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The American media: a critical component of the conspiracy
against democratic rightsPart 4
Television personnel: a few profiles
By David Walsh
19 December 2000
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this version to print
The world of television news analysis in the US is composed
of individuals with pro-establishment and essentially right-wing
views and connections, or liberals and moderates who
continuously accommodate themselves to the right. Here are some
of the figures who commented on the recent post-election crisis
and attempted to shape public perceptions of the extraordinary
events.
Fox News Channel, owned by media mogul Rupert Murdoch, employs
numerous commentators with direct connections to the Republican
Party and the ultra-right. Brit Hume, the anchor
of Special Report with Brit Hume, is notorious for his
conservative views. While chief White House correspondent with
ABC News, Hume was President George Bush's tennis partner. Hume
is a contributing editor at Murdoch's right-wing Weekly Standard.
When NBC News, in the midst of the impeachment crisis, decided
against airing an interview with Bill Clinton's rape-accuser,
Juanita Broaddrick, Hume wore a button on his lapel that read
Free Lisa Myers, in honor of the NBC correspondent
who had done the Broaddrick piece.
Tony Snow, host of Fox News Sunday,
is another well-known right-winger. A journalist from 1979, with
stops at the Detroit News (1984-87), as deputy editorial
page editor, and the Washington Times (1987-91), as editorial
page editor, Snow went to work in the White House for George Bush
in 1991. He functioned first as Bush's chief speech writer (Deputy
Assistant to the President for Communications and Director of
Speech Writing) and later as Deputy Assistant to the President
for Media Affairs.
Another Weekly Standard stalwart, John Podhoretz,
is Fox's media and society contributor and a particularly unpleasant
figure. He also serves as the editorial page editor on Murdoch's
sensationalist tabloid, the New York Post. Podhoretz served
as speech writer for President Ronald Reagan and special assistant
to Drug Czar William Bennett. He too worked for the
Rev. Moon's Washington Times, as assistant managing editor.
One of Fox News's on-air contributors and a permanent fixture
on the news talk show circuit is John Fund. A
collaborator with the ultra-right radio demagogue Rush Limbaugh
on a book, The Way Things Ought To Be, Fund is a member
of the Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal, where
he previously served as deputy features editor. The Journal,
of course, spearheaded the impeachment crusade against Bill Clinton
and has recently published incendiary articles in the wake of
the November 7 election. Its editorial page is a cesspool of reaction.
Another veteran of the Wall Street Journal is David
Asman, host of Fox In Depth, a daily program
featuring interviews with newsmakers of the day. Before
his tenure at Fox, Asman served as Op-Ed editor of the Journal.
He began at the newspaper in 1983, editing the Manager's Journal
and the Americas column. In 1994 he was named senior editor of
the Wall Street Journal's editorial page.
An on-air political contributor since October 1996, Monica
Crowley functioned as former President Richard Nixon's
Foreign Policy Assistant from 1990 to 1994, and authored Nixon
Off the Record. She also writes for the New York Post.
Washington DC-based political analyst Jim Pinkerton
has worked for Fox News Channel since it started up. He is a regular
on Fox News Watch. Pinkerton worked in the White House
under Reagan and Bush, and also in the 1980, 1984, 1988 and 1992
Republican presidential campaigns.
A contributor on women's issues, Amy Holmes
has worked for Fox since June 1998. She is manager of the Independent
Women's Forum, one of billionaire Richard Mellon Scaife's stable
of right-wing political outfits and a breeding ground for various
pro-impeachment conspirators and television commentators. Heather
Nauert works for Fox News Channel as a political contributor.
In June 1998, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich appointed her
to the White House Conference on Retirement Savings. During the
right's campaign against the Clintons' health care plan, Nauert
established and led a group called Americans for Freedom of Choice
in Healthcare.
The chairman and CEO of the Fox News division is Roger
Ailes, a longtime Republican Party political consultant
and hatchet-man, adviser to Nixon, Reagan, Bush, former New York
Senator Alfonse D'Amato and New York City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani.
