Communications
My Very Own Front-Row Seat to History
There鈥檚 still something thrilling about it, days after the fact, when I catch a glimpse of impeachment coverage on the television or hear a podcast snippet about one of the public hearings.
Usually, the producer or host will play an important sound bite, and I鈥檒l pause, not just because of the gravitas of the moment, but because of the memory it elicits.
I remember that; I was there.
When I picked up my life this summer working at a small-town daily newspaper in western Kentucky and moved to the fast-paced media metropolis that is Washington, D.C., I couldn鈥檛 have imagined what opportunities I would be afforded in just the first few weeks I was here.听
I enrolled in 麻豆传媒鈥檚 Journalism and Public Affairs graduate program partly to build the credentials needed to be one of the reporters called on to cover historic moments of national importance like the impeachment of a president.
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I hardly expected it would be a class assignment.听
For the first month or so of my class called Reporting of Public Affairs, my congressional assignments were, as best I could surmise, normal. That is, I covered hearings on terrorism threats at domestic chemical facilities or the rise of shadow Russian merceneries in third-world countries. Each hearing was its own fascinating experience, but, to be fair, they all amounted to 鈥渂usiness as usual鈥 on Capitol Hill.
But when House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced the start of an impeachment inquiry into President Donald Trump鈥檚 dealings with Ukraine this fall, the mood in Washington, and thus the type of assignment my colleagues and I took on, were anything but normal.
My first crack at impeachment coverage came when European Union Ambassador Gordon Sondland testified to the House Intelligence Committee that there had been a 鈥渜uid pro quo鈥 involving a valuable White House meeting and military funds for dirt on one of Trump鈥檚 political foes.
That moment inside the massive Longworth Office Building hearing room was as palpable as it has been described to me. You become quite close with your neighbors in a hearing room setting like that, mostly because you have stood in line with them for hours just for the chance to be there when the committee gavels into session. Those sitting around me -- such as tourists, political junkies and activists -- audibly gasped, because they, like me, understood the gravity of what was being said.听
Sondland鈥檚 verbal exchanges with lawmakers kept the 100 or so onlookers in near-silent awe.
And it鈥檚 important to note just how few people really are in 鈥渢he room where it happens鈥 when, well, it happens. Room 1100 in the Longworth House Office Building usually seats about 150, but that鈥檚 without at least 50 reporters and photographers from around the world, plus a slew of congressional staffers and U.S. Capitol Police.听
With a tight squeeze, the committees can usually make room for about 100 members of the public, so that means the line to be one of those select few inside usually starts forming at about 5 or 6 in the morning.听
Once inside, though, the room is breathtaking. It鈥檚 usually home to the House Ways and Means Committee, but it鈥檚 also the largest room on the House side of the Hill, so it鈥檚 commandeered by higher-profile committees when their hearings demand it. The oval hearing room with its domed ceiling and eagle-adorned eaves is impressive each time you see it.
If there鈥檚 one thing the impeachment of a president has shown me these last few months, it鈥檚 at the heart of all the political showmanship and aesthetic grandeur, these men and women are real people, just like me. They all started somewhere and climbed the ladder to where they are today. They jumped at opportunities, they made mistakes but they never stopped trying, no matter their party affiliation, to do what鈥檚 right for their constituents and the country.
That鈥檚 a lesson learned covering any part of the political process 鈥 an impeachment hearing, the markup of a bill or even just watching lawmakers enjoy their lunch in a crowded cafeteria. I鈥檓 never going to forget my front-row seat to history. But I also don鈥檛 intend to make it my last. (Note: This is an excerpt from a longer piece.)
Austin Ramsey is a graduate journalism student at 麻豆传媒 and a reporting fellow at the Investigative Reporting Workshop. He is also Washington Post practicum student and president of AU鈥檚 School of Communication Graduate Student Council. Before AU, he was a city government reporter at the Messenger-Inquirer in Owensboro, Kentucky.