Watergate redux: The new age of White House investigative reporting
Vera Bergengruen, Stephen Engelberg, Matthew Rosenberg, Michael S. Schmidt, Howard Witt (Moderator)
11:00AM - 12:30PM (EDT)
Event Details
Watergate, Iran-Contra, Whitewater, Monica Lewinsky, Iraq WMD's -- these headline scandals from presidencies past fueled much of the investigative reporting focused on the White House.
But not since the Nixon era have the media's investigative lasers been trained quite so uniformly at a president as they are now. There are many reasons why President Donald Trump finds himself in the crosshairs, ranging from his frequent misstatements during his campaign and his refusal to disclose his tax returns to the allegations surrounding Russia's efforts to influence the election and the firing of FBI Director James Comey.
In this target-rich environment, major national media players, led by The New York Times, the Washington Post, and ProPublica, have produced a stream of probing investigative projects as well as quick-turn daily revelations about the controversies circling the Trump White House.
It feels, in many ways, like a new golden age for investigative reporting about the presidency.
But is it really? For all the investigative stories in the runup to the November election that revealed details of Trump's income taxes, his bankruptcies, his charitable donations, and his potential conflicts of interest, voters elevated him to the White House despite the revelations.
Since Trump’s inauguration, ProPublica reporters have exposed new details about how Trump can continue to profit from his businesses while in office and his hiring of lobbyists to work at agencies they once lobbied. Yet the political impact of these investigations remains to be seen.
And as the media's advertising-driven business model continues to erode, forcing repeated waves of reporter layoffs and the contraction of newsrooms across the nation, will the Fourth Estate retain its capacity to investigate complex White House entanglements?
This Miller Center panel on investigative reporting and the White House will assess the state of this vital check on the power of the presidency.
When
11:00AM - 12:30PM (EDT)
Where
2201 Old Ivy Rd
Charlottesville, VA 22903
Speakers
Vera Bergengruen
Stephen Engelberg
Matthew Rosenberg
Michael S. Schmidt
Howard Witt (Moderator)