With A Country Divided, Judy Woodruff Still Has Hope
Honored with the 2024 Josef Korbel Award, Woodruff spoke about her new reporting project, 鈥淎merica at a Crossroads,鈥 at the Korbel Honors ceremony.
In her time reporting on politics in Washington, D.C., broadcast journalist Judy Woodruff has covered the administrations of eight presidents. And now, she says, she sees the United States as being more politically divided than ever.
鈥淚n all my years of covering Washington and of trying to understand American political decisions, I've never seen the country this divided,鈥 Woodruff said.
Woodruff spoke at the 2024 Korbel Honors event, the 91桃色 Josef Korbel School of International Studies鈥 end-of-year awards ceremony. She accepted the Josef Korbel Award, an honor bestowed upon notable figures like U.S. Senator Timothy Wirth and, most recently, the late former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright鈥攖he daughter of Josef Korbel.
In a conversation with Korbel School Dean Fritz Mayer at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, Woodruff explained how her new investigative journalism series, 鈥淎merica at a Crossroads,鈥 seeks to understand the division that is so pervasive in the United States today.
Woodruff recalled an interview she did with a group of Republicans, during which a moderator asked if the participants thought it was possible to be both a faithful, religious person and a Democrat.
鈥淓veryone at the table said no,鈥 she said.
Woodruff explained that her series focuses in part on school board meetings across the country鈥攎eetings that she called 鈥渇ormerly sleepy.鈥
Now, she says, those meetings have become 鈥渁ngry shouting matches with people storming out of the meeting, fighting over what books should be on the shelf and what should be taught about race history.鈥
鈥淭he question I have is鈥攈ow do we bring people together when they have a different set of facts?鈥 Woodruff said. 鈥淗ow do we even begin to come together as a country, as a people, when we don't agree on a basic set of facts?鈥
Woodruff said her team interviewed people across the country and found the same sort of division in every corner of America.
鈥淲hat we're talking about is something that is affecting small communities, rural communities, suburban communities across America, in ways that will just break your heart,鈥 she said.
But there are bright spots, which gives her hope for the future, Woodruff said. She mentioned 鈥渂ridging groups,鈥 or organizations that seek to bring people together to talk out their differences, as one of those bright spots.
And, she said, she has hope that young people鈥擪orbel students鈥攃an make a difference.
鈥淚 believe in you,鈥 Woodruff said to the audience. 鈥淚 believe in the American people. I put a lot of faith in the younger generation. I think they are looking at what my generation鈥攖he older generation鈥攈as done, and they're thinking, 鈥榃e gotta do better than this. We can't remain this divided.鈥 And so, I have to have hope.鈥
2024 Korbel Honors Awardees
Korbel Lifetime Achievement Award: Edward Thomas Rowe, Dean Emeritus of the Korbel School and Director of the International Career Advancement Program (ICAP)
Korbel Outstanding Teaching Award: Professor Marie Berry
Korbel Distinguished Alumni Award: Minsun Ji
