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Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting

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This Pulitzer Prize has been awarded since 1942 for a distinguished example of reporting on national affairs in the United States. In its first six years (1942–1947), it was called the Pulitzer Prize for Telegraphic Reporting – National.

List of winners for Pulitzer Prize for Telegraphic Reporting – National

[edit]
Year Name(s) Publication Rationale
1942 Louis Stark The New York Times "for his distinguished reporting of important labor stories during the year."
1943 None
1944 Dewey L. Fleming The Baltimore Sun "for his distinguished reporting during the year 1943."
1945 James Reston The New York Times "for his news dispatches and interpretive articles on the Dumbarton Oaks security conference."
1946 Edward A. Harris St. Louis Post-Dispatch "for his articles on the Tidewater Oil situation which contributed to the nationwide opposition to the appointment and confirmation of Edwin W. Pauley as Undersecretary of the Navy."
1947 Edward T. Folliard The Washington Post "for his series of articles published during 1946 on the Columbians, Inc."

List of winners for Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting

[edit]
Year Name(s) Publication Rationale
1948 Bert Andrews New York Herald Tribune "for his articles on 'A State Department Security Case' published in 1947."
Nat S. Finney Minneapolis Tribune "for his stories on the plan of the Truman administration to impose secrecy about the ordinary affairs of federal civilian agencies in peacetime."
1949 C. P. Trussell The New York Times "for consistent excellence covering the national scene from Washington."
1950 Edwin O. Guthman The Seattle Times "for his series on the clearing of Communist charges of Professor Melvin Rader, who had been accused of attending a secret Communist school."
1951 None
1952 Anthony Leviero The New York Times "for his exclusive article of April 21, 1951, disclosing the record of conversations between President Truman and General of the Army Douglas MacArthur at Wake Island in their conference of October 1950."
1953 Don Whitehead Associated Press "for his article called 'The Great Deception', dealing with the intricate arrangements by which the safety of President-elect Eisenhower was guarded en route from Morningside Heights in New York to Korea."
1954 Richard Wilson The Des Moines Register "for his exclusive publication of the FBI Report to the White House in the Harry Dexter White case before it was laid before the Senate by J. Edgar Hoover."
1955 Anthony Lewis Washington Daily News "for publishing a series of articles which were adjudged directly responsible for clearing Abraham Chasanow, an employee of the U.S. Navy Department, and bringing about his restoration to duty with an acknowledgment by the Navy Department that it had committed a grave injustice in dismissing him as a security risk. Mr. Lewis received the full support of his newspaper in championing an American citizen, without adequate funds or resources for his defense, against an unjust act by a government department."
1956 Charles Bartlett Chattanooga Times "for his original disclosures that led to the resignation of Harold E. Talbott as Secretary of the Air Force."
1957 James Reston The New York Times "for his distinguished national correspondence, including both news dispatches and interpretive reporting, an outstanding example of which was his five-part analysis of the effect of President Eisenhower's illness on the functioning of the Executive Branch of the Federal Government."
1958 Clark Mollenhoff The Des Moines Register "for his persistent inquiry into labor racketeering, which included investigatory reporting of wide significance."
Relman Morin Associated Press "for his dramatic and incisive eyewitness report of mob violence on September 23, 1957, during the integration crisis at the Central High School in Little Rock, Arkansas."
1959 Howard Van Smith The Miami News "for a series of articles that focused public notice on deplorable conditions in a Florida migrant labor camp, resulted in the provision of generous assistance for the 4,000 stranded workers in the camp, and thereby called attention to the national problem presented by 1,500,000 migratory laborers."
1960 Vance Trimble Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance "for a series of articles exposing the extent of nepotism in the Congress of the United States."
1961 Edward R. Cony The Wall Street Journal "for his analysis of a timber transaction which drew the attention of the public to the problems of business ethics."
1962 Nat Caldwell The Nashville Tennessean "for their exclusive disclosure and six years of detailed reporting, under great difficulties, of the undercover cooperation between management interests in the coal industry and the United Mine Workers."
Gene Graham
1963 Anthony Lewis The New York Times "for his distinguished reporting of the proceedings of the United States Supreme Court during the year, with particular emphasis on the coverage of the decision in the reapportionment case and its consequences in many of the States of the Union."
1964 Merriman Smith United Press International "for his outstanding coverage of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy."
