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White House Correspondents' Association

Coordinates:38°53′52″N77°03′18″W / 38.89778°N 77.05500°W /38.89778; -77.05500
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromWhite House Correspondents' Dinner)
Organization of journalists covering the US executive branch
For the press corps generally, seeWhite House press corps.

This article needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(April 2024)
White House Correspondents' Association
Map
AbbreviationWHCA
FormationFebruary 25, 1914; 111 years ago (1914-02-25)
52-0799067[1]
Legal status501(c)(3)nonprofit organization[1]
Location
Coordinates38°53′52″N77°03′18″W / 38.89778°N 77.05500°W /38.89778; -77.05500
Eugene Daniels (Politico)[3]
Steven Thomma[3]
Revenue$366,481[2] (2015)
Expenses$311,090[2] (2015)
Employees0[2] (2015)
Websitewhca.pressEdit this at Wikidata

TheWhite House Correspondents' Association (WHCA) is an organization of journalists who cover theWhite House and thepresident of the United States. The WHCA was founded on February 25, 1914, by journalists in response to an unfounded rumor that aUnited States congressional committee would select which journalists could attend press conferences of PresidentWoodrow Wilson.[4]

The WHCA operates independently of the White House. Application for membership is madeonline and granted by the association on the basis of criteria. Historically, notable issues handled by the WHCA were the credentialing process, access to the president and physical conditions in the White House press briefing rooms.[5][6] Its most high-profile activity is the annualWhite House Correspondents' dinner, which is traditionally attended by the president and covered by the news media. Except forDonald Trump, every president has attended at least one WHCA dinner, beginning withCalvin Coolidge in 1924.[7]

In February 2025, the White House announced that the WHCA would no longer determine which outlets are allowed access to the president.[8][needs update]

Association leadership

[edit]

The leadership of the White House Correspondents' Association for 2024–25 includes:[5]

Association presidents

[edit]
YearNameEmployer
1914–20William Wallace PriceThe Washington Star
1921–22Frank R. Lamb
1922–23J. Russell Young
1923–24E. Ross BartleyAssociated Press
1924–25Isaac GreggThe Sun
1925–26George E. DurnoInternational News Service
1926–27John Edwin NevinThe Washington Post
1927–28John T. LambertUniversal Service
1928–29J. Russell YoungThe Washington Star
1929–30Wilbur ForrestNew York Herald Tribune
1930–31Lewis WoodThe New York Times
1931–33Paul R. Mallonsyndicated columnist
1933–34George E. DurnoInternational News Service
1934–35Francis M. StephensonAssociated Press
1935–36Albert J. WarnerNew York Herald Tribune
1936–37Frederick J. StormUnited Press Associations
1937–38Walter J. TrohanChicago Tribune
1938–40Earl GodwinThe Washington Times
1940Felix Belair Jr.The New York Times
1940–41Thomas F. ReynoldsUnited Press Associations
1941–42John C. O'BrienThe Philadelphia Inquirer
1942John C. HenryThe Washington Star
1942–43Douglas B. CornellAssociated Press
1943–44Paul WootenThe Times-Picayune
1944–45Merriman SmithUnited Press Associations
1946–47Edward T. FolliardThe Washington Post
1947–48Felix Belair Jr.The New York Times
1948–49Ernest B. ("Tony") VaccaroAssociated Press
1949–50Robert G. NixonInternational News Service
1950–53Carlton KentChicago Sun-Times
1953–54Robert J. DonovanNew York Herald Tribune
1954–55Anthony H. LevieroThe New York Times
1955–56Laurence H. BurdChicago Tribune
1956–58Francis M. StephensonDaily News
1958–59Marvin ArrowsmithAssociated Press
1959–61Garnett D. HornerThe Washington Star
1961–62William H.Y. Knighton Jr.The Baltimore Sun
1962–63Robert RothPhiladelphia Bulletin
1963–64Merriman SmithUnited Press International
1964–66Alan L. OttenThe Wall Street Journal
1966–67Robert E. ThompsonHearst Newspapers
1967–68Frank CormierAssociated Press
1968–69Carroll KilpatrickThe Washington Post
1969–70Charles W. Bailey IIMinneapolis Tribune
1970–71Peter LisagorChicago Daily News
1971–72John P. SutherlandU.S. News & World Report
1972–73Edgar A. PoeThe Times-Picayune (New Orleans)
1973–74Ted KnapScripps Howard Newspapers
1974–75James DeakinSt. Louis Post-Dispatch
1976–77Lawrence M. O'RourkePhiladelphia Bulletin
1977–78Paul F. HealyDaily News
1978–79Aldo BeckmanChicago Tribune
1979–80Ralph HarrisReuters
1980–81Robert C. PierpointCBS News
1981–82Clifford EvansRKO General Broadcasting
1982–83Thomas M. DeFrankNewsweek
1983–84James R. GerstenzangAssociated Press
1984–85Sara FritzLos Angeles Times
1985–86Gary F. SchusterCBS News
1986–87Bill Plante
1987–88Norman D. SandlerUnited Press International
1988–89Jeremiah O'LearyThe Washington Times
1989–90Johanna NeumanUSA Today
1990–91Robert M. EllisonSheridan Broadcasting
1991–92Charles BierbauerCNN
1992–93Karen HoslerThe Baltimore Sun
1993–94George E. Condon Jr.Copley News Service
1994–95Kenneth T. WalshU.S. News & World Report
1995–96Carl P. LeubsdorfThe Dallas Morning News
1996–97Terence HuntAssociated Press
1997–98Laurence McQuillanReuters
1998–99Stewart PowellHearst Newspapers
1999–2000Susan PageUSA Today
2000–01Arlene DillonCBS News
2001–02Steve HollandReuters
2002–03Bob DeansCox Newspapers
2003–04Carl M. CannonNational Journal
2004–05Ron HutchesonKnight Ridder
2005–06Mark SmithAssociated Press TV and Radio
2006–07Steve ScullyC-SPAN
2007–08Ann ComptonABC News
2008–09Jennifer LovenAssociated Press
2009–10Edwin ChenBloomberg
2010–11David JacksonUSA Today
2011–12Caren BohanReuters
2012–13Ed HenryFox News
2013–14Steven ThommaMcClatchy
2014–15Christi ParsonsTribune Media
2015–16Carol LeeWall Street Journal
2016–17Jeff MasonReuters
2017–18Margaret TalevBloomberg
2018–19Olivier Knox[9]Sirius XM
2019–20Jonathan Karl[10]ABC News
2020–21Zeke Miller[11]Associated Press
2021–22Steven Portnoy[12]CBS News Radio
2022–23Tamara KeithNPR
2023–24Kelly O'DonnellNBC News
2024–25Eugene Daniels[13]Politico
2025–26Weijia Jiang[14]CBS News
2026–27Justin Sink (elect)[15]Bloomberg News

