http://www.propublica.org/article/why-reporters-in-the-us-now-need-protection
Why Reporters in the U.S. Now Need Protection

*Last night, ProPublica founder and executive chairman Paul Steiger
received the Burton Benjamin Memorial award from the Committee to Protect
Journalists. Here are his remarks. *

In recent days I thought a lot about the 16 previous recipients of the
Burton Benjamin award, and re-read the words from this platform of some of
them.

Their words are inspiring. Their deeds are awesome. I am humbled and deeply
honored to be among them.

The first honoree, in 1997, was Ted Koppel of ABC, who for a significant
time brought serious reporting to late-night TV with sustained high
quality. The most recent, last year, was Alan Rusbridger of the Guardian,
who has the vision to be a leader in reinventing journalism for the digital
age and the courage to challenge both his government and ours on the extent
to which they spy on us. Together, and with those in between, they inhabit
an arc of profound change that I want to reflect on briefly tonight.

The arc actually goes back to 1981, when Michael Massing and other young
writers with overseas experience founded CPJ.

American journalists were still basking in the reflected glow of All the
President’s Men, the Robert Redford/Dustin Hoffman movie that five years
earlier had won three Academy Awards and anointed Bob Woodward, Carl
Bernstein and by implication all reporters as rock stars with typewriters.
Yes, typewriters.

Woodward’s and Bernstein’s reporting in the Washington Post, based partly
on tips from anonymous sources, helped drive President Nixon from office.
This came only a few years after the Pentagon Papers case, in which the
Supreme Court denied Nixon’s motion to bar the New York Times and the Post
from publishing leaks of the papers, which detailed abuses during the
Vietnam War.

U.S. journalists, in other words, were riding high.

What Michael and his young colleagues saw was that journalists in America
had it far better than those abroad, particularly in repressive states.
Americans had the protection of the First Amendment and the backing of
wealthy, committed, and lawyer-stocked news organizations. In vast parts of
Asia, Africa, and Latin America, reporters, editors, and broadcasters could
be bankrupted, beaten, thrown into jail, or killed, by powerful people
offended by what they wrote or aired.

As the experience of our incredibly courageous honorees tonight
demonstrates, in many places around the world the life of a journalist who
is determined to find and report the truth is no better today than it was
32 years ago. Reporters, editors, photographers, and publishers are still
threatened, beaten, and murdered, often with impunity. The core mission of
CPJ is just as critical as it ever was, in many respects more so.

What has changed is the position of us, American journalists. We are still
far better off than our beleaguered cousins in danger zones abroad, of
course.

But financially, I don’t need to tell this group of the hammering our
industry has taken in the last decade. Publications shrinking or even
closing, journalists bought out or laid off, beats shrunk or eliminated.

And now, more recently, we are facing new barriers to our ability to do our
jobs – denial of access and silencing of sources.

For the starkest comparison, I urge any of you who haven’t already done so
to read last month’s
report<http://cpj.org/reports/2013/10/obama-and-the-press-us-leaks-surveillance-post-911.php>,
commissioned by CPJ and written by Len Downie, former editor of the
Washington Post. It lays out in chilling detail how an administration that
took office promising to be the most transparent in history instead has
carried out the most intrusive surveillance of reporters ever attempted.

It also has made the most concerted effort at least since the
plumbers<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_House_Plumbers>and the
enemies
lists<http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/bonus-video/presidents-power-nixon/>of
the Nixon Administration to intimidate officials in Washington from
ever
talking to a reporter.

Consider this:  As we now know from the Snowden documents, investigators
seeking to trace the source of a leak can go back and discover anyone in
government who has talked by phone or email with the reporter who broke the
story. Match that against the list of all who had access to the leaked info
and voila!

In my days editing the Wall Street Journal, I used to joke that no one in
the Washington Bureau ever had an on-the-record conversation. Now I would
have to wonder whether anyone was having any kind of conversation at all
that wasn’t a White House-sanctioned briefing.

It isn’t just words. The White House has been barring news
photographers<http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/news-groups-blast-white-house-for-restrictions-on-photographers/2013/11/21/34a81654-52db-11e3-9e2c-e1d01116fd98_story.html>from
all sorts of opportunities to ply their craft. Routine meetings and
activities of the president, of which they used to be able to shoot still
and video images under certain constraints, now are often – not always, but
often -- off limits, according to the American Society of News Editors,
which is protesting the action, along with other groups.

The administration has invited news organizations to pick up images handed
out by the press office or from the White House website. Sort of like
saying, “just print the press release,” as some corporate PR people used to
say to me years ago when I asked for an interview with the CEO.

I don’t mean to suggest that this administration is always and everywhere
implacably hostile to journalists. After its snooping into communications
of the Associated Press and of a Fox News reporter was revealed, the
administration agreed to certain restraints.

It ostensibly agreed not to prosecute anyone for engaging in journalism.
News organizations will generally be given advance notice when the Justice
Department wants access to their records, so that they can resist in court,
and warrants for access to a reporter’s records won’t be sought unless the
reporter is a target of a criminal investigation. Still, the government can
waive these constraints if national security is involved.

CPJ chairman Sandra Mims Rowe noted in announcing the Downie Report last
month that the founders of CPJ “did not anticipate the need to fight for
the rights of U.S. journalists who work with the protection of the First
Amendment.” Limited resources, she said, had to be directed at countries
with the greatest need. Even with declining revenues at U.S. news
organizations, the principal need is still abroad.

But, she added, the time has come for CPJ to speak out against excessive
government secrecy here at home. As just one supporter of CPJ, I agree. If
we are going to be credible admonishing abusers of journalists abroad, we
can’t stand silent when it is going on at home.

One last thing.  I don’t want to leave the impression that I’m in despair.
I’m definitely not.

A couple of billionaires, Jeff Bezos and Pierre Omidyar, have put up
several hundred millions of dollars in funding to, respectively, rebuild
one great old platform – the Washington Post – and erect an entirely new
one.

>From New York to Texas to California, and in scattered places in between,
non-profit reporting teams, ProPublica happily among them, are enjoying
increasing success with both their journalism and their fundraising.

And new forms of web-based reporting like Buzzfeed are both attracting
young audiences and sliding towards profitability. I was at first cranky
the other day when Buzzfeed stole one of our brilliant senior
editors<http://jimromenesko.com/2013/10/21/mark-schoofs-leaves-propublica-to-head-buzzfeeds-investigative-unit/>.
But then I realized his new job is to recruit half a dozen reporters and
start an investigations team. For society and for journalism, that is
progress.

We can’t rest. We need to stand up in stout opposition whenever the First
Amendment is challenged at home. We need to speak out, even more vigorously
than before, when journalists are abused around the world. We need to keep
finding and funding more inventive ways to carry out serious reporting.


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