NYT's Brooks revealed that "from Day One," the Bush White House "decided our public relations is not going to be honest" -- why hasn't he written about this?
On the September 11 edition of NBC's syndicated The Chris Matthews Show, New York Times columnist David Brooks revealed that he has learned from private conversations with Bush officials who "represent" what "Bush believes" that from its earliest days, the Bush administration adopted a policy of shielding itself from political damage by never publicly admitting any mistake -- even if it meant lying to the media and the American public. The fact that Bush doesn't admit mistakes has been reported by the media for years. For instance, in the September 11 edition of The New York Times, David Sanger reported, "Mr. Bush, his aides acknowledge, is loath to fire members of his administration or to take public actions that are tantamount to an admission of a major mistake." Brooks himself has previously noted the Bush administration's unwillingness to admit to mistakes. But what Brooks's September 11 account adds is that Bush is being intentionally dishonest -- in Brooks's words, "totally tactical and totally insincere" -- in resisting such public admissions and in blaming others when failures are too obvious to deny.
Moreover, on the Matthews Show, Brooks disclosed that "from Day One," the Bush White House "decided our public relations is not going to be honest," and that "privately they admit mistakes all the time." Brooks's revelation would appear to be of major significance, particularly in light of recent attempts by Bush administration officials to shift culpability in the Hurricane Katrina disaster away from the White House. But while he claimed on the Matthews show to have debated this strategy with administration officials "since Day One" -- indicating that he has known about it from the beginning -- a review of his columns and television appearances since Katrina struck reveals that Brooks has refrained from telling viewers and readers that the administration's campaign to rehabilitate its public image over the poor handling of the Katrina crisis by blaming others was apparently another manifestation of this dishonest strategy.
Knowing this strategy earlier might have provided readers and viewers with additional insight into an incident regarding a September 4 Washington Post article that prompted Media Matters for America president and CEO David Brock to write to the Post ombudsman. In that letter, dated September 6, Brock questioned the September 4 article's reliance on a quote from an anonymous "senior Bush official" falsely claiming that "[a]s of Saturday [September 3], [Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Babineaux] Blanco still had not declared a state of emergency." The Post ran a correction noting that Blanco had in fact declared a state of emergency on August 26. But in that correction the Post did not explain why it had relied on an anonymous administration source to report a fact that could have been easily checked, nor did it note reports that blaming Blanco was part of an administration strategy to deflect blame off of Bush and the federal government for the catastrophic situation in New Orleans.
In his September 11 column, acknowledging Media Matters' letter and "hundreds of critical e-mails, many of them undoubtedly provoked" by the letter, Post ombudsman Michael Getler wrote, "The outlines of the criticism were valid." But, responding to Media Matters' suggestion that the senior Bush official's lie might have constituted a justification for disclosing the source, Getler quoted assistant managing editor Liz Spayd saying, "It's impossible for us to read the person's mind to really know" if that person was "intentionally misleading us." Had the Post been armed with Brooks's September 11 revelation that lying was part of the administration's PR strategy, the paper would have had a pretty strong reason to think that the source was, in fact, lying.
Brooks himself previously addressed the Bush administration's refusal to admit error -- both in his Times column and on PBS' The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, on which he makes weekly appearances. In his November 2, 2004, column, Brooks wrote: "I'm exasperated at the Bush communications strategy. His advisers came in with one rule: no concessions to elite opinion. They decided not to be open on how they make decisions. They would never admit mistakes." In his September 9, 2003, debut as a Times columnist, he noted: "The Bush administration has the most infuriating way of changing its mind. The leading Bushies almost never admit serious mistakes. They never acknowledge that they are listening to their critics. They never even admit they are shifting course. They don these facial expressions suggesting calm omniscience while down below their legs are doing the fox trot in six different directions." On the November 14, 2003, broadcast of the NewsHour, Brooks said of the Bush administration: "Well, the good news about them is that they won't admit mistakes, but they are ruthlessly pragmatic when forced to be." In none of these instances, however, did Brooks indicate -- as he did on September 11 -- that deception was premeditated, or that he had "since Day One" discussed with White House officials their strategy to engage in deception rather than admit mistakes.
