In Quiet Post, Veteran Journalist Bill Moyers Announces Site Closure, Calls on Readers to Remain 'Vigilant' and 'Engaged as Citizens'

In a quiet post published to BillMoyers.com on Friday titled simply, “Farewell,” the veteran muckraker and site’s namesake—whose work in public life goes back to the Kennedy administration in the early 1960s and whose journalistic career spans from his teens as a local newspaper reporter in East Texas to his most well-known role as the host of several PBS shows and documentaries—announced that the online project would soon enter “archive mode” and cease its daily output of progressive news and commentary.

“Moyers has been one of the most prolific and influential figures in American journalism…. He used TV as a tool to expose political and corporate wrongdoing and to tell stories about ordinary people working together for justice.”
—historian Peter DreierThough Moyers, now eighty-three, has announced retirement at several intervals in his later career, on Friday he wrote, “Now it’s time for another farewell, and with this note I am signing off.” Its final day of regular operation will be Wednesday, December 20th.

A champion of both public and independent media throughout his long career, Moyers has also been a longtime friend and contributor to Common Dreams and a trusted ally of progressive journalists and outlets too many to count.

As historian Peter Dreier detailed on Friday in a new piece for The American Prospect:

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While the content on the site will, it seems, remain available in perpetuity, Moyers called on its readers going forward to “remain vigilant and engaged as citizens in the civic and political life of your community and our country.”

And offering the kind of parting wisdom that was common to his brand of informed, impassioned journalism and political commentary, he offered a final pinch of wisdom and guidance to those, like he, who have expressed so much concern about the current moment in the nation’s political life. “Democracy is fragile,” he wrote, ” and no one can say with certainty that it can withstand the manifold risks to which it is now exposed.”

One of the industry’s most reluctant retirees and a journalist of unending commitment to democracy and the public sphere, this outlet wishes him a very biased farewell in return and thanks him for his years of service, that of his talented and dedicated team, and wishes them all the best for what the future brings.

Moyers’ farewell announcement, in full, follows below: