THINK PROGRESS
The Progress Report
MEDIA
Federal Conglomeration Commission
When French political philosopher Alexis de Tocqueville came to the
United States in the 19th
century, he marveled at the country's "division
of the influence of the press." "In America there is scarcely a
hamlet that has not its newspaper," he wrote. "All the political
journals of the United States are, indeed, arrayed on the side of the
administration or against it; but they attack and defend it in a
thousand different ways." Yet as Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) member Michael Copps observes, two
centuries later, the
United States doesn't fully have "media capable of keeping
democracy strong." FCC chairman Kevin Martin's new plans to loosen
media ownership limits -- which are endorsed by billionaires such as
Rupert
Murdoch and Samuel Zell
-- will only
worsen
this state and smother local voices. These plans are largely opposed by
the American public. Nearly 60 percent
oppose allowing a company to own both a newspaper and a television
station in the same market, and 70 percent describe media consolidation
as a "problem."
CONSOLIDATING MORE THAN 120 MILLION
AMERICANS: In 1975, the FCC enacted a rule prohibiting a company
from owning
a newspaper and a television station in the same city. In 2003,
President Bush's then-FCC chairman Michael Powell attempted to loosen
these rules, sparking a strong public outcry. More than three million
people protested his actions, and Congress overturned one of his rule
changes. The rest were halted by a federal court "for
not being properly justified and sent...back to the FCC to be
rewritten." As Common Cause notes, Martin's current proposals are "eerily
similar to what happened in 2003." His changes would "enable a
media company to own both a newspaper and either a radio or smaller
television station in the nation's
20 largest markets." While Martin has tried to portray his proposal
as "relatively
moderate," Copps and fellow FCC member Jonathan Adelstein, who both
oppose the rule change, note that these 20 markets "account for over 43% of U.S.
households" and directly affect more than 120 million Americans.
Additionally, Martin has rushed to schedule a vote on the issue for Dec.
18, permitting the public just 19 working days to submit
comments.
CROWDING OUT LOCAL AND MINORITY VOICES:
Martin's rushed Dec. 18 vote comes even though the FCC has
not yet finished its study on how the changes would affect local media
ownership, nor has it forwarded "comprehensive ideas to increase women and minority
ownership of broadcast outlets." Adelstein notes that the FCC has
collected 44
recommendations from "expert outside organizations" on this topic,
but they continue to sit "on the shelf of the FCC, just gathering
dust." Even under the current rules, "[w]omen and people of color --
who comprise two-thirds of the population -- own only about one-sixth of commercial
radio and TV stations." African-Americans and Latinos own "only
33 of the nation's 1350 TV stations" and six percent of the 10,000
radio stations. Martin's plan would further shut out diverse voices.
Cross-owned stations, which Martin's change would increase, produce
less local news and lead "other stations in the market to collectively curtail their
news output by about 25 percent." Economists have documented that
when stations provide Spanish-language local news, "voter turnout among Spanish
speakers increases significantly." Center for American Progress
Senior Fellow Mark Lloyd notes that while Martin reportedly conducted 10
studies on "tied to the media ownership review," none focused on
"the impact of local media diversity on democratic engagement, or on
the diversity of information available to minority communities." Lloyd
and Fordham University's Phil Napoli have developed a "Metric for Local
Media
Diversity" to measure local media diversity and "determine what level
of media diversity actually supports strong local democracies."
A 'MISGUIDED AND HARMFUL' PLAN:
As in 2003, Martin's rules change has ignited bipartisan outrage from
Capitol Hill. Today, "24 House Republicans plan to deliver a letter to
Mr. Martin, chiding him for a 'misguided
and harmful' proposal that would give the FCC more authority to
regulate the cable industry." They further call his plan "inappropriate
at best and contradicts the statute at worst." Yesterday, Sen. Russ
Feingold (D-WI) wrote to Martin and expressed concern that he may be "selectively
collecting and releasing information to support its pre-conceived
agenda," citing the fact that the FCC last year decided to not release
"two reports that raised questions about potential negative impacts
from
further media consolidation." Sens. Byron Dorgan (D-ND) and Trent Lott
(R-MS) have introduced legislation
to postpone the FCC's vote, ensure 90 days for public comments, and
"complete a separate proceeding to evaluate how localism is affected by
media consolidation." Contact your lawmakers and urge them to support The
Media Ownership Act of 2007.
