Paige wants Williams investigation

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Paige acts. Powell vascillates. Another scandal we're not hearing much about in the news.

I can't imagine what the rabid right wing media would be doing with this if it wasn't one of their own.

Paige wants Williams investigation

FCC member calls for separate probe of commentator

Thursday, January 13, 2005 Posted: 6:39 PM EST (2339 GMT)

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Outgoing Education Secretary Rod Paige directed his agency Thursday to begin a speedy investigation into its public relations contract with a prominent black media commentator after leaders of a Senate committee asked for records of the department's publicity deals.

At the same time, a Federal Communications Commission member asked that his agency investigate whether the commentator, Armstrong Williams, broke the law by failing to disclose that the Bush administration paid him $240,000 to plug its education policies to minority audiences.

Williams has apologized for a mistake in judgment but says he has broken no law.

Paige, commenting about the flap for the first time, said he has ordered an inspector general investigation to "clear up any remaining aspects of this issue as soon as possible, so that it does not burden my successor or sully the fine people and good name of this department."

Paige is leaving his post shortly, likely to be replaced by Margaret Spellings.

The department, through a contract with the public relations firm Ketchum, hired Williams to produce ads that featured Paige and promoted Bush's No Child Left Behind law. The contract also called for Williams to provide media access for Paige and to persuade other black journalists to talk about the law.

Federal law bans the use of public money on propaganda.

"Given our jurisdiction over the funds involved, we would appreciate your careful review of the contract with Ketchum and the payment made to Mr. Williams," said Sens. Arlen Specter, R-Pennsylvania, and Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, in a letter to Paige.

The letter, dated Wednesday, was obtained by The Associated Press on Thursday. The lawmakers are the chairman and the ranking member of the panel that oversees education spending.

They asked Paige for a list of any grant, contract or arrangement of public money being used "for public relations or anything similar to the purpose of the Ketchum contract" from the 2002, 2003 and 2004 budget years.

Harkin also plans to introduce a bill requiring federal agencies to report their entire advertising budgets to Congress, and to make clear in their ads that public money was used.

As part of a more than $1 million contract with Ketchum, the Education Department paid for a video that appeared as a news story without making clear the reporter was hired to promote No Child Left Behind. The agency also paid for ratings of news reporters, with points for stories that make the law, the Bush administration and the Republican Party look good.

Meanwhile, at an FCC meeting Thursday, Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein said the agency had received about a dozen complaints concerning the Williams arrangement.

"I certainly hope the FCC will take action and fully investigate whether any laws have been broken," Adelstein said.

Paige said the public money went solely for ads in which he described the law.

"All of this has been reviewed and is legal," Paige said. "However, I am sorry that there are perceptions and allegations of ethical lapses."

When the news broke last week, the department defended its decision as a "permissible use of taxpayer funds." Williams, however apologized, saying that accepting money and then publicly supporting the law was an "obvious conflict of interests."

On Thursday, Williams, responding to the request for an FCC investigation, said neither he nor any of the stations that carried his syndicated program violated the law. He said the ads that aired during the show stated they were paid for by the Education Department.

"I was not engaged in any public relations in this campaign. It was strictly advertising," Williams said by phone. "I'm not concerned about this witch hunt because I know that I've done nothing wrong, nothing illegal."

None of the other commissioners responded to Adelstein's statement during the meeting. Afterward, FCC Chairman Michael Powell, a Republican, and David Solomon, who heads the agency's enforcement bureau, declined to comment.

Generally, the FCC reviews letters and complaints before determining if there should be an investigation. Powell said he had not seen the complaints filed against Williams.

 

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
58,686
3
0
All I heard today on RWR was Rush lamenting about Justice Breyer and praising Scalia, Glenn Beck (I think it was him anyway) going on about two income families or something.