1965 Louis M. Kohlmeier Jr. The Wall Street Journal "for his enterprise in reporting the growth of the fortune of President Lyndon B. Johnson and his family."
1966 Haynes Johnson The Washington Star "for his distinguished coverage of the civil rights conflict centered about Selma, Ala., and particularly his reporting of its aftermath."
1967 Monroe Karmin The Wall Street Journal "for their investigative reporting of the connection between American crime and gambling in the Bahamas."
Stanley Penn
1968 Nick Kotz The Des Moines Register "for his reporting of unsanitary conditions in many meat packing plants, which helped insure the passage of the Federal Wholesome Meat Act of 1967."
Howard James The Christian Science Monitor "for his series of articles, 'Crisis in the Courts.'"
1969 Robert Cahn The Christian Science Monitor "for his inquiry into the future of our national parks and the methods that may help to preserve them."
1970 William J. Eaton Chicago Daily News "for disclosures about the background of Judge Clement F. Haynsworth Jr., in connection with his nomination for the United States Supreme Court."
1971 Lucinda Franks United Press International "for their documentary on the life and death of 28-year-old revolutionary Diana Oughton: 'The Making of a Terrorist.'"
Thomas Powers
1972 Jack Anderson Syndicated columnist "for his reporting of American policy decision-making during the Indo-Pakistan War of 1971."
1973 Robert Boyd Knight Newspapers "for their disclosure of Senator Thomas Eagleton's history of psychiatric therapy, resulting in his withdrawal as the Democratic Vice Presidential nominee in 1972."
Clark Hoyt
1974 Jack White The Providence Journal and Evening Bulletin "for his initiative in exclusively disclosing President Nixon's Federal income tax payments in 1970 and 1971."
James Polk The Washington Star "for his disclosure of alleged irregularities in the financing of the campaign to re-elect President Nixon in 1972."
1975 Donald L. Barlett The Philadelphia Inquirer "for their series 'Auditing the Internal Revenue Service,' which exposed the unequal application of Federal tax laws."
James B. Steele
1976 James V. Risser The Des Moines Register "for disclosing large-scale corruption in the American grain exporting trade."
1977 Walter Mears Associated Press "for his coverage of the 1976 Presidential campaign."
1978 Gaylord Shaw Los Angeles Times "for a series on unsafe structural conditions at the nation's major dams."
1979 James V. Risser The Des Moines Register "for a series on farming damage to the environment."
1980 Charles Stafford St. Petersburg Times "for their investigation of the Church of Scientology."
Bette Swenson Orsini
Joseph Albright Cox Newspapers "for a series on energy."
George Anthan The Des Moines Register "for a series on disappearing farmland."
Staff Los Angeles Times "for a series on chemicals in the environment, 'Poisoning of America.'"
1981 John M. Crewdson The New York Times "for his coverage of illegal aliens and immigration."
Donald L. Barlett The Philadelphia Inquirer "for their series 'Energy Anarchy.'"
James B. Steele
Rick Edmonds New York Daily News "for their series on the state of U.S. military preparedness."
Bob Herbert
Alton Slagle
Joseph Volz
Ted Gup The Washington Post "for their series on government contracts."
Jonathan Neumann
1982 Rick Atkinson Kansas City Times "for the uniform excellence of his reporting and writing on stories of national import."
Rick Edmonds The Philadelphia Inquirer "for their series on live-birth abortions."
Liz Jeffries
Staff United Press International "for its coverage of the attempted assassination of President Reagan."
1983 Staff The Boston Globe "for its balanced and informative special report on the nuclear arms race."
Jim Henderson Dallas Times Herald "for his series on the persistence of racism in the 'New South' and, in a second nomination, for his reporting on the consequences of atomic testing in America."
Haynes Johnson The Washington Post "for his reporting on the impact of the recession on communities across the nation."
1984 John Noble Wilford The New York Times "for reporting on a wide variety of scientific topics of national import."
George Getschow The Wall Street Journal "for his series 'Dirty Work,' which disclosed the existence of temporary slave labor camps throughout the southwest United States."
Benjamin L. Weiser The Washington Post "for his series on the difficulties doctors face in making life-and-death decisions regarding their patients."
1985 Tom Knudson The Des Moines Register "for his series of articles that examined the dangers of farming as an occupation."
Robert Parry Associated Press "for his exclusive stories about he CIA's production of two manuals for Nicaraguan rebels--stories that led to an internal investigation and a congressional inquiry."
