Political Elites and the
Media
excerpted from the book
The Democratic Facade
by Daniel Hellinger and Dennis
R. Judd Brooks
Cole Publishing Company,
1991, paper
p39
Political Elites and the Media
... Media in the United States convey
a remarkably uniform view of the world, and it has been a politically
specific one: anticommunist, pro-corporate, and nationalist. It
is hard to imagine any criticism of capitalism by a U.S. reporter
or broadcaster. Perhaps the contrast with a media such as the
USSR's should be drawn partly in this way: Until glasnost, theirs
hewed to an ideology prescribed by government censors. In the
United States, a different ideology is followed with equal reliability
and consistency, but the most important mechanism of censorship
is corporate ownership and management rather than government oversight.
Like their Russian counterparts, the American media are adept
at exposing "slow progress on projects, sloppy workmanship...poorly
made goods, and the like," but the privately owned media
is no more likely to attribute such lapses to capitalism than
the communist-controlled media was likely, before glasnost, to
attribute such problems to communism. When political discourse
over fundamental political issues occurs in the United States,
it proceeds in spite of, rather than because of, a technologically
sophisticated, privately owned mass media that reaches into every
home.
p44
In the 1980s, conservative groups decided that media "objectivity"
actually amounted to a liberal bias, and they launched a well-organized
and well-financed campaign to pull the media to the right. Among
the leading proponents of the "media as liberal" thesis
were a number of activists with close relationships to the corporations
and the military-defense establishment. Among these activists
was Reed Irvine a North Carolina conservative who founded Accuracy
In Media (AIM). AIM publishes a biweekly report that examines
the largest media organizations, with a particular emphasis on
the Washington Post, the New York Times, the news weeklies and
the networks. Another organization, the American Legal Foundation
(ALF), was organized by Daniel Popeo in 1980. The ALF involved
itself in a number of regulatory and legal challenges to media
companies. For example, it challenged minority and women's "citizen's
agreements" with broadcast license owners and served as a
resource center for businesses and politicians suing for libel.
At the same time, the ALF petitioned the FCC to deny licenses
to a group of nonprofit alternative radio stations carrying programs
from the independent Pacifica Foundation.
Two other well-financed groups active
in countering the allegedly liberal bias of the media included
the Institute for Educational Affairs (IEA) and the U.S. Industrial
Council Educational Foundation (USICEF). IEA, cofounded in 1978
by former Nixon Treasury Secretary William Simon and neoconservative
author Irving Kristol, attracted funding from several foundations
and corporations, including General Motors, Northrup, Nestle,
Dow Chemical, and Boise-Cascade. IEA and USICEF funded more than
seventy student-run conservative newspapers from 1979 to 1985.
USICEF helped launch the conservative Yale Free Press and the
Harvard Sentinel, and it provided syndicated services to about
fifty student papers. Conservative organizations also organized
programs to train and place journalists. The National Journalism
Center trained reporters "within a context of traditional
values."
Fairness in Media (FIM) was organized
in 1978 by a Raleigh, North Carolina attorney named Thomas Ellis,
a political ally of Senator Jesse Helms. According to Ellis, the
liberal media was thwarting the will of the electorate: "We
won the election but we lost the battle afterwards because of
the media....Every time the conservatives start to move, the liberal
media is able to change that agenda." Ellis said the idea
to organize FIM was hatched as early as 1967 when, angered by
network coverage of the Vietnam War, he bought one share each
in CBS, ABC, and RCA. This example was cited in 1985 when FIM,
Senator Jesse Helms, and conservative activists encouraged their
supporters to buy shares in CBS Inc. in order to "become
Dan Rather's boss."
Urged on by the Reagan administration,
conservative critics launched an assault on journalists and broadcasters.
Reagan's science adviser, George A. Keyworth, summed up the administration's
charge of liberal bias when he said, "Much of the press seems
to be drawn from a reactively narrow fringe element on the far
left of our society...and...is trying to tear down America.''
The networks responded to these attacks by mounting public relations
campaigns. ABC initiated an ad campaign in the fall of 1985 entitled
"American Television and You." According to explanations
by ABC executives, the campaign was designed to allay public concerns
about the effect of multibillion-dollar takeovers of the networks.
