One-Party State
Pumping Irony
excerpted from the book
Banana Republicans
How the Right Wing Is Turning
America into a One-Party State
by Sheldon Rampton and John
Stauber
Jeremy Tarcher/Penguin, 2004
p104
Much of the real power and influence-peddling in Washington, D.C.,
begins on K Street, a nondescript corridor of office buildings
located a few blocks north of the White House. K Street is where
the big lobbying firms and corporate trade associations have their
headquarters. It is sometimes referred to as the fourth branch
of government. Many of the top K Street lobbyists are, in fact,
former government officials -senators, congressmen and their staffs
who, after retiring from office (or after losing their last election)
go to work as hired advocates for companies and industries. Their
ability to influence government policy comes in part from the
personal relationships they have with their former colleagues,
and from the campaign contributions that corporations can channel
to politicians who do their bidding. Lobbyists, as columnist Michael
Kinsley has observed, are "a group of people who charge a
lot of money to give disproportionate influence in our democracy
to people with even more money.""
Historically, however, the power of corporate
lobbyists has been somewhat mitigated by the two-party system.
Since the party in power could vary from one election to the next,
K Street had to hire top names from both major parties as a way
of ensuring access. Ideological differences between the parties
therefore limited the ability of corporations to control the policy
agenda. In addition to corporations, the Democratic Party needed
to appeal to constituencies including the labor movement, minorities,
environmentalists and other liberals who have historically turned
out as voters and activists in support of the party's candidates.
As Nicholas Confessore observed in the July/August 2003 issue
of the Washington Monthly, the relationship between Democrats
and lobbyists contained an "Inherent tension": "For
the most part, K Street groups supported Democrats because they
had to and Republicans because they wanted to. The Democrats needed
corporate money to stay competitive, but were limited by the pull
of their liberal, labor-oriented base. Although the party became
generally more pro-business during the 1980s, it had few natural
constituencies on K Street."" After Republicans achieved
control over all sectors of the federal government in the early
21st century, however, corporate lobbyists were happy to jettison
bipartisanship and throw their weight solidly behind the Republican
machine, which targeted control of K Street by pressuring the
major lobbying firms to hire only Republicans.
Party strategist Grover Norquist is one
of the leading masterminds of this strategy. Working with Tom
DeLay, the House majority leader, he launched the K Street Project
in 1995 to compile a database of lobbyists. The database lists
lobbyists' names, where they work, which party they belong to,
where they have worked politically and how much money they have
contributed to the candidates and causes of both parties. The
purpose of the list is to decide who "deserves" access
to the White House, Congress and federal agencies. Contributions
to the wrong party can "buy you enemies," explained
Congressman Thomas M. Davis III of Virginia, chairman of the National
Republican Congressional Committee." According to Marshall
Wittmann, a former Christian Coalition staffer who no", works
for Senator John McCain, the pressure on lobbyists has made DeLay
"the 'Dirty Harry of Capitol Hill, the bad cop. Every K Street
lobbyist is shaking in their boots because K Street lives on access,
and DeLay can shut off their oxygen.""
Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum is
another key player in the K Street Project. In the months following
the 2000 elections that gave Republicans the White House, Santorum
began convening a private meeting each Tuesday morning of Republican
lobbyists, attended sometimes by representatives from the White
House and other senators. Democrats and journalists were not invited.
"The chief purpose of these gatherings is to discuss jobs
specifically, the top one or two positions at the biggest and
most important industry trade associations and corporate offices,"
Confessore reported. "Every week, the lobbyists present pass
around a list of the jobs available and discuss whom to support.
Santorum's responsibility is to make sure each one is filled by
a loyal Republican-a senator's chief of staff, for instance, or
a top White House aide, or another lobbyist whose reliability
has been demonstrated. After Santorum settles on a candidate,
the lobbyists present make sure it is known whom the Republican
leadership favors.""
Republican dominance on K Street has further
enhanced the party's fund-raising advantage over Democrats. "An
analysis of political donations by industry groups shows that
over the past decade, 19 major sectors have shifted from a roughly
50-50 split between the two main parties-or in some cases, a slightly
proDemocratic tilt-to a solid alignment with the Republican Party,
which now enjoys advantages exceeding 5 to I in some of these
sectors," the Washington Post reported in November 2002."