Staff The Wall Street Journal "for its thorough coverage and analysis of the 1984 Presidential campaign."
1986 Craig Flournoy The Dallas Morning News "for their investigation into subsidized housing in East Texas, which uncovered patterns of racial discrimination and segregation in public housing across the United States and led to significant reforms."
George Rodrigue
Arthur Howe The Philadelphia Inquirer "for his enterprising and indefatigable reporting on massive deficiencies in Internal Revenue Service (IRS) processing of tax returns-reporting that eventually inspired major changes in IRS procedures and prompted the agency to make a public apology to U.S. taxpayers."
Hugh Aynesworth Dallas Times Herald "for their persistent and thorough investigation of self-proclaimed mass murderer Henry Lee Lucas, which exposed him as the perpetrator of a massive hoax."
Jim Henderson
1987 Staff Miami Herald "for its exclusive reporting and persistent coverage of the U.S.-Iran-Contra connection."
Staff The New York Times "for coverage of the aftermath of the Challenger explosion, which included stories that identified serious flaws in the shuttle's design and in the administration of America's space program."
Bob Woodward The Washington Post "for articles that consistently exposed covert government operations in the Reagan Administration."
1988 Tim Weiner The Philadelphia Inquirer "for his series of reports on a secret Pentagon budget used by the government to sponsor defense research and an arms buildup."
George Anthan The Des Moines Register "for stories about contaminated poultry, which revealed deficiencies in USDA inspection procedures and prompted legislative action."
Chuck Cook The Washington Post "for their series of articles that profiled corruption and mismanagement in Federal Indian programs nationwide and helped generate a Senate investigation."
Mike Masterson
Mark Trahant
Staff The Atlanta Journal-Constitution "for its series 'Divided We Stand,' about the resurgence of segregation in American schools."
1989 Donald L. Barlett The Philadelphia Inquirer "for their 15-month investigation of "rifle shot" provisions in the Tax Reform Act of 1986, a series that aroused such widespread public indignation that Congress subsequently rejected proposals giving special tax breaks to many politically connected individuals and businesses."
James B. Steele
Scot Lehigh The Boston Phoenix "for his insightful coverage of the presidential campaign of Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis."
Matthew Purdy The Philadelphia Inquirer "for his reporting on abuses in America's kidney dialysis program."
1990 Ross Anderson The Seattle Times "for coverage of the Exxon Valdez oil spill and its aftermath."
Bill Dietrich
Mary Ann Gwinn
Eric Nalder
Charles R. Babcock The Washington Post "for incisive reporting of abuses of power committed by members of Congress."
Gilbert M. Gaul The Philadelphia Inquirer "for reporting that disclosed how the American blood industry operates with little governmental regulation or supervision."
1991 Marjie Lundstrom Gannett News Service "for reporting that disclosed hundreds of child abuse-related deaths go undetected each year as a result of errors by medical examiners."
Rochelle Sharpe
Bruce D. Butterfield The Boston Globe "for his series describing child labor abuses in nine states."
Charles Green Knight Ridder "for a series examining the problems and failures of the Medicaid health care system."
1992 Mike McGraw The Kansas City Star "for their critical examination of the U.S. Department of Agriculture."
Jeff Taylor
Donald L. Barlett The Philadelphia Inquirer "for their series 'America: What Went Wrong?' which examined the public policy failures that have diminished the American middle class."
James B. Steele
Maureen Dowd The New York Times "for her coverage of national politics and its personalities."
1993 David Maraniss The Washington Post "for his revealing articles on the life and political record of candidate Bill Clinton."
Donald C. Drake The Philadelphia Inquirer "for their investigation of the pharmaceutical industry and its role in the soaring costs of prescription drugs in the United States."
Marian Uhlman
Douglas Frantz Los Angeles Times "for documenting the clandestine effort of the U.S. government to supply money and weapons to Iraq in the 1980s and up to the weeks before the Gulf War."
Murray Waas
1994 Eileen Welsome The Albuquerque Tribune "for stories that related the experiences of American civilians who had been used unknowingly in government plutonium experiments nearly 50 years ago."
Neill Borowski The Philadelphia Inquirer "for their investigation that identified rampant abuses of America's nonprofit tax laws."
Gilbert M. Gaul
Isabel Wilkerson The New York Times "for her coverage of the Midwestern flood of 1993 and other stories."