After thirteen weeks of spot ads and concurrent newspaper advertising,
ABC researchers noted an increase in the number of viewers "who
felt more positive toward television than they did before they
saw the message." As a follow-up, ABC inaugurated Viewpoint,
an irregular series featuring a live discussion format designed
to provide an ostensibly objective forum for public criticism
of the media.
Claiming that he knew of a "no more
patriotic group than television journalists," in 1986 NBC's
anchor Tom Brokaw took a "loyalty oath" to prove his
own patriotism. In the same summer CBS began running a series
of advertisements promoting its evening news program. Using black-and-white
stills of individuals, the voiceover on the spot said: "Americans,
we know who we are. And when it comes to news, we know who we
trust. Dan Rather, CBS News."
The networks also aired documentaries
on the press. For example, NBC aired a "white paper"
in June 1985, called A Portrait of the Press: Warts and All, written
and hosted by commentator John Chancellor. In a closing segment,
Chancellor said, "The most important thing we learned in
covering the story of journalism in America today is this. The
problems the press does have would be much easier to handle if
there were more attention paid to the craft of journalism."
Indeed, the "craft of journalism" underwent profound
changes in the 1980s that have had the effect of making the media
an active partner in the neoconservative revolution. The pressures
that brought this about were not only applied by political groups.
In the end, news lost all possibility of a critical or investigative
role (what its critics called "left leaning") because
of corporate pressures.
p46
The failure of the media to serve its watchdog role during the
1980s was often attributed to Ronald Reagan's genial personality
and his alleged ability to manipulate the media. But it was the
media itself, not the government, that manufactured the "Teflon"
coating for Reagan, in part because the values of the corporate
executives who own news organizations were the same as those that
put Reagan in the White House:
the press took its definition of what
constituted political news from the political governing class
in Washington. Thus while the press shaped mass opinion it reflected
elite opinion; indeed, it effectively functioned as a mechanism
by which the latter was transformed, albeit imperfectly, into
the former.
In the 1980s, it was inevitable that the
corporate media would amplify conservative voices in news and
news commentary. George Will was named the lone commentator on
ABC News in 1984, reaching the largest audience of any journalist
in the country. Using this position, Will editorialized for the
overthrow of the government of Nicaragua, the deployment of the
MX missile, and military intervention against Libya, and he opposed
sanctions against the Republic of South Africa. Two newly created
news operations, Turner Broadcasting's Cable News Network in 1980
and Gannett's USA Today in 1982, were distinctly conservative
in orientation. And since 198O, the New York Times, which provides
a significant source of syndicated editorial material to other
media, swung decisively toward neoconservative ideas and writers.
In other newspapers, the most widely distributed syndicated columnists
by the late 1980s were conservatives like James J. Kilpatrick,
George Will, Rowland Evans and Robert Novak, and Joseph Kraft.
Liberals, such as Mary McGrory and William Raspberry, each were
able to distribute their columns to less than one-third the number
of newspapers reached by Kilpatrick. Of course, no syndicated
"left" columnist was published in the national daily
press.
p48
The atmosphere of hysteria whipped up by the press exerted tremendous
influence on politics within the United States. The near-universal
editorial opposition to the 1948 presidential campaign of the
short-lived Progressive Party presaged the press's collaboration
in the hunt for internal subversives in the 1950s. The party's
candidate, former Vice President Henry Wallace, offered voters
a liberalized version of the New Deal. Wallace found himself excoriated
in the press as "the centerpiece of U.S. communism's most
authentic looking facade." The anticommunist hysteria sustained
a rollback in many of the rights that labor unions had won in
the 1930s. The press did its part by painting the labor movement
as a "communist front." Business's breakthrough against
labor, the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947, was supported by almost all
the major newspapers in the country. The act empowered the courts
to issue injunctions against strikes and to levy heavy fines for
violations. Mass picketing and secondary boycotts were outlawed.
States were permitted to pass "right-to-work" laws allowing
nonunion employees to work in unionized plants. Owners were allowed
to lock out workers and to refuse to bargain. Union officials
were required to sign oaths certifying that they were not Communists.
The press did not report on the conflict between industry, government,
and labor so much as it acted as an active and powerful participant
in the struggle. It played the crucial role of mobilizing public
opinion sufficiently so that labor could be beaten: "Under
the pressure of the combined forces of industry, government, and
the press, the major strikes had been broken, wages driven down,
the open shop restored and the ranks of the unions decimated."