Key industries that have shifted Republican include accounting,
aerospace, alcoholic beverages, commercial banking, defense, health
care and pharmaceuticals. "Just like the Democrats get a
90-10 split from the trial lawyers and labor, we will have 90-10
in the staffing on K Street and 90-10 business giving," Grover
Norquist gloated in November 2002. But trial lawyers and labor
give only a fraction of the amount that corporations donate to
election campaigns. In 2002, contributions from businesses accounted
for 73 percent of all election giving, compared to only 7 percent
for labor. (Most of the remainder came from "ideological"
or "other" donors, such as environmental groups, the
National Rifle Association, clergy or nonprofit organizations.)'
In place of the "Inherent tension"
that existed between Democratic politicians and K Street lobbyists,
their ideological closeness with Republicans has made the party
and Its corporate supporters virtually indistinguishable. "Tom
DeLay, Grover Norquist, and others have set up a K Street patronage
operation that effectively obliterates the distinction between
conservatives and corporatists," conservative columnist
David Brooks observed in June 2002.
p108
"Beginning in the 1990s, Washington's corporate offices and
trade associations began to resemble immature campaign committees,
replete with pollsters and message consultants," Confessore
writes. "To supplement PAC [Political Action Committee] giving,
which is limited by federal election laws, corporations vastly
increased their advocacy budgets, with trade organizations spending
millions of dollars in soft money on issue ad campaigns in congressional
districts. And thanks to the growing number of associations whose
executives are beholden to DeLay or Santorum, these earnings are
increasingly put in the service of GOP candidates and ralses."
During the Iraq War, for example, radio conglomerate Clear Channel
Communications had its stations sponsor pro-war rallies nationwide
and even banned the Dixie Chicks from their playlist after one
band member criticized Bush. Companies such as General Motors,
Verizon and Morgan Stanley have lobbied their stockholders and
customers to promote Bush administration tax cuts, and the pharmaceutical
industry both helped write and promote Bush's Medicare plan.
p111
... the actual contracts for rebuilding Iraq have also gone to
companies that give big donations to the Republicans. Weeks before
the first bombs dropped in Iraq, the Bush administration began
its plans for rebuilding the country. The plans were developed
in secret, according to ABC News, with only a handful of companies
allowed to bid on contracts for the reconstruction of Iraqi schools,
airports, roads, bridges, hospitals and power plants.
The companies allowed to bid were all
generous political donors, mostly to Republicans: Bechtel, Fluor,
Parsons, the Washington Group and Halliburton -Vice President
Dick Cheney's old firm."
p112
The pattern is this: companies like Halliburton give money to
support Republican politicians, who in turn use their clout to
ensure that the companies get fat contracts, who in turn give
a portion of their profits to keep Republicans in power. Around
and around the circle goes, and everybody, gets a piece-except,
of course, for the rest of the American people, who pay the bill
for all this fun with their tax dollars and the mounting federal
deficit.
The relationship between corporations,
lobbyists, industry funded think tanks and the Republican Party
has become so intertwined that simply listing all the overlapping
relationships can boggle the mind.
p114
Much of the administration's intelligence information about Iraq
actually came from the Iraqi National Congress (INC), an organization
created and funded by the U.S. government at the behest of the
first Bush administration for the purpose of creating conditions
for Saddam Hussein's overthrow. Not surprisingly, the information
from the INC and its head, Ahmed Chalabi, tended to reinforce
the already existing assumptions of policymakers in the second
Bush administration, even when that information contradicted other
reports coining from the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. The
INC's "Intelligence isn't reliable at all," said Vincent
Cannistraro, a former senior CIA official and counterterrorism
expert. "Much of it is propaganda. Much of it is telling
the Defense Department what they want to hear. And much of it
is used to support Chalabi's own presidential ambitions. They
make no distinction between intelligence and propaganda, using
alleged informants and defectors who say what Chalabi wants them
to say, [creating] cooked information that goes right into presidential
and vice-presidential speeches."
p148
By its nature, television is expensive to produce and broadcast
(although that may be changing, thanks to the Internet and other
technological advances). It therefore lends itself to control
by the people who call afford to pay for the considerable costs
of production. It is also a highly emotional medium. Unlike print,
which requires that the audience make a conscious effort, television
is often absorbed unconsciously, as pure images and background
in our information environment.
