Washington – Long-Time White House Reporter, Controversial Journalist Helen Thomas Dies

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    (FILE) Photo dated 11 July 2007 shows long-time White House correspondent Helen Thomas taking up her seat on the front row of the remodeled Brady Press Briefing Room in the West Wing of the White House in Washington, DC. Media reports on 20 July 2013 state Helen Thomas, first female member of the White House press group and longtime  correspondent has died at age 92. Thomas career spanned the terms of 10 presidents during a period of almost 50 years.  EPA/CHIP SOMODEVILLA / POOLWashington – Former White House correspondent Helen Thomas, a trailblazing journalist who reported on every U.S. president from John Kennedy to Barack Obama, died on Saturday at the age of 92, The Gridiron Club and Foundation said.

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    Thomas, who worked the White House beat for 49 years for United Press International and Hearst newspapers, died after a long illness, the Washington journalists’ organization said in a statement.

    As the senior news service correspondent at the White House, Thomas ended dozens of presidential news conferences with the familiar phrase “Thank you, Mr. President.”

    She was known for her straight-to-the-point questioning of presidents and press secretaries in a manner that some considered dogged. Others, including many fellow reporters, considered her style in her later years to be too combative and agenda-driven.

    President Barack Obama in a statement praised “her fierce belief that our democracy works best when we ask tough questions and hold our leaders to account,” and noted that in her long tenure Thomas “never failed to keep presidents – myself included – on their toes.”

    In the last 10 years of her career Thomas was a columnist for Hearst, a job that allowed her opinions to surface more than in her work as a hard-news reporter for UPI.

    Thomas announced in June 2010 that she was retiring from Hearst, effective immediately, after comments she made about Israel and the Palestinians, including that Israel should “get the hell out of Palestine,” were captured on videotape and widely disseminated on the Internet.

    Thomas later issued a statement: “I deeply regret my comments I made last week regarding the Israelis and the Palestinians. They do not reflect my heart-felt belief that peace will come to the Middle East only when all parties recognize the need for mutual respect and tolerance. May that day come soon.”

    Thomas believed the Washington media had grown soft and was reluctant to challenge government, views she shared in her 2007 book “Watchdogs of Democracy? The Waning Washington Press Corps and How It Has Failed the Public.”

    She was especially rough on former President George W. Bush, who in 2003 she described as the “worst president ever,” and the Iraq war, which she felt the media had abetted by not challenging Bush strongly enough on it.

    In 2009 she asked Obama, “When are you going to get out of Afghanistan? Why are we continuing to kill and die there? What is the real excuse and don’t give us this Bushism ‘If we don’t go there, they’ll all come here.'”

    Veteran NBC News correspondent Andrea Mitchell on Saturday tweeted that Thomas “made it possible for all of us who followed,” and Dana Perino, press secretary for George W. Bush, tweeted, “First day I ever took the podium she came to encourage me.”

    DEAN OF WHITE HOUSE MEDIA CORPS

    Thomas was often combative in dealing with the White House, particularly when she felt she was being denied access. Reuters White House reporter Steve Holland recalled that early one morning during Bill Clinton’s presidency, she was spotted kicking the locked door to the White House press office, demanding to speak to the staff.

    Thomas grew up in Detroit, the daughter of Lebanese immigrants, and will be buried in that city. Middle Eastern affairs were a strong interest and impromptu comments about Israel and the Palestinians in May 2010 were her undoing.

    Asked by an interviewer from the website rabbilive.com if she had any comments about Israel, Thomas responded, “Get the hell out of Palestine.” She said Jews should “go home, to Poland and Germany, America and everywhere else.”

    After the interview spread on the Internet, her comments were criticized by the White House, the White House Correspondents’ Association, the co-author of one of her books and the agency that handled her speaking engagements, among others. Shortly after, she announced her retirement, two months short of her 90th birthday.

    Thomas established a number of firsts for women journalists in becoming one of Washington’s best known reporters. She was the first woman officer in the White House Correspondents Association in its 50-year history, becoming its first woman president. In 1975, she broke the 90-year all-male barrier at the Gridiron Club, an organization of leading Washington journalists, and became its first female president in 1993.

    She also supported scores of women starting out in the news business.

    Thomas’s career began as a copy girl on the Washington Daily News and she joined what was then known as United Press in 1943. She was assigned to the White House in 1961 in part because of the great interest in first lady Jacqueline Kennedy, as well as the new young president. She became UPI White House bureau chief in 1974, the first woman to head a wire service bureau there. She stayed in that position until 2000 when she joined Hearst.

