All About Change - Season 3, Episode 6: Judy Woodruff Talks Journalism and Inclusion
Episode Date: July 5, 2020On this episode of All Inclusive, Broadcast Journalist Judy Woodruff from PBS Newshour joins Jay to discuss her remarkable career in journalism, journalism during Covid-19, and her work in inclusion.... See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi, I'm Jay Ruderman, and this is All Inclusive.
All Inclusive, a podcast on inclusion, innovation, and social justice with Jay Ruderman.
Our guest today is one of the most recognized and respected journalists in America, Judy Woodruff, who is currently the anchor and managing editor for the PBS NewsHour.
Judy, thanks for joining us on All Inclusive today.
How are you and your family doing during this time of pandemic?
Thank you, Jay. As we sit here in the last days of the month of May, I have to say we are
thankfully doing well. We're split up a little bit. Al and I, my husband Al Hunt and I are living in
our home in Washington, and thankfully we've been able to stay healthy and
safe. One of our children, Ben, has been living with us, and he's healthy. Our son, Jeff, our older
son, a child who has a number of disabilities and who lives with the program and actually lives in
a group home of three adults and supportive staff, they have all stayed healthy. The program is doing really
well. So we have a lot to be grateful for. Everybody's healthy, and I hope you are too.
Well, thank you. First of all, I want to start by sending you my condolences on some of your
colleagues who've passed recently over the past few years, Gwen Ifill and Jim Lehrer. I know how
much of a personal loss that was for you and a professional
loss for PBS NewsHour. So please accept my condolences on their passing. Thank you very much.
So what is it like for a leading journalist to cover the news of Washington and the world
during the time of pandemic? Well, it's been overwhelming. We were taken by surprise,
just like everyone else. And we had to adjust very quickly when it became clear that we would
need to work remotely. It's not something we're used to doing. We are used to broadcasting the
news hour Monday through Friday from our studio in Arlington, Virginia, but we had to, on a dime, begin to
put the apparatus in place for people to report remotely. I continued to anchor from the studio
from about the middle of March till the middle of April, during which time I had these remarkable
colleagues set up a studio, in essence, what's a studio here in my home just about 15 feet from where I'm sitting maybe 20 we put up a camera television monitors computer screens
lights wires more computer screens it's it's really quite something and I went
on the air from home starting on April the 20th and have been anchoring from
here every night since then it's a reminder of just what we're capable of
doing these days. So
it's been both an incredibly sobering time, but it's also been a time of learning and expanded
understanding of what we are capable of doing and frankly, what the American people are capable of
doing. So you have had a very interesting background growing up. You were an army brat. You moved around a lot. Can you tell
us what that experience was like and how it led you into journalism? Well, it's interesting because
I didn't know for the longest time what I wanted to do. You're right. I grew up as an army brat.
I was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma, father in the military and the army. We lived in Germany.
We lived back in the U.S. for a while in Missouri and New Jersey. Eventually, I moved to Augusta, Georgia, where I finished high school. I knew I wanted a career.
My mother had not even been able to finish high school herself. Neither one of my parents had
gone to college. And my mother, in particular, urged me to get an education. Her mantra was,
diapers and dishes can wait. I started out studying math because I really liked math and then
ran into a couple of professors who didn't think women should be taking advanced math and
simultaneously was studying political science, fell in love with politics and government,
and so ended up majoring in political science. Thought I would work in Washington,
worked here for a couple of summers for my congressman, really wanted to work in Washington. But it was at the late 1960s atipitous as that. I thought, wow, covering politics. And I started looking for a job
as I graduated and was hired as a newsroom secretary for an ABC affiliate in Atlanta.
And that was my first job out of college and did that for a year and a half. Ended up doing the
weekend weather while I was
a secretary at this station in their newsroom because the news director told me, if you don't,
you know, apply for a job doing weekend weather, we won't know whether you can ever be a reporter.
And I was persuaded I needed to do it. So it was like Cinderella, Jay. During the week,
I was a secretary. And on the weekends, I put on an appropriate dress and wore that on Sunday
nights to do the weather at 11 p.m. But then back to the answering the phone and cleaning the film
Monday through Friday. It was a way to learn. And whenever I would pester the news director to let
me go out and cover a story, learn or learn to cover a story, his answer was, why would you want
to do that? We already have a woman reporter.