Brooks has written four Times columns since Katrina made landfall in Louisiana, commenting on how the hurricane will affect the American political landscape [9/1/05]; the loss of American confidence in government institutions [9/4/05]; the racial and economic dynamics of a rebuilt New Orleans [9/8/05]; and the future of government bureaucracy [9/11/05].
Claiming in his September 4 column that "[a]uthority was diffuse and action was ineffective" in response to Katrina, Brooks wrote: "Leaders spun while looters rampaged." Now we know -- and know that Brooks knew all along -- that, at least in the case of the Bush administration, leaders were probably doing more than spinning.
Brooks also appeared on the September 2 broadcast of the NewsHour, commenting, as he did in his September 4 column, on "the de-legitimization of institutions." Notably, in both his NewsHour appearance and his September 4 column, Brooks cited as instances of institutional failures the Abu Ghraib prison scandal, the inability to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, and the lack of postwar planning in Iraq -- all instances in which the Bush administration has ducked responsibility, and all seemingly perfect touchstones for Brooks to disclose the White House's dishonest public relations strategy.
Admittedly, the context under which Brooks spoke with White House officials about their dishonest public relations campaign and refusal to publicly admit to error is unknown. They may have discussed these matters off the record, which would explain Brooks's prior silence on the matter. But if such discussions were off the record, one wonders what has changed. His sources aren't likely to have told him those conversations are now fair game. But now that he has disclosed this information on national television, it is on the record, and it merits further discussion.
From Brooks's September 11 appearance on NBC's The Chris Matthews Show:
MATTHEWS: Do you think there's a problem with this? I remember when the president wrote in his diary -- his father, President Bush senior -- "you know, I picked [former Vice President Dan] Quayle the first time around, and I wish I hadn't. But I'm stuck with him, and I can't admit it." Is there a problem with this president simply admitting, "I put the wrong people at certain jobs, I didn't get back fast enough to the White House, I wasn't calling the orders fast enough?"
BROOKS: From Day One, they had decided that our public relations is not going to be honest. Privately, they admit mistakes all the time. Publicly -- and I've had this debate with them since Day One; I always say admit a mistake, people will give you credit --
MATTHEWS: Who do you debate this with?
BROOKS: With people who work in the White House.
MATTHEWS: I thought you were talking about with the president in the back room.
[laughter]
BROOKS: Not with him, but they represent what he believes, which is, if you admit a mistake, you get no credit from your enemies, and then you open up another week's story, because the admission of a little mistake leads to the admission of big mistakes and another week's story. It's totally tactical and totally insincere.














well....the White House is right to do this, if their sole function is to remain in power. this is straight out of the Hitler propaganda play book (now bandied about the net as the Rove play book as well....)...never admit a mistake. but, while our government has always spun and tried to mitigate mistakes, it's this White House that has brought that effort to new levels. you either focus on LEADING or you focus on remaining in power. these people are cowards, bullies, and they're dangerous. take your lumps like men. if the people decide that those mistakes are worthy of electoral consequences, that's how the country is SUPPOSED to work. with the think tanks and foundations and echo chambers spinning relentlessly, the information on which the people are supposed to base decisions is so obfuscated, they are left with the feeling that there is NO truth. as a bit of a lefty, i believe that the right has used these tactics because they know that their ideology does not favor the common man, and if they didn't manipulate them, the people would never vote for them..... ever.
Brooks is so amazingly partisan. In his town it is the exception not to be partisan. But, what baffles me about Brooks (who is an unwitting talking head for the RNC. I say 'unwitting' because if one were to point out his continued advocacy of this administation it's clear--he's no journalist.
Where was I? Oh, I am baffled by his consistency in firmly advocating for a position that I feel he, on occasion, doesn't himself believe in.
In that sense he seems to be not only an 'unjournalist' but a person devoid of real conviction beyond further an unwitting agenda for personal economic gain. Some of his writing post Hurricane Katrina offered a glimmer of hope but once the defenses in place, the ones used to protect his stifling of passion, regained their footing and he began to see how far out on the limb he was he crawled back to his secure trunk and to his base of economic support.
