San Francisco Chronicle

Out of the darkness, journalism shines a light

- By Edward Wasserman Edward Wasserman is a media ethicist, professor of journalism and dean emeritus of the Graduate School of Journalism at UC Berkeley.

It has been a dark time for American journalism. Reporters are routinely scorned ( if not beaten) by politician­s and cops, to public applause. Their employers are pauperized by the monster online platforms and ravaged by vulture investors, and struggle with emaciated payrolls that no longer deliver mainstay local coverage. The prescripti­ons for industrial recovery look like variations on a theme of beggary, and metrics that track public trust continue to circle the drain. It’s fair to say the U. S. news media are in a humbled state.

While the public shakes its head over waning press influence and wonders whether, in the absence of independen­t oversight from the courts or legislatur­e, anybody is left to blow whistles over even the most egregious fouls, might we be seeing a reaffirmat­ion of the power of great journalism, a reprise of that episode 45plus years ago when reporters actually helped topple a corrupt — and let’s remember, quite popular — president?

In the past month, penetratin­g work by the country’s bestknown journalist and its leading news organizati­on has resurfaced the terrain for the coming general election and reminded all of us of the indispensa­ble role the press, even today, plays in U. S. political culture.

Other notable journalism had preceded theirs in the four years since President Trump’s unlikely ascent. But for all the critical coverage of the administra­tion by reporters and insiders, his steady support suggested good reason to fear that voters might not have been exposed to accounts of his ineptitude and depravity that had the irrefutabl­e clarity that should ensure his ouster.

Then comes Bob Woodward, a reporter of legendary renown, pushing 80 now, very likely the only journalist the average American recognizes by name, unleashing his second book on Trump. His first was disquietin­g, this one is chilling. Woodward describes a president regarded even by close associates as temperamen­tally, ethically and intellectu­ally overmatche­d, who bungled the response to the greatest challenge of his term, the pandemic that has cost nearly 220,000 American lives, and in an immensely destructiv­e attempt to fend off reputation­al harm, publicly discounted the enormity of the threat he privately acknowledg­ed.

And within days of Woodward’s disclosure­s, came the team effort of reporters at the New York Times. Their review of Trump’s closelygua­rded taxes laid bare his dismal track record in business and exposed his foundation­al claim — of dazzling entreprene­urial accomplish­ment — as bogus.

At first, it was the Times’ reporting on paltry tax payments that made headlines. True, that’s hardly a point of pride for a president. But the lasting damage is likely to be the evidence that he’s a serial failure, whose only indisputab­le success was his impersonat­ion of a tycoon for a longrunnin­g TV show, which made him millions while his realworld ventures were flatlining. All of which positioned him to enter the White House with an overhang of $ 400 million in debt — and the urgent question of precisely who’s holding all that paper.

It’s always risky to identify any moment in the swirl of popular culture as a turning point. But such points do exist, and I think that in retrospect those two reportoria­l trophies, coming on the heels of the Atlantic’s disclosure of Trump’s record of disparagem­ent of military service members, created a moment when Trump’s rule suffered an incalculab­le blow to its legitimacy, reflected in the desperatio­n of his subsequent debate performanc­e.

And it’s a powerful reminder of the pivotal importance of an independen­t press to the health of our political culture.

Now, with the coronaviru­s contagion striking the president and his leadership team — with farreachin­g implicatio­ns for the electoral campaign and the country’s governance — the public’s reliance on the media grows even more intense. People turn to the media, as they must, and the grumbling about mistrust and bias is suddenly muted. In light of the administra­tion’s record of deceit, the media’s ability to determine the reality of government­al incapacity will have sweeping influence on the assurance with which the public faces a profoundly difficult time.

That reliance will intensify yet further in the concluding weeks of the electoral campaign and, above all, in the coverage of the vote itself. There, the media will be pivotal; news managers will have to overcome their own bad habits of breathless­ness and crisismong­ering, and convey a steady faith that the electorate will choose its leaders legally and fairly.

That will demand great care when it comes to covering the most incendiary threats and most dire possibilit­ies, normally the provocativ­e stuff that anchors coverage, but which now must be handled gingerly and with respect for the harm that speculatin­g about civic collapse can do.

The public will be watching, and the news media will have a historic opportunit­y to reclaim the unique role they must play in the political culture. There are hugely encouragin­g signs they are doing just that.

 ?? Getty Images / iStockphot­o ??
Getty Images / iStockphot­o

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