Under the Radar
JUSTICE -- HATE CRIMES ON THE RISE AS
BUSH THREATENS VETO: Yesterday, the FBI released statistics
showing that incidents of hate crimes rose
by nearly eight percent
in 2006, as there were 7,722 criminal incidents "targeting
victims or property as a result of bias against a particular race,
religion, sexual orientation, ethnic or national origin or physical or
mental disability." These statistics do not include the recent rise in the number of
nooses that have followed the widely-publicized
incidents in Jena, LA.
Last Friday, Rev. Al Sharpton and Martin Luther King III led a march of
nearly 20,000 people around the Justice Department to protest what they
saw as the Department's failure to aggressively
prosecute hate crimes. "There's
Jenas everywhere," Sharpton said at the march. President
Bush has vowed
to veto
a provision expanding hate crimes law to include crimes motivated by
the gender, sexual orientation, or disability of the victim, calling
the expansion "unnecessary
and constitutionally questionable."
MEDIA -- O'REILLY RUNS AD FOR 'VILE'
MOVIE THAT HE CLAIMS HELPS 'THE TERRORISTS': For
two months, Fox News host Bill O'Reilly has criticized Brian De Palma's
controversial
new film, Redacted, which
was financed by Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban. The film centers
around a fictionalized portrayal of "the true
story of a group of U.S. soldiers who raped and killed a
14-year-old Iraqi girl and murdered members of her
family." O'Reilly kicked off his campaign against the film with a column in
September,
saying the filmmakers "should be ashamed" because "they are hurting
their own country." He sharpened his attacks last week, calling for a
boycott of the "vile," "anti-American" film during multiple segments on
his show. In a second column, O'Reilly
compared Cuban and DePalma to Charles Manson. Cuban responded
to O'Reilly's criticism by claiming that the Fox News star is mischaracterizing
the film and attacking it without
having seen it. Last week, Cuban bought
ad time for the film during The O'Reilly Factor. The ad ran during
the Nov.
15 edition of the show. Cuban says the point of the ad buy was
to see if the issue "really was important to Mr. O'Reilly, or whether"
he "would
say whatever he needed to say to get more people to watch." Cuban
said he had no problem whatsoever obtaining the time. Watch a compilation
of O'Reilly's attacks on Cuban and the ad he aired.
ETHICS -- NOVAK ATTACKS BUFFET AS A
'HYPOCRITE' WITH 'PHONY MESSAGE': Last week, billionaire
investor Warren Buffett urged Congress "to
maintain the estate tax,
saying that plans to repeal the tax would benefit a handful of the
richest American families and widen income disparity in the United
States." Fewer than one percent of the nation's super-rich pay the
estate
tax.
"For this year, individual estates valued at more than $2 million are taxed
at a top rate of 45 percent." In the last 20 years, tax laws have
allowed the "superrich" to become richer, according to Buffet. Buffet
-- who pays the estate tax -- argued, "A progressive and meaningful
estate tax is needed to curb the movement
of a democracy toward plutocracy." This weekend on Bloomberg
Television, right-wing pundit Bob Novak fumed
over Buffett's altruistic testimony, attacking him as a hypocrite
who
"should be ashamed of himself for putting out that phony message."
Bloomberg's Al Hunt responded, "Bob, there's only two differences
between you and Warren Buffett: $40 billion and a conscience."
