
MSNBC anchorwoman Rachel Maddow discusses the 2024 vice presidential debate. | MSNBC screenshot
While accepting one of this yearâs Walter Cronkite Awards for Excellence in Political Journalism from the USC Annenberg Norman Lear Center earlier this month, Rachel Maddow issued something of a challenge in the form of advice to American media: cover the people, not those in power.

At the December 12 ceremony at the National Press Club in Washington, Maddow accepted the award for a segment on her MSNOW (formerly MSNBC) show on this springâs massive, nationwide protests against the Trump administrationâs policies.
Her speech centered around both the awardsâ 2025 theme â âHow a Free Press Defends Democracyâ â and the subject of her showâs segment.
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âIn national news, when we cover people who arenât technically in power, it is⊠often as people who are affected by the decisions of the people who are in power,â Maddow said. âBut if we are serious about doing this work in a democracy and for a democracy, that categorization is backwards.

Because in a democracy, the controlling force, the real power, ultimately is with the people. And when the people are expressing themselves politically â which means peacefully â they are telling power what it can do and what it cannot do.â
The Peabody and Emmy-winning out journalist asked those gathered to imagine âa faraway country with its democracy at risk.â

âItâs under pressure from a leader having his friends buy up and domesticate previously independent media, doing his best to intimidate or shut down the rest. He has the intent to rule by force, to consolidate all power in himself and rule indefinitely without being constrained by election results,â she said.
Maddow went on to explain that American mediaâs foreign correspondents would not judge whether this hypothetical countryâs democracy would survive by scrutinizing the words and actions of its despotic leader, but would instead focus on the peopleâs reaction to that leaderâs actions.
âThe story of our age, I really believe, the story of our democracy right now is not a Washington story, and it is not easy to cover, but right now it is the most important story in the world,â Maddow went on.
âI want to encourage all of you to look to the response of the people and not just the way they are victimized and affected by those in power, because it is the response of the people that will decide whether or not weâre here next year doing awards like this again.â
Alongside Maddow and other national and local journalists, comedian and actor Jon Stewart accepted the first-ever Cronkite Award for âComedic News and Commentaryâ for hosting Comedy Centralâs The Daily Show.

Ahead of the ceremony, the Norman Lear Centerâs founding director, Martin Kaplan, said in a statement that âThe message sent by honoring these winners is that the press isnât âthe enemy of the peopleâ â itâs the firewall between the public and disinformation, abuse of power, and corruption.â