I eventually was hired by another station in Atlanta, the CBS affiliate was hired to cover the Georgia State Legislature. And that's where I really, I truly cut my teeth as a reporter and
learned to fell in love with covering politics and covering politicians and understanding how
to report on legislation and policy. But it was a long climb because it was the, it was then,
by then it was the seventies and women were being given more opportunities, thankfully,
but it was a long climb. And how did your family, your parents feel about you going into journalism?
Were they happy with that career path? You know, they really were just, I would say my mother in
particular just wanted me to find a career that made me
happy where I could put my abilities to use and advance. She really wanted me to figure out what
I wanted to do and then to pursue that. So she was glad with whatever. I think they were proud.
I'm sure they were. Your interest in politics, I know that at that time, there were few women in politics.
Do you ever think about getting into politics yourself?
No, I didn't.
You know, when I worked on Capitol Hill, I was so, I was young.
I was in college.
I was just beginning to understand, frankly, the world around me.
My parents, they were not people who followed the news very much.
We didn't subscribe to a newspaper.
I think we subscribed to the Augusta Chronicle, but we were not a news-consuming family. So that was something
that I learned as I grew up. And I would say that as I followed politics, fell in love with it,
I really never thought of myself as running for office. So throughout your career, you've covered
many, many administrations, thousands of members of Congress. I got to
know you before the 2016 election, but over these past three years, Washington and the national
politics has changed. How has that affected you and your job in covering politics and just the
atmosphere in Washington? Well, it's become, it was already a polarized place.
And in fact, I mean, I've been covering national politics
going back to the 1970s.
I covered Jimmy Carter's campaign
for president against Gerald Ford.
I was a brand new reporter then,
but sure, the parties fight it out.
They have their ideas.
It can get really rough and ugly at times,
but I think we have gotten to the point now, and even before 2016, where you saw the kind of attack campaigns, if you will. I mean, I remember the birther campaign against President Obama, the kinds of, and it does go both ways. But it just has gotten uglier and uglier. And then in the last three and a half years, I would say since 2016,
it's even more so. We are in a completely polarized environment. People often ask me,
how do you make it better? I think perhaps the great silent majority rise up and say,
I can't stand this anymore and we need to find ways to work together. But right now,
you don't see anything like that.
So heading into the 2020 election, how do you see this unfolding, especially with COVID-19,
with the pandemic upon us?
It doesn't seem to be ending anytime soon.
How will that change our politics?
I think handling the pandemic, handling COVID-19 is almost certainly going to be the defining issue of this election.
President Trump's handling of this, his administration's handling of it, is going to become a central feature of the campaign.
It's not the only thing. You know, people feel that their jobs are coming back.
Do they feel their retirement income is secure? How worried are they about taxes?
And I think all of those things are going to be discussed. It's going to be ugly. Hopefully,
there'll be some substance as well. Is there any concern on your part that we could reach
an election in November of 2020 and either not have a clear result or not have either of the party accept the
election for various reasons, because of COVID-19 showing up at the polls, mail-in ballots, and
everything that's being discussed right now? I think all of those are very serious concerns.
As you know, there's a push on the part of many Democrats right now to ensure that mail-in ballots are available in November.
You're already seeing that with primary elections coming up.
But at this point, President Trump himself is arguing against mail-in.
He's warning that it holds the potential for great fraud, despite the fact that there's been no evidence of fraud on any measurable scale anywhere in the country.
So I think that's going to be an issue. And I think questioning election results,
we American people now know that one candidate can win the popular vote, but the other candidate
can win the electoral vote. So just a matter of a few thousand votes in a few states, as we saw
in 2016, can make all the difference. Do you think that the level of discourse in our country, which may be shaped by our political
discourse and has reached sort of a very low level of attacking individuals for various things from
their physical appearance to all sorts of other things, Will we ever return as a society to a more balanced,
respectful public discourse? Or do you think that what we've experienced over the last,
you know, three plus years will affect us going forward? I think because so much of this depends
on the example set by our leaders, if we have leaders who model respectful discourse and who model respectful
conversation and exchange, if we have leaders who model that kind of respectful demeanor,
I think that could go a long way toward affecting the American people. But without that,
I don't see how we turn it. So unless we take it upon ourselves to say that's not acceptable, and I think we do that inside our families, we try to teach our children to have the values that we think are the most important values of compassion and respect and honesty and integrity. And my hope is that those will override some of these other more negative values that we see being demonstrated in public
life. So is it that much harder to be a journalist today? I mean, I watch many of the press
conferences that either go on in Congress or in the administration, and often there's attacks on
journalists themselves for simply asking questions. To me, it seems like it's a very difficult position these days to be in.
