In his speech to last spring's National Media Reform Conference in St.
Louis, Bill Moyers accused the Bush Administration not merely of
attacking his highly regarded PBS program NOW but of declaring war on
journalism itself. "We're seeing unfold a contemporary example of the
age-old ambition of power and ideology to squelch and punish journalists
who tell the stories that make princes and priests uncomfortable," explained Moyers. With the November resignation of Moyers's nemesis,
Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) board chair Ken Tomlinson,
amid charges of personal and political wrongdoing and a host of other
recent developments, it becomes increasingly clear that this White House
is doing battle with the journalistic underpinnings of democracy.
To be sure, every administration has tried to manipulate the nation's
media system. Bill Clinton's wrongheaded support for the
Telecommunications Act of 1996 cleared the way for George W. Bush's
attempts to give media companies the power to create ever larger and
more irresponsible monopolies. But with its unprecedented campaign to
undermine and, where possible, eliminate independent journalism,
the Bush Administration has demonstrated astonishing contempt for the
Constitution and considerable fear of an informed public. Consider the
bill of particulars:
Corrupting PBS. Tomlinson's tenure at the CPB, which
annually distributes $400 million in federal funding to broadcast
outlets, was characterized by an assault on the news operations of the
Public Broadcasting Service in general, and Moyers in particular, for
airing dissenting voices and preparing investigative reports on the
Administration. His goal was clearly to fire a shot across the bow of
all public stations so managers would shy away from the sort of
investigative journalism that might expose Bush Administration
malfeasance. On November 15, on the heels of Tomlinson's resignation,
the CPB's inspector general issued a sixty-seven-page report documenting
Tomlinson's repeated violations of the Public Broadcasting Act, CPB
rules and the CPB code of ethics with his political meddling, though it
stopped short of calling for prosecution, or of examining the link
between Tomlinson's actions and White House directives.
Faking TV News. Under Bush Administration directives, at
least twenty federal agencies have produced and distributed scores,
perhaps hundreds, of "video news segments" out of a $254 million
slush fund. These bogus and deceptive stories have been broadcast on TV
stations nationwide without any acknowledgment that they were
prepared by the government rather than local journalists. The
segments--which trumpet Administration "successes," promote its
controversial line on issues like Medicare reform and feature Americans
"thanking" Bush--have been labeled "covert propaganda" by the Government
Accountability Office.
Paying Off Pundits. The Administration has made
under-the-table payments to at least three pundits to sing its praises,
including Armstrong Williams, the conservative columnist who collected
$240,000 from the Education Department and then cheered on the
ill-conceived No Child Left Behind Act.
Turning Press Conferences Into Charades. Bush has all but
avoided traditional press conferences, closing down a prime venue for
holding the executive accountable. On those rare occasions when he
deigned to meet reporters, presidential aides turned the press
conferences into parodies by seating a friendly right-wing "journalist,"
former male escort Jeff Gannon, amid the reporters and then steering
questions to him when tough issues arose. They have effectively silenced
serious questioners, like veteran journalist Helen Thomas, by refusing
to have the President or his aides call on reporters who challenge them.
And they have established a hierarchy for journalists seeking interviews
with Administration officials, which favors networks that give the White
House favorable coverage--as the frequent appearances by Bush and Dick
Cheney on Fox News programs will attest.
Gutting the Freedom of Information Act. As Eric Alterman
detailed in a May 9 report in these pages, the Administration has
scrapped enforcement of the Freedom of Information Act and has made it
harder for reporters to do their jobs by refusing to cooperate with even
the most basic requests for comment and data from government agencies.
This is part of a broader clampdown on access to information that has
made it virtually impossible for journalists to cover vast areas of
government activity.
Obscuring the Iraq War. In addition to setting up a system
for embedding reporters covering the war--which denied Americans a full
picture of what was happening during the invasion--the Defense
Department has denied access to basic information regarding the war,
from accurate casualty counts to images of flag-draped coffins of US
dead to the Abu Ghraib torture photos.
Pushing Media Monopoly. The Administration continues to
make common cause with the most powerful broadcast corporations in an
effort to rewrite ownership laws in a manner that favors dramatic new
conglomeratization and monopoly control of information. The
Administration's desired rules changes would strike a mortal blow to
local journalism, as media "company towns" would be the order of the
day. This cozy relationship between media owners and the White House
(remember Viacom chair Sumner Redstone's 2004 declaration that
re-electing Bush would be "good for Viacom"?) puts additional pressure
on journalists who know that when they displease the Administration they
also displease their bosses.
In his famous opinion in the 1945 Associated Press v. US case, Justice
Hugo Black said that "the First Amendment rests on the assumption that
the widest possible dissemination of information from diverse and
antagonistic sources is essential to the welfare of the public, that a
free press is a condition of a free society." In other words, a free
press is the sine qua non of the entire American Constitution and
republican experiment.
The Bush Administration attack on the foundations of self-government
demands a response of similar caliber. Under pressure from media-reform
activists Congress has begun to push back, with a strong bipartisan vote
in the Senate Commerce Committee to limit the ability of federal
agencies to produce covert video news segments and to investigate
Defense Department spending on propaganda initiatives. But until the
Administration is held accountable by Congress for all its assaults on
journalism, and until standards are developed to assure that such abuses
will not be repeated by future administrations, freedom of the press
will exist in name only, with all that suggests for our polity.
John Nichols, The Nation's Washington correspondent, has covered progressive politics and activism in the United States and abroad for more than a decade. He is currently the editor of the editorial page of Madison, Wisconsin's Capital Times. Nichols is the author of two books: It's the Media, Stupid and Jews for Buchanan.
Robert W. McChesney, who teaches at the University of Illinois, is the author of Rich Media, Poor Democracy (New Press) and, with John Nichols, of It's the Media, Stupid (Seven Stories). With John Nichols, he founded Free Press, a media reform network.
© 2005 The Nation
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