1995 Tony Horwitz The Wall Street Journal "for stories about working conditions in low-wage America."
Stephen Seplow The Philadelphia Inquirer "for their stories about the origins and impact of violence in America."
John Woestendiek
David Zucchino
David Shribman The Boston Globe "for his analytical reporting on Washington developments and the national scene."
1996 Alix M. Freedman The Wall Street Journal "for her coverage of the tobacco industry, including a report that exposed how ammonia additives heighten nicotine potency."
Russell Carollo Dayton Daily News "for their reporting on lenient handling of sexual misconduct cases by the military justice system."
Carol Hernandez
Jeff Nesmith
David Maraniss The Washington Post "for their accounts of the way the Republican takeover of the House of Representatives played out during 1995."
Michael Weiskopf
1997 Staff The Wall Street Journal "for its coverage of the struggle against AIDS in all of its aspects, the human, the scientific and the business, in light of promising treatments for the disease."
Ron Brownstein Los Angeles Times "for his comprehensive political coverage during the presidential election year."
Bill Moushey Pittsburgh Post-Gazette "for his resourceful reporting on the federal Witness Protection Program illustrating how the program's secrecy and lack of oversight has led to abuses and risks to the public."
1998 Russell Carollo Dayton Daily News "for their reporting that disclosed dangerous flaws and mismanagement in the military health care system and prompted reforms."
Jeff Nesmith
Douglas Frantz The New York Times "for his dogged reporting on the Church of Scientology, particularly its questionable relationship with the Internal Revenue Service, which granted the organization tax-exempt status."
David Wood Newhouse News Service "for his fresh and revealing coverage of the U.S. military and the challenges facing it in the post-Cold War world."
1999 Jeff Gerth The New York Times "for a series of articles that disclosed the corporate sale of American technology to China, with U.S. government approval despite national security risks, prompting investigations and significant changes in policy."
Staff
Chris Adams The Wall Street Journal "for their reporting on the pitfalls faced by elderly Americans housed in commercial long-term facilities."
Ellen Graham
Michael Moss
Staff The Times-Picayune "for a revealing series on the destruction of housing and the threat to the environment posed by the Formosan termite."
2000 Staff The Wall Street Journal "for its revealing stories that question U.S. defense spending and military deployment in the post–Cold War era and offer alternatives for the future."
Cornelia Grumman Chicago Tribune "for their series on the growing lucrative privatization of jails and foster programs for troubled youths."
David Jackson
Anne Hull St. Petersburg Times "for her quietly powerful stories of Mexican women who come to work in North Carolina crab shacks, in pursuit of a better life."
2001 Staff The New York Times "for its compelling and memorable series exploring racial experiences and attitudes across contemporary America."
Frank Fitzpatrick The Philadelphia Inquirer "for their series on the extreme commercialization of college sports."
Gilbert M. Gaul
Staff Chicago Tribune "for its comprehensive review of death penalty cases in Texas and nine other states that pointed out fundamental flaws in the system by which Americans are executed for crimes."
2002 Staff The Washington Post "for its comprehensive coverage of America's War on Terrorism, which regularly brought forth new information together with skilled analysis of unfolding developments."
Douglas M. Birch The Baltimore Sun "for their series that suggested that university research on new drug therapies is being tainted by relationships with profit-seeking drug companies."
Gary Cohn
Gregory L. Vistica The New York Times "for his enterprising and nuanced reporting that disclosed Senator Bob Kerrey's role in a massacre during the Vietnam War."
2003 Alan Miller Los Angeles Times "for their revelatory and moving examination of a military aircraft, nicknamed 'The Widow Maker,' that was linked to the deaths of 45 pilots."[a]
Kevin Sack
Anne Hull The Washington Post "for 'Rim of the New World,' her masterful accounts of young immigrants coming of age in the American South."
Staff Chicago Tribune "for its engrossing exploration of the fall of Arthur Andersen, a once proud accounting firm."
Staff The Washington Post "for its tenaciously reported and clearly written stories that exposed and explained corruption in corporate America."
2004 Nancy Cleeland Los Angeles Times "for its engrossing examination of the tactics that have made Wal-Mart the largest company in the world with cascading effects across American towns and developing countries."
John Corrigan
Abigail Goldman
Evelyn Iritani
Tyler Marshall
Rick Wartzman
Staff
S. Lynne Walker Copley News Service "for her candid, in-depth look at how Mexican immigration transformed an all-white Midwestern town."
