NOW Leans Into YouTube To Connect With ViewersBy Mark JoyellaThat means bringing in experts and thinkers, and avoiding the kind of panel discussions that dissolve into partisan shouting that are so common on cable news. “I think that 9 a.m. was a natural great place to do it, right out of Morning Joe,” Ruhle said. “I wanted to do something that was two hours, so we had the space to do things…like really covering economic issues and holding this administration or any administration to account.”
Talking to real people
One of the elements of the new show will be an effort to bring in the perspectives of real people, rather than just the talking heads of Wall Street, the c-suite, or Washington. "In an age of misinformation and disinformation,” she said, “it’s really important to have people actually be part of the show.”
Ruhle is also drawing on her YouTube Live series, It’s Happening with Velshi & Ruhle, co-hosted with friend and the new host of The 11th Hour, Ali Velshi. In that series, Velshi and Ruhle have made an effort to bring in the voices of real people.
Ruhle also experimented with live audiences in a recent town hall featuring an audience comprised of fired federal workers, who spoke of their own experiences being directly impacted by the Trump Administration’s cost-cutting across the government.
A graphic for Stephanie Ruhle's new show, 'Money, Power, Politics' on MS NOW
MS NOW
A world beyond the time slot
Although Money, Power, Politics is a live morning show, Ruhle and MS NOW are designing it for a world where viewers increasingly watch on their own schedules. MS NOW has seen rapid growth across YouTube, TikTok, and audio—nearly 8 billion views across YouTube and TikTok in 2025 and more than 140 million audio downloads—and the new programming slate is tailored to thrive across platforms.
Ruhle says she thinks of the show much like a top podcast: something viewers may watch live, but just as often will seek out later for deeper analysis and perspective on the week’s biggest stories. That approach echoes the success of other MS NOW franchises that have strong lives beyond their original broadcast hour.
As Ruhle puts it, the mission is straightforward, even if the execution is ambitious: slow down, cut through the noise, and help people feel more informed and less overwhelmed.
“We’re not rooting against anybody,” she said. “We’re trying to make something good here—strong, smart, and actually useful to people at a pretty crazy time.”

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