guardian.co.uk,
Justin Elliott for ProPublica, Friday 20 April 2012
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| Several major media companies have dispatched top executives or outside lobbyists to the FCC to oppose the proposed rule. Photograph: Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images |
News organizations cultivate a reputation for demanding transparency, whether by suing for access to government documents, dispatching camera crews to the doorsteps of recalcitrant politicians, or editorializing in favor of open government.
But now
many of the country's biggest media companies — which own dozens of newspapers
and TV news operations — are flexing their muscle in Washington in a fight
against a government initiative to increase transparency of political spending.
The
corporate owners or sister companies of some of the biggest names in journalism
— NBC News, ABC News, Fox News, the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal,
USA Today, Politico, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and dozens of local TV
news outlets — are lobbying are against a Federal Communications Commission
measure to require broadcasters to post political ad data on the internet.
As we have recently detailed, political ad data is public by law but is not widely
accessible because it is currently kept only in paper files at individual
stations. The FCC has proposed fixing that by requiring broadcasters to post on
the internet details of political ad purchases including the identity of the
buyer and the price.
(ProPublica
has been inviting readers and other journalists to send in the files to be
posted as part of our Free the Files project.)
Over the
past few months, several major media companies have dispatched top executives
or outside lobbyists to the FCC to oppose the proposed rule or to push a
watered down version, disclosure filings show. (The FCC is voting on the issue
April 27.)
Among them
are:
• News
Corporation, which owns the Wall Street Journal and Fox News
• Walt
Disney, which owns ABC News and ESPN
•
NBCUniversal, which is owned by Comcast and includes NBC News
•
Allbritton, which owns several TV stations and Politico
• Gannett
Broadcasting, a division of Gannett, which owns USA Today
•
Post-Newsweek Stations, the broadcast division of the Washington Post Company
• Belo
Corp, which owns 20 TV stations
• Cox Media
Group, which owns the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the Austin
American-Statesman, and other newspapers and TV stations
• Dispatch
Broadcast Group, which owns Ohio and Indiana TV stations
•
Barrington Broadcasting, which owns several TV stations around the country
• The EW
Scripps Company, which owns TV stations and newspapers including the Commercial
Appeal in Memphis
• Hearst
Television Inc, which owns 29 TV stations
• Raycom
Media, which owns TV stations
• Schurz
Communications, which owns TV Stations and newspapers around the country
In a speech
this week at the National Association of Broadcasters convention in Las Vegas,
FCC chairman Julius Genachowski excoriated the broadcasters as working
"against transparency and against journalism."
The
industry's opposition to the transparency proposal has sometimes been heated.
In filings submitted to the FCC in January and March, Allbritton senior
vice-president Jerald Fritz raised the specter of "'Soviet-style'
standardization" of ad sales if political ad files are required to be put
online in a single format.
In a February meeting with the FCC, Walt Disney executives complained about the
"logistics and burden" of putting the political ad information
online.
That same
month, executives from Disney along with NBC and News Corp argued in a meeting
with FCC officials that posting the political ad file would allow
"competitors in the market and commercial advertisers [to] anonymously
glean highly sensitive pricing data."
Television
stations must by law must offer political candidates the lowest rates on ads.
Broadcasters have argued that by making this information available online and
not just at stations, it would hurt their ability to negotiate with other
advertisers.
Advocates for the online disclosure rule have countered that the political ad information
is already public by law and the measure would simply make the existing
disclosure rules relevant for the internet age. They have also pointed out that
keeping paper files in electronic form should actually be more efficient for
stations.
Albritton,
NBC, and Walt Disney did not respond to requests for comment on the FCC
chairman's charge that they have positioned themselves "against
transparency and against journalism." News Corp declined to comment.
Some media
companies have also pushed a watered down proposal to post only some of the
public political ad data, and to put it up on individual station websites
instead of on a central FCC website.
Washington
lawyers representing the other companies fighting the rule — Barrington
Broadcasting, Belo, Cox, Dispatch, EW Scripps, Gannett, Hearst, Meredith
Broadcasting, Post-Newsweek Stations, Raycom Media, and Schurz Communications —
lobbied FCC officials in February, March, and again this week.
The group suggested that instead of putting the full, itemized political ad data online,
stations would post aggregate data once a week.
"What
we were saying is, if you want the public to be informed about what's being
bought at what price, maybe there's a simpler way to do it,"Mary Jo
Manning, an attorney representing the group, told ProPublica.
"Transparency is giving people information that is useful."
But when
the FCC pressed the group for details on its plan, the stations said they
opposed posting even the aggregate data in a single format prescribed by the
FCC. They also opposed posting the data on a central FCC website, saying they
wanted to post the limited data only on the stations' own websites. If enacted,
both of those stances would make it more difficult to get and analyze the data.
Since there is a one-week sunshine period ahead of FCC votes, today is the last day that
interested parties will be able to lobby the commission before its public
meeting April 27.
• This
article was originially published on ProPublica and has been cross-posted by
permission.
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