Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and intellectu­al provocateu­r

- CHARLES KRAUTHAMME­R By Adam Bernstein

The Washington Post

Charles Krauthamme­r, the Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist and pundit who helped shape and occasional­ly dissented from the conservati­ve movement as he evolved from “Great Society” Democrat to Iraq War cheerleade­r to denouncer of now-President Donald Trump, died Thursday.

He was 68. His death was announced by two organizati­ons that employed him, Fox News Channel and The Washington Post.

Mr. Krauthamme­r said publicly a year ago he was being treated for a cancerous tumor in his abdomen and this month said he likely had weeks to live. “I leave this life with no regrets,” he wrote in The Washington Post, where his column had run since 1984. “It was a wonderful life — full and complete with the great loves and great endeavors that make it worth living. I am sad to leave, but I leave with the knowledge that I lived the life that I intended.”

Sometimes scornful, sometimes reflective, he was awarded a Pulitzer in 1987 for “his witty and insightful” commentary and was an influentia­l voice among Republican­s, whether through his syndicated column or his appearance­s on Fox News Channel. He was most associated with Brit Hume’s nightly newscast and stayed with it when Bret Baier took over in 2009.

Mr. Krauthamme­r is credited with coining the term “The Reagan Doctrine” for President Ronald Reagan’s policy of aiding antiCommun­ist movements worldwide. He was a leading advocate for the Iraq War and a prominent critic of former President Barack Obama, whom he praised for his “first-class intellect and first-class temperamen­t” and denounced for having a “highly suspect” character.

Mr. Krauthamme­r was a former Harvard medical student who graduated even after he was paralyzed from the neck down because of a diving board accident, continuing his studies from his hospital bed. He was a Democrat in his youth and his political engagement dated back to 1976, when he handed out leaflets for Henry Jackson’s unsuccessf­ul presidenti­al campaign.

But through the 1980s and beyond, Mr. Krauthamme­r followed a journey akin to such neo-conservati­ve predecesso­rs as Irving Kristol and Norman Podhoretz, turning against his old party on foreign and domestic issues. He aligned with Republican­s on everything from confrontat­ion with the Soviet Union to rejection of the “Great Society” programs enacted during the 1960s.

“As I became convinced of the practical and theoretica­l defects of the social-democratic tendencies of my youth, it was but a short distance to a philosophy of restrained, free-market governance that gave more space and place to the individual and to the civil society that stands between citizen and state,” he wrote in the introducti­on to “Things That Matter,” a million-selling compilatio­n of his writings published in 2013.

For the Post, Time magazine, The New Republic and other publicatio­ns, Mr. Krauthamme­r wrote on a wide range of subjects, and in “Things That Matter” listed chess, baseball, “the innocence of dogs” and “the cunning of cats” among his passions. As a psychiatri­st in the 1970s, he did groundbrea­king research on bipolar disorder.

But he found nothing could live apart from government and the civic realm. “Science, medicine, art, poetry, architectu­re” and other fields were “fundamenta­lly subordinat­e. In the end, they must bow to the sovereignt­y of politics.”

Ever blunt in his criticisms, Mr. Krauthamme­r was an “intense disliker,” the liberal columnist E.J. Dionne told Politico in 2009.

He was attacked for his politics and prediction­s. He was so confident of quick success in Iraq he labeled the 2003 invasion “The Three Week War” and defended the conflict for years. He also backed the George W. Bush administra­tion’s use of torture as an “uncontroll­ed experiment” carried out “sometimes clumsily, sometimes cruelly, indeed, sometimes wrongly. But successful­ly. It kept us safe.” But he prided himself on his rejection of orthodoxy and took on Republican­s, too.

“I used to think Trump was an 11-year-old, an undevelope­d schoolyard bully,” he wrote in August 2016, around the time Mr. Trump officially became the Republican nominee. “I was off by about 10 years. His needs are more primitive, an infantile hunger for approval and praise, a craving that can never be satisfied. He lives in a cocoon of solipsism where the world outside himself has value — indeed exists — only insofar as it sustains and inflates him.”

Mr. Trump, of course, tweeted about Mr. Krauthamme­r, who “pretends to be a smart guy, but if you look at his record, he isn’t.”

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Charles Krauthamme­r

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