The Awful TruthChuck Lewis of the Center for Public Integrity on political lies, and the corporate interests that fund them
KEEPING SCORE Chuck Lewis In 1998, Lewis was named a MacArthur fellow. He is currently president of the Fund for Independence in Journalism in Washington, which was created as a support organization to the Center for Public Integrity. He also serves on the board of the Fund for Investigative Journalism, the advisory board of the International Reporting Project, and as an "international associate" of the Open Democracy Advice Centre in Cape Town, South Africa. Last week he released the report he coauthored with Mark Reading-Smith detailing the 935 false statements of the Bush administration on its way to war in Iraq. I first met Lewis 25 years ago, when he was an off-air reporter at the ABC News bureau in Washington. Both of us first started writing for newspapers during Watergate. Like me, Lewis is a former Ferris professor of journalism at Princeton. Currently, he is a Distinguished Journalist in Residence and professor of journalism at American University in Washington, D.C. Last week we chatted about a few of the permanent catastrophes in our nation's capital. CHARLES KAISER: Compared to 1980, how much institutionalized investigative reporting still exists at the networks? These folks are all getting the news on every day. And the news to them is whatever the newsmakers are saying is the news. They're covering hearings—if there are any interesting hearings. Most hearings aren't covered anymore. They'll cover presidential speeches. There are only six or seven pieces a day in less than 22 minutes on the evening news, and of that, you're talking one or two out of D.C., if that. The bottom line: Whatever you're getting is pretty big stuff, like whatever the big bill is up on the hill or some controversy between the speaker and the president—something that is basically headline stuff. I'm not saying it's not important, but it's also not investigative. They don't have the staff to do it, really. You know, at each network there are a few investigative producers who I know and have respect for, but the problem is they also have to do crap occasionally. They get diverted. And then when they pitch stuff it doesn't always get approved—which, again, is putting it charitably. ... We have to be honest here: There's not great incentive to do complex investigative business stories about multibillion-dollar corporations. Who just happen to be the people who make all the decisions in Washington.
BARELY COVERED BY THE OLD GRAY LADY 435 days of missing White House e-mails As I'm sure you're aware, several thousand newspaper reporters and editors, 3,000 or 4,000 of them have been fired since 2000. So what's happening is newsrooms are starting to be hollowed out. Do you think that the corporate control of the Washington governmental process is greater than it was 30 years ago, or really just about the same? To become a senator from a state like New York or California, it's tens of millions of dollars you have to raise. All that money is coming from powerful, well-heeled interestsAs I've certainly pounded into the ground with a few books, the idea of a Harry Truman or an Abe Lincoln entering politics—good luck! You have to raise a lot of money just to be a state legislator now. And to become a senator from a state like New York or California—forget it. It's tens of millions of dollars you have to raise. All that money is coming from powerful, well-heeled interests—less than one percent of Americans make contributions of $1,000 or more. We've done a lot of work over the years at the Center of Public Integrity—we're talking scores of reports that deal with this. You have the iron triangle: members of Congress who have oversight over independent federal agencies like the FDA or the FAA. And what happens is, if you start asking questions that are a little tough about this industry or that industry, campaign money dries up. The corporate influence is huge. I'll give you one small example. We looked at 10 years of food safety legislation, from approximately '87 to '97. In the mid-1990s, 9,000 people were dying every year from food-borne illnesses according to the Centers for Disease Control, and millions more were getting sick. What happened is, not a single bill to tighten up safety in meatpacking plants and things like that came out of the two agriculture committees in the two houses of Congress. And of course the most money from the food-related industries all goes into those two those committees, and the chairs of those committees bottle up the legislation and never let it hit the floor for a vote. If the industry flexes its muscle, it can control that agenda. I could go through about 20 examples of this. The average American senses that Washington is such a mess, which sums it up. That's why we don't have health care. We did a big report in '94. It was the only report dealing with lobbying on the Clinton health care proposal—right before it was withdrawn. It took a year of research and we tracked 660 groups, both pro and con, from unions to hospitals and doctors and insurance companies; we interviewed hundreds and we looked at thousands of records. It was called "Well Healed." I did a piece for the Outlook section and I compared Clinton and health care to Santiago, the fisherman in The Old Man and the Sea. Like all other preceding presidents who were interested in health care insurance going back to the beginning of the 20th century, Clinton came back to shore with just a skeleton of bones. The thing had been eaten alive by all these sharks out there—the nurses don't want this, the doctors don't want that—by the time you saw what was left it was not a pretty sight. So that's Washington. |
|
|
||
Share This Article
Like this article? Click here to buzz it up on Yahoo!