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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsEdward Snowden Looms Over Pulitzer Prizes
Next month, the trustees who oversee Americas most distinguished journalistic award could face their toughest decision in at least four decades.
The issue before the Pulitzer Prize Board: Does it honor reporting by The Washington Post and The Guardian based on stolen government documents that are arguably detrimental to the national security of the United States, and which were provided by a man who many see as a traitor? Or, does it pass over what is widely viewed as the single most significant story of the year if not the decade for the sake of playing it safe?
The politically charged debate surrounding the National Security Agencys widespread domestic surveillance program, and the man who revealed it, Edward Snowden, is certain to prompt intense discussion for the 19-member Board as it gathers to decide this years winners, according to past Board members, veteran journalists and media watchdogs. The debate echoes the historic decision in 1972, when the Board honored The New York Times for its reporting on Daniel Ellsbergs Pentagon Papers, they said.
This is an institutional question for them, said Robert Kaiser, the veteran Washington Post journalist and a previous Pulitzer Prize finalist. This is a very good argument to have, and there are members of that Board who are going to raise these questions and want to talk about them.
The risks are manifold, and there is no easy answer: Honoring the NSA reporting particularly in the coveted category of Public Service would inevitably be perceived as a political act, with the Pulitzer committee invoking its prestige on behalf of one side in a bitter national argument. In effect, it would be a rebuttal to prominent establishment voices in both parties who say that Snowdens revelations, and the decision by journalists to publish them, were the exact opposite of a public service. President Barack Obama has said that Snowdens leaks could impact our operations in ways that we may not fully understand for years to come. Former Vice President Dick Cheney has called him a traitor. Snowden, who is living in Russia, is facing three felony charges in a criminal complaint filed by the Justice Department.
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http://www.politico.com/story/2014/03/edward-snowden-pulitzer-prize-washington-post-guardian-nsa-104608.html