Dan Balz is retiring after nearly fifty years at The Washington Post, where he covered twelve elections and eight presidencies. Politics over the past five decades has become tougher, coarser, and meaner. Political life still experiences ebb and flow, but public trust in government dropped sharply during the Vietnam and Watergate eras and has largely remained depressed since then. The career marks decades of reporting on major political figures and events and underscores long-term shifts in tone, institutional confidence, and the character of American political engagement.
After nearly five decades, Dan Balz is retiring from The Washington Post, where he covered 12 elections and eight presidencies as a political correspondent. On Washington Week With The Atlantic, Jeffrey Goldberg asks Balz about the state of American democracy today, and how he's seen the landscape of politics change. "Over the course of 50 years that I've been doing this, I think that the most important shift," Balz said last night, is that "politics has gotten tougher, coarser, and meaner."
"There's always "ebb and flow" in politics, he continued. But trust in government "fell off the cliff during Vietnam and Watergate, and it's basically been down ever since." Watch the full episode-and learn more about the figures who changed American politics- here.
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