Ezra Isaac Levant (born February 20, 1972) is a Canadian media personality, political activist, writer, broadcaster, and former lawyer. Levant is the founder and former publisher of the conservative magazine, The
 Western Standard. He is also the co-founder, owner, and 
CEO of the 
far-right media website 
Rebel News. Levant has also worked as a columnist for 
Sun Media, and he hosted a daily program on the 
Sun News Network from the channel's inception in 2011 until its demise in 2015.
Levant rose to prominence in 2006 after publishing the 
Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons in The 
Western Standard, which led to a protracted legal battle with the 
Alberta Human Rights Commission regarding 
hate speech legislation and 
freedom of speech. The complaint against Levant was ultimately withdrawn. In February 2015, Levant co-founded 
Rebel News with 
Brian Lilley; Lilley left 
Rebel News in 2017 citing lack of editorial standards. Under Levant, 
Rebel News has been described as a platform for the anti-Islamic ideology known as 
counter-jihad.
Levant self-identifies as a 
libertarian conservative;
[8] however, he has also been identified as belonging to the Canadian far right. He is a prominent supporter of the 
Canadian petroleum industry and 
fracking. Levant has been successfully sued for libel on multiple occasions, while apologies and retractions were issued by him or on his behalf on numerous other occasions.
Early life and education
Levant was born to an 
Ashkenazi Jewish family in Calgary, Alberta. His great-grandfather emigrated to Canada in 1903 from Russia to establish a homestead near 
Drumheller, Alberta. Levant grew up in a suburb of Calgary. He attended the 
Calgary Hebrew School in his childhood before transferring to a public junior high school.
Levant campaigned for the 
Reform Party of Canada as a teenager and joined it as a university student. From 1990 to 1993, while at the University of Calgary, his two-person team won the "best debating" category in the 
Inter-Collegiate Business Competition held at 
Queen's University. The first two of those years, his debate partner was future Calgary mayor 
Naheed Nenshi. He has subsequently accused Nenshi, who is 
Ismaili, of "anti-Christian bigotry" as mayor.
In 1994, he was featured in an article in 
The Globe and Mail on young conservatives after accusing the 
University of Alberta of racism for instituting an 
affirmative action program of hiring women and Indigenous professors. After his actions outraged Indigenous law students, feminists, and a number of professors, Levant was called to a meeting with the assistant dean who advised him of the university's non-academic code of conduct and defamation laws. As head of the university's speakers committee, Levant organized a debate between 
Doug Christie, a lawyer known for his advocacy in defence of 
Holocaust deniers and accused 
Nazi war criminals, and Thomas Kuttner, a Jewish lawyer from the New Brunswick Human Rights Commission.
Levant was invited to write a guest column for the 
Edmonton Journal and interviewed on television.
[18] He spent the summer of 1994 in 
Washington, D.C., in an internship arranged by the libertarian 
Koch Summer Fellow Program. In 1995 he worked for the 
Fraser Institute and wrote 
Youthquake, which argued for smaller government, including privatization of the 
Canada Pension Plan. Levant saw "youthquake," the term he used to describe what he identified as a conservative youth movement of the 1990s, as similar to the 1960s 
civil rights movement. In his eyes, instead of being enslaved by racism, his generation was "enslaved by debt", and in order to liberate itself, society needed to dismantle elements such as 
trade unions, the 
minimum wage, 
universal health care, subsidized 
tuition, and 
public pension plans.
[...]
At Rebel News
Main article: 
Rebel News
Following the closure of Sun News Network, on February 16, 2015, Levant launched 
The Rebel website as a corporate endeavour with a YouTube channel for videos produced by himself, 
Brian Lilley and other former Sun News Network personalities. Levant argued his online production would be unencumbered by the regulatory and distribution challenges faced by the Sun News Network. He also said lower production costs would make it more viable.
[46] A 
crowdfunding campaign raised $100,000 for the project.
Lilley quit the Rebel on 12 August 2017, following coverage of the 
Unite the Right rally in 
Charlottesville, Virginia, by 
Faith Goldy, who was later fired by Levant. Lilley said he had become uncomfortable with what he felt was an "increasingly harsh tone" when The Rebel discussed topics such as 
immigration or 
Islam. He also accused The Rebel of exhibiting a "lack of editorial and behavioural judgment that left unchecked will destroy it and those around it."
In 2017, The Rebel was repeatedly the object of controversy, including advertising boycott campaigns in Canada and the UK, the loss of several well-known contributors, and the cancellation under pressure of a planned Caribbean cruise featuring The Rebel personalities. As of February 20, 2022, The Rebel Media had more than 1.56 million subscribers on its YouTube channel.