Glenn Greenwald wins Pulitzer Prize for NSA coverage
Glenn Greenwald gives an acceptance speech after receiving the George Polk Award for National Security Reporting. Greenwald, who reported for The Guardian, and Barton Gellman of The Washington Post, in background, led coverage of the NSA at their news organizations, which shared the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. Credit: AP Photo/Richard Drew

Snowden, NSA, national interestWhile the journalism world conferred its top honor yesterday to the newspapers that reported on Edward Snowden’s National Security Agency leaks, the public remains divided over whether those classified leaks served the public interest.

Yesterday’s top Pulitzer Prize, in the category of Public Service, was awarded to the teams at The Washington Post and The Guardian US. News coverage of the award compared it to the 1971 news coverage and Pulitzer Prize for exposing the Pentagon Papers. In response to yesterday’s prize announcement, Snowden released a statement saying the award was a “vindication” of sorts.

But Snowden remains a polarizing figure to the American public, and the country is divided about whether the leaks have benefited the public interest more than they have harmed it. In a January survey by Pew Research and USA Today, 45% said his leaks served the public interest and 43% said they harmed the public interest. There was similar division when the story first broke last year: 49% said the leaks served the public interest and 44% said they harmed the public interest in June 2013. 

In the recent survey, attitudes about the leaks varied by age. Adults ages 18-29 are more likely to say the leaks helped the public (57%) than hurt it (35%). Adults 30-49 are somewhat split, while those ages 50 and older are more likely to say the leaks harmed than helped the public.

Older adults are also the most likely to want the U.S. to pursue a criminal case against Snowden. Overall, 56% of Americans want there to be a criminal case against Snowden and 32% do not. While adults 50 and older say the government should prosecute Snowden by a margin of about two-to-one, those under 30 are divided, 42%-42%.

When The New York Times began publishing the Pentagon Papers in June 1971, a Gallup survey found that those who had heard of the articles were largely supportive of their publication, which revealed a more extensive involvement in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos than the public had been aware. By a two-to-one margin, more said the Times and other newspapers did the right thing by publishing the articles (58%) than the wrong thing (29%). An age gap existed in 1971, too: 66% of adults younger than 30 said the newspapers did “the right thing,” compared with 49% of those 50 and older. It’s worth noting that the Pentagon Papers revealed government secrets that took place in the past, while the NSA revelations have put a spotlight on past and ongoing intelligence-gathering efforts.

Regarding the NSA surveillance program itself, the public’s views have changed since the summer. Our January survey showed that a 53% majority of the public disapproved of the program and 40% approved of it; last July, by comparison, more Americans approved (50%) than disapproved (44%) of it.

Seth Motel  is a former research analyst who focused on U.S. politics and policy research at Pew Research Center.