And actually repeated attacks on my colleague Yamiche Alcindor, who covers the White House
for the NewsHour. She's been personally criticized. The president has called her questions dumb.
He's used various adjectives to describe her questions and to describe her and many other
journalists as well.
It is the case that it is tougher to be a reporter today, no matter whether you work
in television or print, because the very essence of what you do is being challenged by people
in charge.
They are challenging your line of questioning, your right to ask challenging, probing questions.
line of questioning, your right to ask challenging, probing questions. And now I think many,
much of the American public, if you look at the public opinion polls now, has accepted that. They don't agree with the press. They don't like the fact that the press is asking tough questions.
It's not the role of the press to be liked. It's the role of the press to cover what's going on
and to do it in a fair way, not a cynical way, but to be skeptical, to always look
for the facts. That's what our job is. And to be held accountable ourselves. And when we make
mistakes, we should be called to account for that. We shouldn't be excused for getting it wrong,
ever. And we shouldn't ever make mistakes. My message, Jay, to my colleagues has been and
continues to be, our job is to cover the news, keep our head down,
but to be the eyes and ears for the American people. That's what we're here to do, to ask
the questions they would ask, to do the kind of deep reporting they would want us to do,
and to hold public officials accountable. What do you think about this whole thing of fake news?
I mean, this is something that's sort of emerged, I mean, a little bit, you know, with Nixon, you know, rallying against different news sources.
But, you know, we hear a lot about fake news, your fake news.
You know, how does that impact, you know, the whole role of journalism and people accepting journalism as nonpartial?
I think we have to be careful about the term because, I mean, President Trump uses the term fake news for news that he hasn't liked in particular, news that he thinks is unfairly critical of him. I mean, I think we have to be careful about that term, which he uses.
And then what may be legitimately a false story.
I mean, some news organization got hold of something that wasn't, couldn't be borne out by facts, and they've run with it.
You know, false news. Who would ever support false news? Of course not. You know, our job is to tell
the truth, to try to get the facts. Truth is a much more elusive thing. You may not know on any
given day what the ultimate truth is, but you could keep working at getting at the facts. But
I think so. We fight against anything that's false, but fake as a label, I think we have to be careful.
I certainly don't ascribe to what either the president or some others have said when they just blanket, in a blanket way, labeled an entire news organization fake news.
We just have to keep on keeping on and remind ourselves what really matters here, and that is the American people.
You're listening to All Inclusive with Jay Ruderman.
You can learn more. View the show notes and transcripts at rudermanfoundation.org slash all inclusive.
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You've covered many national debates. Are there any particular incidents that stick out in your
mind as particularly memorable? I have to say, looking back historically, Jay, the debate that
I moderated in 1988 when I was just a child, I was actually with the NewsHour and I was asked to moderate
a vice presidential debate between Lloyd Benson and Dan Quayle. So it was Michael Dukakis's
vice presidential running mate, Benson, and George H.W. Bush's vice presidential running
mate, Senator Dan Quayle. And the famous line, of course, from that debate was when
Dan Quayle looked at Senator Benson and answering the question and said, you know, Senator, I was, you know, I'm like John Kennedy because, you know, trying to say he was young, I'm young, and he knew a lot and I know a lot.
And Benson's answer was, Senator, I knew John Kennedy. I knew Jack Kennedy. You're no Jack.
I remember that well.
Yeah. So that, you know, but of course, what happened after that, that we all thought at that debate that that Benson had knocked it out of the park. But of course, he and Dukakis lost to Bush and Quayle. You never know what's whether what happens in a debate is going to decide an election and often it hasn't. covered over your long career, whether it be 9-11 or the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq or
presidential elections? Is there a particular story that sticks out to you that you just carry
with you as something that's very poignant to you? The moment that was the most searing, I guess,
was I was there as part of the press pool the day John Hinckley shot President
Reagan. I was there at the Washington Hilton Hotel, just a few feet away on the other side
of the president's car. And we didn't know at that moment that President Reagan had been hit.
And this was 1981. So there were no cell phones then, and we all had to run to a telephone to
report. But that's no question that was the most searing for me, because I was right there as an attempt was made on the life of a president.
