Newhouse School Announces Winners of 2023 Toner Prizes for Excellence in Political Reporting

Politico won the 2023 Toner Prize for national political reporting, and chief investigative reporter Phil Williams of WTVF-TV in Nashville, Tennessee won the Toner Prize for local political reporting.
The winners of the annual聽聽were announced by 网爆门鈥檚聽聽during a ceremony Monday night at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center in Washington. Sen. Mitt Romney delivered the keynote speech and CNN anchor and senior political correspondent Abby Phillip served as master of ceremonies.
Toner Prize for Excellence in National Political Reporting
Winner: Politico
Reporters: Josh Gerstein, Alex Ward, Peter Canellos, Hailey Fuchs, Heidi Przybyla, Elena Schneider and Holly Otterbein
Entry: 鈥淭he Supreme Court and Abortion鈥
-

The reporting team from Politico pose on stage while accepting the 2023 Toner Prize for Excellence in National Political Reporting at the Toner Prizes ceremony in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Scott Robinson Photography)
Politico broke the news that the U.S. Supreme Court voted to strike down the landmark Roe v. Wade decision granting abortion rights. The outlet published a PDF of the initial draft majority opinion, which was circulated inside the court and obtained by Politico. No draft decision in the modern history of the court has been disclosed publicly while a case was still pending. The revelation intensified scrutiny of the tactics of the conservative legal movement in building a new Supreme Court majority during the Trump presidency. Politico鈥檚 reporting also transformed the political year, putting abortion rights front and center in the 2022 midterm elections.
Judges鈥 comments
鈥淎 bombshell scoop with seismic repercussions for the third branch of government. Cautiously written to stick to the facts. Revelatory follow-ups on conservative outsiders trying to influence conservative Justices. This reporting took courage and professionalism.鈥 鈥 Ann Compton
鈥淚t was the political story of the year, and the extraordinary leak reverberated nationally and locally, galvanizing women and demonstrating the degree conservatives have shaped the judiciary. And it opened the window into how the Supreme Court operates, especially highlighting silent conflicts of interests.鈥 鈥 Maralee Schwartz
Toner Prize for Excellence in National Political Reporting聽Honorable Mention

ProPublica and The Texas Tribune
Reporters: Jeremy Schwartz, Jessica Priest, Chris Morran, Perla Trevizo and Andrea Suozzo
Entry: 鈥淐hurch Politics,鈥 which explored the political activity of churches and the potential impact on candidates and campaigns.
Judge鈥檚 comment
鈥淧roPublica and The Texas Tribune joined forces in a ground-breaking five-part series on how churches and right-wing organizations representing themselves as churches violate the terms of federal tax exemption by taking sides on political candidates and issues.鈥 鈥 Joseph B. Treaster
Toner Prize for Excellence in Local Political Reporting

Winner: Phil Williams, WTVF-TV, Nashville, Tennessee
Entry: 鈥溾
As the station鈥檚 chief investigative reporter, Williams led WTVF鈥檚 dogged efforts to look into how laws are made in the Tennessee General Assembly. The legislative branch is ruled by a supermajority with near-absolute power that sets its own rules. The exhaustive 鈥淩evealed鈥 investigation was based on a simple premise: citizens cannot fully understand how the system can be fixed unless they understand how it really works.
Judges鈥 comments
鈥淚t is so hard to crack into the secretive world of campaign cash and lobbying in a state capital 鈥 and nearly impossible to do it on video. But somehow Phil Williams managed to do just that in this brilliant series shining light on state lawmaker practices and crisply showing viewers exactly HOW legislation is shaped and the exact questionable practices that are difficult to put into clear journalistic examples in any medium. I鈥檓 blown away by these pieces and will be using them to teach.鈥 鈥 Christina Bellantoni
鈥淭his is what a great local news investigation looks like. Documentaries like this one are not done nearly enough. It is excellent! It informs residents about what their lawmakers are doing and who has influence and power over them.鈥 鈥 Beverly Kirk
About the Toner Prizes
More than 250 people attended the first in-person Toner Prizes event in three years. The awards, along with the聽聽at the Newhouse School, are named after Robin Toner, a 1976 graduate of 网爆门 and the first woman to serve as national political correspondent of The New York Times.

Among other speakers at Monday鈥檚 ceremony were 网爆门 Chancellor聽, Newhouse School dean聽听补苍诲听, Kramer Director of the 网爆门 Institute for Democracy, Journalism and Citizenship.
Judges
- Christina Bellantoni, professor at the University of Southern California鈥檚 Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism and former political reporter and editor for The Los Angeles Times
- Ann Compton, retired reporter and White House correspondent for ABC News Radio
- Beverly Kirk, director of Washington Programs at 网爆门鈥檚 S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications and Professor of Practice in the broadcast and digital journalism department
- Maralee Schwartz, retired political editor of The Washington Post
- Joseph B. Treaster, professor at the University of Miami School of Communication, a former correspondent at The New York Times and a contributor to the Times and other publications