The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Long after Watergate, Woodward and Bernstein make news

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NEW YORK » More than 40 years after they became the world’s most famous journalism duo, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein are still making news.

Bernstein was among three CNN reporters who last week broke the story of former Donald Trump lawyer Michael Cohen’s allegation that Trump knew in advance of the June 2016 meeting between representa­tives of his presidenti­al campaign and Russian officials. On Tuesday, Woodward’s upcoming “Fear: Inside the Trump White House” was No. 1 on Amazon.com, within a day of its announceme­nt.

The former Washington Post colleagues known for their Watergate coverage speak regularly, they say, comparing notes on the Trump era.

“He’s a news junkie, and I’m a news junkie,” Woodward, 75, explained Tuesday during a telephone interview, adding that he includes a tribute to Bernstein in his new book’s acknowledg­ements.

“We keep each other posted pretty well,” Bernstein, 74, said during a separate phone interview. “Obviously, we do different things. But we also have a lifetime of understand­ing each other and looking at news together.”

Woodward, an associate editor at the Post, is among the most successful nonfiction authors of his time, with a long series of best-selling accounts of sitting presidents from Richard Nixon to Barack Obama. A new Woodward book even became a political tradition — coming out in the fall of an election year.

But after the 2012 release “The Price of Politics,” Woodward stepped away from the present, publishing no works on Obama’s second term, and instead focused on Watergate-era news. “The Last of the President’s Men,” his work on White House aide Alexander Butterfiel­d, the man who revealed Nixon’s taping

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