Staff The Wall Street Journal "for its masterly, richly detailed stories on how hidden decision-makers make life-and-death choices about who gets health care in America."
2005 Walt Bogdanich The New York Times "for his heavily documented stories about the corporate cover-up of responsibility for fatal accidents at railway crossings."
Erin Hoover Barnett The Oregonian "for their groundbreaking reports on the failure to curtail the growing illicit use of methamphetamines."
Steve Suo
Staff The Washington Post "for its relentless, unflinching chronicle of abuses by American soldiers at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq."
2006 Eric Lichtblau The New York Times "for their carefully sourced stories on secret domestic eavesdropping that stirred a national debate on the boundary line between fighting terrorism and protecting civil liberty."
James Risen
Jerry Kammer Copley News Service "for their disclosure of bribe-taking that sent former Rep. Randy Cunningham to prison in disgrace.""
Marcus Stern
Staff
Staff The San Diego Union-Tribune
Michael Moss The New York Times "for his tenacious, thoroughly researched stories on the bureaucratic inertia that led to the fatal injury of American soldiers in Iraq who lacked protective armor."
2007 Charlie Savage The Boston Globe "for his revelations that President George W. Bush often used "signing statements" to assert his controversial right to bypass provisions of new laws."
Bryan Denson The Oregonian "for their disclosure of mismanagement and other abuses in federally-subsidized programs for disabled workers, stirring congressional action."
Jeff Kosseff
Les Zaitz
Steve Mills Chicago Tribune "for their investigation of a 1989 execution in Texas that strongly suggests an innocent man was killed by lethal injection."
Maurice Possley
2008 Jo Becker The Washington Post "for their lucid exploration of Vice President Dick Cheney and his powerful yet sometimes disguised influence on national policy."
Barton Gellman
Howard Witt Chicago Tribune "for his wide ranging examination of complicated racial issues in America, from the courtroom to the schoolyard."
Staff The New York Times "for its stories about CIA interrogation techniques that critics condemned as torture, stirring debate on the legal and moral limits of American action against terrorism."
2009 Staff St. Petersburg Times "for 'PolitiFact,' its fact-checking initiative during the 2008 presidential campaign that used probing reporters and the power of the World Wide Web to examine more than 750 political claims, separating rhetoric from truth to enlighten voters."
Tom Avril The Philadelphia Inquirer "for their exhaustive reports on how political interests have eroded the mission of the Environmental Protection Agency and placed the nation's environment in greater jeopardy, setting the stage for remedial action."
John Shiffman
John Sullivan
Amy Goldstein The Washington Post "for their relentless exploration of America's network of immigration detention centers, melding reporting and computer analysis to expose sometimes deadly abuses and spur corrective steps."
Dana Priest
Staff The Wall Street Journal "for its highly detailed coverage of the collapse of America's financial system, explicating key decisions, capturing the sense of calamity and charting the human toll."
2010 Matt Richtel The New York Times "for incisive work, in print and online, on the hazardous use of cell phones, computers and other devices while operating cars and trucks, stimulating widespread efforts to curb distracted driving."
Staff
Chris Adams McClatchy "for their examination of the nation's financial collapse and notably on the involvement of Goldman Sachs."
Greg Gordon
Kevin G. Hall
Ken Bensinger Los Angeles Times "for their tenacious reporting on how design flaws and weak federal oversight contributed to a potentially lethal problem with Toyota vehicles, resulting in corrective steps and a congressional inquiry."
Ralph Vartabedian
2011 Jake Bernstein ProPublica "for their exposure of questionable practices on Wall Street that contributed to the nation's economic meltdown, using digital tools to help explain the complex subject to lay readers."
Jesse Eisinger
David Evans Bloomberg News "for his revelations of how life insurance companies retained death benefits owed to families of military veterans and other Americans, leading to government investigations and remedial changes."
Staff The Wall Street Journal "for its examination of the disastrous explosion on the Deepwater Horizon oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico, using detailed reports to hold government and major corporations accountable."
2012 David Wood The Huffington Post "for his riveting exploration of the physical and emotional challenges facing American soldiers severely wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan during a decade of war."
Jeff Donn Associated Press "for his diligent exposure of federal regulators easing or neglecting to enforce safety standards as aging nuclear power plants exceed their original life spans, with interactive data and videos used to drive home the findings."
