Bought and paid for lies and propaganda masquerading as news
By Bill Berkowitz
Online
Journal Contributing Writer
Jan 21, 2006, 20:10
"Despite its centrality to political debate,
economic research is a very low-budget affair. The entire annual economics
budget at the National Science foundation is less than $20 million. What this
means is that even a handful of wealthy cranks can support an
impressive-looking array of think tanks, research institutes, foundations, and
so on devoted to promoting an economic doctrine they like . . . The economists
these institutions can attract are not exactly the best and the brightest . . .
But who needs brilliant, or even competent, researchers when you already know
all the answers?" -- Paul Krugman, Slate, August 15, 1996)
Several decades ago, when veteran radio news reporter Scoop Nisker
closed out his broadcasts by telling his audience that if they didn't like the
news they should "go out and make some of your own," little did he
imagine that the Bush administration, and a host of its surrogates, would
become masters of that domain.
Last year, the public was startled to discover that the Bush
administration had been paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to black conservative
columnist and radio and television talk show host Armstrong Williams to flak
for the "No Child Left Behind Act." Those revelations not only called
into question the columns and commentaries Williams produced around Bush's
education legislative centerpiece, it also rendered Williams' entire body of
work suspect.
At the end of December, the New York Times revealed that the
Pentagon had been paying Iraqi newspapers to publish "good news"
stories about the situation in country; stories that had been generated by the
Pentagon itself.
Political analyst and former Republican presidential candidate Pat
Buchanan argued, during a session on MSNBC's Hardball, that
"deception, misinformation, disinformation, deceit, [and] propaganda"
in times of war was acceptable.
Buchanan pointed out that "the Pentagon and our guys over there
have got every right to have good news put into the media and get to the people
of Iraq, even if it's got to be planted or bought."
On Friday, December 16, another branch from the "pay to play"
tree of journalism came crashing to earth.
Doug Bandow, a senior fellow at the fiercely libertarian Cato
Institute, resigned after BusinessWeek Online revealed
that he had been paid ample chunks of change by indicted Republican lobbyist
Jack Abramoff to produce columns in support of issues of interest to Abramoff
and his clients. Many of these columns were related to Indian gambling, and
"extol[ing] the virtues of the free-market system" particularly in
the Northern Mariana Islands, the New York Times reported.
After the Business Week story appeared, Bandow resigned from the
Cato Institute, and the Copley News Service -- which syndicated his columns --
suspended him, pending further investigation.
Bandow apparently accepted as much as $2,000 an article, for writing
some 12 to 24 Abramoff-inspired pieces over a several year period beginning in
the mid 1990s, BusinessWeek Online reported.
The story also named Peter
Ferrara, of the Lewisville, Texas-based Institute
for Policy Innovation (IPI). Ferrara, admitted taking money from Abramoff,
but insisted that it came prior to his stint at IPI.
Since the 1980s, the political landscape has become thick with
conservative and libertarian think tanks. For a time, it seemed that every
other week or so, yet another press release announced the establishment of a
new think tank or public policy institute. During this period, more than 100
such organizations were founded, staffed and funded. Some appeared to be
fly-by-night operations run by one person or by a skeleton staff whose sole
purpose was to issue canned press releases on the public policy issue of the
day. Other organizations appeared to engage in original research and received a
substantial amount of funding support from conservative philanthropies and
foundations.
Special studies, op-ed pieces, and so-called "highly
documented" studies, covering a broad swath of conservative/free market
issues, cascaded forth from these institutions. Similar to the Bush
administration's faith-based
initiative, where little attention has been paid to discovering whether
these groups actually serve the public better than government agencies, much of
the information generated by these think tanks was accepted without much
investigation into the substance of their assertions. It appeared that the
sheer volume of the material that was generated -- especially when similar
conclusions came from different groups -- was enough for editorial writers,
reporters, op-ed writers and radio talk show hosts to spread their findings as
gospel.
