Media Matters for America

Tomlinson choice for CPB head is GOP partisan who oversees Bush international propaganda effort -- with Tomlinson

June 13, 2005 1:03 pm ET

A June 9 Washington Post article identified assistant secretary of state and former Republican National Committee (RNC) co-chairwoman Patricia de Stacy Harrison as the "leading candidate" to become president of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), a private, not-for-profit corporation created by Congress to protect public broadcasting outlets from political interference. While reporter Paul Farhi noted that Harrison is CPB chairman Kenneth Y. Tomlinson's "favored candidate" and that both are Republicans, he failed to mention that Harrison's current role in the State Department, where she manages efforts to openly promote Bush administration policy around the world, potentially undermines her fitness to lead an organization created to protect against political interference.

Harrison's State Department position requires her to work closely with the other agency responsible for managing U.S. public diplomacy, the Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG), which Tomlinson chairs. In a May 20 Post article, Farhi had mentioned the potential conflict of interest arising from Tomlinson's dual positions. He wrote then: "How, some ask, can a man so intimately involved in the Bush administration's efforts to polish its image put politics aside when it comes to running the CPB, an agency created by Congress in 1967 expressly to give public broadcasting 'maximum protection from extraneous [political] interference and control.' " But Farhi did not report that Harrison has been at least as involved as Tomlinson in "the Bush administration's efforts to polish its image."

Finally, Farhi noted the public broadcasting community's concerns about Harrison's history as a Republican activist, but did not fully examine her history of partisan advocacy.

What Farhi included in his article:

What Farhi omitted:

The CPB's eight-member board of directors is scheduled to decide who will fill the vacant presidency at meetings June 20-21.

Media Matters for America runs the Hands Off Public Broadcasting campaign, an effort to ensure that public broadcasting remains independent and free from political pressure and to highlight conservative misinformation in and about public broadcasting.

&mdash J.K.

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