Jim Lehrer

Jim Lehrer

Anchor, “The NewsHour With Jim Lehrer”

Born in Wichita, Kansas, in 1934, Jim Lehrer attended Victoria College. In 1956, he received a Bachelor's journalism degree from the University of Missouri before joining the Marine Corps, where he served three years as an infantry officer. For the following decade, Lehrer worked as a reporter in Dallas, before moving on to a local experimental news program on public television.

He came to Washington with PBS in 1972 and teamed up with Robert MacNeil in 1973 to cover the Senate Watergate hearings. In 1975, they started what became "The MacNeil/Lehrer Report" and then the "MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour" in 1983, the first 60-minute evening news program on television.

The program became The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer in 1995 when MacNeil retired. Lehrer has received numerous awards for his work, including a presidential National Humanities Medal in 1999. He also has moderated ten of the nationally televised candidate debates in the last five presidential elections.

Lehrer is the author of 17 novels, including Eureka (2007), The Phony Marine (2006), The Franklin Affair (2005), and Flying Crows (2004). He has also written two memoirs and three plays. Lehrer and his wife, Kate, have been married since 1960. They have three daughters and six grandchildren.

3 min
Unlike the America of his childhood, the country no longer has a shared experience to draw upon.
5 min
As an American, Jim Lehrer is worried about what is done in his name.
1 min
If we’d had a mandatory military service, Lehrer wonders, would we still have invaded Iraq?
2 min
Lehrer, on Americans’ lack of cohesion.
12 min
Jim Lehrer talks about duty, shared experience, and what it means to serves one’s country.
4 min
Jim Lehrer writes about people fighting like hell to be successful.
3 min
Jim Lehrer, on why and how he writes.