Witcover began working in Washington for
Newhouse Newspapers in 1954. He was reportedly steps away from where
Robert F. Kennedy was shot in 1968. He was also one of the reporters featured in the 1972 book on campaign journalism,
The Boys on the Bus, and eventually came to be seen as a "journalistic institution," according to media critic
Howard Kurtz. For 45 years, Witcover wrote a syndicated political column, from which he retired in 2022. His most recent book is
The American Vice Presidency: From Irrelevance to Power. Published in 2014,
Kirkus Reviews described the work as a "valuable book of American history." Other work includes
Very Strange Bedfellows: The Short and Unhappy Marriage of Nixon & Agnew, Public Affairs (2007), and
Joe Biden: A Life of Trial and Redemption. In March 2008, his history of
campaign finance reform, "The Longest Campaign," appeared on the
Center for Public Integrity's
The Buying of the President 2008 website.
Joe Biden: A Life Of Trial And Redemptions 2020 update includes 4 additional chapters, picking up where the original version left off and covers Biden's successful presidential campaign. ==Personal life and death==