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Jim Messina, former Obama campaign manager and current corporate consultant, appears on CNN following the New Hampshire Democratic primary on February 11, 2020. (Photo: Screengrab/CNN)
CNN and CBS do it. NPR and PBS do it. They all do it.
It's a "gentleman's" agreement between elite media and their establishment guests--a courtesy major news outlets bestow upon former officials who get to pontificate and editorialize about today's events with no worry they'll be identified by their jobs TODAY.
On Wednesday night, CNN's Don Lemon hosted ubiquitous Bernie Sanders-basher Jim Messina--solo, without an opposing view--to slam Sanders and his Medicare for All proposal.
"If properly introduced, it would have been no surprise to CNN viewers that a corporate consultant would revile Sanders, the most popular anti-corporate politician in recent US history."
Messina was introduced and repeatedly identified only by his former positions: "Former Obama Campaign Manager" and "Former Deputy Chief of Staff, Obama Administration."
As is typical, viewers weren't told what Messina's current job is--perhaps far more relevant information than his positions many years ago.
Messina is now a corporate consultant. He is CEO of The Messina Group, whose website boasts corporate clients such as Google, Uber, Delta, PillPack/Amazon--and the slogan: "Unlocking Industries So Businesses Can Win."
If properly introduced, it would have been no surprise to CNN viewers that a corporate consultant would revile Sanders, the most popular anti-corporate politician in recent US history.
Host Lemon also neglected to inform viewers that since leaving Team Obama, Messina has been paid handsomely to elect conservative politicians across the globe, including Tory Prime Ministers David Cameron and Theresa May in Britain, and Prime Minster Mariano Rajoy in Spain. Messina's website features an image of Cameron next to the banner: "Campaigning for candidates we believe in."
In U.S. corporate media, such misidentification is a hoary tradition, and a dishonest one. More relevant to news consumers in judging the quality of information from a former government official would be the current employment and entanglements of that ex-official.
In the months after the Chinese government massacred students in Tiananmen Square in 1989, no voice in U.S. media was more prominent or ubiquitous in apologizing for China than Henry Kissinger, usually identified only as "former Secretary of State." Consumers of news were almost never told that Kissinger at the time was a consultant to corporations doing business in China - and the head of China Ventures, a company engaged in joint ventures with China's state bank.
When healthcare reform was being hotly debated in 1993-94, NPR presented point-counterpoint face-offs between a former GOP congressman and a former Democratic congressman, both of whom were quick to deride the proposal in Congress for a single-payer system of government-provided health insurance. NPR didn't tell its listeners that both of its "formers" were current lobbyists or consultants for private healthcare corporations.
A lot of the corruption in Washington--the kind Sanders and Elizabeth Warren criticize--stems from former officials, whether Democrat or Republican, leaving government to work as consultants or lobbyists for greedy private interests. Mainstream news outlets work hard to look away from this corruption, and one way they do so is by dutifully identifying their "experts" only as formers.
Anita Dunn will always be the "former Obama White House Communications Director"--and in that job, she assisted first lady Michelle Obama's anti-obesity campaign. After leaving the White House, Dunn became a consultant for food companies seeking to block restrictions on sugary food ads targeted toward children. She also consulted for TransCanada in its push for the controversial Keystone XL pipeline. Today, Dunn is a senior adviser on Joe Biden's presidential campaign.
A warning to news consumers: When CNN or NPR or PBS introduces a guest only as a "former" official, you are being lied to more often than not.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
CNN and CBS do it. NPR and PBS do it. They all do it.
It's a "gentleman's" agreement between elite media and their establishment guests--a courtesy major news outlets bestow upon former officials who get to pontificate and editorialize about today's events with no worry they'll be identified by their jobs TODAY.
On Wednesday night, CNN's Don Lemon hosted ubiquitous Bernie Sanders-basher Jim Messina--solo, without an opposing view--to slam Sanders and his Medicare for All proposal.
"If properly introduced, it would have been no surprise to CNN viewers that a corporate consultant would revile Sanders, the most popular anti-corporate politician in recent US history."
Messina was introduced and repeatedly identified only by his former positions: "Former Obama Campaign Manager" and "Former Deputy Chief of Staff, Obama Administration."
As is typical, viewers weren't told what Messina's current job is--perhaps far more relevant information than his positions many years ago.
Messina is now a corporate consultant. He is CEO of The Messina Group, whose website boasts corporate clients such as Google, Uber, Delta, PillPack/Amazon--and the slogan: "Unlocking Industries So Businesses Can Win."
If properly introduced, it would have been no surprise to CNN viewers that a corporate consultant would revile Sanders, the most popular anti-corporate politician in recent US history.
Host Lemon also neglected to inform viewers that since leaving Team Obama, Messina has been paid handsomely to elect conservative politicians across the globe, including Tory Prime Ministers David Cameron and Theresa May in Britain, and Prime Minster Mariano Rajoy in Spain. Messina's website features an image of Cameron next to the banner: "Campaigning for candidates we believe in."
