John Dickerson: The first step was a doozy
How Donald Trump could have helped himself on Saturday with what he said on Friday
John Dickerson is the anchor of "The Daily Report with John Dickerson," CBS News chief political analyst, senior national correspondent and a contributor to "CBS Sunday Morning." He reports for all CBS News platforms and programs, including "CBS Mornings," "CBS Evening News with Norah O'Donnell" and "Face The Nation." Dickerson also serves as an anchor of CBS News election coverage and political special reports.
"The Daily Report with John Dickerson" is presented Monday through Thursday (6 p.m. ET) on CBS News 24/7 and features the latest headlines and live, in-depth reporting on the day's major stories.
He is also a co-host of Slate's "Political Gabfest" and "Whistlestop" podcasts and the host of "Navel Gazing," a podcast of essays about the notebooks he has carried for thirty years. He is also a contributing writer to The Atlantic.
Dickerson joined CBS News in April 2009 as an analyst and contributor. For six years, he served as the Network's political director. He moderated "Face the Nation" from June 2015 to January 2018 and was the program's chief Washington correspondent. During the 2016 presidential campaign, he moderated CBS News' two presidential debates. From January 2018 until May 2019, he was co-host of "CBS This Morning."
From 2019-2021, Dickerson was a contributor for 60 Minutes, where his story on the death of Elijah McClean was nominated for an Emmy.
In addition to his political reporting, Dickerson has interviewed a wide range of figures, from Apple CEO Tim Cook to actors Glenda Jackson and Christian Bale, authors Colson Whitehead, Michael Lewis, and Tara Westover, and musicians John Prine, Jon Batiste, Jason Isbell and Dave Matthews.
Dickerson started his career with Time magazine, covering economics, Congress and the presidency. In the last four years of his 12 at the magazine, he was its White House correspondent. From 2005 to 2015, he was Slate magazine's chief political correspondent. He has covered the last eight presidential campaigns.
A native Washingtonian, he graduated with distinction from the University of Virginia with a bachelor's degree in English and a specialty in American studies.
His mother, Nancy Dickerson, was CBS News' first female correspondent. Dickerson is the author of On Her Trail (Simon and Schuster), a book about his mother. He is also the author of the New York Times bestsellers Whistlestop: My Favorite Stories from Presidential Campaign History (Twelve Books) and The Hardest Job in the World: The American Presidency. (Random House).
He received the Ford Prize for Distinguished Reporting on the Presidency and the David Broder Award for political reporting.
Dickerson resides in New York City with his family.
How Donald Trump could have helped himself on Saturday with what he said on Friday
Inaugurations are designed to pull the country together, but the true test for Trump isn’t whether he’ll call for unity, but if and how he’ll make the pitch to those not already wearing “Make America Great Again” hats
Mr. Trump doesn’t need the press the way former presidents did because he has Twitter -- and a following who is more apt to believe him over the press
"Face the Nation" moderator John Dickerson pays tribute to his friend, colleague and the moderator of PBS' "Washington Week" Gwen Ifill
Follow along for the latest news and analysis as the 2016 campaign draws to a close
Much has been said of Clinton’s appeals to women voters, but her campaign has quietly been chasing the votes of fathers and grandfathers, too
A conversation in the kitchen quickly headed into the locker room
If voters do turn away from Trump, it may be because his performance so directly illuminated his key vulnerability
The quips and stumbles likely won’t say much about how Clinton or Trump will handle the job -- here’s what’s worth looking for
In campaigns, we investigate candidate instincts because they tell us how they’ll behave in office when the pressure is on
Here's what we mean when we throw around the word "transparency" during campaigns
“I call them, and they are there for me,” he has said about the impact of his past campaign donations on politicians
Is it a sign of adaptation by entrepreneurial executive…or act of desperation an self-soothing before the defeat?
A convention that started with the pick of a stabilizing V.P. is ending in volatility
Comey's remarks refute what Clinton has said repeatedly about her private server--that no emails she sent were classified when she sent or received them