John Dickerson Is Departing CBS News

 

CBS Evening News co-anchor John Dickerson announced that he is departing CBS News on Monday.

In a message posted on Instagram, Dickerson wrote:

At the end of this year, I will leave CBS, sixteen years after I sat in as Face the Nation anchor for the first time. I am extremely grateful for all that CBS gave me — the work, the audience’s attention and the honor of being a part of the network’s history — and I am grateful for the dear colleagues who’ve made me a better journalist and a better human. I will miss you.

Dickerson’s departure comes at a time of great upheaval at the storied network. Its parent company, Paramount Plus, was widely scrutinized — including by Dickerson — for settling a lawsuit filed against it by President Donald Trump over a 60 Minutes interview with his 2024 general election opponent, former Vice President Kamala Harris.

More recently, former New York Times editor and Free Press founder Bari Weiss assumed the role of editor-in-chief at the company to the chagrin of many on the left. Weiss, a lifelong liberal, has emerged as one of the mainstream media’s most vocal critics in recent years, and is expected to make considerable changes at the network.

Here is Dickerson’s monologue about the network’s settlement with Trump earlier this year:

Paramount Global, the parent company of CBS News, settled a suit with President Trump today. Journalists don’t like to report on themselves. Sometimes that’s false humility. Mostly, it’s a practical limitation. Reporters try to find order in chaos. We prefer to explain the cause of a bombing, the intent of a bill, the marvel of a new discovery. Putting chaos in preliminary order helps viewers make sense of their world. They tell us this at airports, restaurants, and at church. The audience brings us their fears, their questions, their good faith view of things. It reminds us that we are stewards of that concern. It’s a grace to receive another’s trust, but also to have a mission that shapes your work.

Mission — that can sound grandiose. We are not all that. Public figures have taught us that misguided mission can do more harm than brute force. We pride ourselves on our BS detector, so it ought to work on ourselves, too. When it doesn’t, the stakes are real, a loss of public trust, the spread of misinformation.

A visitor to our newsrooms might wonder why we debate a single word for so long, why it takes hours to answer the simple question, what is this story about, why there’s a cry of frustration when a detail is off by an inch. That is what it work looks like when it is deeply felt, when the audience’s concerns become ours, passed by bucket brigade from the subjects of our stories to correspondents, to producers, to editors, fact checkers, and writers. The obstacles to getting it right are many. The Paramount settlement poses a new obstacle. Can you hold power to account after paying it millions? Can an audience trust you when it thinks you’ve traded away that trust? The audience will decide that. Our job is to show up, to honor what we witness on behalf of the people we witness it for.

The network’s first heroes ran to rooftops during the bombing of London. Its current ones carry that same instinct, but another story from CBS’s early days also captures this spirit. The young correspondent was filing a story when it started to rain. The takes they’d already filmed were fine, everybody could have just gone inside. But she persisted. The rain turning the notes in her hand to pulp. Again and again, she worked to get it right. This wasn’t London under the fire. It was just a regular story. That’s the point. So the rain has picked up, but we’ll stay at it. We hope you will too. See you tomorrow

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