Journalist Helen Thomas died Saturday at the age of 92, according to The Gridiron Club & Foundation. Over the decades, she made her mark as a woman journalist who shattered barriers in the nation's capital and as someone who invariably spoke her mind. She became a fixture at the White House, too, but her career came to an ignominious end due to her bluntly expressed opinions — especially her criticism of Israel and Jews.

Thomas was a trailblazer and gadfly. Had she stepped away after the first six decades of her career, she would have been hailed simply as one of the most famous White House reporters in modern times.

"It sounds glamorous, and it is — and it's a wonderful job — but there's a lot of legwork involved in doing it well. And Helen was committed to doing it as well as anybody," former Associated Press reporter Jennifer Loven says.

Loven and Thomas met while Loven was working as an intern in the early 1990s. She retained her awe for Thomas as she rose to be a full-fledged White House correspondent for the AP. Even after decades on the job, Loven says, Thomas continued to scramble after stories, and yet took time to mentor a younger woman who was reporting for a rival news agency.

"You know, there is a confederation among journalists that you help each other up until the moment when you have to beat the crap out of each other," Loven says. "And she was true to that."

Her Path To The White House

Thomas was born in the small town of Winchester, Ky., the daughter of two Lebanese immigrants who arrived in the U.S. with less than $20 in their pockets. Soon after her birth, the family moved to Michigan. Altogether, the Thomases had nine children. Helen Thomas went to public schools and then to Wayne State University. She later became a cub reporter in Washington, D.C., and a chronicler of so-called "women's issues," before covering various federal agencies for what was then United Press.

She covered Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kennedy on the campaign trail, then followed him to the White House, where she continued to report for nearly five decades. Her sign-off at the end of press conferences, "Thank you, Mr. President," became so well-known it was included in movies about White House intrigue.

Thomas' place as a part of the institution meant her reputation preceded her. B. Jay Cooper was a press aide to President George H.W. Bush. In 2010, he told NPR's Audie Cornish how he'd been warned about Thomas:

"When I started in 1989, Marlin Fitzwater, who was the press secretary at the time, said to me, 'Now B. Jay, when you come in, Helen's going to be sitting on the bureau outside my office.' I said, 'Yes, Sir.' He said, 'She's going to ask you questions.' I said, 'Yeah.' He says, 'Don't answer them. Don't say anything, because anything you say will be the top of her story.' "

Thomas was the first woman to join the White House Correspondents' Association, and the first to join the Gridiron Club. She pushed hard for entry, knowing both professional groups provided validation for reporters in D.C.

A Professional Provocateur

She thrived on the public theater of the job, poking and provoking presidents of both parties at press conferences. But Thomas put a premium on shoe-leather reporting. Following the Monica Lewinsky scandal and impeachment of President Clinton, Thomas spoke on NPR's Talk of the Nation in 1999:

"Well, I know we're being accused of overkill, but I think that the aggression in the aftermath of being lied to for nine months, where everything was inoperative that they said, and we were the transmission belt, a certain disillusionment does set in, and we all realized that we were not aggressive enough. We didn't ask enough questions."

In 2000, United Press International was sold to the Rev. Sun Myung Moon of the Unification Church. Thomas wanted no part of him. She became an opinion columnist for Hearst Newspapers, unshackled from notions of journalistic objectivity, but still present in the White House press room.

"What does the president mean by 'total victory?'" she asked White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan in a memorable exchange from 2005. "We'll never leave Iraq until we have total victory? What does that mean?"

"When you engage in a war, you take the fight to the enemy," McClellan replied. "You go on the offense. And that's exactly what we're doing. We are fighting them there, so that we don't have to fight them here." McClellan began to talk about what the administration learned from the Sept. 11 attacks when Thomas interrupted.

"Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11," she said.

Felled By Her Own Sword

Her outspokenness occasionally inspired controversies that would flare up for a day or two and then subside. But it took only 30 seconds in 2010 to dislodge her, at the age of 89, from the perch in the White House press corps she prized so deeply.

A rabbi at a Jewish heritage day celebration, held on the White House lawn, asked Thomas if she had any comments on Israel.

"Tell them to get the hell out of Palestine," she answered.

When asked, "So where should they go? What should they do?" she replied, "They'd go home — Poland, Germany." It was a particularly galling jab, given how many Jews were driven from or murdered in those two countries during World War II.

Hearst announced Thomas' retirement soon after the video was posted online. She eventually took a position as a columnist at a small Virginia paper, but her voice would be little heard from again. Thomas' fans and former colleagues offer no defense of those remarks that day, but say her legacy is being wrongly overshadowed by the incident.

"She stood up and she asked the questions that are hard to ask, that are challenging," Loven says. "You could find clip after clip after clip of White House press secretaries standing up at the podium and saying, 'Well, Helen, I reject the premise of your question,' which she invariably found insufficient, and would tell them so immediately."

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

LINDA WERTHEIMER, HOST:

This is WEEKEND EDITION, from NPR News, I'm Linda Wertheimer. Journalist Helen Thomas died this morning at her home in Washington, D.C., after a long illness. She was 92. Over decades, she made her mark as a woman journalist who shattered barriers in the nation's capital and invariably spoke her mind. She became a fixture at the White House, too. But toward the end her bluntly expressed opinions about Israel and Jews cast a shadow on her long career. NPR's David Folkenflik has this remembrance.

DAVID FOLKENFLIK, BYLINE: Helen Thomas was a trailblazer and gadfly, and had she stepped away after the first six decades of her career, she would have been hailed simply as one of the most famous White House reporters in modern times.