White House press room

[edit]

The WHCA was formerly responsible for assigned seating in theJames S. Brady Press Briefing Room in theWhite House.[16][17]

White House Correspondents' dinner

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toWhite House Correspondents' Association dinner.

The WHCA's annual dinner, begun in 1921,[18] has become aWashington, D.C. tradition, and is traditionally attended by the president and vice president. Except forDonald Trump, every president has attended at least one WHCA dinner, beginning withCalvin Coolidge in 1924.[7][4][19] The dinner is traditionally held on the evening of the last Saturday in April at theWashington Hilton.

Until 1962, the dinner was open only to men,[20] even though WHCA's membership included women. At the urging ofHelen Thomas, PresidentJohn F. Kennedy refused to attend the dinner unless the ban on women was dropped.[21]

Prior toWorld War II, the annual dinner featured singing between courses, a homemade movie, and an hour-long, post-dinner show with big-name performers.[4] Since 1983, the featured speaker has usually been a comedian, with the dinner taking on the form of acomedy roast of the president and his administration.

The dinner also fundsscholarships for gifted students in college journalism programs.[22]

Many annual dinners have been cancelled or downsized due to deaths or political crises. The dinner was cancelled in 1930 due to the death of former presidentWilliam Howard Taft; in 1942, following the United States' entry into World War II; and in 1951, over what PresidentHarry S. Truman called the "uncertainty of the world situation."[23] In 1981,Ronald Reagan did not attend because he was recuperating after theattempted assassination the previous month, but he did phone in and told a joke about the shooting.[24]

Duringhis first presidency,Donald Trump did not attend the dinners in 2017, 2018, and 2019.[25] Trump indicated that he might attend in 2019 since this dinner did not feature a comedian as the featured speaker.[26] However, on April 5, 2019, he announced that he again would not attend, calling the dinner "so boring, and so negative," instead hosting a political rally that evening in Wisconsin.[27][28] On April 22, Trump ordered a boycott of the dinner, withWhite House Cabinet SecretaryBill McGinley assembling the agencies'chiefs of staff to issue a directive that members of the administration not attend.[29][30] However, some members of the administration attended pre- and post-dinner parties.[31]

Trump also declined to attend the dinner in 2025, the first year ofhis second presidency.[32] Some members of his administration were also absent from the dinner and instead attended the launch party forExecutive Branch, a new private club in Georgetown that is owned byDonald Trump Jr. and others with ties to the administration.[33]

Dinner criticisms

[edit]

The WHCD has been increasingly criticized as an example of the coziness between theWhite House press corps and the administration.[34][35] The dinner has typically included a skit, either live or videotaped, by the sitting U.S. president in which he mocks himself, for the amusement of the press corps.[34] The press corps, in turn, hobnobs with administration officials, even those who are unpopular and are not regularly cooperative with the press.[34] Increasing scrutiny bybloggers has contributed to added public focus on this friendliness.[34]

After the 2007 dinner,New York Times columnistFrank Rich implied that theTimes would no longer participate in the dinners.[36] Rich wrote that the dinner had become "a crystallization of the press's failures in the post-9/11 era" because it "illustrates how easily a propaganda-driven White House can enlist the Washington news media in its shows".[36]