These filthy individuals and others like them Sean
Hannity, Bill O'Reilly, Fred
Barnes, Matt Drudge, John Ellis
(Bush's first cousin who called Florida for him on election
night), etc.put Fox News Channel's promise of fairness
and balance in perspective.
The right-wing bias of Murdoch's network is hardly a secret.
Other television commentators, however, present themselves as
independent-minded and unbiased journalists, while presenting
quite reactionary conceptions.
At first glance CNN's senior political analyst, Bill
Schneider, for example, appears nothing more than a glorified
opinion pollster. Schneider's specialty normally involves superficial
attempts at taking the country's political temperature. During
the post-November 7 period, however, he was one of those, like
many in the media, who kept insisting that the American people
were eager for quick resolution of the crisis. This argument,
whose aim at least in part was precisely to encourage the spread
of such a sentiment in the population, amounted to aid to the
Bush camp, who were pushing for an end to all challenges to the
official (and fraudulent) Florida vote tally.
One commentator quoted Schneider on this theme: How
much is winning this election worth?' scolded CNN analyst Bill
Schneider. Is it worth creating a constitutional crisis?'
(Another grand old man' of television news who argued along
the same bankrupt lines was CBS's Bob Schieffer,
longtime moderator of Face the Nation. Schieffer remarked,
The country is much more important to me than whether Al
Gore gets his final ambition or George Bush. Very patriotic-sounding,
but the effect was to assist the usurpation of power by Bush.)
A little investigation demonstrates that Schneider keeps some
foul company. The CNN senior political analyst is a resident fellow
at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington DC. Other scholars
and fellows at the AEI include: Robert Bork, the extreme right-wing
Court of Appeals judge whose nomination to the Supreme Court was
beaten off in 1987, and author of Slouching towards Gomorrah:
Modern Liberalism and American Decline, a violent attack on
the notion of social equality; Lynne V. Cheney, former head of
the National Endowment for the Humanities, and wife of the vice
president-elect, Dick Cheney; Dinesh D'Souza, right-wing ideolog
and author of The End of Racism; former House Speaker Newt
Gingrich; Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, Reagan's ambassador to the UN;
Irving Kristol, one of the original neo-conservatives, and father
of William Kristol, television talk show habitué
and editor of the Weekly Standard; Charles Murray, co-author
of The Bell Curve, which argued for the natural inferiority
of blacks and the poor; and Richard N. Perle, Reagan's assistant
secretary of defense for international security policy. Schneider
comes by his anti-democratic leanings honestly.
Tim Russert, moderator of NBC's interview
program Meet the Press, and NBC News Washington bureau
chief, played a pernicious role during the impeachment crisis.
Russert was one of those who claimed to be taking the moral high
ground, castigating Clinton's behavior, while spreading the salacious
gossip put out by the right wing. (Typical Russert sound-bite:
There are lots of suggestions coming out of people close
to Ken Starr that perhaps the Secret Service facilitated'
[i.e., pimped] for President Clinton. Remember that code wordit
was used by state troopers in Little Rock.... Was the Secret Servicewas
a Secret Service agentan accomplice in trying to cover up
a relationship with Monica Lewinsky? The fact that this
story, and dozens like it, attributed to unnamed sources,
proved to be false, never stopped Russert and his media cohorts.)
Russert is a Democrat, a former adviser to New York Senator
Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Governor Mario Cuomo. He seems the
personification of self-satisfied, prosperous ex-liberalism, with
his constant smirk and relentlessly shallow commentary. (For instance,
following the second presidential debate this fall, Russert maintained
that Bush had gained ground because he had established parity
with Gore on command of foreign affairs. Gore is a bourgeois politician
of distinctly unremarkable caliber, but Bush, it should be recalled,
consistently demonstrated appalling ignorance of the most elementary
facts of world politics.)
Yet Russert is considered a major player. Former
Clinton adviser Paul Begala commented, Russert is enormously
influential. In fact, he might have crossed from the realm of
influence into that of power. When I was at the White House ...
there wasn't a day that would go by without my contacting him.
What a commentary on Washington and the Clinton administration!