WorldasMaya
If Brooks is a "talking head for the RNC", which he is not - then so are Dowd, Krugman, Herbert and Rich for the DNC. In a sea of left wing columnists at the NYT, Brooks is nearly the only one with a right slant. What is wrong with that? I'm sure you consider all the aforementioned journalists right down the middle and fair and never partisan.
Ya, right.
Uh, Tom, apparently you didn't realize you were responding to a post about honesty, not a NYT left/right tally of opinion journalists.
ash,
I was responding to the assertion that Brooks is just a talking head for the RNC, and a rank partisan........both of which are untrue. Whereas the other's mentioned never fail to uphold the DNC mantra whenever they can.
Oh, by the way, I-indeed-was making a comment about more than partisanship & yet that's all you saw. Ash has/had it correct. But, I understand your partisan point of view.
Tommy,
That's a good point. It probably is a matter of perspective.
tommy - Monday September 12, 2005 03:04:35 PM EST -
When I read the NYTimes I read columns by Safire (who I think recently retired)Cal Thomas, and Krauthammer all the time the idea that Brooks is the ONLY rightwinger to write columns for the NYTimes is ludicrous
You forget to mention Friedman, who is a supporter of the Iraq War, and the most notable columnist of the ones you mentioned.
Brooks is, IMHO, a "will-o-the-wisp" type columnist/pundit...or, if you prefer, a "fair-weather" friend...as are most of these folk as I observe it...it's about on which "side their bread is buttered"...now if we could just get him and the rest to behave like B. Kristol (who operates on the THUMPER PRINCIPLE - "if you can't say something NICE...") to just SHUT UP when he can't support this idiot and gang of thieves...we'd have SILENCE, for the most part, from "their side"...and perhaps some of the dumbed down folks could try to THINK!!!
Give credit to Brooks for his candor (though I'm still trying to figure out if "elite opinion" is supposed to be some kind of disclaimer). And give lots of discredit to Matthews for failing to follow up with the obvious, "What mistakes, exactly, do they privately admit?"
The White House lies to the public as a matter of policy? This ought to be big.
It should be a suprise to no one paying attention that this administration lies like most people breathe
If ANYTHING is an impeachable offense, I would think lying and deliberately deceiving the American People would be. It should be taken for granted that these politicians are under oath ANYTIME they talk to the public re Governmental matters! And if they never admit mistakes, and mistakes ARE made, we now see how and why they can never take responsibility!!! Sad, truely SAD.
The "smoking gun" concerning the dishonesty of this administration (which has been obvious from the start) will be swept under the rug, even though it is coming from a fellow conservative and true believer. We all know what to do with unpleasant truths in this country....IGNORE THEM!
And hope they go away.
Remember the Wead tapes? They prove very prescient when taken in context. The formula then is the same as David Brooks reveals now. Never admit wrongdoing, even lie, then blame (smear) your opponants. Read this: "The cocaine thing, let me tell you my strategy on that," Bush said on the tape. "Rather than saying no … I think it's time for someone to draw the line and look people in the eye and say, you know, 'I'm not going to participate in ugly rumors about me and blame my opponent,' and hold the line."
This from the article: "Knowing this strategy earlier might have provided readers and viewers with additional insight..."
Roughly half the country has been aware of this strategy for about 5 years. The other half probably knows it, but refuses to admit it.
I think MMFA has struck entirely the wrong tone on this one. I've been watching Brooks on the NewsHour for many years now, and he's been one of the few Republican willing to openly criticize the administration for its "never admit fault" posture. I've heard him mention this on several occasions -- perhaps never as bluntly as he did in the Matthews interview -- but he has said it before.
MMFA should give the man more credit, especially if he's now become disgusted enough with his party's leadership to tell tales out of class like this.
You have a point. MMFA might have felt cornered inasmuch as they focus on neocon lies and distortion, and this was an instance of clarity -- about the nature of neocon lies and distortion. Perhaps it would have been better to just mention him as reporting on this period. MMFA occasionally does this. Would take the form of "Not all republican pundits parroting blameless claims".
Wonder if he'll get McCain'd (or Clark'd) for this micro-deviation.