Other criticism has focused on the amount of money actually raised for scholarships, which has decreased over the past few years.[22]

The dinners have drawn increasing public attention, and the guest list grows "more Hollywood".[6] The attention given to the guest list and entertainers often overshadows the intended purpose of the dinner, which is to "acknowledge award-winners, present scholarships, and give the press and the president an evening of friendly appreciation".[6] This has led to an atmosphere of coming to the event only to "see and be seen".[6] This usually takes place at pre-dinner receptions and post-dinner parties hosted by various media organizations, which are often a bigger draw and can be more exclusive than the dinners themselves.[37][38][39]

The public airings of the controversies around the dinner from the mid-2000s onward gradually focused concern about the nature of the event.[40] While interest in the event from entertainers, journalists, and political figures was high during theObama administration, by the period of theTrump administration, interest gradually slowed in attending, especially after President Trump announced he would not attend, nor his staff.[41] Business related to the weekend event slowed considerably, including at hotels, high-end restaurants, salons, caterers, and limo companies. During the Trump administration, some media companies stopped hosting parties, while other of the roughly 25 events held during the three-day period gained more prominence as signs of social status.[40]By 2019, the dinner and associated parties had returned somewhat to their previous nature as networking and media functions, with packed houses of media industry employees and Washington political figures.[31]

After the April 30, 2022, dinner, several attendees, including Secretary of StateAntony Blinken tested positive forCOVID-19.[42] However, no cases of serious illness were reported as a result of the dinner.[43]