But I have to say, covering 9-11, I was with CNN then, and I was anchoring our coverage out of
Washington at the same time it was being anchored out of New York. And just watching the towers come
down and knowing what it represented, I think that was the closest I ever
came to falling apart on the air. I've covered a lot of tragedy on the air, everything from the
happiest moments to certainly the worst moments in people's lives. But knowing what that meant
and knowing just the fright that we all still felt because we didn't know what had happened or why it
had happened, that was had happened. That was very
difficult. It was hard. I mean, it was a horror. It was awful. Having said all that, Jay, right now
is just unspeakable. I mean, night after night after night, since the beginning of this pandemic,
we've been covering heartbreaking stories about people losing their lives, about nursing homes,
about, you know, healthcare workers unprotected. I mean,
today we're airing a story. You won't be airing this interview today, but tonight on the News
Hour, our plan is to air a story about what caregivers are going through right now. People
who are at home taking care of either ailing parents or grandparents. And these are individuals
who don't have any relief. We've interviewed a number of them. And tonight we're going to interview someone from a caregiver's group, just talking about what
these individuals are going through. So we're seeing how this pandemic has affected people
of every background, but in particular, those who are least able to fight it. And we have a window
into, you know, the lives of people like these caregivers who are,
they already were dealing with a challenging situation and now it's almost unimaginable.
And at the same time, Jay, we're covering these uplifting stories of people who are working on
the front lines, the sanitation workers, the food delivery people, the people who are going to work
every day in these hospitals and taking care of folks, putting themselves at risk. I mean, we're seeing real heroes. So I don't, I've never covered anything like this story. And
it's what motivates me every day to get up and keep going because the American people need to
know what their fellow Americans are doing right now. I didn't realize that you were so close to
the attempted assassination of President Reagan or the Towers
9-11 and especially the pandemic, you know, how do you set it aside at night? And the other thing
that I would just couple that with is social media, which is 24 hours a day. You know, what
impact does that have on journalism? You know, is that something that you've encountered where
that makes your job either easier or more difficult? But it seems like we're at a case now where it's very difficult to put
this aside and to have a life outside of your professional life. How do you set it aside as
you just really don't? I mean, I carry this around with me all the time. I am able to relate to my
family and we try to find a moment on the weekends to watch
something to take our minds off of it. Al is re-watching Curb Your Enthusiasm with Larry David
to take his mind off of what we're going through. And I've been watching just anything to take your
mind off of this. But in the end, we're swimming it. It's everywhere. And we know that. Every waking
moment is covering this pandemic. And so you just you just accept it and keep going because that's what we're dedicated to do.
Social media is both something that's great fun, but it's also, I think, very painful.
I mean, I see people saying things in social media. I try to stay moderately active on Twitter.
So I see the I see the good of it. And I see the fact that we now can share information.
I mean, it's become a haven for journalists. It's where we go to find out what's going on
in the world. But it's also can be very mean and just painful. We're coming up on the 30th
anniversary of the American Disabilities Act, which is the landmark legislation,
civil rights legislation for people with disabilities. What do you remember about
this specific event
that was signed into law by President George Bush? Jay, I was covering the White House,
covering Washington then. Remember, we covered it. It was an important story, but it didn't,
I would say the ADA didn't become real to me until after our son, Jeff, who was born with
spina bifida, but at the age of 16 in 1998, he was
injured and in a way that left him profoundly disabled. And that's when I began to have some
understanding of what it is to have a disability, what it is to be part of a family, to understand
that when one member of a family has a disability, the entire family is affected. And frankly,
to understand that this is something that affects many more Americans than we realize.
I always thought I was understanding and sympathetic, but I didn't really understand
how invisible people with disabilities can be, how people just look past them or through them
or around them or over them because for whatever
reason they don't want to deal with it or they don't know what to say, they don't know how to
handle it. And of course, that's only one aspect of life with a disability. But I think our society
needs to do a much better job of incorporating people with disabilities into life and to give
them the same opportunity the rest of
us want to have in life, and that is to be a contributing member of society. I think that
that is all I know my son wants. I'm committed to doing whatever I can to get that message out.
Judy, one in five Americans have some form of a disability, and they're the largest minority in
our country. Yet inclusion
is a nonstop battle, as you mentioned. The unemployment rate for people with disabilities
is much higher. And you look at the most recent events surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic,
there's a real fear that people with disabilities will not receive the same care, such as receiving
a ventilator, and that a person without a disability would receive.
