Ressa's Daniel Pearl Award lands in the same week as Pentagon press defiance and the Don Lemon prosecution — making it less ceremony and more battlefield dispatch.
The LA Press Club announced the award March 20 — MyNewsLA and the Press Club's own site led coverage, with the June 28 gala date confirmed.
Press freedom advocates are treating the award as a rallying symbol; Ressa's warnings about the creator economy as propaganda infrastructure are circulating widely.
The Los Angeles Press Club named Maria Ressa the 2026 Daniel Pearl Award recipient for Courage and Integrity in Journalism. As this paper previously noted, the Nobel laureate's recognition carries weight on its own. But the week in which it lands gives it a different charge entirely. [1]
This is the week the Pentagon escalated its confrontation with independent press access to the Iran war. It is the week the Don Lemon prosecution — in which the DOJ twice failed to secure an arrest warrant before a federal judge — continued to demonstrate the government's willingness to criminalize journalism. Ressa's award arrives not as ceremony but as context. [2]
Ressa has warned repeatedly that the creator economy functions as a propaganda apparatus — that the line between content and disinformation has dissolved, and that the infrastructure of trust is being dismantled faster than anyone is rebuilding it. The Daniel Pearl Award, named for the Wall Street Journal reporter murdered in Pakistan in 2002, exists to honor exactly this kind of clarity under pressure.
Judea Pearl, Daniel's father, will present the award at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles on June 28. The timing of the announcement, though, is what the press freedom community is marking.
-- Anna Weber, Berlin