List of dinners

[edit]
DatePerformer(s)Notes
May 7, 1921[44]
May 3, 1924PresidentCalvin Coolidge became the first president to attend the dinner.[45]
1930The dinner was canceled due to the death of former presidentWilliam Howard Taft on March 8.
March 15, 1941[46]
1942Dinner canceled following the United States' entry intoWorld War II.
February 12, 1943[46]
March 4, 1944[46]Bob Hope,Fritz Kreisler,Gracie Fields,Pedro Vargas,Fred Waring,Elsie Janis,Ed Gardner,Nan Merriman,Robert Merrill, and Frank Black[47]
March 1945Frank Sinatra,Danny Thomas,Jimmy Durante,Fanny Brice,Danny Kaye, andGarry Moore[48]
March 23, 1946[citation needed]Ed Sullivan (host); featured performers includedHerb Shriner,Señor Wences,Paul Draper,Larry Adler, andSugar Chile Robinson.[49]
March 6, 1948Spike Jones[50]
March 14, 1949
1951Dinner canceled due to what PresidentHarry S. Truman referred to as the "uncertainty of the world situation."[23]
May 1953Bob Hope[51]
c. Feb. 27, 1954Milton Berle,The Four Step Brothers,[52][53]Jaye P. Morgan,The McGuire Sisters, andIrving Berlin performed.Held at the Statler Hotel.[53] Berlin performed an original song, "I Still Like Ike," to honor PresidentDwight D. Eisenhower.[23]
March 1955Duke Ellington,Tennessee Ernie Ford,Channing Pollock[54]
May 1956James Cagney emceed;Nat King Cole,Patti Page, andDizzy Gillespie performed.[55]
October 12, 1959[citation needed]
February 25, 1961The Peiro Brothers (jugglers),Julie London,Dorothy Provine,Mischa Elman, andJerome Hines[56][46]
April 27, 1962Peter Sellers,Gwen Verdon, Richard Goodman, andBenny Goodman shared hosting duties.Event opened to female correspondents for the first time.[46]
May 24, 1963Merv Griffin emceed;Barbra Streisand performed.[57][46]
May 21, 1964[58]Duke Ellington, theSmothers Brothers[23]
May 11, 1968[46]Richard Pryor
May 3, 1969[59]TheDisneylandGolden Horseshoe Revue[60]
May 2, 1970[citation needed]George Carlin[61][62]
May 8, 1971[63]PresidentRichard Nixon was in attendance; he later described the dinner as "probably the worst of this type that I have attended," and called the attendees "a drunken group; crude, and terribly cruel."[64]
1972President Nixon declined to attend and sent his wife,Pat Nixon, in his place.[65]
April 14, 1973[66]Held in the International Ballroom of theWashington Hilton Hotel[67]
May 4, 1974President Nixon again declined to attend;[65] Vice PresidentGerald Ford attended in his place.[68]
May 3, 1975Danny Thomas andMarlo Thomas[69]
May 1, 1976[70]Bob Hope emceed andChevy Chase performed.[71]When PresidentGerald Ford rose to speak, he pretended to fumble, and began his speech with "Good evening. I'm Gerald Ford and you're not"—a reference to Chase's catchphrase fromSaturday Night Live'sWeekend Update.[71]
April 30, 1977[46]
April 29, 1978PresidentJimmy Carter declined to attend, sending press secretaryJody Powell in his place.[72]
April 28, 1979[73]
May 3, 1980Preservation Hall Jazz Band[74]
April 25, 1981[75]PresidentRonald Reagan did not attend because he was recuperating after theattempted assassination the previous month.[24]
April 24, 1982[46]
April 23, 1983Mark RussellRussell's stand-up bits replaced the traditionalcabaret[45][46]
April 13, 1984Rich Little[a]
April 27, 1985[77]Mort Sahl[78]
April 17, 1986Dick Cavett[79]
April 22, 1987[80]Jay Leno[81]
April 21, 1988Yakov Smirnoff[82]
April 29, 1989Jim Morris (Bush impersonator)[83][84]Garry Shandling made a surprise appearance.[85]
April 28, 1990Jim Morris[86]
April 27, 1991[87]Sinbad[88]
May 8, 1992Paula PoundstonePoundstone was the first solo female host.[89]
May 1, 1993Elayne Boosler[90][91]This was the first year that the dinner was televised onC-SPAN.
April 23, 1994Al Franken[92][93]
April 29, 1995Conan O'Brien
May 4, 1996Al Franken[94][95]
April 26, 1997Jon Stewart[96][97]
April 25, 1998Ray Romano
May 1, 1999Aretha Franklin[49]A non-comedian was chosen to host because of the recentimpeachment of PresidentBill Clinton.[98] NBC'sBrian Williams performed a skit.
April 29, 2000Jay Leno[99]President Clinton mocked himself in the short filmPresident Clinton: The Final Days, which depicted him as a lonely man closing down a nearly desertedWhite House, riding a bicycle, and learning about the Internet with the help of actorMike Maronna.
April 28, 2001Darrell Hammond
May 4, 2002Drew Carey[100]
April 26, 2003Ray CharlesPresidentGeorge W. Bush decided to eschew a comedian that year, given the recentinvasion of Iraq.[101]
May 1, 2004Jay Leno[81]
April 30, 2005Cedric the EntertainerFirst LadyLaura Bush performed some jokes.[102][103]
April 29, 2006Stephen Colbert[104] Colbert performed while being in character of histelevision satire of a right-wing cable television pundit.[105] Colbert also screened a video featuringHelen Thomas. Several of President Bush's aides and supporters walked out during Colbert's speech, and one former aide said that Bush had "that look that he's ready to blow".[106]Steve Bridges also performed a Bush impersonation.[107]
April 21, 2007Rich LittleDavid Letterman appeared by video with aTop 10 list of "favorite George W. Bush moments".[108]
April 26, 2008Craig Ferguson[109]Like hisLate Late Show monologues, Ferguson appeared to go off script and started improvising new jokes. It was noted that President Bush had difficulty understanding Ferguson's Scottish accent.[110]
May 9, 2009Wanda Sykes[111]
May 1, 2010Jay Leno[112]Leno hosted for the fourth time, more than any other individual in the dinner's history.[113] Leno had been chosen several weeks before his controversialTonight Show conflict,[114] and his use of recycled jokes was noted by critics.[115]
April 30, 2011Seth Meyers[116][117][118]Both PresidentBarack Obama andSecretary of DefenseRobert Gates were seen laughing at Meyers' jokes about the government's apparent inability to track downOsama bin Laden, even though they were a day away fromthe operation to assassinate him.
President Obama and Meyers also mocked then-Celebrity Apprentice hostDonald Trump's role as the face of thebirther movement. Trump, who was present at the dinner, would go on to be electedpresident five years later in2016. Journalists present at the dinner said being mocked by President Obama and Meyers made him decide to run for president, but Trump would later deny this, saying that he had been considering a run for the presidency for many years prior to the dinner.[119]
April 28, 2012Jimmy Kimmel[120][121][122]
April 27, 2013Conan O'Brien[123][124][125]
May 3, 2014Joel McHale[126][127]Prior to President Obama's remarks, a video with Vice PresidentJoe Biden andJulia Louis-Dreyfus, who played Vice President Selina Meyer on the HBO showVeep, was shown.[128]
April 25, 2015Cecily Strong[129][130]Keegan-Michael Key made a guest appearance as President Obama's "anger translator",[131] Luther, a recurring character from the Comedy Central showKey & Peele.[132]
April 30, 2016Larry Wilmore[133][134]Wilmore delivered a controversial, searing routine targeting the president, elite media, lobbyists, politicians, and celebrities. At the end of the speech, Wilmore ended his set by thanking President Obama for having been the country's first black president and finished his speech by calling him "mynigga" on live television. This remark sparked controversy among the media, with some calling it disrespectful.[135]
April 29, 2017Hasan Minhaj[136][137]PresidentDonald Trump did not attend the dinner.[138][139] The last time a sitting president did not attend in person wasRonald Reagan in 1981, who was recovering from anassassination attempt.[24]
The Washington Post journalistsBob Woodward andCarl Bernstein presented awards and spoke about the importance of theFirst Amendment.[139][140]
April 28, 2018Michelle Wolf[141][142]President Trump did not attend the dinner for the second consecutive year.[143] Instead, he sent his press secretary,Sarah Huckabee Sanders.[144]
Wolf received both praise and criticism for her monologue. The association released a rare statement regarding the monologue.[145][146][147] Several attendees walked out in reaction to Wolf's "brutal" comments.[148] After the dinner, newspaperThe Hill informed the WHCA that it would no longer participate in the event, saying, "In short, there's simply no reason for us to participate in something that casts our profession in a poor light. Major changes are needed to the annual event."[149][150]
April 27, 2019Ron Chernow[151][152]President Trump did not attend the dinner for the third consecutive year.[153] Additionally, Trump ordered some of his staff and administration members to boycott the dinner.[154]