"Paying to play" is not a new phenomenon, nor, I suspect,
limited to right-wing think tanks. However, over the past two decades,
conservative philanthropists and foundations have spent their money wisely.
In the introduction to its 1996 report titled "Buying a
Movement: Right Wing Foundations and American Politics," People for
the American Way pointed out that:
"Each year, conservative foundations channel
millions of dollars into a broad range of conservative political organizations.
Their recipients range from multimillion-dollar national think tanks to state
policy centers, universities, conservative journals, magazines and student
publications, right-wing television networks and radio programs, and community
projects. The issue work funded by these conservative givers ranges from
military and fiscal policy to education funding to health and welfare program
analysis to environmental deregulation to libertarian workplace policy, and
more."
"Conservative foundations have overt political and
ideological agendas and invest comprehensively to promote a given issue on
every front. In the words of the director of one foundation, the right
understands that government policies are based on information from "a
conveyer belt from thinkers, academics and activists," and provides
funding accordingly."
"Indeed, the foundations are supporting the work at
every station on the conveyer belt. They fund national conservative "think
tanks" to package and repackage conservative issue positions; state think
tanks to lend a local flair to these issues; national political groups to lobby
in Washington and shape national media coverage; state-based groups to do the
same in the states; grassroots organizations to stir up local activism;
national and state media to report, interpret and amplify these activities;
scholars to record the history of such activities and push the intellectual
boundaries of the issues; graduate students to form the next wave of
scholarship and movement leadership; and college newspapers to shape the milieu
in which America's next generation of political leaders comes to their
political awakening."
Uncovering the ties -- and the amount of money involved -- between
researchers and op-eders at right-wing think tanks and industry lobbying groups
and /or their powerful political patrons is no easy task. As the New York
Times' Philip Shenon recently noted, "Executives in the public
relations and lobbying industries say that the hiring of outside commentators
to promote special interests -- typically by writing newspaper opinion articles
or in radio and television interviews -- does happen, although it is impossible
to monitor since the payments do not have to be disclosed and can be disguised
as speaking fees and other compensation."
Nevertheless, on Friday, December 23, Shenon reported that at least two
other researchers at the Institute for Policy Innovation -- founded by former
Texas Republican Congressman Dick Armey in 1987 -- "had relationships with
industry trade groups.
On October 25, IPI's Susan Finston wrote an opinion piece for The
Financial Times in which "she called for patent protection in poor
countries for drugs and biotechnology products." Last month Finston also
penned a column that appeared in the European edition of The Wall Street
Journal which "called for efforts to block developing nations from
violating patents on AIDS medicines and other drugs," Shenon reported.
In both cases she was identified as a "research associate" at
IPI. However, according to Shenon, "Neither mentioned that, as recently as
August [she] was registered as a lobbyist for the Pharmaceutical Research and
Manufacturers of America, the drug industry's trade group. Nor was there
mention of her work this fall in creating the American Bioindustry Alliance, a
group underwritten largely by drug companies."
He also pointed out that Merrill Matthews, Jr., writes for major
newspapers under the IPI banner, advocating policies promoted by the insurance
industry, even though he is a registered lobbyist for a separate group backed
by the insurance giants.
Given his previous comments on the matter, it was not surprising to read
that the president of IPI told Shenon "Lobbying is not a four-letter
word."
Both Finston and Matthews deny any wrongdoing.
While the reputations of Doug Bandow and Peter Ferrara have been damaged
by the BusinessWeek Online revelations, investigations into the buying
and selling of columnists probably will not end with these two cases.
Just as the incompetence of former FEMA head Michael Brown led enterprising
reporters to look into a host of Bush administration appointments whose
qualifications are suspect, "pay to play" revelations could shed some
needed light on a much larger question; the honesty and integrity of the
"research" that has been produced by right-wing think tanks over the
past two decades.
Bill Berkowitz is a
longtime observer of the conservative movement. His WorkingForChange column
Conservative Watch documents the strategies, players, institutions, victories
and defeats of the American Right.
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