Think Fast
"New Orleans lost out in the competition to host one of the 2008 presidential debates Monday after the commission that selects the sites decided that the city has not sufficiently recovered from Hurricane Katrina to handle such a major event."
CQ reports that Senate Judiciary Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-VT) "is ready to play nice when considering President Bush's latest round of nominees to fill a raft of vacancies in the upper echelons of the Justice Department." After Bush reportedly called him at home, Leahy pledged, "I'm going to try to move as quickly as I can on them."
CBS's "60 Minutes" is gathering information in Alabama about the case of incarcerated former Gov. Don Siegelman. Siegelman's prosecution was opposed by Justice Department prosecutors and was reportedly interfered with by Bush administration political operatives.
While the violence in Baghdad declines, "northern Iraq has become more violent than other regions as al-Qaida and other militants move there to avoid coalition operations elsewhere." "What you're seeing is the enemy shifting," Army Maj. Gen. Mark P. Hertling told reporters yesterday.
Law professors David Cole of Georgetown University and Jules Lobel of the University of Pittsburgh published a Report Card on the war against terrorist networks in this weekend's Los Angeles Times. The chart combines visual and statistical depictions of the cost of the administration's failing strategy. View it here.
When the House voted on Iraq redeployment legislation last week, three Republicans -- Reps. Chris Shays (CT), Jim Walsh (NY) and Phil English (PA) -- "voted to order withdrawal for the first time," likely influenced by the tough re-election campaigns they face in '08.
"US contracts in Iraq and Afghanistan more than doubled from 2004 to 2006 to over 25 billion dollars but government oversight of the firms involved has slackened," reports the Center for Public Integrity. Former Halliburton subsidiary KBR topped the list with more than $16 billion in U.S. contracts.
"Apparel retailer Gap is canceling half of its orders with a vendor in India and promises to donate $200,000 to improve working conditions there. The move comes after revelations that some of its clothes were made by children as young as 10."
And finally: "Robert Novak is a prince, all right, and every member of royalty needs a chariot befitting his title. That must be why the right-leaning columnist and author of 'Prince of Darkness' was spotted pulling up to the Capitol on Friday in his sleek (and slightly menacing-looking) black Corvette convertible."
Good News
According to the United Nations, new infections of the deadly AIDS virus "have been dropping each year since they peaked in the late 1990s."
State Watch
CALIFORNIA:
"The nation is watching whether California will join Massachusetts in
enacting universal health care."
PENNSYLVANIA:
"Mayor John Street, once regarded as an enemy of the gay community for
opposing same-sex partner benefits, is to preside over his first
same-sex commitment ceremony this weekend."
POLITICS:
A Pennsylvania college is "trying to start a movement to ban
politicians
from holding closed meetings restricted to supporters on
all campuses in the nation."
Blog Watch
THINK
PROGRESS: Fox News chief Roger Ailes lectures West Point cadets
About "the military and the media."
WINDOW
ON WASHINGTON: Homeland Security Adviser France Townsend's goodbye
to President Bush: "You are such a man."
ERIC
BLACK INK: "The mood" in the Minnesota U.S. attorney's office is "a
combination of relief and euphoria" after Rachel Paulose announced she
is leaving for a job in the Justice Department.
DAILY
KOS: A "return to normalcy" has been claimed during every single
year of
the Iraq war, without any lasting normalcy.
Daily Grill
"One of the good things about [columnist Robert] Novak is that...he
breaks stuff that always turns out to be right. He is never proven
wrong. He is always right."
-- Political analyst Dick Morris, 11/19/07, on Fox News's Hannity and
Colmes
VERSUS
"An Illinois Republican source tells us former Speaker J. Dennis
Hastert (R-Ill.) plans to resign November 6 this year instead of
finishing out his term."
-- Novak, 8/22/07
VERSUS
"It's time for this legislator to return to being a private citizen."
-- Hastert, 11/15/07,
announcing his resignation
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