Background
Haynes was born March 13, 1955 in Monroeville, Alabama, the daughter of Mary Louise Marshall Tucker, a high school English teacher and John Tucker, a middle-school principal.
Haynes was born March 13, 1955 in Monroeville, Alabama, the daughter of Mary Louise Marshall Tucker, a high school English teacher and John Tucker, a middle-school principal.
Auburn University; Harvard University.
She was also a Pulitzer finalist in 2004 and 2006. She was born during the early years of the American Civil Rights Movement, in an era of racial segregation. She did not attend an integrated school until she was 16.
She attended Auburn University, where she majored in English and journalism and wrote for the student newspaper, The Auburn Plainsman.
After graduation in 1976, she began work for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution (AJC) as a reporter. In 1980, she left Atlanta and the AJC for a job at The Philadelphia Inquirer.
Shortly thereafter, Haynes decided that she wanted to be a foreign correspondent in Africa, but the Inquirer considered her too inexperienced for the assignment. Haynes set out on her own, traveling around Africa and freelancing for six months.
She then returned to Atlanta, where she was rehired as a columnist by the AJC. Haynes was a Nieman Fellow by Harvard University in 1988.
She was promoted to editorial page editor of the AJC in 1990. Haynes blogged regularly and wrote two columns a week for both the print and web versions of the AJC. Her columns were syndicated to over 40 United States. newspapers. She is regarded as politically liberal.
In 2006, Haynes was named Journalist of the Year by the National Association of Black Journalists.
In July 2009, Haynes moved to Washington, District of Columbia, as the Atlanta Journal-Constitution"s political columnist.