By 1950, the Soviet Union had detonated
its first nuclear warhead, the Chinese Communist party had ousted
the U.S.-backed government of Chiang Kai-shek, and the United
States was sinking into an unpopular war in Korea. Alger Hiss,
a State Department official, had been convicted in January of
perjury, following a barrage of hysterically negative press reports
that ensured he could not get a fair trial. Julius and Ethel Rosenberg
were arrested six months later, accused of conspiring to pass
the secret of the atomic bomb to the Soviet Union. Their subsequent
death sentence was, to the Hearst press, an appropriate way to
rid the nation of a cancer: "The trial...disclosed in shuddering
detail the Red cancer in the American body politic-a cancer which
the government is now forced to obliterate in self-defense. The
sentences indicate the scalpel which prosecutors can be expected
to use in that operation."
p50
One reason for the public's skepticism may have been frequent
revelations about a close relationship between the U.S. intelligence
community and the media. Reporters and CIA agents historically
have been so close that U.S. News and World Report's chief foreign
editor, Joseph Fromm, once told a congressional committee that
"a foreign government could be forgiven for assuming that
there is some kind of informal link." The long-standing relationship
was disclosed in a series of congressional intelligence committee
hearings held in the mid-1970s. Those investigations revealed
not only that hundreds of reporters had worked closely with intelligence
agencies, but that some reporters were actually on the CIA payroll.
A partial list of journalists who had collaborated with the CIA
included New York Times columnist C. L. Sulzberger, syndicated
columnists Joseph and Stewart Alsop, editors for CBS and ABC news,
and reporters for United Press International.
At one time the CIA ran at least fifty
of its own media and 200 wire services and publications (the present
number is unknown). The agency also provided financial support
to Radio Liberty and Radio Free Europe. It induced Kenneth Love,
a reporter for the New York Times, to cooperate with it in its
successful effort to topple the constitutional government of Mohammed
Mossadegh in Iran in 1953, and it successfully pressured the Times
into pulling a reporter (Sidney Gruson) from a story about the
CIA-inspired overthrow of the democratically elected government
in Guatemala in 1954.64 On many occasions it planted news stories
abroad in order to have them picked up by wire services and U.S.
newspapers. In one instance among many, stories about Cuban soldiers
killing babies and raping women in Angola were concocted by the
CIA in the early 1980s, and reported as fact in the U.S. press.
The CIA is not the only government agency
that has forged close relationships with the media. For decades,
the Federal Bureau of Investigation maintained cooperative relationships
with more than 300 journalists in more than twenty-five cities
including at least twenty-five "friendly" media contacts
in the Chicago area alone. Uncooperative media were treated differently.
The FBI acknowledged that from 1956 to 1971 it carried out large-scale
intelligence-gathering and disruption efforts against alternative
and underground newspapers, reporting syndicates and individual
journalists.
Even if media reporters wanted to establish
their independence, the news process makes it difficult or impossible
for them to check on government sources. For foreign reporting,
reporters must primarily use such sources or rely on news generated
by the major wire services (Associated Press, United Press International
and British-based Reuters) and by the elite press (the New York
Times, the Washington Post, and the Los Angeles Times). For this
reason, alternative sources of information are rarely available
to the news consumer and news stories reported by different news
organizations are remarkably similar.
p50
News During the Reagan Years
As a consequence of their heavy reliance
on the government for information, news organizations are loathe
to offend "official sources" and they are subject to
manipulation. Government officials use their monopoly over information
to generate favorable coverage and to manage the news. All presidential
administrations have tried to control the flow of information
as much as possible, but news management became a fine-tuned art
during the presidency of Ronald Reagan The Reagan administration,
operating under the umbrella of what it saw as its conservative
mandate, paid close attention to the art of controlling information.
One of its best successes came with its decision to exclude the
press from covering the October 25, 1983, invasion of the Caribbean
island of Grenada. The invasion was used by the administration
as an opportunity to assert almost complete control over information
As a result of acquiescing to these new government policies, the
media has substantially agreed since 1983 to censor itself when
covering military actions.
Journalists had been permitted to cover
military operations in every previous military engagement since
the American Revolution, including the Civil War; twenty Caribbean
expeditions between 1880 and 1924; the First World War; the Second
World War; the wars in Korea and Vietnam; and the 1956 intervention
in Lebanon.