Russert's background raises an interesting question. The role
of the Christian [Protestant] neo-fascist element has been relatively
well documented, and the impeachment crisis made one aware of
the degree to which a certain layer of Jewish professionals had
swung to the right, but the part played by right-wing Catholics
(and perhaps behind them, the Church officialdom) in the anti-Clinton
drive is one that has yet to be chronicled. Russert's background
is Irish Catholic. Public shows of morality (and moralizing) seem
to be one of his defining characteristics. In 1995 the National
Father's Day Committee named Russert Father of the Year,
and Washingtonian magazine cited him as a Real Dad.
Parents magazine honored him as a Dream Dad in 1998
and Irish-American magazine has named Russert as one of the top
100 Irish Americans in the US.
This is suggestive because Chris Matthews,
another anti-Clinton blowhard (and former Democratic Party operative),
also has a Catholic background, as does Maureen Dowd,
the high priestess of the New York Times vice squad. Then
there are the more openly right-wing Catholics such as O'Reilly
of Fox and Pat Buchanan, the Reform Party presidential candidate.
Another insufferable statesman of the airwaves is ABC Nightline's
Ted Koppel, he of the clipped speech and permanently
crenellated hair. Koppel effects Olympian detachment and intellectual
weight. One looks in vain for the substance behind the mannered
style. Like his less pretentious brethren, Koppel is little more
than a conduit for US government and ruling elite propaganda.
Can anyone remember him ever standing up to the powers that be?
Has he ever challenged conventional wisdom or fought tooth and
nail for an unpopular position?
Koppel was born in Lancashire, England in 1940, the son of
German Jewish refugees from Hitler. His father had owned a major
tire factory in Germany. His family came to the US in the early
1950s. Koppel, after attending Syracuse and Stanford universities,
went to work for ABC News in 1963. He was named anchor of Nightline,
the late-night news and interview program, at the time of its
debut in March 1980.
Jeff Cohen, of Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR), describes
Koppel as an individual who has, for his whole career, been
virtually a mouthpiece for the U.S. State Department. Cohen
backs up the characterization, pointing out that Koppel began
his career as the Hong Kong bureau chief for ABC News, where he
and they covered up the US role in Vietnam and, in particular,
CIA operations in Laos.
Norman Solomon, another critic, has documented Koppel's role:
From 1969 to 1971, Koppel paid several visits to the Southern
Laos site of Pakse, where CIA and U.S. military personnelunknown
to the American publicwere assisting and directing continuous
bomb runs by the Laotian air force. These guys were all
in civilian clothes,' Koppel told me in a 1990 interview. None
of them admitted to being in the militaryor with the CIA,
for that matter. They all claimed to be civilian contract employees.'
Koppel acknowledged that, at the time, he knew the facts
were otherwise: I may have known that, but I wasn't in a
position to prove it.' His news reports made no mention of the
CIA and U.S. military involvement, even though it was central
to the bombing that he witnessed.
Walter J. Smith, a U.S. Air Force officer at Pakse, was
present when Koppel showed up with a cameraman at the base officers'
club. Smith heard Koppel stress that he would not dislodge the
official fig-leaf: In effect, he was saying, I'm not
going to tell the truth no matter what happens.
Cohen notes that Koppel rose in ABC during the 1970s, and
he became [part of] what is called the KKK Club, where it would
be Bernard Kalb, Marvin Kalb, and Ted Koppel, who were big network
correspondents, who had traveled the world with Henry Kissinger
singing his praises as he went around the world wheeling and dealing.
And Henry Kissinger, in the eyes of them at the time, was basically
a foreign policy genius. And the human rights abuses, that were
the direct results of Kissinger's policies, weren't exactly emphasized
by Bernard Kalb, Marvin Kalb, or Ted Koppel.
Solomon comments: Long ago, Koppel declared himself proud
to be a friend of Henry Kissinger' and ranked his pal (who orchestrated
bloody foreign-policy deceptions from Vietnam to Chile) as certainly
one of the two or three great secretaries of state of our century.'
