MEDIA WINNER: Chris Wallace & Nikole Hannah-Jones CNN+ host Chris Wallace and 1619 Project author Nikole Hannah-Jones had a mutually warm and respectful discussion on the latest episode of the CNN+ series Who’s Talking to Chris Wallace, but it was also a conversation that Wallace himself described as “a little heated” at times. They covered a lot of ground in the interview. At one point, the host and guest went at it over Hannah-Jones’ claim that the “Greatest Generation” was also culpable in “brutally suppressing democracy” for Black people. Much of the interview centered around Hannah-Jones’ essay and book on the 1619 Project, including one passage that Wallace particularly objected to. “Without the idealistic strenuous and patriotic efforts of black Americans, our democracy today would most likely look very different. It might not be a democracy at all,” Wallace read. “We like to call those who lived during World War Two, the Greatest Generation, but that allows us to ignore the fact that many of this generation fought for democracy abroad, while brutally suppressing democracy for millions of American citizens.” “Again, I am in no way minimizing our terrible racial legacy. But in some of these things, aren’t you overstating?” Wallace asked. Hannah-Jones did not agree, and told Wallace “if you have half of the country, where it’s in some states majorities, in many other states pluralities, 25% of the population, 40% of the population cannot vote, have their vote violently suppressed, where they’re a single one-party, one-race rule in a region where about 30% of the population is Black. Would you consider that democracy?” Wallace cited the period during which women were not allowed to vote, and Hannah-Jones said “We weren’t a democracy, then either — half of the population can’t vote. I don’t know how you define democracy. But I don’t define that as democracy.” “I agree with that. I’m just not sure that I would say that if it weren’t for Blacks, that wouldn’t be a democracy at all,” Wallace said. The entire interview was a veritable clinic on what a political interview should be. Both participants were warm and respectful, but firm and engaged. Wallace held nothing back in pressing Hannah-Jones about controversies surrounding her Pulitzer Prize-winning project, and the author was emphatic and expansive in her responses. Both professed to having enjoyed the interview repeatedly, and Wallace summed it up best when he said "this is exactly what we want to do." "We're here to have a conversation that shed light, not heat, although it got a little heated at points," he said. "It should," Hannah-Jones agreed. Yes, it should. |