Reporter
and Author William Greider Dies at Age 83
William
"Bill" Greider, a veteran journalist and author who spent decades
reporting on politics and economics for national media outlets, died Wednesday
at his home in Washington, D.C. at the age of 83.
Born on Aug. 6, 1936
to Harold and Gladys, Greider was raised in Wyoming, Ohio and graduated from
Princeton in 1958. He died from complications of congestive heart
failure, according to his son Cameron.
In addition to Cameron, Greider is survived by his wife Linda, his daughter Katharine, his sister Nancy, and four grandchildren.
In addition to Cameron, Greider is survived by his wife Linda, his daughter Katharine, his sister Nancy, and four grandchildren.
A longtime national
affairs correspondent for The Nation,
Greider also spent 17 years at Rolling Stone and
15 years at The Washington
Post. He was a correspondent for six Frontline documentaries
on PBS and authored several books. During his tenure at The
Nation, Greider was a frequently featured writer on Common Dreams.
Greider's editors,
fellow reporters, and readers have turned to social media since his death on
Christmas Day to recognize his contributions to journalism and highlight some
of his most celebrated pieces of writing.
Katrina vanden Heuvel,
editorial director and publisher of The Nation, wrote on Twitter that Greider understood
"something all too rare in this 24-7 media world. The process of
reimagining democracy requires not only real respect for the people, deep
reporting, historical insight, but also patience."
Among Greider's most famous articles was "The Education of David Stockman," which was published in The Atlantic in 1981. The critical essay about President Ronald Reagan's budget director and Reaganomics earned Greider a George Polk Award and later appeared in one of his books.
In a pair of tweets, John Nichols, fellow national affairs
correspondent for The Nation, called Greider "a friend and
comrade and occasional co-conspirator."
"He taught me so
see politics not as a game but high-stakes struggle for power in which the
Democrats, sadly, yielded far too much ground to an increasingly right-wing
Republican Party," wrote Nichols.
"Born in the year
of Franklin Delano Roosevelt's greatest electoral triumph, William Greider was
in many senses the last New Dealer," Nichols continued. "His death,
at age 83, represents a stark loss for American journalism. And for those of us
who knew his great generosity of spirit and intellect."
Eric Etheridge, who
edited Greider's column for Rolling Stone in the early 1990s,
shared a story about the journalist's persistence in a series of tweets
Thursday.
In a 2015 column for The Nation that
subsequently appeared on Common Dreams, Greider wrote that the
country was facing a stark choice between an ascendant Donald Trump in the
Republican Party and the promise presented by Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.)
during the early months of his first presidential run.
It was September of that year when Greider asked readers to consider which of the two politicians—though, at the time, he thought neither was likely to win—the United States would follow:
It was September of that year when Greider asked readers to consider which of the two politicians—though, at the time, he thought neither was likely to win—the United States would follow:
We can only speculate
on what might happen next. One party or the other might split apart.
Independent formations could appear on the left or right and try to overturn
one established party or the other. The center, given its advantages, might
hang on to control of government, but it isn't holding on to the people.
We may wish for reason
in high places—that powerful financial and corporate interests recognize the
dangers and accede to real reform and economic revival for the broad populace.
Don't count on it. We cannot assume the powerful will yield their advantages
without a fight. Nor should we expect that the future will necessarily be
progressive.
History suggests that crusty old political parties in powerful nations have a hard time acknowledging that they have to change or die. Politicians should read a little history—American history—and get over their illusions.
History suggests that crusty old political parties in powerful nations have a hard time acknowledging that they have to change or die. Politicians should read a little history—American history—and get over their illusions.
This is what the
politicians should ponder for 2016, even if they don't yet have the nerve to
talk about it.
In an obituary published Friday, Payday
Report founder Mike Elk described Greider as his "mentor"
and wrote that "upon hearing the news that he died, I cried so hard. I owe
my career to Bill—he was a hero of mine, who gave me the confidence to push on
with low pay in a media world that so often pushes blue-collar kids like me
out."
"I first got to
know him as a young 22-year-old labor reporter, when I had the incredible
fortune to have a desk just a few feet away from Greider's office, who was in
his 70s and still writing regularly for The Nation," Elk
explained.
"He was folksy, down-to-earth, swore a lot, and was funny as all hell. He was an old school journalist from the pre-internet era when journalists actually sat down and took time to talk to regular people."
"He was folksy, down-to-earth, swore a lot, and was funny as all hell. He was an old school journalist from the pre-internet era when journalists actually sat down and took time to talk to regular people."
Elk wrote of his
mentor that "a student of the populist movement, he saw the liberal elite's
discourse as being a barrier to the ability of social movements to achieve
change. He encouraged me to ignore the D.C. media types and focus on calling
out how the elites talked down to workers."
As Greider once told
Elk, "That's journalism, people are gonna talk shit on you no matter what
you say so why not just to tell the truth."