I remember some time ago a media person was asked why the press doesn't cover situations like Bush and his failings. He claimed the press takes alot of initiative from the public. When the press knows that the citizens are displeased with a politician then they will cover him very carefully. But if he/she is liked by the public, they are resistant to pursue that politician. So basically, the press is chicken, big scaredy cats, weenys. And, of course, Bush/Rove have a very vengeful nature as we all know. Then there was the time if anyone questioned BushCo. we were unpatriotic,(.....Last refuge of a scoundel). So with the polls saying Bush is in the toilet I expect some really great journalism!!! Rove might be counting his days also.
From your keyboard to God's ears. Let the media feeding frenzy begin! Bush will not be as clever as Clinton because he is not as smart. It could go even worse for him.
Bush didn't know it at the time, but winning the last election may have been the worst thing for him.
"Let the media feeding frenzy begin!"
Amen to that! I know it's unfashionable to engage in schaddenfreude, but I, for one, would thoroughly enjoy watching the press tear Bush apart over the next 2 years. Watching him depart on the White House helecopter in shame, the way Nixon did, would be the ultimate political pleasure.
However, given the skiddishness of today's press corps, I think that scenario is unlikely.
"When the press knows that the citizens are displeased with a politician then they will cover him very carefully. But if he/she is liked by the public, they are resistant to pursue that politician."
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Your comment would have been insightful except for:
Bill Clinton's approval ratings were in the mid-70s and rising all during the impeachment fiasco. The press hounded him mercilessly.
W's approval ratings are (if you believe Newsweek) at 38% and falling, and the press still won't say the Emperor has no clothes.
The fact is, the MSM is in the pocket of defense contractors who don't want to rock the boat when billions of dollars are to be made killing innocent civilians and then overbilling to rebuild the countries they themselves destroy. W's policies fit hand in glove with their profit motive, and there is no way they are going to jeopardize that.
"Bill Clinton's approval ratings were in the mid-70s and rising all during the impeachment fiasco. The press hounded him mercilessly."
Clinton didn't have his very own chorus of highly paid hacks shrieking "treason" whenever anyone criticized him. That makes a big difference.
That was another copout from a "media person." It was someone else's fault: The public!
Of course, like in even the most blatant propaganda, there is an element of truth in it. It's true that the media are a bunch of hopeless weaklings too. But they're also out to sell papers/air time. So the likes of Lumbaugh and o'lielly are going to sell for a while because they're sexy..."unconventional."
I say it every day and will continue: as far as the TV/radio news. Just turn off the idiot box! I'm not sure what to do about mainstream newspapers, except to take every shot one can at degrading propaganda rags like the Washington Times--are there any others like that insulting piece of toilet paper? Oh, and spread the word of things like Media Matters or the truth will never be known.
People in glass houses, or in Bush's case plastic wrap, can't effectively throw stones. Think about all the times Bush has attacked other's truthfullness: Hussein, Kerry, Kim Jong Il, Gore, and the list goes on. Bush is just as bad a liar as all of them. His policy is always to lie. Sounds like the government in North Korea.
Yknow guys, I'm living down here in a staunch conservative part of North Carolina and I am simply amazed by how the "folks" down here swallow this administration's misinformation hook, line and sinker.
I've asked 3 people in what I thought was a frank conversation if they truly felt Saddam Hussein possessed WMD's and was a threat to the United States. One said "Yes absolutely." Another countered "Well WMD's was only one of many reasons we went over there." The last person I spoke to about this said "there is a documented relationship between terrorism and Iraq." Either way, none of them would even fancy the idea that the war is unjustified in even the slightest way. They just had to be right and stick their heads in the sand.
I. F. Stone, said:
All governments are run by liars. Nothing they say should be believed.
And when asked for his advice for aspiring journalists, Stone boiled it down to just two words: "Governments lie."
It seems to me that falsehood and PR are synonymous. Noam Chomsky has stated for years that, in effect, politics has become pretty trivial because of PR's effect on it. The Pentagon has mastered the practice (See the fine book "Second Front") and the general public is incapable of distinguising between PR hype and reality. So Bush is seen as a morally superior creature to those nasty Democrats (who, remember, had a president who got it on in the oval office!) because of his stand on abortion ("prolife" they erroneously call themselves!) while he slaughters countless in the Mideast and vacations while New Orleans drowns.
Oh, all right. Bush has brought the practice to new depths.
Hmmmm....