JENNIFER LOVEN: It sounds glamorous - and it is - and it's a wonderful job, but there's a lot of legwork that goes into doing it well; and Helen was as committed to that as anybody.

FOLKENFLIK: Former Associated Press reporter Jennifer Loven first encountered Thomas as an intern in the early 1990s, but retained her awe for Thomas as she rose to be a full-fledged White House correspondent for the AP. After decades on the job, Loven says, Thomas was continuing to scramble after stories, and yet took time to mentor a younger woman who was reporting for a rival news agency.

LOVEN: You know, there is a confederation among journalists that you help each other up until the moment when you have to, you know, beat the crap out of each other.

FOLKENFLIK: (Laughing)

LOVEN: And she was true to that.

FOLKENFLIK: Helen Thomas was born in the small town of Winchester, Ky., the daughter of two Lebanese immigrants who arrived in the U.S. with less than 20 bucks in their pockets. And the family soon moved to Michigan. The Thomases had nine children. Helen went to public schools and then on to Wayne State University, later becoming a cub reporter in Washington, D.C., and a chronicler of so-called women's issues before covering various federal agencies for what was then United Press.

She covered Democratic presidential candidate John F. Kennedy and then after his success, followed him to the White House, where she continued for just shy of five decades; her sign-off at the end of press conferences becoming so well known, it was included in movies about White House intrigue.

(SOUNDBITE OF MOVIE "DAVE")

HELEN THOMAS: (As herself) Thank you, Mr. President.

FOLKENFLIK: And so Thomas herself became part of the institution - the fearless, tenacious part.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED INTERVIEW)

B.J. COOPER: I used to be a deputy press secretary at the White House.

FOLKENFLIK: B.J. Cooper was a press aide to then-President George H. W. Bush. He spoke to NPR's Audie Cornish in 2010.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED INTERVIEW)

COOPER: And when I started in 1989, Marlin Fitzwater - who was the press secretary at the time - said to me: Now B.J., when you come in, Helen's going to be sitting on the bureau outside my office. I said: Yes, sir. He said: She's going to ask you questions. I said: Yeah. He said: Don't answer 'em. Don't say anything because anything you say will be the top of her story.

FOLKENFLIK: Thomas was the first woman to join the White House Correspondents' Association, and the first to join the Gridiron Club as well. She pushed hard for entry, as both professional groups provided validation for reporters in D.C. She thrived on the public theater of the job, poking and provoking presidents of both parties at press conferences; but put a premium on shoe-leather reporting out of view. Here, Thomas spoke on NPR's TALK OF THE NATION in 1999, following the Monica Lewinsky scandal and the impeachment of President Clinton.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED BROADCAST)

THOMAS: Well, I know we're being accused of overkill. But I think that the aggression, in the aftermath of being lied to for nine months for everything was inoperative - that they said, and we were the transmission belt. A certain disillusionment does set in, and we all realize that we were not aggressive enough; we didn't ask enough questions.

FOLKENFLIK: In 2000, United Press International was sold to the Rev. Sun Myung Moon of the Unification Church, and Thomas wanted no part of him. She became an opinion columnist for Hearst Newspapers, unshackled from notions of journalistic objectivity but still present in the White House press room.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED PRESS CONFERENCE)

THOMAS: We'll never leave Iraq until we have total victory. What does that mean?

FOLKENFLIK: What does total victory mean in Iraq? A memorable exchange with President George W. Bush's press secretary Scott McClellan, in 2005.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED PRESS CONFERENCE)

SCOTT MCCLELLAN: When you engage in a war, you take the fight to the enemy. You go on the offense. And that's exactly what we are doing. We are fighting them there so that we don't have to fight them here. Sept. 11th taught us...

THOMAS: It had nothing to do with - Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11.

FOLKENFLIK: Which was, of course, true. But her outspokenness had occasionally inspired controversies that would flare up for a day or two and then subside. It took only 30 seconds in 2010 to dislodge her, at the age of 89, from the perch in the White House Press Corps she prized so deeply. A rabbi at a Jewish Heritage Day celebration - held on the White House lawn - asked Thomas if she had a message for Jewish people. [POST-BROADCAST CORRECTION: Thomas was asked if she had, quote, "any comments on Israel."]

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

RABBI DAVID NESSENOFF: We're asking everybody today...

THOMAS: Tell them to get the hell out of Palestine.

FOLKENFLIK: Just to be clear: At a goodwill event for Jews, she told them to get the hell out of Israel. [POST-BROADCAST CORRECTION: Thomas said Israel - not Jews - should leave Palestine - not Israel.]

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

NESSENOFF: So where should they go? What should they do?

THOMAS: They'd go home.

NESSENOFF: Where's the home?

THOMAS: Poland. Germany.

NESSENOFF: So the Jews - you're saying the Jews should go back to Poland and Germany?

FOLKENFLIK: A particularly galling jab, given how many Jews were driven from, or murdered in, those two countries during World War II. Hearst announced Thomas' retirement soon after that video was posted online. She would soon take up as a columnist at a small Virginia paper, but her voice would be heard from little again.

Her fans among her former colleagues offer no defense of those remarks that day, but say her legacy is being wrongly overshadowed. Again, former AP reporter Jennifer Loven.

LOVEN: She stood up; and she asked the questions that are hard to ask, that are challenging, that are - you know, sometimes provocative. I mean, you could find - you know, clip after clip after clip of White House press secretaries standing up at the podium and saying well, Helen, I reject the premise of your question, but - and then, you know, coming out with some kind of an answer; which she invariably thought was insufficient, and would tell them so immediately.

FOLKENFLIK: David Folkenflik, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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