http://dailybreeze.com/content/bog/nmbogert19.html

Doubting Thomas offers her press veteran�s take on state of presidency 

As veteran White House correspondent Helen Thomas signed my program
Thursday evening at the Society of Professional Journalists� annual
awards banquet, I said, �First time I ever asked a reporter for an
autograph.�

�Thank you, dear,� she said, patting my arm. �Don�t lose heart.�

Those are words that should be engraved at the bottom of every journalism
degree. That�s because I�m not sure that any business can cause a heart
to be lost or broken faster than this. And Thomas probably knows this
better than anyone because she began reporting in 1943.

Thomas, in case you�ve never seen a presidential news conference, is the
woman who has haunted every U.S. president since JFK.

I can�t, in fact, recall a news conference where she wasn�t standing
hawk-like, grilling men who clearly didn�t want to be grilled by anyone,
especially a woman.

Thomas, by the way, is the woman who said, �Thank you, Mr. President,� at
the end of her very first press conference in 1961.

That, I think, is a wonderful tradition that continues to this very day.
It shows a little respect to make up for the kind of lack of respect we
used to hear from shouters such as Sam Donaldson, the man Ronald Reagan
could never quite hear.

I attended this Biltmore Hotel banquet for two reasons � Thomas and Jean
Adelsman. Jean is the retired managing editor of the Breeze and the
recipient Thursday evening of a Journalist of the Year award, along with
Judy Muller of ABC News, Kitty Felde of KPCC�s �Talk of the City,� Sue
Manning of The Associated Press and USC law professor Erwin Chemerinsky.

Odd how the world breathlessly awaits the Golden Globes while honors
presented the people who watch the politicians or work for a cancer cure
are as obscure as lice. In fact, there�s a joke about the Golden Globes
and the foreign press that presents them. It�s said that on ceremony
night you can�t find a waiter anywhere in town. Take this from someone
who once sat at another banquet with the foreign press � a group composed
of a dry cleaner from Pacoima, a large Eastern European woman in a turban
and an Egyptian shoe salesman who spent the evening trying to cadge free
drinks. Now that I think of it, they aren�t much different from domestic
journalists.

Except when it comes to Thomas, who � to the 100 or so people in that
room � is the very essence of celebrity, a woman who dedicated 60 years
at United Press International and Hearst to afflicting the elected.

Keep in mind that Thomas came up in the bad old days. Unlike Thursday
night, when four of five honorees were women, she spent decades proving
herself to the male hierarchy.

As late as 1972 she was the only woman on the Nixon China trip. Still,
she survives in a Washington press corps that she says has gone soft,
accepting presidential spin without question.

There was a lot of that in her speech, this talk of devaluation in the
character of leadership. Not surprisingly for an admitted liberal, she
held her greatest praise for John Kennedy, the only president in her
estimation who made Americans look to their higher angels.

Then came Johnson�s Great Society and Vietnam. Nixon, she said, was a man
who would � when presented two roads � �always choose the wrong one.� He
was followed by �healing� Ford, well-meaning Carter, Reagan�s revolution,
Bush Sr.�s self-destruction and Clinton�s damaging of the presidential
myth.

She seemed to have sympathy and affection for everyone but George W.
Bush, a man who she said is rising on a wave of 9-11 fear � fear of
looking unpatriotic, fear of asking questions, just fear. �We have,� she
said, �lost our way.�

Thomas believes we have chosen to promote democracy with bombs instead of
largess while Congress �defaults,� Democrats cower and a president
controls all three branches of government in the name of corporations and
the religious right.

As she signed my program, I joked, �You sound worried.�

�This is the worst president ever,� she said. �He is the worst president
in all of American history.�

The woman who has known eight of them wasn�t joking. 

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