Such biases infuse Koppel's TV work, as when he told Nightline'
viewers in April 1992: If you want a clear foreign-policy
vision, someone who will take you beyond the conventional wisdom
of the moment, it's hard to do any better than Henry Kissinger.'
FAIR monitored Koppel's programming in the 1980s during the
period of the Reagan administration's covert war against the Sandinista
government in Nicaragua. Cohen observes that this was a period
when the Reagan White House had one public relations goal
in Central America: get all the U.S. media to focus on human rights
violations in Nicaragua, and get little or no media coverage on
human rights violations in El Salvador, which by every standard
were far more severe. More violence, more incarcerations, more
disappearances, more suppression of the press. The fact is, when
you study Koppel, he did I think it was over 22 different programs
focusing on the negatives of the government in Nicaragua: human
rights abuses, problems between the government and the press in
Nicaragua, meaning one newspaper that they were polarized with,
and zero programs during a 40-month period on El Salvador. Now
that's pretty big success for the public relations operatives
at the Reagan White House and the U.S. State Department. I don't
know how much closer you could become to a state broadcast outlet
than that.
Solomon points out that American critics of foreign policy
were almost invisible. Koppel didn't see a problem. We are
governed by the president and his cabinet and their people,' he
fired back. And they are the ones who are responsible for
our foreign policy, and they are the ones I want to talk to.'
In other words, I only talk to those in power. There's
the unmistakable voice of a free and democratic-minded press!
A former colleague of Koppel's at ABC News and Nightline,
Jeff Greenfield, is currently a senior analyst
at CNN, where he went to work in 1998. Greenfield, a New York
native, was a bit of a left in his youth, of a cynical
sort. From 1968 to 1970 he served as chief speech writer for New
York City's liberal Republican Mayor John V. Lindsay, and in 1967-68
he was a Senate aide and speech writer for Senator Robert F. Kennedy.
In 1972 he co-authored A Populist Manifesto with longtime
Village Voice columnist and Robert Kennedy idolater, Jack
Newfield.
Greenfield has been around. He was an analyst for PBS's Firing
Line, hosted by right-winger William F. Buckley, and We
Interrupt This Week. He subsequently joined CBS, working as
a media critic during that network's coverage of the 1980 Republican
and Democratic conventions and the 1980 presidential election.
For 14 years Greenfield functioned as ABC News's political and
media analyst.
He has carved out something of a niche for himself. Greenfield
takes it upon himself to justify and explain away every twist
and turn of American public life. He is the great rationalizer,
particularly of political reaction. None of the activities and
provocations of the right wing, from impeachment to the Bush grab
for power, are cause for alarm in Greenfield's view. Each bit
of dirty business turns out to be no more than a necessary stage
in the unfolding of the great American national experiment, whose
predetermined outcome has been miraculously revealed to CNN's
senior analyst. He is there to reassure his audience. He has it
on good authority that nothing will go seriously wrong.
Greenfield's performance during the final week of the election
crisis was typical: a special segment proving that the Bush-Gore
standoff couldn't have happened at a more fortuitous moment, when
Americans are content and the country is enjoying unprecedented
stability and tranquillity.
The CNN analyst possesses the quality that seems so pervasive
in the US news media: bottomless sycophancy in the face of established
authority. Is there anyone in American political office that Greenfield
could not find a good word for? Nearly all the leading media types
are like that. During the Republican convention this summer a
commentator noted CNN anchor Judy Woodruff's obsequious remark
that vice presidential nominee Dick Cheney had delivered
a speech, from a soft spoken man, that delivered a walloping speech....
Jeff Greenfield agreesin awewith Judy. That
sounds about right.
Greenfield, along with so many others, flowed with the reactionary
current during the Kenneth Starr impeachment drive in 1998-99,
failing to challenge the threat to democratic rights this witch-hunt
represented. Indeed Greenfield provided a rationale for one of
the key assaults on elementary rights.
A favored technique of Starr's office was to leak sealed grand
jury testimony unfavorable to Bill Clinton, which then became
the basis for sensationalized and unsubstantiated reports in the
media.