Jessica Silver-Greenberg The Wall Street Journal "for her compelling examination of aggressive debt collectors whose often questionable tactics, profitable but largely unseen by the public, vexed borrowers hard hit by the nation's financial crisis."
2013 David Hasemyer Inside Climate News "for their rigorous reports on flawed regulation of the nation’s oil pipelines, focusing on potential ecological dangers posed by diluted bitumen (or "dilbit"), a controversial form of oil."
Elizabeth McGowan
Lisa Song
Karen DeYoung The Washington Post "for their fresh exploration of how American drones moved from a temporary means to kill terrorists to a permanent weapon of war, raising issues of legality and accountability."
Greg Miller
Julie Tate
Craig Whitlock
Carolyn Johnson The Boston Globe "for their aggressive coverage of the deadly national outbreak of fungal meningitis traced to a compounding pharmacy in suburban Boston, revealing how the medical regulatory system failed to safeguard patients."
Liz Kowalczyk
Kay Lazar
Todd Wallack
Patricia Wen
2014 Dave Philipps The Gazette "for expanding the examination of how wounded combat veterans are mistreated, focusing on loss of benefits for life after discharge by the Army for minor offenses, stories augmented with digital tools and stirring congressional action."
John Emshwiller The Wall Street Journal "for their reports and searchable database on the nation's often overlooked factories and research centers that once produced nuclear weapons and now pose contamination risks."
Jeremy Singer-Vine
Jon Hilsenrath The Wall Street Journal "for his exploration of the Federal Reserve, a powerful but little understood national institution."
2015 Carol D. Leonnig The Washington Post "for her smart, persistent coverage of the Secret Service, its security lapses and the ways in which the agency neglected its vital task: the protection of the President of the United States."
Walt Bogdanich The New York Times "for stories exposing preferential police treatment for Florida State University football players who are accused of sexual assault and other criminal offenses."
Mike McIntire
Jonathan Landay McClatchy "for timely coverage of the Senate Intelligence Committee's report on CIA torture, demonstrating initiative and perseverance in overcoming government efforts to hide the details."
Marisa Taylor
Ali Watkins
2016 Staff The Washington Post "for its revelatory initiative in creating and using a national database to illustrate how often and why the police shoot to kill and who the victims are most likely to be."
Jason Cherkis The Huffington Post "for deeply researched multimedia reporting on opioid addiction that punctured conventional wisdom by showing how many drug overdose deaths may have been preventable, not inevitable."
Jeff Larson ProPublica "for ambitious reporting that uncovered greed, political cowardice and willful ignorance as prominent causes of the water crisis currently affecting the American West."
Abrahm Lustgarten
Naveena Sadasivam
Al Shaw
David Sleight
2017 David Fahrenthold The Washington Post "for persistent reporting that created a model for transparent journalism in political campaign coverage while casting doubt on Donald Trump’s assertions of generosity toward charities."
Renee Dudley Reuters "for uncovering a U.S. college admissions process corrupted by systematic cheating on standardized tests in Asia and the complicity of American officials eager to cash in on full-tuition foreign students."
Alexandra Harney
Irene Jay Liu
Steve Stecklow
Staff
Staff The Atlanta Journal-Constitution "for an extraordinary series revealing the prevalence of sexual misconduct by doctors in Georgia and across the nation, many of whom continued to practice after their offenses were discovered."
2018 Staff The New York Times "for deeply sourced, relentlessly reported coverage in the public interest that dramatically furthered the nation’s understanding of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election and its connections to the Trump campaign, the President-elect’s transition team and his eventual administration."
Staff The Washington Post
Amy Julia Harris The Center for Investigative Reporting "for poignantly exposing a shocking practice that took root in Oklahoma, Arkansas and other states in which, under the guise of criminal justice reform, judges steered defendants into drug rehabs that were little more than lucrative work camps for private industry."
Shoshana Walter
Brett Murphy USA Today "for a graceful, data-driven narrative populated by the truckers who transport goods from America’s ports—spirited characters exploited by some of the country’s largest and best-known companies."
2019 David Fahrenthold The Wall Street Journal "for uncovering President Trump’s secret payoffs to two women during his campaign who claimed to have had affairs with him, and the web of supporters who facilitated the transactions, triggering criminal inquiries and calls for impeachment."
Carole Cadwalladr The Guardian "for reporting on how Facebook and other tech firms allowed the spread of misinformation and failed to protect consumer privacy, leading to Cambridge Analytica's theft of 50 million people’s private information, data that was used to boost Donald Trump’s campaign."
The Observer
Staff The New York Times
Staff Associated Press "for authoritative coverage of the Trump administration’s migrant family separation policy that exposed a federal government overwhelmed by the logistics of caring for and tracking thousands of immigrant children."
2020 Mike Baker The Seattle Times "for groundbreaking stories that exposed design flaws in the Boeing 737 MAX that led to two deadly crashes and revealed failures in government oversight."
Dominic Gates
Lewis Kamb
Steve Miletich
Robert Faurtechi ProPublica "for their investigation into America's 7th Fleet after a series of deadly naval accidents in the Pacific."
T. Christian Miller
Megan Rose
Staff The Wall Street Journal "for revelatory work showing how a California utility’s neglect of its equipment caused countless wildfires, including one that wiped out the town of Paradise and killed 85 people."
2021 Staff AL.com "for a year-long investigation of K-9 units and the damage that police dogs inflict on Americans, including innocent citizens and police officers, prompting numerous statewide reforms."
Staff The Indianapolis Star
Staff Invisible Institute
Staff The Marshall Project
Staff The New York Times "for detailed reporting on how the Trump administration consistently failed to respond properly or adequately to the coronavirus threat, including downplaying its seriousness."
Staff The Wall Street Journal "for its series of stories documenting how nursing home residents were hit particularly hard by the coronavirus pandemic, partially because of improper decisions made by government officials."
2022 Staff The New York Times "for an ambitious project that quantified a disturbing pattern of fatal traffic stops by police, illustrating how hundreds of deaths could have been avoided and how officers typically avoided punishment."[1]
Eli Hager The Marshall Project "for powerful reporting that exposed how local government agencies throughout America quietly pocketed Social Security benefits intended for children in foster care."
Joseph Shapiro National Public Radio
Staff The Washington Post "for a sweeping series on environmental racism, illuminating how American communities of color have disproportionately suffered for decades from dirty air, polluted water and lax or nonexistent environmental protection."
2023 Caroline Kitchener The Washington Post "for unflinching reporting that captured the complex consequences of life after Roe v. Wade, including the story of a Texas teenager who gave birth to twins after new restrictions denied her an abortion."[2]
Kristina Cooke Reuters "for a year-long investigation that exposed how two of the world’s largest automakers and a major poultry supplier in Alabama violated child labor laws and exploited undocumented immigrant children."
Mica Rosenberg
Joshua Schneyer
Stephania Taladrid The New Yorker "for sweeping and empathetic reporting on individuals caught in the abortion fight in New Mexico, Texas and Mexico, including stories about an abortion underground, women and girls trying to get health care, and the final days of a Houston abortion clinic."
2024 Staff Reuters "for an eye-opening series of accountability stories focused on Elon Musk’s automobile and aerospace businesses, stories that displayed remarkable breadth and depth and provoked official probes of his companies’ practices in Europe and the United States"; staff of The Washington Post, "for its sobering examination of the AR-15 semi-automatic rifle, which forced readers to reckon with the horrors wrought by the weapon often used for mass shootings in America."[3]
Staff The Washington Post "for its sobering examination of the AR-15 semi-automatic rifle, which forced readers to reckon with the horrors wrought by the weapon often used for mass shootings in America."[b]
Sharon Lurye Associated Press "for a deeply reported series on the corrosive effect of the pandemic on public education, highlighting the staggering number of students missing from classrooms across America."
Bianca Vázquez Toness
Dave Philipps The New York Times "for groundbreaking reporting that uncovered a pattern of traumatic brain injuries among U.S. troops from blast exposures caused by the weapons they were firing."

Notes

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  1. ^ Moved by the Pulitzer board from the Investigative Reporting category, where it was a finalist.
  2. ^ Moved by the Pulitzer board from the Public Service category, where it was a finalist.

References

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  1. ^ ""2022 Pulitzer Prizes & Finalists"". Pulitzer Prize. May 9, 2022. Retrieved May 9, 2022.
  2. ^ "The 2023 Pulitzer Prize Winner in National Reporting". Pulitzer Prize. Retrieved May 15, 2023.
  3. ^ "Here are the winners of the 2024 Pulitzer Prizes". Poynter. Retrieved May 6, 2023.
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