Reporter Leslie Stahl tells a story in
her memoir, Reporting Live, of all experience she had in 1984
when she broadcast a piece for the CBS Evening News about the
gap between rhetoric and reality, under the Reagan administration.
She juxtaposed images of staged photo opportunities ill which
Reagan picnicked with ordinary folks or surrounded himself with
black children, farmers and happy flag-waving supporters. These
images, she pointed out, often conflicted with the nature of Reagan's
actual policies. "Mr. Reagan tries to counter the mention
of an unpopular issue with a carefully chosen backdrop that actually
contradicts the president's policy," she said in her Evening
News piece. "Look at the handicapped Olympics, or the opening
ceremony of all old-age home. No hint that he tried to cut the
budgets for the disabled or for federally subsidized housing for
the elderly."
Stahl's piece was so hard-hitting in its
criticism of Reagan, she recalled, that she "worried that
my sources at the White House would be angry enough to freeze
me out." Much to her shock, however, she received a phone
call immediately after the broadcast from White House aide Richard
Darman. He was calling from the office of Treasury Secretary Jim
Baker, who had Just watched the piece along with White House press
secretary Mike Baker's assistant, Margaret Tutweiler. Rather than
complaining, they were calling to thank her. 'Way to go, kiddo,"
Darman said. "What a great story! We loved it."
"Excuse me?" Stahl replied,
thinking he must be joking.
"No, no, we really loved it,"
Darman insisted. "Five minutes of free media. We owe you
big-time."
"Why are you so happy?" Stahl
said. "Didn't you hear what I said?"
"Nobody heard what you said,"
Darman replied.
"Come again?"
"You guys in Televisionland haven't
figured it out, have you? When the pictures are powerful and emotional,
they override if not completely drown out the sound. Leslie, I
mean it, nobody heard you."
Stahl was so taken aback that she played
a videotape of her segment before a live audience of a hundred
people and asked them what they had 'List seen. Sure enough, Darman
was right. "Most of the audience thought it was either an
ad for the Reagan campaign or a very positive news story,"
Stahl recalls. "Only a handful heard what I said. The pictures
were so evocative-we're talking about pictures with Reagan in
the shining center-that all the viewers were absorbed. Unlike
reading or listening to the radio, with the television we 'learn'
with two of our senses together, and apparently the eye is dominant.
When we watch television, we get an emotional reaction. The information
doesn't always go directly to the thinking part of our brains
but to the gut. It's all about impressions, and the White House
understood that."
The George W. Bush administration also
understands this lesson. At the Republican National Convention
that nominated Bush in 2000, only 4 percent of the actual delegates
were black, compared to 20 percent at the Democratic Convention,
but the talent onstage looked quite different: not lust Colin
Powell, but comedian Chris Rock, the Temptations, a gospel choir,
rhythm-and-blues and salsa singers, and Representative J. C. Watts
(the only black Republican in Congress). "It's all visuals,"
Karl Rove told campaign finance chief Don Evans. "You campaign
as if America was watching TV with the sound turned down."