The World Socialist Web Site commented at the time:
Leaking grand jury testimony is a federal crime, and, from
a legal standpoint, of a far more serious character than giving
false testimony in a deposition in a civil case, such as the Paula
Jones suit. Witnesses called to testify before a grand jury do
not have the benefit of legal counsel while they are being questioned.
The promise that their statements will not be made public is the
main protection they have against retaliation for their testimony
(Clinton
crisis exposes threat to democratic rights, 7 February
1998).
Greenfield, who was one of those passing along morsels tossed
out by Starr, responded in a different fashion. When challenged
by a critic, Jane Prettyman, Greenfield (in a written response)
first compared the publicizing of the grand jury testimony to
the leaking of the Pentagon Papersa secret multi-volume
history of the Vietnam War commissioned by Secretary of Defense
Robert McNamarato the New York Times by Daniel Ellsberg
in 1971.
Greenfield continued: The whole point of the First Amendment
was to make the press a guardian of the public's right to information,
even when officials want to keep that information secret.
Prettyman effectively exposed Greenfield's hypocrisy and sophistry,
noting that the First Amendment was granted not for the
benefit of media corporations but for the benefit of the People
... so that we might have a free flow of information to defend
ourselves against tyrannical government.... Ken Starr and his
staff of prosecutors are a powerful part of the government, some
would say tyrannical government.... The dissemination of Grand
Jury material ... has, instead, the effect of reducing rather
than enhancing our freedom in relation to government.
She continued: The general public does not have a right
to know' the contents of Grand Jury proceedings. The free
flow of information' stops at the door of the secret Grand Juryand
for good reasonsnot for reasons of national security (as
the Government tried to argue in the Pentagon Papers case), but
for reasons of personal security of individual citizens, to protect
their freedom in relation to a one-sided prosecutorial government
action without due recourse of law.
We can be fairly certain that such arguments fell on deaf ears.
When faced with a choice between the defense of elementary democratic
and constitutional rights, on the one hand, and the opportunity
to advance his own career and move ever closer to those in positions
of power, on the other, Greenfield, like the overwhelming majority
of television and print journalists in the US, is not likely to
hesitate.
What social processes and conditions have created such people?
They are the products, first, of the social gap that has widened
over the past two decades under Reagan, Bush and Clinton. Prosperous
and complacent, living in a different world than ordinary people,
they are naturally hostile to the interests of the poor and the
working class. They have consciously repudiated 1960s activism
and turned their backs on opposition generally. They have the
expectation, if they keep their noses clean, of greater and greater
wealth and prestige. The watchwords are: Never stick your neck
out! Respect every cliché! Repeat the obvious!
Intellectually, the media figures fear and despise serious
analysis. They are ignorant of and lack interest in history. They
don't see themselves as representatives of social or historical
forces (although they are) and fail to recognize any such forces
at work. Everything is reduced to small changeindividual
motive, the immediate ebb and flow of public opinion. Never a
probing, complicated thought. Nothing disturbs them except signs
of discontent. These people always put the best face on; the word
crisis has been banned from their lexiconthey
pretend or believe that the skies are always sunny and there is
clear sailing ahead.
Mediocrities and self-important nobodies, the senior
analysts and chief correspondents and assorted
pundits and experts, without a shred of wit or wisdom between
them, foresee nothing and prepare no one. Along with the rest
of the ruling elite, they are unprepared for the turmoil to come.
How will they react? One can only imagine.
See Also:
The US media: a
critical component of the conspiracy against democratic rightsPart
7
Conclusions about the media in general, the liberal press in particular
[13 January 2001]
The US media: a critical
component of the conspiracy against democratic rightsPart
6
Who is the Wall Street Journal's Robert Bartley?
[8 January 2001]
The US media: a critical component of
the conspiracy against democratic rightsPart 5
Media ownership and concentration
[27 December 2000]
The US media: a critical component of
the conspiracy against democratic rightsPart 3
Television personnel: money matters
[16 December 2000]
The US media: a critical component of
the conspiracy against democratic rightsPart 2
An evening of television news
[7 December 2000]
The US media: a critical component of
the conspiracy against democratic rightsPart 1
[5 December 2000]
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