The son of the late Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and editor Malcom
Johnson, Haynes Johnson has distinguished himself as a newspaperman and
a political reporter in his own right. Johnson won the 1966 Pulitzer
Prize in national reporting for his coverage of the civil rights
demonstrations in Selma, Ala. He is a 40-year veteran newsman in the
nation's capital, first for the Washington Star and still for the
Washington Post. He is the Knight Chair in Public Affairs Journalism at
the Philip Merrill College of Journalism, University of Maryland.
Johnson is considered "one of the most perceptive, the best-informed,
and the most level-headed reporters in Washington," according to former
London Times editor Godfrey Hodgson in the Washington Post Book World.
Thousands of television viewers know him for his reports on the Public
Broadcasting Service (PBS) program "Washington Week in Review" and
"NewsHour with Jim Lehrer." Johnson's books on affairs of national
interest include: "The Bay of Pigs: The Leaders' Story of Brigade
2056," "In the Absence of Power: Governing America," "Sleepwalking
Through History: America in the Reagan Years," "The System: The
American Way of Politics at the Breaking Point," and "The Best of
Times: America in the Clinton Years." Johnson earned his bachelor's in
journalism at the University of Missouri and holds a master's from the
University of Wisconsin at Madison.