But the media accepted new restraints
on the publication of news about the Grenada invasion, including
information embargos and voluntary "ground rules." The
military limited the number of reporters who could accompany individual
units during specific operations.
The military also imposed censorship,
as it has done before. During the Civil War, correspondents were
required to submit copy to a provost marshal for approval, telegraph
lines were put under military control, and a number of newspapers
were censored or closed. During the First World War, seventy-five
newspapers in the United States were closed or censored and the
government's Committee on Public Information issued a voluntary
censorship code. Reporters were accredited by the military during
the Second World War and the Korean War.
But coverage of the invasion of Grenada
was different from previous military operations. The U.S. media
were limited to official and secondary sources of information,
and the military made no pictures of the invasion available. "Reporters
were working under unprecedented U.S. restrictions," one
journalist noted, "that kept them 150 miles away from the
battle and totally dependent on the military itself for information."
General John W. Vessey, Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
explained his rationale: "We didn't bring the media with
us to Grenada because of the need for surprise in this operation.
We were going in there quickly, and we needed surprise in order
to have it be successful." This explanation soon was exposed
as false when it became known that two days before the operation,
Radio Havana had broadcast news about an imminent U.S. invasion
of Grenada.
On the second day of the invasion, again
relying on official sources, the U.S press reported that the U.S.
soldiers were meeting substantial resistance from 1,100
p55
The Propaganda Machine
Propaganda is an accurate term for describing
U.S. information policy Indeed, use of the term in this context
was justified by the conservative newsweekly U.S. News & World
Report in 1985, with the reasoning that "[Propaganda] does
not always involve distortion of the facts...it can consist of
disseminating the truth to help one's cause. For this reason,
at various times distinguished journalists such as Edward R. Murrow
and John Chancellor have agreed to do stints in key USIA [U.S.
Information Agency] jobs."
The Reagan administration played to win
the propaganda game. It steadily enhanced the budget of the USIA,
which reached nearly $800 million in 1986-a 74 percent increase
since 1981. It inaugurated "WorldNet," a $15 million
per-year project linking foreign journalists and American policy
makers by satellite. In October 1985, it began, for the first
time since the end of the Second World War, 24-hour Voice of America
(VOA) broadcasts to Europe. Under the mantle of VOA, the administration
also created Radio Marti, staffed by many anti-Castro expatriates,
which broadcast programs to Cuba. In the 1970s, the CIA financed
opposition dailies in Jamaica during the socialist government
of Prime Minister Michael Manley and opposition newspapers in
Chile during the socialist government of President Salvador Allende
Gossens. After the Sandinistas took power in 1969, it provided
a large part of the financial support for La Prensa, the main
opposition daily in Nicaragua. Before the invasion of Grenada,
U.S. psychological warfare units had been broadcasting to the
island via Radio Spice Island.
These activities illustrate a much broader
phenomenon-the overwhelming dominance of U.S. governmental and
media institutions over communications around the world. During
the past decade, developing countries have complained about the
role of the international media in controlling information about
world affairs. Their complaints cited the effects of policies
dating back to the Second World War and before. In 1946, William
Benton, Assistant Secretary of State, outlined the U.S government's
position on the freedom of international communications:
The State Department plans to do everything
within its power along political or diplomatic lines to help break
down the artificial barriers to the expansion of private American
news agencies, magazines, motion pictures and other media of communications
throughout the world....Freedom of the press-and freedom of exchange
of information, generally-is an integral part of our foreign policy.
The United States can be credited with
making the "free flow of information" an article in
the UNESCO constitution when the United Nations was organized
in 1946. The United States originally had proposed that the organization
establish a worldwide communications system. Great Britain protested,
charging that the United States was attempting to use the organization
"to blitz the world with American ideas." The proposal
was shelved, but the United States continued to produce material
for UNESCO radio programming that even sympathetic foreign newspapers
labeled as propaganda.
At least seventy countries gained their
independence from colonial rule in the 1960s, and by 1969, at
a UNESCO meeting in Montreal, a reaction against U.S. media dominance
surfaced. New members introduced the concept of "two-way
circulation of news and balanced circulation of news." A
report from the conference argued:
The fact that the production of mass communications
materials is largely concentrated in the hands of the major developed
countries...affects the role of the media in promoting international
understanding. Communication at the moment is a "one-way
street" and the problems of developing nations are seen with
the eyes of journalists and producers from the developed regions;
moreover, the materials they produce are aimed primarily at audiences
of those regions. As a result, not only is the image of the developing
nations often a false and distorted one, but that very image is
reflected back to the developing countries themselves.
