Today is the best of times to, once again, review The Post, the chronicle of the Washington Post’s breakthrough on the American national scene, and the publication of the infamous Pentagon Papers by both the New York Times and the Washington Post during Nixon’s first term could have also been told under the Post’s current slogan Democracy Dies in Darkness.
The movie tackles five main themes.
The contents of the Pentagon Papers
The classified documents show that the American decision-making process when it came to the war was flawed and that numerous US administrations knew for a fact that the Vietnam War couldn’t be won, meaning administrations kept sending young Americans to an absurd and unnecessary death.
[The US administrations] violated the Geneva Convention, they lied to Congress, they lied to the public. They knew we couldn’t win and still sent boys to die. Seventy percent of those boys [died] just to avoid [the US] being humiliated.
The mission of the press
The publication of the Papers started with the introduction of the Post on the Stock Market. The prospectus allows the investors to withdraw in case of extraordinary circumstances occurring in the week following the company’s going public. When the Post was about to publish its first article related to the Papers, some were arguing that the move could lead the Department of Justice to issue an injunction, which could be viewed by bankers as extraordinary circumstances, allowing them to withdraw and thus to sink the Post. To overcome this menace, Katherine Graham returns to the mission of the Washington Post, as mentioned in the same prospectus. The Post is about outstanding news collection and reporting and will be dedicated to the welfare of the nation and to the principles of a free press.
Ben Bradley argues that giving the Nixon administration a free pass isn’t caution but cowardice and draws a tight correlation between the freedom of the press, as well as journalists and the press rising up to the difficulties and challenges of their time, and the future of the country. It will look like we were afraid. We will lose. The country will lose. Nixon wins this one, and the next one, and all the ones after that, because we were afraid, because the only way to assert the right to publish is to publish.
The freedom of the press
Nixon’s administration attempts to legally block the publication of the Pentagon Papers by issuing an injunction against The New York Times and The Washington Post, raising the question of the effective extent of the First Amendment.
The problem with the Pentagon Papers wasn’t just that they were leaked, but that they were also confidential documents, obviously harmful to the US government as well as to the two major political parties, since the behavior of both Democratic and Republican administrations is chronicled. McNamara served as Secretary of Defense under democrat John F. Kennedy and democrat Lyndon B. Johnson. Harry Truman was also a democrat. Dwight D Eisenhower and Richard Nixon were both republicans. This confidentiality is used as an argument in the administration’s case before the Supreme Court. Why would other countries talk to us in confidence if secrets like this can be leaked? However, it is the damage these Papers could cause to the presidency, and by extension, the president, that is truly concerning. The Post and the NYT’s decision to hold the government accountable is depicted as throwing the government under the bus – if the president can’t keep secrets, he can’t govern – and putting the integrity of the presidency at stake. But is protecting the presidency and the president the press’s mission and job, or are the freedom of the press and the quest for the truth more important? The Supreme Court renders a six-to-three judgment considering that Nixon’s administration failed to show justification for the imposition of such a restraint or to prove that the publication would cause grave and irreparable danger. Justice Hugo Black explains his vote in a scathing review of the origins and need of the First Amendment.
The press was to serve the governed, not the governors. The Government’s power to censor the press was abolished so that the press would remain forever free to censure the Government. The press was protected so that it could bear the secrets of government and inform the people. Only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government. And paramount among the responsibilities of a free press is the duty to prevent any part of the government from deceiving the people and sending them off to distant lands to die of foreign fevers and foreign shot and shell.
The emancipation of Kay Graham
Katherine Graham’s evolution is hypnotizing. The Washington Post was purchased by Katherine’s father, Agnes Ernst Meyer, who later gave it to her husband, Phil Graham, rather than to her. It’s only after her husband’s suicide that she will head The Post. Far from troubling me that my father thought of my husband and not me, it pleased me. In fact, it never crossed my mind that he might have viewed me as someone to take an important job at the paper. Arthur Parson constantly brings up her father’s decision in repeated attempts to undermine her authority and depict her as a lady who throws a great party but who doesn’t have the resolve to turn serious profit. Bradlee, on the other hand, doesn’t see Meyer’s decision as anything more than the product of the times he lived in and not a proof of Kay’s inability to handle the job.
Katherine’s life and ordeal are summarized by Tony Bradlee, Ben’s wife, who explains to her husband why Kay’s decision to publish the Pentagon Papers is braver than his decision to publish the exact same papers. That’s brave … but Kay, Kay’s in a position she never thought she would be in… when you’re told time and time again you’re not good enough, your opinion doesn’t matter as much, when they don’t just look past you, when to them, you’re not even there, when that’s been your reality for so long, it’s hard not to make yourself think it’s true. So to make this decision, to risk her fortune, and the company that’s been her entire life, well I think that’s brave.
But Kay won’t just stand up for the company that’s been her entire life; she will eventually stand up for herself. This is no longer my father’s company, it’s no longer my husband’s company. It’s my company. And anyone who thinks otherwise probably doesn’t belong on my board. The depth of this tirade isn’t in how well it is written or how great Meryl Streep delivered it. Still, in the realization that it actually happened, that the woman who oversaw the Washington Post’s most iconic period reclaimed her life at the exact moment her company became one of the illustrative examples of the freedom of the press.
Kay’s decision to publish the Pentagon Papers resonates throughout the United States, and the next day, other newspapers follow in her lead and publish the Papers.
The menace of Nixon
Nixon banning Judith from covering his daughter’s wedding might seem like an insignificant incident. Judith had previously been mean to the first daughter, and Nixon was merely retaliating as a father. But Nixon was also the president, and banning Judith was actually the president banning a journalist and interfering with the freedom of the press. Throughout the movie, Nixon’s tendency for secrecy, his pettiness, and his disregard for the First Amendment are underlined. Time and time again, the Washington Post’s reporters seem to be anticipating Watergate, getting ready for “a next time”. The movie ends exactly where All The President’s Men starts, with the robbery at the Democratic National Committee, the incident that will eventually be known as Watergate and stain Nixon’s presidency and his legacy.
The timing of the movie is worth mentioning. The free press is today under constant attack from the Republican President of the United States. From Fake News, to the bickering, to treating Jim Acosta just like Nixon treated Judith, to the lying to the suing threats, and the real desire of reviewing the libel laws, Donald Trump is a menace. On the other hand, American women are experiencing a new and long-awaited wave of genuine emancipation. The 2016 presidential election showed that America isn’t over sexism! Women are marching not only against the government but also against the system. There is a nationwide call for women to get involved in politics, to run for office, and to help create the future they want.
Finally, I hope local media will follow Kay’s lead and stop reading the news and start writing it. The time has come for reporters to take over our outlets. Why the anchor was laughing isn’t an article I want to read. Where another journalist went dancing isn’t an article I want to read. How great this or that politician isn’t an article I want to read! It’s time we get our own Ben Bradlee, our own Ben Bagdikian, our own Bob Woodward, and our own Carl Bernstein.
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