Media Matters for America

Letter to The Miami Herald

October 04, 2006 3:39 pm ET

Tom Fiedler
Executive editor, The Miami Herald

David Landsberg
Publisher, The Miami Herald

Dear Mr. Fiedler and Mr. Landsberg:

I am writing today in response to the growing controversy surrounding payments by the Bush administration to Florida journalists, some of whom work for the Herald, for appearances on Radio and TV Marti.

I was encouraged to read in today's Herald that "Top Miami Herald and McClatchy executives announced a new policy that no journalists in the future will accept pay for appearances on government-sponsored media." This is a good and necessary step in reassuring your readers of the Herald's commitment to editorial independence. However, the context in which the Radio and TV Marti payments occurred suggests that the Herald owes its readers more.

As I'm sure you know, the payments to Herald reporters are only the latest in a string of troubling examples of the Bush administration manipulating the news media through the use of paid propaganda and, in some cases, direct payments to journalists in exchange for the promotion of Bush policies. Examples include:

These incidents and others have seriously eroded the American public's confidence in the independence of the news media.

Now we learn that several journalists employed by The Miami Herald and its sister publication, El Nuevo Herald, were paid by the Bush administration for appearances on Radio and TV Marti.

According to the September 8 edition of The Miami Herald, syndicated columnist Carlos Alberto Montaner -- whose columns appear in both the Herald and El Nuevo Herald -- is among those who have been paid by the administration.

A quick review of columns by Montaner that ran in the Herald raises troubling questions that demand immediate investigation. During the heated 2004 presidential campaign -- a campaign in which, as you know, Florida was seen as a key battleground state -- the Herald ran columns by Montaner that praised President George W. Bush and criticized his Democratic opponent, Sen. John Kerry. For example:

Further, Montaner wrote a September 7, 2004, column in praise of Mel Martinez, the former Bush administration secretary of Housing and Urban Development who was, at the time, the Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate. Martinez couldn't have asked for more favorable treatment than he received from Montaner, who noted that Martinez "insists jubilantly that the American Dream does exist and that it is attainable. His very life is proof of that."

We have no reason to believe that Montaner wrote favorably of Bush, or negatively of Kerry, as a result of the payments he received from the Bush administration. No reason, that is, other than the administration's pattern of paying journalists to promote Bush administration policies.

That pattern, however, makes it essential that the Herald immediately conduct a thorough and public review of the articles and columns it published that were written by journalists who were on the Bush administration's payroll. Herald readers -- and all Americans concerned about their government's pattern of using taxpayer money to pay for favorable media coverage -- deserve prompt and thorough answers to several basic questions, including:

Thank you for your attention to this matter. Please do not hesitate to contact me if I can be of any assistance.

Sincerely,
Jamison Foser
Managing Director
Media Matters for America

&mdash

Copyright © 2012 Media Matters for America. All rights reserved.