Not a peep about Iraq, no WMDs, Bush using taxpayer dollars for those NCLB promotions, Abu Ghraib trials, Human Rights Watch denouncing the US, the tsunami aid effort, etc.
 

dahunan

Lifer
Jan 10, 2002
18,191
3
0
Didn't they also do something similar with FAKE Health and Social Security Commericals? << I cannot remember many details about it..
 

conjur

No Lifer
Jun 7, 2001
58,686
3
0
Payola columnist Armstrong Williams repeated Social Security misinformation in self-syndicated column
http://mediamatters.org/items/200502140007
Conservative commentator and columnist Armstrong Williams -- whose column was dropped by Tribune Media Services following USA Today's disclosure that the Bush administration paid him $240,000 to promote its No Child Left Behind education policy -- echoed other conservatives' false claims about Social Security in his February 14 self-syndicated column. Williams claimed that "there exists no Social Security surplus;" that Social Security will "collapse" in 2032; and that "[t]he only way to actually solve the problem [of Social Security's solvency] is to transfer our Social Security taxes into privately managed universal savings accounts." In fact, the Social Security trust fund is composed of real assets; the Social Security trustees' date for Social Security's projected insolvency is 2042, at which point it will not "collapse" but would continue to be able to pay out a projected 73 percent of currently promised benefits; and administration officials have acknowledged that private accounts will not address the issue of Social Security's solvency.

In his February 14 column, which continues to appear on the Heritage Foundation's website TownHall.com and on the right-wing news website NewsMax.com, Williams wrote:
Perhaps this is a good time to mention, there exists no Social Security surplus. The social security trust fund is filled with old, yellowed scraps of paper that read, "IOU." So what we're looking at is the impending bankruptcy of the entire Social Security system. Experts predict that on or about the year 2032, the system will collapse.

As Media Matters for America has documented, the oft-repeated claim that the Social Security trust fund is a "myth" is false. The debts that the government owes Social Security are as real and redeemable as all public debts to which the government is obligated. As a January 10 New York Times editorial explained: "If the trust fund's Treasury securities are worthless, someone better tell investors throughout the world, who currently hold $4.3 trillion in Treasury debt that carries the exact same government obligation to pay as the trust fund securities."

Williams also incorrectly stated that Social Security will "collapse" in 2032. As Media Matters has noted, the 2004 Report by the six member Board of Trustees of the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Disability Insurance Trust Funds (OASDI) -- which includes three of Bush's cabinet secretaries -- estimates that Social Security's assets will be exhausted in 2042, at which point the system would not "collapse." Instead, tax income would cover 73 percent of Social Security's projected costs. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated that the Social Security trust fund could pay out full benefits until 2052, 81 percent of currently scheduled benefits in 2053, and 71 percent in 2100.

Williams also incorrectly claimed that "[t]he only way to actually solve the problem [of Social Security's solvency] is to transfer our Social Security taxes into privately managed universal savings accounts." Even an unnamed "senior administration official" has conceded that diverting payroll taxes into private accounts will not address the issue of Social Security's long-term projected insolvency.

Williams was the first of a series of conservative columnists found to have had undisclosed financial ties to the Bush administration.
Guess he's just a glutton for punishment.
 

BBond

Diamond Member
Oct 3, 2004
8,363
0
0
Originally posted by: conjur
heh...seems Spellings is putting the blame on Paige.


Spellings: 'Serious Lapses' in Publicity
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20050415/D89G1F0G0.html

And the White House is refusing to cooperate with the investigation. Maybe Paige is just another in a long and ever increasing list of fall guys. Or maybe he was just following orders.

Debate Rekindles Over Government-Produced 'News'

By ANNE E. KORNBLUT and DAVID BARSTOW

Published: April 15, 2005

WASHINGTON, April 14 - A California Democrat accused the Bush administration on Thursday of failing to cooperate fully with the inspector general at the Education Department in an investigation of the government's hiring of Armstrong Williams, a prominent conservative commentator, to promote the president's signature education legislation.

The comments of the Democrat, Representative George Miller of California, came as the Federal Communications Commission and the Senate stepped into a second controversy over the public relations policies of the Bush administration, and moved toward strengthening the rules that govern how video news releases are produced and broadcast.

The Senate voted 98 to 0 to approve an amendment that would force federal agencies over the next year to disclose the origins of video releases. The releases have been repeatedly presented as real news accounts and broadcast by some television stations with no indication that they came from the government.

...