Why do you think that in the year 2020, there's such a disparity? And what do you think needs
to happen to make our society a more equal society for people with disabilities?
I think there's disparity because people with disabilities are still a minority.
Their voice is not in the room when these decisions are made in terms of how to write legislation and who's affected by that legislation. They are not
there sufficiently in the halls of Congress or in the halls of White House or governor's offices,
and those voices have to be in the room when those decisions get made, when legislation is drawn up.
We need to elect more people to office with disability. We need to see more people with disability holding positions of influence in government. And we need to keep
fighting the good fight from the public standpoint, from the standpoint of nonprofits,
foundations like the Ruderman Foundation, and making these arguments and holding officials
accountable. It's a never-ending. I don't, I mean,
I think of the civil rights movement. I think of the, you know, the women's movement to a degree.
I think we have to think of the fight for disability rights in the same way.
You've interviewed so many people, thousands of people over your career. Is there anyone that
you had wished to interview, but you were never able to?
You mean in connection with disability or?
No, just in general, in your
career. Was there one person that you're like, I really wish I had been able to interview that
person? Well, there's so many. I've been very lucky to interview every president since Jimmy
Carter. So that, not the sitting president, not President Trump, but every president from
President Carter through President Obama, and even was able to interview President Ford after he left
office. There are some major figures. I mean, I would love to have interviewed Pope John Paul. I mean,
I have, there are figures in American life. I wish I had been around in the time of Eleanor
Roosevelt to interview her. And I'm trying to think of others who, you know, changed American
life or changed our understanding of the world and, frankly, have made us appreciate
what's important. There are so many. I did have a chance once to interview Mother Teresa, so that
was a treat from a distance. I was able to talk to her. And I will say this, Jay, that some of the
most illuminating interviews for me have been ordinary Americans. In covering political campaigns
over all these years, I found that sometimes there's great wisdom
that lies with real people, people who live normal lives and go about those lives and overcome a lot
because they have to, they don't have any choice. And so those turned out to me to be some of the
most meaningful interviews I've ever conducted. My final question to you is looking into your
crystal ball, there's so many journalists
throughout our nation who look up to you, and you're a mentor to them, and they aspire to your
type of journalism. How do you see journalism 20 years from now?
Well, thank you for that. I hope if that's the case that I, you know, can live up to
setting the example every day. When I started out in my career,
I had a producer who told me
when I worked and covered local news in Atlanta,
he said, you know, Woodruff,
you're only as good as your last story.
So we always feel pressure every day
to make sure this story, this day, this interview
is as good as it can possibly be
because you're being judged and we should be judged.
We are here for the American people. Where will we be in 20 years? I think we're going to be much more technologically
advanced than we are today. I think there will always be a need for probing questions and the
kind of deep journalism, investigative journalism and reporting that we have today. It's to me,
it's hand in hand. You can't have a democracy unless you've got great reporting going on. So I think it may look
different technically, technologically. People may, you know, we may be looking at our wristwatch
to read an entire newspaper, or maybe we'll have a chip implanted in our eyeglasses. I think that
the delivery methods will change. I hope there are still newspapers around, but mainly I know
that we will always need reporters because without reporters asking tough questions,
holding people accountable, frankly, shining a light on the parts of our country and of our world
that otherwise wouldn't get attention, then we can't advance as a human race and we can't advance
as a country, as a democracy.
We have to know what's going on.
We have to have information.
And that's why we rely on journalists.
We can't depend on our elected officials to do that for us.
I mean, they do a lot of important things.
We're always going to need a free press.
The Founding Fathers were right about that.
That's why they put it in the First Amendment.
So we all need to support good journalism, because if we don't, it is going to get weaker, and we need it to stay strong.
Thank you so much, Judy. It's been a real pleasure talking to you. I really appreciate your time.
I wish you and Al and the whole family to stay safe and healthy, and thank you for all you do
for our nation and the world. I appreciate your time.
Jay, it's an honor to talk to you.
And so I just have to say how much I appreciate the work
you and the Ruderman Foundation do every day.
Thank you so much.
All Inclusive is a production
of the Ruderman Family Foundation.
Our key mission is the full inclusion of people
with disabilities in all aspects of society.
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