Finalist: Editorial Staff of the Capital Gazette, Annapolis, Md.
For deeply personal editorials that reflected on gun violence, loss and recovery following a newsroom attack that left five of the writers’ colleagues dead.
Nominated Work
June 29, 2018
July 1, 2018
July 6, 2018
July 15, 2018
July 29, 2018
December 16, 2018
December 25, 2018
Winners
Prize Winner in Editorial Writing in 2019:
Brent Staples of The New York Times
For editorials written with extraordinary moral clarity that charted the racial fault lines in the United States at a polarizing moment in the nation’s history.
Editorial Writing
Finalists
Nominated as finalists in Editorial Writing in 2019:
Editorial Staff of The Advocate, Baton Rouge, La.
For persuasive editorials that prompted Louisiana voters to abolish a Jim Crow-era law that undermined equal justice in the jury system.
The Jury
The Jury
Jelani Cobb(Chair)
Ira A. Lipman Professor of Journalism, Columbia University; Staff Writer, The New Yorker
Matthew Carroll
Professor of the Practice of Journalism
Susan Goldberg
Editor-in-Chief
Brant Houston
John S. and James L. Knight Foundation Chair in Investigative and Enterprise Reporting
Laura A. Kiernan
Editorial Board Member
Winners in Editorial Writing
Andie Dominick of The Des Moines Register
For examining in a clear, indignant voice, free of cliché or sentimentality, the damaging consequences for poor Iowa residents of privatizing the state’s administration of Medicaid.
Art Cullen
For editorials fueled by tenacious reporting, impressive expertise and engaging writing that successfully challenged powerful corporate agricultural interests in Iowa.
John Hackworth and Brian Gleason of Sun Newspapers
For fierce, indignant editorials that demanded truth and change after the deadly assault of an inmate by corrections officers.
Kathleen Kingsbury
For taking readers on a tour of restaurant workers' bank accounts to expose the real price of inexpensive menu items and the human costs of income inequality.
2019 Prize Winners
South Florida Sun Sentinel
For exposing failings by school and law enforcement officials before and after the deadly shooting rampage at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.
David Barstow, Susanne Craig and Russ Buettner of The New York Times
For an exhaustive 18-month investigation of President Donald Trump’s finances that debunked his claims of self-made wealth and revealed a business empire riddled with tax dodges. (Moved by the Board from the Investigative Reporting category, where it was also entered.)
Matt Hamilton, Harriet Ryan and Paul Pringle of the Los Angeles Times
For consequential reporting on a University of Southern California gynecologist accused of violating hundreds of young women for more than a quarter-century.
Carlos Lozada of The Washington Post
For trenchant and searching reviews and essays that joined warm emotion and careful analysis in examining a broad range of books addressing government and the American experience.