The WHCA chose historian Ron Chernow as the featured speaker instead of a comedian after Wolf's controversial set.[151]

2020The dinner was originally scheduled for April 25, 2020, with comedianKenan Thompson hosting and political entertainer and former WHCD hostHasan Minhaj as the featured entertainment.[155][156] On March 22, the dinner was postponed due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, without naming a substitute date.[157] On April 13, a new date of August 29 was announced.[158]
On June 23, WHCA PresidentJonathan Karl announced that the dinner itself would be canceled, but that the WHCA was working on a virtual presentation format to honor award winners and scholarship recipients.[159][155] On August 14, Hasan Minhaj spoke privately viaZoom with the WHCA 2020 scholarship recipients, who also attended a private onlinepanel discussion by three veteran Washingtonpolitical reporters that day.[160][161]
2021On April 14, 2021, WHCA executive director Steven Thomma announced that improvements in the pandemic situation had not been sufficient to allow the association to proceed with a large indoor event, and that no dinner would be held in 2021.[162] However, the association still intended to select recipients for its annual journalism awards and student scholarships, and announced that it planned to go ahead with the dinner the following year, on April 30, 2022.[162]
April 30, 2022Trevor Noah[163]The dinner was held in person for the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic.[163] PresidentJoe Biden attended the dinner, making him the first president to attend the dinner since 2016 as Trump boycotted the event throughout his presidency.[164]
April 29, 2023Roy Wood Jr.[165]
April 27, 2024Colin Jost[166]
April 26, 2025In February 2025, the WHCA board announced that comedianAmber Ruffin would be the featured entertainment for the dinner. On March 29, WHCA president Eugene Daniels announced that the board had decided to cancel her performance, "to ensure the focus is not on the politics of division".[167][168] Ruffin's planned appearance had been criticized by White House deputy chief of staffTaylor Budowich, who labeled the WHCA's cancellation of Ruffin's performance as a "cop-out" and described her as "hate-filled".[168] Commenting on her cancellation, Ruffin said, "I thought when people take away your rights, erase your history and deport your friends, you’re supposed to call it out. But I was wrong."[169]

Gallery

[edit]
  • President Gerald Ford (left) with White House Correspondent Helen Thomas at the 1975 Dinner
    President Gerald Ford (left) with White House CorrespondentHelen Thomas at the 1975 Dinner
  • President Bill Clinton (right) with television actor Mike Maronna (left) celebrating a successful online purchase in a comedic short film recorded for the 2000 Dinner
    President Bill Clinton (right) with television actorMike Maronna (left) celebrating a successfulonline purchase in acomedic short film recorded for the 2000 Dinner
  • President George W. Bush (left) with Bush impersonator Steve Bridges in character (right) at the 2006 Dinner
    President George W. Bush (left) with Bush impersonatorSteve Bridges in character (right) at the 2006 Dinner
  • President Barack Obama ending his final Correspondents' Dinner speech with a mic drop at the 2016 Dinner
    President Barack Obama ending his final Correspondents' Dinner speech with amic drop at the 2016 Dinner

Awards

[edit]
Note: Award years represent the date the work was published/broadcast, which is always one year before the prize was awarded.

The Aldo Beckman Memorial Award

[edit]
Main article:Aldo Beckman Award for Journalistic Excellence
icon
This sectionis missing information about award recipients. Please expand the section to include this information. Further details may exist on thetalk page.(November 2023)

Established in 1981 in memory ofAldo Beckman (1934–1980), the "lateChicago Tribune Washington bureau chief, a past president of the association.... Given annually to a Washington reporter 'who personifies the journalistic excellence as well as the personal qualities exemplified by Mr. Beckman, an award-winning White House correspondent.'"[170]Awarded for overall excellence in White House coverage.[171]

