Like an aging rock band, they take the stage and grin. Cheering fans crush forward to take photos. Cameras flash. Cell phones jut over our heads. Some stand on chairs to get a better shot of journalistic superstar reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, their former editor Ben Bradlee and Dan Schorr, the former CBS news guy, now in his 90s, who ended up on Richard Nixonโs shit list.
Bob Schieffer announces that never before has such a prestigious Watergate panel been assembled.
The lights dim and an old TV interview with Woodstein plays. The young reporters talk between scenes from All The Presidents Men, the 1976 film starring Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman.
Paroxysms of nostalgia. My stomach churns. Investigative reporters as heroes! Journalism that Makes A Difference!
The nostalgia passes. โWhat happened?โ I scratch on my notepad. โThis administration is at least as corruptโmore. Whoโs committed to โtruthโ now?โ
I am in D.C. for the Society of Professional Journalistโs national convention. Fawning reporters and journalism students from around the nation pack the Ticonderoga room at the Hyatt Regency on Capitol Hill.
Many are thinking what Iโm thinking. Why did investigative reporting help bring a corrupt presidential administration to account in the 1970s?
Woodward credits his editor, offering an anecdote about how actor Jason Robards didnโt want the role of Washington Post editor Bradlee in the film. โAll he does is run around and say, โWhere the fuckโs the story?โ โ Robards complained.
โThatโs what an executive editor does,โ he was told. โThatโs his fucking job. You have to find 15 different ways to say, โWhereโs the fucking story?’โ
Bernstein addressed the question directly. โThe system worked,โ he says. โThe press did its job. The Senate did its job. The House Judiciary [Committee] did its job.โ
When the facts of Watergate became publicโthe administrationโs burglary, campaign fraud, political espionage and sabotage, illegal break-ins and wiretapping on a massive scaleโoutraged even Republicans . President Richard Nixon was forced to resign or be removed for his crimes.
Today, feds are free to wiretap, sneak, peek, track cell phone calls, look at library records. Campaign fraud? Lighten up. Lying to the public about Iraqโs weapons of mass destruction and Saddam Husseinโs al Qaeda connections, resulting in the deaths and injuries of tens of thousands of U.S. troops and hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians?
Is anyone paying attention?
The press does its job, Bernstein says. But the system is broken.
โLook what we know about this president,โ he says. โBut thereโs no oversight.โ
Nine UNR journalism students and I flew to D.C. for this conference. Students met with Sens. Ensign and Reidโand were stood up by Rep. Dean Heller. We toured the White House and the National Archives where the Declaration of Indepen-dence and the Constitution reside.
The fading ink on the Bill of Rights stung me. Fourth Amendment protection against โunreasonable searches and seizures”? Gone. Sixth Amendmentโs โright to a speedy and public trial”? RIP. Eighth Amendment protection against โcruel and unusual punishments”? Oh sure, we donโt torture.
Would Watergate reporting happen today? Comparing the two eras is impossible, Bernstein says.
โWeโve had 25 to 30 years of ideological warfare,โ he says. โWe live in a very different atmosphere.โ
It might be hard convincing the world, nowadays, that Nixon was a criminal.
Though newsrooms have changed dramatically, if the mainstream press โstumbled onto a good story,โ Bernstein thinks theyโd report it.
And now bloggers, YouTubers and other โcitizenโ journalists can latch on to stories missed by Big Media.
Thatโs good. And not so good.
โThereโs so much garbage out there.โ
