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The Pulitzer Prize: No Conservatives Need Apply

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  • The Pulitzer Prize: No Conservatives Need Apply

    FrontPage Magazine
    April 7 2004

    The Pulitzer Prize: No Conservatives Need Apply

    By George Shadroui
    FrontPageMagazine.com | April 7, 2004

    The Pulitzer Prizes announced this week demonstrate again the
    stranglehold that liberals and leftists enjoy when it comes to
    garnering recognition from those who bestow honors for outstanding
    journalism and writing.

    While it is laudable that Anne Applebaum, who serves on the liberal
    Washington Post editorial board, won for documenting the terrors of
    the Soviet Gulag, it should be recalled that Solzhenitsyn's
    monumental work on the same subject appeared in the 1970s. Likewise,
    the award given to William Taubman for his Khrushchev biography comes
    long after the Soviet Union itself had admitted to the crimes and
    repression documented. It has apparently taken the liberal and
    leftist establishment decades to accept and document crimes that many
    anti-communists were assailed for daring to mention back in 1940s and
    1950s.

    The rest of the awards, however, went pretty much as expected, with
    liberal and left-driven journalism taking the honors. In the category
    for commentary, the winner and all those nominated were liberals. The
    public service writing award went to two PBS leftists. The
    investigative reporting award went for a series about American
    atrocities in Vietnam, which is standard fare in the awards business.
    The national reporting award went to a series attacking Wal-Mart -- a
    favorite bete noir of the Left. The international reporting award
    went to the Washington Post for a series on the reactions of Iraqis
    to the American invasion, much of it casting U.S. efforts in a
    negative light. The beat reporting award went to a story on college
    admissions preferences for the wealthy (not one of the extraordinary
    investigations into race preference admissions has ever won). The
    drama award went to a play whose lone character is a transvestite.
    The non-fiction book award went to a book by a leftist about race
    struggles.

    In short, like many national awards of this kind, the Pulitzer is a
    political prize bestowed almost exclusively on writers, journalists
    and thinkers who cater to suitably liberal or left-wing points of
    view. It wasn't always thus, but since the 1960s that's been the
    case. Writers Peter Collier and David Horowitz, for example, were
    nominated for a National Book Award for the first of their four
    best-selling biographies of American dynastic families. That was when
    they were on the Left. Although their book on the Kennedys earned
    them the sobriquet "the premier chroniclers of American dynastic
    tragedy" and the New York Times described their book on the Fords as
    an "irresistible epic," they were never nominated for an award again.

    Having spent more than 20 years working as a journalist or with
    journalists, I can attest to what even internal surveys by academics
    and journalists have shown: most journalists are either liberal/Left
    or so cynical that they resist easy characterization. In fact, in
    nearly a decade of working as a local reporter, I do not recall
    stumbling across another conservative. So do liberals dominate the
    reporting awards? The answer is obvious. And it's not because the few
    conservative journalists don't write worthy stories. Heather
    MacDonald, Michael Fumento, William Tucker, Bill Gertz and the late
    Mike Kelly have produced prize-worthy work by any standard, but none
    of them have been rewarded by the Pulitzer Board.

    Still, many of the awards honor legitimate feats of journalism and
    many focus on local news coverage that defies easy ideological
    characterization, so let us put aside the journalism categories for
    now and look instead at the major book or commentary awards, which
    are more high profile and often more slanted. For the purposes of
    this analysis, four categories - general non-fiction, commentary,
    autobiography/biography and history - are relevant. A review of
    winners over 40 years shows that conservatives are basically
    excluded.

    The category for commentary is an exception. Since 1970, when
    commentary was first singled out for recognition as part of the
    Pulitzer Prizes, several prominent conservatives have won, including
    George Will, William Safire, Charles Krauthammer, Vermont Royster and
    Paul Gigot.

    But liberals have still dominated, with winners including Mike Royko,
    David Broder, Mary McGrory, Ellen Goodman, Russell Baker, Art
    Buchwald, Claude Sitton, Murray Kempton, Jimmy Breslin, Clarence
    Page, Jimmie Hoagland, Anna Quindlen, Colbert King, Thomas Friedman,
    Maureen Dowd and William Raspberry. William F. Buckley, Irving
    Kristol, Norman Podhoretz, and Thomas Sowell, to mention just four
    obvious conservatives whose work is impressive in scope and quality,
    have never won.