    Thomas first came to public notice during the Watergate era when she started receiving late-night phone calls from Martha Mitchell, the wife of Attorney General John Mitchell, discussing the scandal.

    “I have witnessed presidents in situations of great triumph and adulation, when they are riding the crest of personal fulfillment, and I have seen them fall off their pedestals through an abuse of power or what President Clinton called ‘a lapse of critical judgment,'” she wrote in her memoir “Front Row at the White House: My Life and Times.”

    Thomas married a professional rival, Douglas Cornell of the Associated Press, in 1971. He died in 1982.


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    57 Comments
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    murray059
    murray059
    10 years ago

    Helen Thomas- “get the hell off planet earth”…..

    bennyt
    bennyt
    10 years ago

    Her hometown, financially bankrupt Detroit, is the perfect place to bury this morally bankrupt anti-Semitic witch.

    ChareidiMan
    ChareidiMan
    10 years ago

    She was a HUGE enemy of Jews and enemy of Israel, she will NOT be missed in the least!

    Giggidy
    Giggidy
    10 years ago

    Mazel tov and good riddance!!

    10 years ago

    She was an anti-semite. Now she will get what she deserves!

    curious
    curious
    10 years ago

    Now she can “go back to where she came from.”

    10 years ago

    Helen Thomas is back where she belongs HELL!

    10 years ago

    Maybe she will have better experiences in the afterlife when she gets the real word of trust in Israel. Hopefully she does not have any rocks to throw at heaven too. B’DE

    victorg
    victorg
    10 years ago

    Another bigot bites the dust, rest in peace you low life!

    CSLMoish
    CSLMoish
    10 years ago

    You rejoice that a woman that spread hatred of the Jews will no longer be able to do so. Somewhere deep in Hell Hitler finally meets his virgin bride Helen.

    Balaboos
    Balaboos
    10 years ago

    Oh Helen dear…may you rust in pieces!

    clear-thinker
    clear-thinker
    10 years ago

    One less person for nk to meet with. Aterg do you plan to make a shiva visit?

    DanielBarbaz
    DanielBarbaz
    10 years ago

    Never in my life have I seen such a Meiskeit—-except for Yasser Arafat YS”V.

    Perhaps they were siblings.

    from-here_to-there
    from-here_to-there
    10 years ago

    sing-along everyone:
    Ding Dong the -itch is dead, the -itch is dead… the wicked -itch is dead!

    10 years ago

    she was a wonderful journalist and a eishes chayil.

    TexasJew
    TexasJew
    10 years ago

    92 years too late.

    username
    username
    10 years ago

    And she’s being buried in Detroit to boot. ROTFL!

    Davethemave
    Davethemave
    10 years ago

    Ding Dong The witch is dead.

    10 years ago

    Second best news of the day, after a family simcha!

    Babishka
    Member
    Babishka
    10 years ago

    B’avod reshoim rinah!

    10 years ago

    To #11 , and all of the other postings blasting #10 - I agree with #10 that it is prohibited to rejoice at the death of one’s enemies. One’s enemies includes gentiles, and not only other Jews. For example, one can be guilty of uttering loshon horah, against gentiles. The prohibition of loshon hora, does not only apply to Jews, but also to non-Jews. While I did not like (and found offensive) Ms. Thomas’ remarks in 2010, (including that Jews control Wall Street, Congress, Hollywood, and the media), and while I did not like some of her hostile questions raised at various news conferences, the fact of the matter is that she is gone. It should be noted that after the uproar in 2010, she stated that her family sponsored Jewish refugees after World War Two, in coming to the USA.

    chayamom
    chayamom
    10 years ago

    And not a moment too soon!

    10 years ago

    It was quite funny to read all the little pithy comments above. Especially the few who called her a witch. Really, you have to admit, she was a quite apparently visually present person and though I will certainly not advocate for her ultimate blessing in the world to come, she does not really deserve downplay as a witch. Really now. A witch? So she was ugly and had a lot of warts in her money. Just another average whacko I say. But her real contribution is that she smiled for the television at her old age. And if you ask me, she was a little bit of a bag lady.

    naisgal
    naisgal
    10 years ago

    Some say she was a good journalist. Yea and the engineers who designed crematoriums were good engineers. No one will miss her, meiskite that she was, inside and out.