The columnist Leaks, lies, and libel in Drew Pearson's Washington

Donald A. Ritchie, 1945-

Book - 2021

"In the Washington Merry-Go-Round, a nationally syndicated newspaper column that appeared in hundreds of papers from 1932 to 1969, as well as on weekly radio and television programs, the investigative journalist Drew Pearson revealed news that public officials tried to suppress. He disclosed policy disputes and political spats, exposed corruption, attacked bigotry, and promoted social justice. He pumped up some political careers and destroyed others. Presidents, prime ministers, and members of Congress repeatedly called him a liar, and he was sued for libel more often than any other journalist, but he won most of his cases by proving the accuracy of his charges. Pearson dismissed most official news as propaganda and devoted his column ...to reporting what officials were doing behind closed doors. He broke secrets-even in wartime-and revealed classified information. Fellow journalists credited him with knowing more dirt about more people in Washington than even the FBI and compared his efforts to Daniel Ellsberg with the Pentagon Papers or Edward Snowden with WikiLeaks, except that he did it daily. The Columnist examines how Pearson managed to uncover secrets so successfully and why government efforts to find his sources proved so unsuccessful. Drawing on a half century of archival evidence it assesses his contributions as a muckraker by verifying or refuting both his accusations and his accusers"--

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Oxford University Press [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Donald A. Ritchie, 1945- (author)
Physical Description
xi, 367 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 281-353) and index.
ISBN
9780190067588
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: The Man Who Broke Secrets
  • 1. Launching the Column
  • 2. Nothing to Fear
  • 3. Breaking Secrets in Wartime
  • 4. Drew Pearson's Leg Men
  • 5. Just Mild about Harry
  • 6. The Case against Congress
  • 7. Battling McCarthyism
  • 8. Disliking Ike
  • 9. Between Kennedy and Khrushchev
  • 10. Lyndon's Lackey?
  • 11. Prisoner of the "Merry-Go-Round"
  • Epilogue: A Muckraker's Legacy
  • A Note on Sources
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Biography of a significant voice in 20th-century journalism. When newspapers were the primary source of news, nearly everyone read Drew Pearson (1897-1969), whose daily column and weekly radio broadcasts expressed strong opinions and revealed government secrets. Though they were often scurrilous and occasionally wrong, they were never ignored. Recent historians have been less than kind, but Ritchie, historian emeritus of the U.S. Senate, draws a more favorable portrait than any during Pearson's lifetime and brings to life one of the golden ages of investigative journalism. The bestseller Washington-Merry-Go-Round, a spicy political exposé written by Pearson and a colleague, appeared in 1931, and both veteran reporters were fired. Already aggressive self-promoters, they sold the idea of a daily column, which debuted in 1932 as "a mix of important news, amusing events, brisk style, realistic reporting, and crusading spirit." Before long, the "Washington-Merry-Go-Round" column was a massive success. Until Pearson's sudden death from a heart attack, the column's combination of rumor, punditry, and scandal made him a household name. As the author notes, "the columnist took credit for the indictment, imprisonment, censure, and expulsion of a half dozen members of Congress, and the defeat of many more." A small army of loyal leg men trolled for dirt, but Pearson's massive audience proved irresistible to elected officials and even presidents, who leaked information even as they denounced him in public. Although generally liberal, he was despised by FDR, Truman, and Kennedy no less than Eisenhower and Nixon. The column continued with his younger collaborator, Jack Anderson, before fading at the end of the century with the rise of the internet. Readers may weary of Ritchie's relentless stream of half-forgotten scandals, but they will be intrigued by his portrait of a time when muckrakers raked whatever muck they found. Today, with politics polarized into near immobility, commentators still attack government malfeasance, but hard evidence is increasingly irrelevant to their audience, to whom truth is whatever conforms to their ideology. An entertaining and mostly admiring life of the legendary columnist. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.