    A 4 to 1 ratio is actually a victory of sorts for conservatives when
    compared to most other categories or awards. Not a single discernible
    conservative has won in the other three major categories being
    considered here. Not one. There is a long list of leftists and
    liberals, however. Among those honored for their work in history, we
    find Dean Acheson, James MacGregor Burns, Leon Litwack, Taylor
    Branch, Joseph Ellis, Robert Caro, Stanley Karnow, Gordon Wood, Louis
    Menand, and Doris Kearns Goodwin.

    In the general non-fiction category, winners have included Barbara
    Tuchman, David McCullough, Tina Rosenberg, Garry Wills, Richard
    Hofstader, Theodore White, Norman Mailer, Frances Fitzgerald, Annie
    Dillard, James Lelyveld, J. Anthony Lukas, Neil Sheehan, Jonathan
    Weiner, John Dower, John McPhee, Samantha Power and David Remnick. In
    the biography and auto-biography category we have W.A. Swanberg,
    Arthur Schlesinger Jr., Robert Caro, Joseph Lash, George Kennan,
    Edmund Morris, Russell Baker, Katherine Graham, David McCullough,
    etc.

    Some of these awardees wrote great books and their work deserved
    recognition, irrespective of ideological pedigree. It cannot be
    ignored, however, that conservative authors are totally overlooked
    (or snubbed) going back to the 1960s. No awards for Allan Bloom (The
    Closing of the American Mind), George Gilder (Wealth and Poverty),
    Charles Murray (Losing Ground), Abigail and Stephan Thernstrom
    (America in Black and White), whose books helped set the terms of
    national discussion and policy.

    Why? For starters, Joseph Pulitzer was a crusader who coined a
    much-cited definition of journalistic excellence: to afflict the
    comfortable and comfort the afflicted. By this standard, documenting
    the defects in society is a priority, often with the goal of
    stimulating government activism to redress specific issues. When not
    pushing for more government to solve seemingly intractable social
    problems, the press is routinely focused on corporate malfeasance.
    Finding victims and documenting failure is the paradigm through which
    journalists practice their craft -- except, alas, when it might cut
    against the liberal grain. There will be no Pulitzers for exposing
    the destructive effects of liberal programs like welfare, for
    example, or the political subversion of the public health system by
    the AIDS lobby.

    To show just how prevalent this bias is, consider for a moment John
    Stossel, the Emmy-winning television reporter, who recently published
    a book, Give Us a Break, in which he documents how he was ostracized
    by the journalism community when he turned his reporting talents from
    major corporations to big government. Once a touted and celebrated
    reporter, suddenly he was on the outside among the liberal elite.
    Bernard Goldberg, in his books, Bias and Arrogance, also documents
    the liberal slant of major news organizations.

    This political culture within the profession discourages journalists
    from tackling certain stories that would provide a more balanced view
    of public policy and international issues. How is it, for example,
    that the media have gladly focused on the victims of American and
    corporate power, yet done so little to document the suffering of
    victims of Ba'athist tyranny in Iraq? Could it be that the media is
    reluctant to give moral credence to what is an unpopular war among
    leftists and Democrats? Prisons were emptied, mass graves uncovered,
    and yet coverage that has explored these issues in depth or
    interviewed families or victims at length has been scarce since
    Saddam was toppled. Certainly, compared to the coverage given Richard
    Clarke's attacks on the Bush policy in Iraq, efforts to document the
    atrocities uncovered by our troops has been miniscule. It is as if we
    had defeated the Germans and then no one bothered to document the
    concentration camps or the Nazi killing machine, but rather focused
    on the imperfections of D-Day.

    This bias is evident in coverage of Cold War issues, as well. Again,
    it took decades before liberals finally documented atrocities
    perpetrated by communism. Yet, their work was quickly recognized.
    Meanwhile, the work of Richard Pipes, Robert Conquest and Martin
    Malia has never received a Pulitzer. As this year shows again, there
    is no shortage of honored books or authors who "dare" to report on
    American "crimes" in Southeast Asia or Central America - among them
    Frances Fitzgerald, Neil Sheehan, Norman Mailer, Tina Rosenberg and
    Gloria Emerson - or for work that takes the traditional liberal slant
    on our nation's race problems. The result is that even well-intended
    and more fair-minded journalists or historians often seem to view
    issues through the paradigms constructed by anti-American critics
    like Noam Chomsky and Howard Zinn.