YearRecipientEmployerRef.
1981Helen ThomasUPI[172]
1982Rich JaroslovskyThe Wall Street Journal[citation needed]
1983Lou CannonThe Washington Post[173]
1984David HoffmanThe Washington Post[174]
1985Robert TimbergThe Baltimore Sun[175]
1986W. Dale NelsonAssociated Press[176]
1987Gerald F. SeibThe Wall Street Journal[177]
1988
1989Ann DevroyThe Washington Post[178]
1990Kenneth T. WalshU.S. News & World Report[179]
1991Timothy J. McNultyChicago Tribune[180]
1992Thomas DeFrankNewsweek[181]
1993Jeffrey BirnbaumThe Wall Street Journal[182][183]
1994Kathy LewisThe Dallas Morning News[184]
1995John A. FarrellThe Boston Globe[185]
1996Todd PurdumThe New York Times[186]
1997Michael K. FrisbyThe Wall Street Journal[187][188]
1998John HarrisThe Washington Post[189]
1999Jeanne CummingsThe Wall Street Journal[190][191]
2000Steve ThommaKnight Ridder[192]
2001Anne E. KornblutThe Boston Globe[193]
2002Dana MilbankThe Washington Post[194]
2003David SangerThe New York Times[195]
2004Susan PageUSA Today[196]
2005Carl CannonNational Journal[197]
2006Kenneth T. WalshU.S. News & World Report[198]
2007Alexis SimendingerNational Journal[199]
2008Michael AbramowitzThe Washington Post[200]
2009Mark KnollerCBS News[201]
2010Peter BakerThe New York Times[202]
2011Scott WilsonThe Washington Post[203]
2012Ryan LizzaThe New Yorker[204]
2013Glenn ThrushPolitico[205][206]
Brianna KeilarCNN
2014Peter BakerThe New York Times[207][208]
2015Carol LeeThe Wall Street Journal[209][210]
2016Greg JaffeThe Washington Post[211]
2017Maggie HabermanThe New York Times[212]
2018McKay CoppinsThe Atlantic[213]
2019Yamiche AlcindorPBS NewsHour[214]
2020Philip Rucker The Washington Post[215]
2021Jonathan SwanAxios[216]
2022Matt ViserThe Washington Post[217]
2023Barak RavidAxios[218]
2025Alex ThompsonAxios[219]

Award for Excellence in Presidential News Coverage Under Deadline Pressure

[edit]
icon
This sectionis missing information about award recipients and specific articles/shows. Please expand the section to include this information. Further details may exist on thetalk page.(November 2023)

The award was established in 1970 as theMerriman Smith Memorial Award for outstanding examples of deadline reporting.[171] (Smith died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1970.) The award was renamed in 2022 after the WHCA determined that Smith had supported excluding Black and female journalists from membership in theNational Press Club and from attending theWhite House Correspondents' Dinner.[220][20]

