Does an Obama White House need
more black reporters?
The
White, White House Press Corps
Sam
Fulwood III *
Jesse
Jackson's 1984 presidential campaign
boostedno, it actually createdthe
careers of a whole cadre of black political
reporters.
Barack Obama's
historic capture of Oval Office? Well, not so
much.
The reasons
behind the white-out of the Obama campaign are
varied and complex, ranging from the reduction of
general political coverage by mainstream media to
fewer experienced black political reporters to
the persistence of racism in the doling out of
coveted newsroom assignments.
A generation
ago, as the peripatetic preacher crisscrossed the
country to the chants of "Run, Jesse,
Run!" black journalistsamong them Gwen
Ifill of The (Baltimore) Evening Sun,
Julie Johnson of The (Baltimore) Sun
and later The New York Times and ABC
News, George Curry of the Chicago Tribune,
Ron Smothers of The New York Times,
Milton Coleman of The Washington Post,
Kevin Merida of The Dallas Morning News
and Kenneth Walker of ABC Newstraveled
along, reporting and interpreting the historic
political campaign.
Nearly a quarter century
later, Barack Obama made the same primary run,
and it was not the symbolic stab at the White
House that Jackson's represented; instead, the
junior senator from Illinois took the prize and
will become the nation's first black president.
But black
journalists by and large weren't around to
document the groundbreaking victory. A handful of
black journalists popped in and out of the Obama
campaign, notably Suzanne Malveaux of CNN, Ron
Allen of NBC and William Douglas of McClatchy
Newspapers. At the end of the campaign, the black
faces most visible on the Obama plane belonged to
reporters and photographers representing Ebony
and Essence, magazines that don't
traditionally cover politics.
The complexion
of the media can be an important factor in
defining the president and his policies. In fact,
even as Obama's campaign operated with
"no-drama" precision, some media
miscues emerged, among them the Associated Press
describing Obama as half-black.
Speaking at a
recent journalism symposium conducted by the
Nieman Foundation at Harvard University, Jack
White, who covered the 1984 Jackson campaign for Time
magazine, noted the irony of Obama's taking
office with relatively few black reporters
assigned to cover his administration.
"We are
going to integrate the Oval Office long before we
integrate the media that covers the
president," White said. "The job of
interpreting this president to the world is too
big and too important to be left just to white
reporters and editors."
Political
reporting is something of a boutique corner in
most newsrooms, a space reserved for those deemed
to be the best and the brightest. Political
reporting was glamorized by Timothy Crouse's 1973
"The Boys on the Bus," a best-seller
that revealed the techniques and antics of the
reporters covering the 1972 presidential
campaign. Of course, all the boys on that
busthe biggest names in the
businesswere all white.
The color of
campaign coverage changed somewhat when Jackson
announced his presidential aspirations. Run more
like a civil rights crusade than a modern,
efficient presidential campaign, the Jackson
entourage was populated, at first, by skilled
black reporters who had come into mainstream
newsrooms a generation earlier to cover dangerous
urban unrest, neglected minority concerns and a
host of other issues that their white colleagues
couldn't or wouldn't write about. By 1984
and the Jackson campaign, white-directed
newsrooms had turned the page on those stories
and many of the black reporters on the Jackson
bus weren't covering politics for their
news organizations.
Kevin Merida,
now an associate editor of The Washington
Post, recalled being reluctant to cover
Jackson's fledgling campaign, fearing it would
derail him from more coveted assignments as an
investigative reporter. Now, he credits covering
Jackson with boosting his career, which includes
his recent publication of a photo-essay book on
the Obama campaign.
"I guess I
was like a lot of other black reporters who
didn't want to cover Jackson," he said in a
recent interview. "We didn't want to get
pigeonholed, and we didn't anticipate the story
becoming as big as it did."
The lure of
political reporting stayed with Merida, unlike
most of the other blacks reporters covering
Jackson. Often, between presidential campaigns,
he marveled at the dearth of black faces at
political meetings and gatherings where white
political writers cemented relationships with
campaign operatives and grass-roots activists.
"Covering
politics isn't always a glamorous job," he
said. "It's a lot of rubber-chicken dinners
and talking to a lot of county political
hacks."
Squeezed by
tighter budgets, fewer newspapers are springing
for reporterswhite or blackto indulge
in such reporting. The number of black reporters
who do cover full-bore politics has reverted to
its pre-Jesse Jackson days.
White, now
retired from Time and a regular
contributor to The Root, recalled
covering Jackson's 1984 and 1988 presidential
runs, saying it was starkly different from the
coverage he observed from the sidelines during
the Obama campaign.
"I got the
impression that black reporters didn't get as
much of a bounce from [Obama's] campaign as you
might expect," White said. "Maybe
that's because Jackson was seen back then as the
black people's candidate, who shocked the world
by winning a couple primaries. Obama was seen as
something more than a black candidate and that
meant white editors wanted to put their best
political team on him. And, of course, in their
minds that meant white reporters."
Michael
Calderone, a media writer for Politico.com, wrote
recently that an Obama White House is likely
to bring more black and minority reporters
to Washington beats.He quoted Julie Mason, White
House correspondent for The Examiner in
Washington, as saying: "The number of
African-American commentators on TV has gone
through the roof and I think that'd be reflected
in how [news organizations] cover the White
House."
But others are
more skeptical. Richard Prince, author of the
online Journal-isms, reported recently that black
political writers were "big-footed" off
the Obama campaign plane by white reporters. He
said in an interview that he sees no evidence of
that changing after Obama takes office.
"Most news
organizations are ignoring that [Obama] is black,
just as they did for the most part during the
campaign," Prince said. "Having black
reporters on the White House beat is just not a
priority, unless it can be measurably
demonstrated that some special access or
advantage can be gained by having a black
reporter there."
What if Obama
insisted on black reporters being among the press
corps?
"That's not
likely," Prince said. "He's not going
to be that kind of president. Jesse might have
been, but not Obama."
* Sam
Fulwood III es un
colaborador habitual del blog The Root, donde originalmente fue publicado este
texto el 1 de diciembre de 2008.
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