CBS ‘Face The Nation’ Anchor Bob Schieffer To Retire

BEVERLY HILLS, CA - MARCH 11: Honoree Bob Schieffer speaks onstage at the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences 22nd Annual Hall of Fame Gala at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on March 11, 2013 in Beverly Hills, California... BEVERLY HILLS, CA - MARCH 11: Honoree Bob Schieffer speaks onstage at the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences 22nd Annual Hall of Fame Gala at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on March 11, 2013 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Vince Bucci/Invision for the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences/AP Images) MORE LESS

NEW YORK (AP) — Veteran CBS News “Face the Nation” moderator Bob Schieffer announced Wednesday at the Texas journalism school named for him that he’ll be retiring this summer.

It’s not his first retirement announcement but, at age 78, looks like it has a good chance of sticking. Schieffer was speaking at an annual symposium that bears his name at TCU’s Bob Schieffer College of Communication in Fort Worth, his alma mater.

“It’s been a great adventure,” Schieffer said at the college. “You know, I’m one of the luckiest people in the world because as a little boy, as a young reporter, I always wanted to be a journalist, and I got to do that. And not many people get to do that, and I couldn’t have asked for a better life or something that was more fun and more fulfilling.”

A former newspaper reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Schieffer joined CBS News in 1969 and has been the network’s chief Washington correspondent since 1992. He began at the political affairs show “Face the Nation” in 1991, asking direct questions to politicians in a Texas twang.

He had an unexpected career highlight starting in 2005, filling in as anchor of the “CBS Evening News” following Dan Rather’s exit for a year and a half until Katie Couric took over the role. His folksy style got good reviews, boosted ratings and healed morale at the news division following the network’s discredited report on President George W. Bush’s military service.

Schieffer survived bladder cancer about a decade ago, a brush with mortality that was one factor in his 2008 announcement that he would retire with the inauguration of a new president in January 2009.

That inauguration came and went and Schieffer stayed. He was enjoying the job too much. The death of NBC’s Tim Russert, whose “Meet the Press” led in the ratings for many years, opened Sunday morning to a tighter competition. “Face the Nation” often led, and CBS responded by expanding the show to an hour.

“I know what you’re thinking,” CBS News President David Rhodes said in a memo to his staff Wednesday. “Bob’s thought about retiring before, is he really retiring now? And of course with his long connection to CBS News we’d be happy to learn that he’s not leaving now, or that he can be seen by our viewers in the future.”

But Rhodes said Schieffer wanted to announce the end of his career where it all began.

Rhodes called him “an inspiration and a mentor to so many colleagues — and, frankly, to me.”

CBS would not talk Tuesday about potential successors at “Face the Nation.” Schieffer hasn’t had a single substitute when he took time off; Charlie Rose, Norah O’Donnell, Major Garrett, John Dickerson and Nancy Cordes have all filled in at different times.

His chief competitors are Chuck Todd at “Meet the Press” and George Stephanopoulos at ABC’s “This Week.”

___

AP Television Writer Lynn Elber contributed to this report from Los Angeles.

Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  1. I don’t mean to be snarky, but ol’ Bob has overstayed his welcome. He arrived at CBS when Uncle Walter was in his prime, survived the Dan Rather years, and has attempted to assume the Eric Sevareid role as ‘grey eminence’ which only succeeded for so long. I wish him no ill, just that he would go quietly into retirement. Esp from the Presidential debates!

  2. Geriatrics clinging to status positions long past their expiration date reminds me of Inca royalty maintaining their estates and positions long after their deaths. Note: It didn’t serve the Inca civilization very well.
    I think Bob should run for the Arizona Republican Senate nomination…

  3. He retired from journalism years ago, but he kept on talking to people on teevee for a long, long time.

  4. I agree his style was always “good o’l boy” and I for one on the rare occasions I watched, being I would be lazy about turning off the TV after Sunday Morning, he did everything but “asking direct questions to politicians” unless those questions were softballs. Just once I would like a “journalist” to say Bull Phucky, instead, they ask and ask and allow the pol to skirt the question as George Stephanopoulos did recently.

  5. It’s just been announced and won’t happen for months, but the real victim here is Charles Pierce, who for years, following each and every outbreak of Sunday shows, could depend on at least one line, on Schieffer’s seniority, to pretty much write itself.

    Incidentally, it’s not Robert “Bob” Schieffer, and never was; it’s Bob “Bob” (Bob) Schieffer, and has been so thru the ages. Also, there are people who’d believe Schieffer covered successive Incan administrations starting with Pacacuti, but I think they could be confusing Schieffer with a nephew. Finally,this recap could prove precipitous; it’s not the first time Bob “Bob” (Bob) has mused on retiring; just ask the descendants of the White House press corp from the second Adams administration.

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