Jim Lehrer, a veteran journalist and respected anchor of PBS NewsHour, exemplified the highest standards of integrity and professionalism in broadcast journalism. His incisive interviews and thoughtful analysis informed and enlightened audiences for decades, earning him admiration and trust as a trusted source of news and information.

"On a daily basis there are some huge ones that are, sure, from time to time, but it is helping the reader sort through all this sort of gray stuff out there."



"We have increasingly fewer and fewer journalists who have any military experience and understand what life is like in the military and in combat."



"As I say, I'm a discourse advocate. What form it comes is less important to me than the fact that there is discourse."



"Best I can do for them is to give them every piece of information I can find and let them make the judgments. That's just my basic view of my function as a journalist."


1

"If we don't have an informed electorate we don't have a democracy. So I don't care how people get the information, as long as they get it. I'm just doing it my particular way and I feel lucky I can do it the way I want to do it."


1

"I have great faith in the intelligence of the American viewer and reader to put two and two together and come up with four."



"I'm an expert on the NewsHour and it isn't how I practice journalism. I am not involved in the story. I serve only as a reporter or someone asking questions. I am not the story."


2

"My own view, there is a need for and a demonstrated need for more journalism now than there ever has been."