In our previous book, Weapons of Mass
Deception, we described the extraordinary level of detail that
went into preparing Bush's May 1, 2003, landing in a fighter let
aboard an aircraft carrier to celebrate what he called the end
of "major combat operations in Iraq ."46 Orchestrating
the event cost about $1 million in taxpayer dollars .4- In reality,
the aircraft carrier was so close to shore that it had to be repositioned
in the water to keep TV cameras from picking up the San Diego
shoreline." In order to get the light just right and keep
the ship from arriving at port before the prime-time broadcast,
a Pentagon official admitted, the USS Abraham Lincoln made "lazy
circles" 30 miles at sea and took 20 hours to cross a distance
that could have been covered in an hour or S0.49 (Without the
stagecraft, in other words, Bush could have walked aboard, rather
than flown.) During his speech, commanders gauged the wind and
glided along at precisely the right speed so sea breezes would
not blow across the ship and create unwanted noise. When the wind
shifted during the speech, the ship changed course.",
Similar attention went into the staging
of Bush's Surprise visit to Baghdad on Thanksgiving 2003 to share
turkey with the troops. Although Bush was shown on camera cradling
a huge platter laden with a golden-brown turkey, the object in
his hands was actually a decoration. "A contractor had roasted
and primped the turkey to adorn the buffet line, while the 600
soldiers were served from cafeteria-style steam trays," reported
the Washington Post." The soldiers who cheered Bush were
prescreened for his arrival, while others showing tip for turkey
were turned away.' In a letter to Stars and Stripes, the Pentagon-authorized
newspaper for the U.S. military, Sgt. Loren Russell complained
that the soldiers under his command in Iraq had actually been
denied their expected evening meal, because the facility where
they usually ate had been reserved for Bush's appearance. "I'm
lucky enough to be with soldiers who often complain among themselves,
but all they expect are good leadership and three square meals
a day," Russell wrote. He added, "Imagine their dismay
when they walked 15 minutes to the Bob Hope Dining Facility, only
to find that they were turned away from their evening meal because
they were in the wrong unit.... And all of this happened on Thanksgiving,
the best meal of the year when soldiers get a taste of home cooking.";`
The point to these exercises in politics as theater is that they
enable symbolism and style to substitute for substance. The speech
aboard the aircraft carrier sent a message that "the war
is over," even if Bush didn't use those precise words. The
turkey hoisted in his arms on Thanksgiving sent a message that
he cared enough about the troops to serve them their food in person.
Imagery substitutes so thoroughly for substance that the Bush
administration's photo opportunities have often directly contradicted
his actual policies:
* In March 2001, Bush visited Egleston
Children's Hospital in Atlanta, Georgia. "This is a hospital,
but it's also-it's a place full of love," he said, adding,
"There's a lot of talk about budgets right now, and I'm here
to talk about the budget. My job as the president is to submit
a budget to the Congress and to set priorities, and one of the
priorities that we've talked about is making sure the health-care
systems are funded ."54 Yet Bush's first budget proposal
actually proposed cutting grants to children's hospitals (including
the "place full of love" in Egleston) by $35 million,
or 15 percent . 55
* A year later, Bush gave speeches before
groups of "first responders" (police, rescue workers
and firefighters). "We're dealing with first-time responders
to make sure they've got what's needed to be able to respond,"
he said, standing before a large backdrop that featured a huge,
blown-up photo of a 9/11 rescue worker." Yet Bush actually
opposed requests from fire chiefs for funding to help communities
hire additional firefighters. According to the International Association
of Fire Chiefs (IAFC) and the International Association of Fire
Fighters (IAFF), fire departments throughout the country were
vastly understaffed and unprepared to cope with a terrorist attack.
To fill this gap, they called for a federal grant program that
would help hire 75,000 new firefighters, at a cost of $7.6 billion.
Bush responded with a proposal for less than half that amount,
most of which was allocated for equipment and training rather
than personnel." The gap between pretty poses and actual
money prompted the IAFF to vote unanimously in August 2002 to
boycott Bush's planned national tribute to firefighters who died
on September 11. "Don't lionize our fallen brothers in one
breath, and then stab us in the back by eliminating funding for
our members to fight terrorism and stay safe," said IAFF
president Harold Schaitberger. "President Bush, you are either
with us or against us. You can't have it both ways.""
* In June 2002, Bush toured a housing
project supported by a HOPE VI grant from the U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). He was photographed standing
alongside happy home dwellers who had obtained assistance from
the program, which was set up in 1992 to pay for rehabilitation,
new construction and other housing improvements in America's most
distressed public housing. "Part of being a secure America
is to encourage home ownership," Bush said as he toured the
project, adding, "All you've got to do is shake their hand
and listen to their stories and watch the pride that they exhibit
when they show you the kitchen and the stairs. In his 2004 proposed
budget, Bush eliminated funding for HOPE VI.
* In January 2003, Bush gave a speech
at a St. Louis warehouse announcing his new tax plan. He stood
in front of what appeared to be a backdrop of cardboard boxes
stamped "Made in U.S.A." The backdrop, however, was
actually a facade painted on canvas. The warehouse where he gave
his speech did contain cardboard boxes, but the real boxes were
all stamped "Made in China." To minimize the possibility
that anyone would notice the difference between reality and the
painted facade, a Bush aide had carefully taped white labels over
all of the actual boxes, obscuring the words "Made in China
."
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