Roughly 90 percent of the world news disseminated
by the media in Asia, Africa, and Latin America (excepting Japan
and China) originates from centers in Paris, London and New York
City. Despite its resources, media in the United States use very
few foreign media products. A report by the International Communications
Agency in 1979 noted that most foreign news reaches the United
States through AP and UPI and that the U.S. television system
is the second most closed to foreign programming in the world.
p56
Political Discourse and the Media
Despite concentrated corporate ownership
of media, some alternatives to corporate programming are available:
two television news programs, the Public Broadcasting System (PBS)
and Pacifica News; a few magazines, including The Nation, Mother
Jones, The Village Voice, The Progressive, Z, and various magazines
sponsored by environmental organizations; and newspapers like
In These Times and The Guardian. The viewpoints and information
represented in these sources, however, are relegated to the margins
because of their very limited circulation and audience. The exception
is PBS, which strives for a tone of objectivity and evenhandedness.
Its right-wing critics label its coverage "liberal"
because corporate owners and advertisers are not constantly present
to pull news and commentary toward the right (though corporations
contribute money to PBS, with a potentially similar effect).
The flowering of an alternative press
came about during the Vietnam War, peaking during a period bracketed
by the end of the Johnson (1968) and the Nixon (1974) administrations.
These media outlets-self-described as "underground"-
were responsible for breaking some of the most dramatic stories
of the period, ranging , ~ from disclosures of covert U.S. intervention
abroad to domestic spying by the FBI Z and CIA. A case in point
is recounted by a reporter who coauthored a report linking drug
trade to officials in the South Vietnamese government:
The May 1971 issue of Ramparts featured
the story on its cover with the headline "Marshall Ky: The
Biggest Pusher in the World."...The story was a well-documented
block-buster, but the conventional media virtually ignored it.
There were a few column inches about Congressional hearings being
called for, and then the story vanished for months until Senator
Albert Gruening of Alaska opened hearings. Suddenly the story
was "discovered" by the Washington Post and NBC News.
However, after the hearings, the story received continued coverage
only through alternative sources such as the Dispatch News Service
International.
Economic exigency spelled the end for
a large number of overtly partisan, political, and radical papers.
Some survivors, like the democratic-socialist weekly In These
Times, which emerged in the 1970s, and The Guardian, which was
founded in the 1950s, have periodically turned to readers for
emergency financial support. An editorial published in In These
Times in 1980 underscored the dilemma faced by the alternative
media: "Because its readership is relatively small, regionally
dispersed, and from a Madison Avenue standpoint, heterogeneous,
it has no chance of gaining substantial revenues from advertising.
Instead, it has to derive its income from circulation. Its circulation
income, is, in turn, largely limited to subscriptions, acquired
primarily through direct-mail." The magazines The Nation,
Mother Jones, and The Progressive also are forced each year to
make appeals to subscribers for donations.
Corporate ownership of media institutions
has had the effect of limiting the availability of finance capital
to support alternative media. As a consequence, many alternative
publications have become largely adjuncts to the establishment
media. In the process they have lost much of their distinct political
message and now focus on middle-class concerns about environmental
and lifestyle issues:
[Some] alternative papers that survived
the protest years have prospered, emerging from homespun publications
to become slick, professional managed multi-million-dollar businesses
with upscale readers in their mid-20s to late 30s....[Some] in
an effort to cash in on the success of the alternatives, have
adopted the* bread-and-butter coverage in the arts, lifestyles,
service listing and personal ads-but left out the meat, the tough
editorial stand.
The mere existence of "alternative"
media institutions-meaning noncorporate, publicly owned or nonprofit,
not necessarily "leftist"-is sometimes cited as evidence
that there is a "multitude of tongues" in American public
discourse. But of course this claim ignores the enormous, even
controlling influence that money wields on media institutions.
Alternative media are accorded a right to compete in the same
way that minor party candidates are allowed to compete with Democrats
and Republicans. They are only denied a key resource, money, which
originates most abundantly from corporations and wealthy individuals.
Corporate America does not finance its own opposition, either
in information or in politics.
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