In U.S. corporate media, such misidentification is a hoary tradition, and a dishonest one. More relevant to news consumers in judging the quality of information from a former government official would be the current employment and entanglements of that ex-official.
In the months after the Chinese government massacred students in Tiananmen Square in 1989, no voice in U.S. media was more prominent or ubiquitous in apologizing for China than Henry Kissinger, usually identified only as "former Secretary of State." Consumers of news were almost never told that Kissinger at the time was a consultant to corporations doing business in China - and the head of China Ventures, a company engaged in joint ventures with China's state bank.
When healthcare reform was being hotly debated in 1993-94, NPR presented point-counterpoint face-offs between a former GOP congressman and a former Democratic congressman, both of whom were quick to deride the proposal in Congress for a single-payer system of government-provided health insurance. NPR didn't tell its listeners that both of its "formers" were current lobbyists or consultants for private healthcare corporations.
A lot of the corruption in Washington--the kind Sanders and Elizabeth Warren criticize--stems from former officials, whether Democrat or Republican, leaving government to work as consultants or lobbyists for greedy private interests. Mainstream news outlets work hard to look away from this corruption, and one way they do so is by dutifully identifying their "experts" only as formers.
Anita Dunn will always be the "former Obama White House Communications Director"--and in that job, she assisted first lady Michelle Obama's anti-obesity campaign. After leaving the White House, Dunn became a consultant for food companies seeking to block restrictions on sugary food ads targeted toward children. She also consulted for TransCanada in its push for the controversial Keystone XL pipeline. Today, Dunn is a senior adviser on Joe Biden's presidential campaign.
A warning to news consumers: When CNN or NPR or PBS introduces a guest only as a "former" official, you are being lied to more often than not.
CNN and CBS do it. NPR and PBS do it. They all do it.
It's a "gentleman's" agreement between elite media and their establishment guests--a courtesy major news outlets bestow upon former officials who get to pontificate and editorialize about today's events with no worry they'll be identified by their jobs TODAY.
On Wednesday night, CNN's Don Lemon hosted ubiquitous Bernie Sanders-basher Jim Messina--solo, without an opposing view--to slam Sanders and his Medicare for All proposal.
"If properly introduced, it would have been no surprise to CNN viewers that a corporate consultant would revile Sanders, the most popular anti-corporate politician in recent US history."
Messina was introduced and repeatedly identified only by his former positions: "Former Obama Campaign Manager" and "Former Deputy Chief of Staff, Obama Administration."
As is typical, viewers weren't told what Messina's current job is--perhaps far more relevant information than his positions many years ago.
Messina is now a corporate consultant. He is CEO of The Messina Group, whose website boasts corporate clients such as Google, Uber, Delta, PillPack/Amazon--and the slogan: "Unlocking Industries So Businesses Can Win."
If properly introduced, it would have been no surprise to CNN viewers that a corporate consultant would revile Sanders, the most popular anti-corporate politician in recent US history.
Host Lemon also neglected to inform viewers that since leaving Team Obama, Messina has been paid handsomely to elect conservative politicians across the globe, including Tory Prime Ministers David Cameron and Theresa May in Britain, and Prime Minster Mariano Rajoy in Spain. Messina's website features an image of Cameron next to the banner: "Campaigning for candidates we believe in."
In U.S. corporate media, such misidentification is a hoary tradition, and a dishonest one. More relevant to news consumers in judging the quality of information from a former government official would be the current employment and entanglements of that ex-official.
In the months after the Chinese government massacred students in Tiananmen Square in 1989, no voice in U.S. media was more prominent or ubiquitous in apologizing for China than Henry Kissinger, usually identified only as "former Secretary of State." Consumers of news were almost never told that Kissinger at the time was a consultant to corporations doing business in China - and the head of China Ventures, a company engaged in joint ventures with China's state bank.
When healthcare reform was being hotly debated in 1993-94, NPR presented point-counterpoint face-offs between a former GOP congressman and a former Democratic congressman, both of whom were quick to deride the proposal in Congress for a single-payer system of government-provided health insurance. NPR didn't tell its listeners that both of its "formers" were current lobbyists or consultants for private healthcare corporations.
A lot of the corruption in Washington--the kind Sanders and Elizabeth Warren criticize--stems from former officials, whether Democrat or Republican, leaving government to work as consultants or lobbyists for greedy private interests. Mainstream news outlets work hard to look away from this corruption, and one way they do so is by dutifully identifying their "experts" only as formers.
Anita Dunn will always be the "former Obama White House Communications Director"--and in that job, she assisted first lady Michelle Obama's anti-obesity campaign. After leaving the White House, Dunn became a consultant for food companies seeking to block restrictions on sugary food ads targeted toward children. She also consulted for TransCanada in its push for the controversial Keystone XL pipeline. Today, Dunn is a senior adviser on Joe Biden's presidential campaign.
A warning to news consumers: When CNN or NPR or PBS introduces a guest only as a "former" official, you are being lied to more often than not.