YearRecipientCategoryEmployerArticle / ShowNotes /Ref.
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974Douglas C. WilsonPrintThe Providence JournalResignation of President Nixon[221][222]
1975Aldo BeckmanPrintChicago Tribune"Sarah Jane Moore's assassination attempt onPresident Ford"[223][70]
1976
1977Michael J. Sniffen and Richard E. MeyerPrintAPBert Lance used the same stock as collateral for two different loans.[72]
1978Edward WalshPrintThe Camp David Summit Conference[224]
1979
1980John PalmerBroadcastNBC News"...the failed attempt by President Jimmy Carter’s administration to rescue the American hostages in Iran."[225][226]
Lars-Erik Nelson and Frank Van RiperPrintNew York Daily News"deadline coverage of the negotiations to free American hostages held in Iran during the Carter administration."[227]
1981
1982
1983StaffPrintNewsweek"Coverage of the bombing of Marine headquarters in Lebanon"[173]
1984David HoffmanPrintThe Washington Post"President Reagan's blaming a terrorist attack on the U.S. Embassy annex in Beirut on the 'near destruction' of U.S. intelligence during the Carter administration."[174]
1985
1986Owen UllmannPrintKnight Ridder"TheReykjavík Summit"[176]
1987Gerald F. SeibPrintThe Wall Street Journal[177]
1988
1989Norman D. SandlerPrintUPI[178]
1990Steve TaylorBroadcastUnistar Radio Networks"President Bush's trip to Saudi Arabia."[179]
Norman D. SandlerPrintUPI"1990 Helsinki summit"[179][228]
1991Susan PagePrintNewsdayGulf War[180]
1992Peter MaerBroadcastMutual-NBC RadioLive coverage of President George Bush's collapse at an official dinner in Tokyo[181]
David EspoPrintAPDeadline reporting on Election Day 1992[181]
1993Mara LiassonBroadcastNational Public Radio[183]
Terrence HuntPrintAssociated Press
1994Mara LiassonBroadcastNPR[229]
William NeikirkPrintChicago Tribune[184]
1995Mark KnollerBroadcastCBS News"Writing and broadcasting multiple breaking stories ... about a White House intruder."[185]
Peter MaerMutual/NBC Radio"Outstanding broadcast of President Clinton's attendance at the funeral of the Israeli Prime Minister."
Susan CornwellPrintReuters AmericaPresident Clinton and taxes: "For getting a scoop from an on-the-record presidential speech.... Cornwell's entry was the only one that caused second-day stories (and more) to be written. It not only covered news; it created news."[185][230][231]
1996Mara LiassonBroadcastNational Public Radio"Spot news coverage of the 1996 election campaign"; "she found time to ... deliver an insightful audio portrait of a small California town that President Clinton visited last October."[186]
Ron FournierPrintAssociated Press"An exclusive on President Clinton's new cabinet choices for the second term."[186]
1997Peter MaerBroadcastNBC Radio/Mutual News"Evocative radio account of President Clinton's visit toLittle Rock Central High School, 40 years after the school was integrated."[188][187]
Ron FournierPrintAssociated Press"President Clinton's knee injury that sent him to the hospital in the middle of the night."[188][187]
1998Jodi EndaPrintKnight Ridder"President Clinton's meeting with survivors ofgenocide in Rwanda...."[189]
1999Gary NurenbergBroadcastKTLA-TV,Tribune Broadcasting"Monica Lewinsky Deposed"[190][191]
Jodi EndaPrintKnight Ridder Newspapers"A poignant story about an emotional day inKosovo."[190][191]
2000Jim AngleBroadcastFox News Channel[192]
Sandra SobierajPrintAssociated Press[192]
2001Peter MaerBroadcastCBS News[193]
Ron FournierPrintAssociated Press[193]
2002Jim AngleBroadcastFox News Channel[194]
David SangerPrintThe New York Times[194]
2003Mike AllenPrintThe Washington Post[195]
2004Ron FournierPrintAssociated Press[196]
Jackie CalmesPrintThe Wall Street JournalHonorable Mention[196]
2005Terry MoranBroadcastABC News[197]
Deb RiechmannPrintAssociated Press[197]
2006Martha RaddatzBroadcastABC News[198]
David SangerPrintThe New York Times[198]
2007Ed HenryBroadcastCNN[199]
Deb RiechmannPrintAssociated Press[199]
2008David GreeneBroadcastNPR[200]
Sandra Sobieraj WestfallPrintPeople magazine[200]
2009Jake TapperBroadcastABC News[201]
Ben FellerPrintAssociated Press[201]
2010Jake TapperBroadcastABC News[202]
Dan BalzPrintThe Washington Post[202]
2011Jake TapperBroadcastABC NewsReporting that "Standard & Poor was on the verge of downgrading America's triple-A credit rating because of concerns over political gridlock in Washington"[203]
Glenn Thrush,Carrie Budoff Brown,Manu Raju and John BresnahanPrintPolitico"The deal between Barack Obama and congressional Republicans to raise the U.S. debt ceiling."[203]
2012Terry MoranBroadcastABC NewsOn-air interpretation of theSupreme Court ruling of Obama'sHealth Care Reform Law[204]
Julie PacePrintAssociated Press2012 Obama campaign's get-out-the-vote strategy
2013Peter MaerBroadcastCBS News"Sequestration"[205][206]
Peter BakerPrintThe New York Times"Obama Seeks Approval by Congress for Strike in Syria"
2014Jim AvilaBroadcastABC NewsCuba/Alan Gross[207][208]
Josh LedermanPrintAssociated PressFence Jumper
2015Norah O'DonnellBroadcastCBS News"60 Minutes interview withVice President Joe Biden and his wife, Dr.Jill Biden on his decision not to run for president" in 2016.[209][210]
Matt ViserPrintThe Boston Globe"An Inside Look at How the Iran Talks Unfolded"
2016Edward-Isaac DoverePrintPolitico"How Obama set a trap for Raul Castro"[232]
2017Evan Perez,Jim Sciutto,Jake Tapper andCarl BernsteinBroadcastCNNIntelligence community's briefing of Obama and Trump "that Russia had compromising information about Trump."[212]
Josh DawseyPrintPolitico"Resignation of White House Press SecretarySean Spicer"
2018Ed HenryBroadcastFox NewsInterview withEnvironmental Protection Agency AdministratorScott Pruitt[233]
Josh DawseyPrintWashington Post
2019Alan Cullison,Rebecca Ballhaus, and Dustin VolzPrintThe Wall Street Journal"Trump Repeatedly Pressed Ukraine to Investigate Biden's Son"[214]
BroadcastCNN"FBI. Open the door."
2020Michael BalsamoPrintAssociated Press"Disputing Trump, Barr says no widespread election fraud"[234][235]
Jonathan KarlBroadcastABC NewsTrump getting COVID and being rushed to the hospital[234]
2021Zeke Miller and Mike BalsamoPrintAssociated PressCDC mask order[236]
Jonathan KarlBroadcastABC NewsJanuary 6 United States Capitol attack coverage[236]
2022Jeff MasonPrintReuters"Exclusive: Biden to waive tariffs for 24 months on solar panels hit by probe"[217]
Phil MattinglyBroadcastCNNZelensky's White House visit
2023Peter BakerPrintThe New York TimesCoverage of President Biden's visit to Israel just days after the2023 Hamas-led attack on Israel[218]
Tamara KeithBroadcastNPRAudio report of President Biden’s trip to Israel
2025Aamer Madhani andZeke MillerPrintAssociated PressMadhani and Miller caught the White House press office trying to alter the official account of history — the White House transcript of Biden’s use of the word “garbage” to describe supporters of Donald Trump.[237]

Katharine Graham Award for Courage and Accountability

[edit]

A $10,000 prize to "recognize an individual or newsgathering team for coverage of subjects and events of significant national or regional importance in line with the human and professional qualities exemplified by the lateKatharine Graham, the distinguished former publisher ofThe Washington Post. Debuted in 2020.[238]

