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Journalist took $240,000 to push Bush education program
By John Levine
13 January 2005
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The revelation that Armstrong Williams, a black conservative
journalist, received $240,000 in US government money to promote
the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) program before black
audiences further demonstrates the extent to which the American
media has become a vehicle for official propaganda.
Williams contract, with the US Department of Education
and the public relations firm Ketchum, required him to comment
on Bushs education program on his nationally syndicated
television and radio shows (The Right Side), interview
Education Secretary Rod Paige, produce radio spots that aired
on his show and convince other black journalists and producers
to interview Paige and publicize the Bush policy. During the course
of the contract, he also penned numerous opinion columns in support
of the program, distributed by Tribune Media Services and appeared
on various television news programs as a commentator advocating
No Child Left Behind.
Last May, for example, Williams wrote in a column, Fifty
years after Brown v. Board of Education, we need to ensure that
our children are receiving a decent education, regardless of income,
background or race. This need was not lost on President Bush,
who passed the bi-partisan No Child Left Behind Act. Among other
things, the act holds public schools accountable for failing to
properly educate our children. That constitutes an important victory
because up until recently, the teachers unions would be damned
if they were going to allow public school teachers to be held
accountable for the job they do educating our children.
Williams only played a part in a larger, apparently illegal,
propaganda initiative run by Ketchum with money from the Department
of Education. According to USA Today, Ketchum received
a million dollars for its services. A letter from Reps. Rosa L.
DeLauro (Connecticut), Sherrod Brown (Ohio) and Rahm Emanuel (Illinois),
all Democrats, alleges that Ketchum engaged in a national propaganda
campaign that included:
1. A compilation of journalists and news organizations
writing favorable stories on President Bush and his political
partys commitment to education;
2. Marketing tactics to improve public perception of
the NCLB and improve the image of the Department;
3. A video news release that fails to identify the government
as the source of the report, and does not make clear the person
purporting to be a reporter was someone specifically hired for
the promotional video.
It should come as no surprise that the Bush administration
would resort to such measures. The Government Accountability Office
(GAO) found that the Department of Health and Human Services has
similarly promoted changes to Medicare by issuing video
news releases. These video news releases feature actors
playing the part of reporters with a script written by the government.
These videos were aired by at least 40 television stations, without
any indication that they had been created by the government for
propoganda purposes.
The Office of Drug Control Policy made and distributed similar
videos, also featuring actors playing reporters and delivering
an anti-drug use message. This departments propaganda videos
were played on more than 300 news programs, reaching over 22 million
households, also with no indication of their origin.
Not only is covert propoganda released by the government antidemocratic
and unethical, it is also apparently illegal. USA Today
listed a number of applicable laws:
* The Anti-Lobbying Act of 1919, which prohibits the
use of any federal funds to directly or indirectly
influence government policy through any personal service,
advertisement, telegram, telephone, letter, printed or written
matter, or other device.
* The Anti-Deficiency Act of 1906, which bars government officials
from spending money for any purpose not authorized by congress.
* Appropriation bills routinely contain provisions that forbid
the use of federals funds for publicity or propaganda
purposes within the United States not heretofore authorized by
Congress.
The GAO released a report in May that said the purpose of the
above laws was to mark the boundary between illegally
creating news reports unbeknownst to the receiving audience
and legally making information known to the public.
An unapologetic statement released by the Department of Education
claimed the Williams deal was a legitimate way to explain its
policy to minority parents. The statement said: The
contract paid to provide the straightforward distribution of information
about the departments mission and N.C.L.B.a permissible
use of taxpayer funds.
A letter from Congressman George Miller of California said,
The use of covert propaganda is unethical and illegal and
is extremely dangerous to our society. For our government to participate
in the undermining of public confidence in government is deeply
disturbing and troublesome. Such behavior must not be allowed
to continue.
Members of both parties have called for an investigation, but
no legal action has been taken with regard to the two previously
uncovered instances of covert propaganda this year. USA Today
wrote, Administrations have run afoul of those laws periodically,
but criminal prosecution is rare. In fact, Armstrong Williams,
though admitting he used bad judgment, brazenly even
refuses to return any of the illegally obtained $240,000 to the
government!
