The Day

JOURNALIST COKIE ROBERTS OF NPR AND ABC DIES AT 75

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Cokie Roberts, the pioneering journalist whose storied career included high-profile stints with NPR and ABC News, died Tuesday from complicati­ons of breast cancer, her family announced. She was 75.

Three-time Emmy winner Roberts, a member of the Broadcasti­ng and Cable Hall of Fame, launched her career as a freelance foreign correspond­ent for CBS Radio in the 1970s before joining National Public Radio in 1978. After moving to ABC, she co-hosted “This Week” with Sam Donaldson from 1996 to 2002.

New York — Cokie Roberts, the daughter of politician­s and a pioneering journalist who chronicled Washington from Jimmy Carter to Donald Trump for NPR and ABC News, died Tuesday of complicati­ons from breast cancer. She was 75.

ABC broke into network programmin­g to announce her death and politician­s including former Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama offered sympathy.

Roberts devoted most of her attention to covering Congress, where her father Hale Boggs was a House majority leader who died in 1972 when his plane went missing over Alaska. Her mother, Lindy Boggs, took over his Louisiana congressio­nal seat and served until 1990, later becoming ambassador to the Vatican.

Roberts co-anchored the ABC Sunday political show “This Week” with Sam Donaldson from 1996 to 2002. She was most proud profession­ally of a series of books about women in Washington. “We Are Our Mother’s Daughters” was about the changing roles and relationsh­ips of women. She also wrote two books with her husband, Steven Roberts, about marriage and an interfaith family.

“Cokie Roberts was a trailblaze­r who forever transforme­d the role of women in the newsroom and in our history books,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said. “Over five decades of celebrated journalism, Cokie shone a powerful light on the unsung women who built our nation, but whose stories had long gone untold.”

Roberts, who earned her nickname because her brother couldn’t pronounce “Corinne,” grew up primarily in Bethesda, Md. She attended Wellesley College, and met her future husband at a conference for student leaders.

“Journalism just kind of happened to me,” she said in a 2018 interview with the Television Academy. “It wasn’t anything I had planned to do.”

But she got her start at a newsletter, worked in local news and filed stories for CBS News from Greece when her husband was stationed there as a correspond­ent. She was bitten by the bug.

Settling back in Washington in the mid-1970s, she was hired to cover Congress for National Public Radio. Again, it wasn’t in the game plan — politics felt like treading familiar ground in a way that didn’t interest her — but her background enabled her to understand how Congress worked in a way few outsiders could. And it gave her time to spend with her mother outside of Sunday dinner.

In those days it wasn’t unusual for a senator to lean in and put a hand on her knee.

“I would just sort of pick it up and put it on the table say, ‘I think this belongs to you,’” she recalled. “It’s remarkable how long that went on.”

Roberts “grew up instinctiv­ely understand­ing the ground she would cover as a journalist, and she used her insider knowledge for the public good,” said veteran Rep. John Lewis of Georgia. “She asked tough questions and formed solid opinions that made journalist­s and newsmakers in Washington lean in whenever she shared her thoughts.”

Obama said Roberts was a role model for women at a time the journalism profession was still dominated by men, and was a constant over 40 years of a shifting media landscape and changing world.

His predecesso­r, former President George W. Bush, and his wife, Laura, called Roberts a talented, tough and fair reporter.

“We respected her drive and appreciate­d her humor,” the former president said. “She became a friend.”

While staying at NPR, she started working at PBS on “NewsHour” and in 1988 joined ABC News. She may be the only reporter to file stories for “Morning Edition,” “All Things Considered,” “World News Tonight” and “Nightline” in a single day, said James Goldston, ABC News president.

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Cokie Roberts

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