YearRecipientEmployerArticle / ShowNotes /Ref.
2019ProPublica"Death in the Pacific"[214]
2020The Marshall Project,AL.com, theIndyStar, andInvisible Institute"Mauled: When Police Dogs are Weapons"[215]
2021International Consortium of Investigative Journalists,The Washington Post, "and media partners around the world"Pandora Papers[216]
2022Josh Gerstein and Alex WardPoliticoDecision "to report, verify and publish the draft Supreme Court opinion reversing abortion rights – and the organization’s follow-up work exploring the consequences of the decision...."[217]
2023The Washington Post"The Washington Post shows courage, sensitivity and originality in breaking with journalism industry norms to inform and show readers how the AR-15 weapon inflicts horrific damage to the human body."[218]

Award for Excellence in Presidential News Coverage by Visual Journalists

[edit]

$1,000 "award recognizes a video or photojournalist for uniquely covering the presidency from a journalistic standpoint, either at the White House or in the field. This could be breaking news, a scheduled event or feature coverage."[217] Debuted in 2020.

YearRecipientEmployerWorkNotes /Ref.
2019Doug MillsThe New York Times"The Pelosi Clap"[214]
2020Win McNameeGetty ImagesTrump and Fauci[215]
2021Brendan SmialowskiAgence France-Presse"US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, President Joe Biden, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov wait for a meeting at Villa La Grange June 16, 2021, in Geneva."[216]
2022Doug MillsThe New York Times"President Joe Biden walks between the Marine Honor Guard as he enters an event to celebrate the passage of H.R. 5376, the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022, on the South Lawn of the White House, Tuesday, Sept. 13, 2022."[217]
2023Doug MillsThe New York TimesPresident Biden boardingAir Force One as he leavesWarsaw, Poland[218]

Discontinued awards

[edit]

The Edgar A. Poe Memorial Award

[edit]
Main article:Edgar A. Poe Award

Named in honor of the distinguished correspondentEdgar Allen Poe (1906–1998),[239] a former WHCA president unrelated to the American fiction writer of the nearly identical name.[240] Funded by theNew Orleans Times-Picayune andNewhouse Newspapers,[239] the award honored excellence in news coverage of subjects and events of significant national or regional importance to the American people.[241] The Edgar A. Poe Memorial Award was presented from 1990 to 2019, when it was replaced by theKatharine Graham Award for Courage and Accountability and theAward for Excellence in Presidential News Coverage by Visual Journalists.

Notable past winners of the award includeRochelle Sharpe,Marjie Lundstrom,Michael Tackett,Russell Carollo,Cheryl Reed,Michael Isikoff,Sam Roe,Sean Naylor,Lance Williams and Mark Fainaru-Wada,Marcus Stern,Megan Twohey,David Fahrenthold, andNorah O'Donnell.

Raymond Clapper Memorial Award

[edit]
Main article:Raymond Clapper Memorial Award

Named in honor ofRaymond Clapper (1892-1944) and given "to a journalist or team for distinguished Washington reporting."[242] The award was presented from 1944 to 2003, usually at the WHCA dinner[243] (although in the period 1951–1965 it was presented at theAmerican Society of News Editors annual dinner).[244][245]

In 2004, the award passed to the Scripps HowardNational Journalism Awards.[242] Under Scripps Howard, theWashington Reporting Raymond Clapper Award was presented until 2011, at which point it was discontinued.[246]

Notable past winners of the Raymond Clapper Award includedErnie Pyle,Nicholas Lemann,Clark R. Mollenhoff,James Reston,Joseph Albright,Morton Mintz,Adam Liptak,Helene Cooper,Jean Heller,Newbold Noyes Jr.,Thomas Lunsford Stokes,Tom Squitieri,Marcus Stern,Susan Feeney,Doris Fleeson,James Polk,James V. Risser, andWilliam Neikirk.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^At the start of his 2007 dinner speech, Little stated that he had previously hosted in 1984, but "had to wait until everybody died" before he was invited back.[76]

References

[edit]
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  2. ^abc"Form 990: Return of Organization Exempt from Income Tax".White House Correspondents' Association.Guidestar. October 31, 2015.
  3. ^ab"WHCA Officers and Board".White House Correspondents' Association. RetrievedMarch 11, 2024.
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  5. ^ab"White House Correspondents' Association Officers and Board".White House Correspondents' Association. RetrievedFebruary 18, 2025.
  6. ^abcd"Joe Strupp, "Incoming WHCA Prez: Next Year's Dinner Will Not Be 'Politically Correct",Editor and Publisher, April 25, 2007".
  7. ^abGittins, William (May 2023)."Why didn't Donald Trump ever attend the White House Correspondents' Dinner as president?".
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  11. ^WHCA [@whca] (July 13, 2018)."Congratulations to @ZekeJMiller winner of a 3-year term on the #WHCA board and winner of election to be president in 2020-2021" (Tweet) – viaTwitter.
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