|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Once again on the US "free press"
Fox News chief doubled as political adviser to Bush
By David Walsh
25 November 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The revelation that Fox News Channel Chairman Roger Ailes sent
a secret memo offering political advice to George W. Bush after
last years terrorist attacks illustrates one of the fundamental
facts of American political life: the utterly dishonest and politically
incestuous relationship between the mass media and the government.
The Ailes-Bush episode came to light through a passing reference
in Bob Woodwards new book, Bush at War. The book
is an account, based on insider information, of the first 100
days in the Bush White House following the September 11 hijack-bombings.
Woodward reports that on October 7, 2001 Karl Rove, Bushs
chief political adviser, delivered a confidential communication
from Ailes to the president.
Woodward continues: It had to be confidential because
Ailes, a flamboyant and irreverent media executive, was currently
the head of Fox News, the conservative-leaning television cable
network that was enjoying high ratings. In that position, Ailes
was not supposed to be giving political advice. His back-channel
message: The American public would tolerate waiting and would
be patient, but only as long as they were convinced that Bush
was using the harshest measures possible. Support would dissipate
if the public did not see Bush acting harshly.
Thus the head of one of the nations major news outlets
coached the president on how best to manipulate public opinion.
In doing so, Ailes was carrying out through his top-level political
connections the job that Fox newscasters and commentators do on
a daily basispeddling lies, half-truths and government handouts
as news, in order to misinform and dupe the public.
Ailes issued a statement after the release of Bush at War
claiming that he had merely written a personal note to a
White House staff member as a concerned American expressing my
outrage about the attacks on our country. He refused, however,
to make public the contents of the letter. Ailes said that he
and Woodward had talked the incident over and that it was a non-issue.
Ailes secret memo and his brazen defense of his conduct
have provoked barely a murmur of protest from the media at large.
The New York Times merely suggested that as a top
executive of a news organization he [Ailes] should know better
than to offer private counsel to Mr. Bush.
The Times and the rest of the establishment media have
good reason to play down the significance of Ailes flagrant
partisanship and conflict of interest. The Murdoch-owned Fox News
simply exhibits in the most shameless and overt manner the cynical
and corrupt relationship between the media and the American state.
The main difference between Fox and its rivals is that the Murdoch
news outlet is more openly tied to one of the two big business
parties, the Republicans, and barely makes a pretence of impartiality.
Ailess own biography is a case in point. He became media
adviser for Richard Nixon in the late 1960s and is widely credited
with the latters political resurrection. He scripted Ronald
Reagans second debate with Walter Mondale in 1984 and created
the notorious Willie Horton commercial for the senior George Bush
in the 1988 election (which featured a black man convicted of
murder who had been paroled by the administration of Bushs
Democratic opponent, Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis, and
was later arrested for rape and assault).
In 1992 Ailes claimed that he had finished with politics and
that his contract with the short-lived Rush Limbaugh television
program prevented him from political consulting. However, according
to New York Daily News business columnist Paul Colford,
Ailes privately urged Bushs reelection campaign to
get rough, and he helped the president prepare his acceptance
speech at the Republican convention.
Along the way Ailes has made a fortune with his own media production
and consulting firm. He has been chair and chief executive officer
of Fox News and the Fox News Channel since it began in January
1996.
The Fox cable channel is a hotbed of right-wing ideologues,
including talk-show host and demagogue Bill OReilly (who
writes for the extreme right WorldNetDaily.com), Brit Hume
(a contributor to the American Spectator and Murdoch-owned
Weekly Standard), David Asman (formerly of the Wall
Street Journal editorial page), Tony Snow (a former speechwriter
in the first Bush administration), Sean Hannity (a radio talk-show
host), Fred Barnes (editor of the Weekly Standard) and
numerous others.
The connections between Fox and the Bush administration, as
the confidential communication between Ailes and George W. Bush
indicates, reach the highest levels. On Election Day 2000, John
Ellis, a first cousin of Bush, headed Foxs decision
desk. After a series of telephone consultations with the
Bush headquarters in Texas, Ellis called Florida a win for Bush
in the early morning hours of Wednesday, November 8, sparking
a stampede of similar calls by the other networks. A Bush victory
in Florida gave the Republican candidate the electoral votes necessary
to secure the presidency, even though Bush had lost the popular
vote. Subsequently, the networks revoked their declaration of
a Bush win and labeled Florida too close to call,
sparking the two-month struggle over the Florida vote that ultimately
led to the Supreme Court ruling handing the White House to Bush.
Even though it was later revoked, the Fox projection created
the public impression that Bush had won the presidency, helped
legitimize his subsequent claims and played a material role in
the successful campaign to steal the election and place the Texas
governor in the White House.
State manipulation of the news is by no means unique to Fox.
Every television network engages in it. During the US war in Afghanistan
last autumn, executives of CNN instructed their reporters to downplay
civilian casualties and damage done by US military attacks, on
the grounds that such reports might weaken popular support for
the invasion. CNN Chairman Walter Isaacson told the Washington
Post it seemed perverse to focus too much on the casualties
or hardship in Afghanistan.
Were entering a period in which theres a
lot more reporting and video from Taliban-controlled Afghanistan,
Isaacson said. You want to make sure people understand that
when they see civilian suffering there, its in the context
of a terrorist attack that caused enormous suffering in the United
States.
A watershed for CNN came in its capitulation to the military
and right-wing forces over the Operation Tailwind
affair. In 1998 the cable news channel broadcast a program reporting
allegations that the US military had used chemical weapons in
Laos in 1970. The program provided substantial evidence that the
military had used sarin, a deadly nerve gas, in Operation Tailwind.
When former civilian and military officials, Henry Kissinger
and Colin Powell, among others, denounced the program, CNN officials
capitulated unconditionally. Ted Turner apologized profusely and
the network fired the two producers of the program.
The US media, which has turned sharply to the right along with
rest of political elite, has been conditioned over the course
of several decades to function as the conduit for Pentagon misinformation
and lies. Fox, CNN and the major networks are willing and eager
to play that role in an invasion and colonial-style occupation
of Iraq.
See Also:
The US free press and the
Pentagon war machine
[14 November 2002]
CNN tells reporters:
No propaganda, except American
[6 November 2001]
The US media: a critical
component of the conspiracy against democratic rights
[5 December 2000]
Elements of a conspiracy
How Bushs man at Fox News worked to shape the outcome of
the US election
[17 November 2000]
Pentagon pressure behind
CNN firing of Peter Arnett
[22 April 1999]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |