To follow up on an item from Saturday guest-poster Morbo, PBS’s future is looking increasingly bleak.
A brief interview with the New York Times Magazine recently highlighted the fact that Ken Ferree, the new Republican president of PBS, doesn’t watch the network he’s taking over.
Today we learn that the problem is even worse than originally feared. While Ferree is hoping to bring in more Republican viewers, new Corporation for Public Broadcasting Chairman Kenneth Tomlinson, a close Karl Rove ally, is starting to lean on PBS to be more conservative.
The Republican chairman of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting is aggressively pressing public television to correct what he and other conservatives consider liberal bias, prompting some public broadcasting leaders – including the chief executive of PBS – to object that his actions pose a threat to editorial independence.
Without the knowledge of his board, the chairman, Kenneth Y. Tomlinson, contracted last year with an outside consultant to keep track of the guests’ political leanings on one program, “Now With Bill Moyers.”
In late March, on the recommendation of administration officials, Mr. Tomlinson hired the director of the White House Office of Global Communications as a senior staff member, corporation officials said. While she was still on the White House staff, she helped draft guidelines governing the work of two ombudsmen whom the corporation recently appointed to review the content of public radio and television broadcasts.
Mr. Tomlinson also encouraged corporation and public broadcasting officials to broadcast “The Journal Editorial Report,” whose host, Paul Gigot, is editor of the conservative editorial page of The Wall Street Journal. And while a search firm has been retained to find a successor for Kathleen A. Cox, the corporation’s president and chief executive, whose contract was not renewed last month, Mr. Tomlinson has made clear to the board that his choice is Patricia Harrison, a former co-chairwoman of the Republican National Committee who is now an assistant secretary of state.
Six months ago, at a meeting members of the Association of Public Television Stations along with officials from the corporation and PBS, Tomlinson told them they should make sure their programming “better reflected the Republican mandate.”
He later said he was joking. Yeah, what a kidder.
Strategically, it seems the Bush administration can’t lose here. If the new leadership of public broadcasting is successful in brining in new Republican viewers and donors, the right wins because it will have turned PBS into a reliable conservative outlet, on par with Fox News. If the new leadership is unsuccessful and viewers stop contributing, the right wins anyway — they’ll get to kill PBS.
I wonder if there may a political opportunity here for Dems. I vaguely remember Newt Gingrich trying to cut the PBS budget in 1995, only to face a backlash from those who wanted to “save Sesame Street.” Admittedly, the situation isn’t completely analogous here. The administration isn’t trying to gut PBS; it’s merely trying to make it right-wing.
Any chance there could be a similar backlash to the Fox-ification of public broadcasting? Seems like yet another example of Republican excesses.