    Take as one example recent Pulitzer winner Samantha Power. In her
    book on genocide, A Problem from Hell, she documents what she calls
    the reluctance of the United States to take any action to thwart the
    genocidal policies of other governments. Power, it should be noted,
    reviewed Chomsky's recent book, Hegemony or Survival, for the New
    York Times. The book is another in a long line of his anti-American
    fulminations. Though Power concedes that Chomsky can be one-sided,
    her own work is in some ways a testimony to his influence.

    Power, like many critics of American foreign policy on the Left,
    views American decision-making outside of historical context. She
    judges our action or inaction against some unachievable ideal rather
    than against what other nations or governments were doing. If our
    record is less than satisfactory, it seems fair to ask how it
    compares with the action or inaction of others? To attack the United
    States because it has neither the capacity nor the will to right
    every horrific wrong being committed across the globe is to hold our
    nation to a standard unmatched in history. As we are finding in Iraq
    today, the choices are not painless or uncomplicated, but these
    factors often are forgotten over time.

    For example, what would she have had the American government do to
    stop the Holocaust or the Armenian genocide beyond exercising our
    maximum military and diplomatic might against the regimes
    perpetrating these crimes, which we did once involved in both World
    War I and World War II? We lost almost a million men in both wars and
    it was not a given that we would triumph. Nor is it a given we will
    win in Iraq against a clearly fascist enemy, but our harshest critics
    for acting against a tyrannical regime are on the Left.

    Back in the 1980s, J. Douglas Bates, a former newspaper editor,
    offered some criticism of the Pulitzers in his book, The Pulitzer
    Prize. He documented a bias evident in the Pulitzers, not against
    conservatives, but against those who worked in the heartland or out
    West. His argument was that Easterners had the advantage. Bates also
    documented the lobbying effort by leftists on behalf of the work of
    Toni Morrison and James Baldwin. When a group of leftist writers took
    out an ad in the New York Review of Books arguing that Morrison
    should win in the fiction category, the Pulitzer Board a few weeks
    later honored her novel Beloved. You can rest assured that those
    writers never organized on behalf of black author Shelby Steele,
    known for his rejection of politically correct views.

    Bates has plenty of sympathy for liberals he feels have been
    overlooked by the Pulitzers, including I.F. Stone, Leonard Bernstein
    and Neil Sheehan for his reporting on the Vietnam war (though Sheehan
    would later win for his history of Vietnam). Yet, not once in his
    250-page book did Bates explore the issue of bias against
    conservative writers or journalists who cut against the liberal
    grain.

    The awards, of course, are administered by the Columbia Journalism
    School, which is itself a bastion of liberal/Left attitudes. One
    Columbia University student once reportedly remarked - all my
    professors come from The Nation and the Village Voice. There is not a
    single identifiable conservative on the Columbia Journalism faculty.
    Bernard Goldberg, in his most recent book, Arrogance, reports that a
    blue ribbon panel was established a few years ago to review the
    school's operations in an effort to improve its performance and the
    practice of good journalism. Goldberg notes that the panel consisted
    almost entirely of known leftists and liberals, while prominent and
    respected conservatives were not invited to contribute.

    Awards are symbolic but also important. They are the trademark of
    excellence and they often make or break careers. They should be based
    on the quality of the work being considered, not on the political
    prejudices of judges or the industry as a whole. Most conservatives,
    I am confident, want fair and balanced reporting even when it cuts
    against the grain of their own ideology. This is the bulwark of a
    free society. What they can't accept as easily is the kind of
    spectacle witnessed over the past couple of weeks, when Richard
    Clarke was given unprecedented air time, during a time of war, to
    espouse views at odds with those of conservative administration
    trying to win that war.

    A self critical journalism community must ask itself why such noted
    conservative writers and authors as William F. Buckley Jr., David
    Horowitz, Peter Collier, Michael Novak, George Gilder, Charles
    Murray, Allen Bloom, William Gertz, Gerald Posner, Dinesh D'Souza,
    Thomas Sowell, Florence King and many others have been overlooked by
    so many contests that honor writing or letters.

    However difficult it might be for liberal elites to acknowledge it,
    every major award given for writing or public affairs reporting is
    dominated or controlled by the leftist or liberal intelligentsia. Is
    it an accident that Jimmy Carter was given the Nobel Prize precisely
    when a conservative president whose policies Carter detests was
    trying to mobilize the international community against worldwide
    terrorism?

    Those who would claim to be the standard-bearers of excellence and
    the defenders of the marketplace of ideas should be embarrassed by
    the discriminatory practices evident in these cherished awards. None
    dare call it bias - but bias it is.

    http://frontpagemag.com/Articles/ReadArticle.asp?ID=12902
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