The Bush administration used payments to members of the media
in an attempt to build support for its attacks on public education.
The NCLB program penalizes schools that do not perform well on
standardized tests and does little to help restore funding lost
due to cuts in state and local budgets. The lay-offs of teachers,
bankruptcy and closure of schools and the encroachment of profit-hungry
private institutions into public education have continued apace.
Among the chief victims are those living in poor black neighborhoods.
Hence the administration figured that Williams, because of his
skin color, would come in handy as a salesman for its program.
The administration cynically believes that with this public
relations initiative, with the correct spin, it can
erase the consequences of its reactionary policies. This media-management
method has been used in the past on numerous occasions by various
administrations, but it has been used with increasing frequency
and blatancy by the current White House. Only 11 percent of the
black vote went for Bush in the 2004 election, leading the White
House to conclude that it needed a more effective public relations
strategy, i.e., covert propoganda. Armstrong Williams fits into
this strategy as part of a layer of highly paid conservative minority
spokespeople who appear publicly in support of Republican initiatives.
Williams was formerly an aide to Supreme Court Justice Clarence
Thomas, and is considered to be this arch-conservatives
political protégé. He also worked for Senator Strom
Thurmond, who ran for president in 1948 as a Dixiecrat on a segregationist
program. During that campaign, Thurmond declared, All the
laws of Washington and all the bayonets of the Army cannot force
the Negro into our homes, our schools, our churches.
The exposure of Williams dealings by USA Today
raises the obvious question: is he the only one? He received $240,000
of the contract, so who got the rest of it? According to David
Corn of the Nation, Williams let the cat out of the bag,
stating, This happens all the time ... There are others.
When asked who else had accepted money from the Bush administration,
Williams replied, Im not going to defend myself that
way. The Amsterdam News quotes Williams as stating,
The syndicate can cancel my columnthat is their right....
But they should be careful with this murky road. I am definitely
not the only commentator or pundit that does something like this.
Let me be clear on that.
George W. Bush did not invent this strategy, but has merely
taken it to new heights. In the 1980s, the State Department under
Reagan paid consultants to write opinion pieces for newspapers
endorsing the right-wing paramilitary Contras in Nicaragua. In
addition, they fed false news reports to journalists who published
the lies citing intelligence sources. Otto Reich,
whose Office of Public Diplomacy took responsibility for organizing
this admittedly illegal propaganda effort, never faced prosecution.
In fact, Bush nominated him in 2001 for Assistant Secretary of
State and when he was not confirmed, appointed him Latin American
envoy.
During Bill Clintons presidency, the White House used
some of the same methods. Television networks NBC, CBS, ABC, Fox,
WB and UPN all have admitted to participating in a secret long-term
plan of Clintons Office of National Drug Control Policy.
The networks agreed to pressure the producers of highly rated
shows to create scripts with anti-drug messages. The scripts would
then be submitted for the approval of White House officials. If
approved, the networks would benefit financially.
Shows airing government-approved messages included ER,
Home Improvement, Beverly Hills 90210,
The Wayans Bros., and The Drew Carey Show
and numerous others. After this program was put in place, the
number of episodes with anti-drug messages increased from 32 in
one season to 109 in another. No one faced criminal prosecution
in relation to this program. (See http://www.wsws.org/articles/2000/jan2000/drug-j24.shtml)
The domination of news gathering and distribution by a handful
of conglomerates and their close collaboration with government
officials represents a shift and indicates in its own way the
depths of the crisis of American democracy. The mass media now
more and more openly operates as a propaganda arm of the administration
in Washington.
The government assigns its dirty work to characters such as
Armstrong Williams. These pundits believe that they
can get away with any position they take in front of the camera
or behind the microphone. However, the deterioration of the public
education system, along with all the other attacks on working
people, cannot be wished away with a few articles and scripted
appearances by government officials on radio and television shows.
See Also:
CBS purges producer, executives for anti-Bush
broadcast
[12 January 2005]
US television network
caves in to right wing over Reagan mini-series
[5 November 2003]
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