While reporting on President Trump can be challenging as he demeans critical stories about him, often calling them fake, the executive editors of two of the nation鈥檚 leading newspapers told a National Press Club audience recently that it can be done, but only by maintaining high standards and not snapping at the president鈥檚 bait.
鈥淚f you tell the truth, if you're accurate, if you're aggressive, and you're fair, and you hold onto your principles, I think in the end, that鈥檚 the only way you can cover him,鈥 New York Times Executive Editor Dean Baquet told moderator Marvin Kalb on the latest edition of 鈥淭he Kalb Report.鈥
For Marty Baron, the Washington Post鈥檚 executive editor, the mission of the newspaper in covering the president has not changed.
鈥淭ruth may be elusive,鈥 he said, 鈥淏ut there is such a thing as truth.聽 It鈥檚 not just a matter of personal opinion. And our job is to come in every day, do our job, do our work, and try to determine the truth.鈥
The president鈥檚 criticism of news coverage, said Baron, has almost become 鈥渂ackground music鈥 because it is so repetitive.
鈥淚f we were to react to this every single day, get all worked up about it, and spend our time making an issue out of it all the time, we wouldn鈥檛 be able to do our jobs,鈥 Baron said. 鈥淚f that鈥檚 what he wants to do, that鈥檚 what he wants to do. We know what we want to do.鈥
One aspect that is different in covering this administration compared with those of the past is the aggressiveness of the newspapers鈥 efforts to fact-check statements by the president and other politicians.
鈥淲e no longer wait for two or three days to evaluate whether a politician is telling the truth,鈥 Baron said. 鈥淲e set up systems to do it immediately.鈥
Both Baquet and Baron said their newspapers have turned the corner financially so they have the resources to do the type of investigative reporting that readers expect from them.聽 聽For more than a century, newspapers made as much as 80 percent of their revenue from advertising, but in the face of competition from the internet, print advertising has dropped drastically.
鈥淲e now make more money on subscribers in print and online than we do in advertising,鈥 Baquet said. Paid digital subscriptions have grown dramatically during the 2016 presidential campaign season and in the first few months of Trump鈥檚 presidency. Baron said the Post鈥檚 now exceed 1 million. Some reports have put the Times鈥 at 2 million.
鈥淚 would much more want to be dependent on my readers than on advertisers,鈥 Baquet said, 鈥渂ecause readers demand quality.鈥
But outside of Washington and New York, journalism is in deep trouble, they said, and that threatens democracy. In the next four or five years, many local newspapers are going to go out of business, Baquet said.
And that loss reflects a decline in accountability, they agreed. School boards are not being covered, Baron said. City budgets are not being analyzed. Few papers can afford Washington bureaus to keep tabs on local House members and senators. Only the biggest papers are staffing state capital bureaus.聽 These news organizations can鈥檛 cover the basics, much less do investigative work.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 catastrophic,鈥 Baquet said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e in the middle of a crisis that people have not woken up to.鈥
Yet both editors said this is a wonderful time to be a journalist.
鈥淚t鈥檚 going to have a future,鈥 Baron said. 鈥淣otwithstanding the enormous challenges, one person can make a difference.鈥
Baquet noted the many new ways of reporting and distributing news.
鈥淭here is no question that the best news organizations are like a billion times better than they ever were before,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd the opportunities are greater.鈥
in its entirety on the National Press Club webpage.
About the Kalb Report Now at the beginning of its 24th season, The Kalb Report is a joint project of National Press Club鈥檚 Journalism Institute, University of Maryland University College, the George Washington University School of Media and Public Affairs, Harvard University鈥檚 Shorenstein Center, the Gaylord College of Journalism at the University of Oklahoma, and the Philip Merrill College of Journalism at the University of Maryland. It is underwritten by a grant from Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation.
Photo credit: Noel St. John