The hackiest hack of all the hacks that ever hacked

And I thought [tag]Ken[/tag] Tomlinson’s partisan, ideological, and generally ridiculous work as Bush’s chairman of the [tag]Corporation for Public Broadcasting[/tag] was bad before. As it turns out, it was even worse than I realized.

State Department investigators have found that the head of the agency overseeing most government broadcasts to foreign countries has used his office to run a “horse racing operation” and that he improperly put a friend on the payroll, according to a summary of a report made public on Tuesday by a Democratic lawmaker.

The report said that the official, Kenneth Y. [tag]Tomlinson[/tag], had repeatedly used government employees to perform personal errands and that he billed the government for more days of work than the rules permit.

The summary of the report, prepared by the State Department inspector general, said the United States attorney’s office here had been given the report and decided not to conduct a criminal inquiry. The summary said the Justice Department was pursuing a civil inquiry focusing on the contract for Mr. Tomlinson’s friend.

This is actually the second instance of Tomlinson getting caught breaking the law. Last November, we learned that he violated the Federal Broadcasting Act, which prohibits the use of “political tests” in employment.

We’re dealing with a man who has lied, schemed, and politicized his way through nearly three years of government service. But let’s not forget one key detail: he’s still working in the administration, in a key diplomatic post.

Nearly a year ago, Tomlinson resigned from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, after a series of amateurish scandals. Yet, despite all of his humiliating hackery at the [tag]CPB[/tag], [tag]Karl Rove[/tag] also made Tomlinson the head of the Broadcasting Board of Governors, an independent government commission that oversees the Voice of America, Radio Free Europe/Radio Free Liberty, and Radio Sawa and its sister TV network, Alhurra — making Tomlinson a key person in America’s international diplomacy.

As Franklin Foer explained in a very good TNR piece a year ago, Tomlinson has run the [tag]BBG[/tag] just as he ran the CPB, “purging the bureaucracy of political enemies, zealously rooting out perceived ‘liberal bias,’ and generally politicizing institutions that have resisted ideological intrusions for decades.”

And now he’s been caught, again, misusing government resources and violating government personnel policies. How long will the White House stand by this clown?

As Nico noted, Reps. Howard Berman (D-Calif.) and Tom Lantos (D-Calif.) and Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.) wrote [tag]Bush[/tag], urging him to immediately remove Tomlinson from his position. Given what we know, it seems like the least he could do.

As usual, it’s pointless to give the administration the benefit of any doubt. If they put a corrupt hack into a position of responsibility, it’s not because they made a mistake. It’s because corrupt hacks are what they all are, the hackery is what they expected and intended.

  • “How long will the White House stand by this clown?”

    They will put him up until enought people rise up and demand accountability. If a Democrat were to act in this way in this position you know the GOP would be screaming TREASON!!!! from the rafters until he was in country club prison. He got off with losing his job at CPB and the attorney has ruled out any criminal charges. Second high profile offence second slap on the wrist. Of course this will likely earn Tomlinson a nice promotion. Maybe he will end up ambassador to Iraq where he can really line his pockets.

    Every American who believes in democracy needs to stand up in November and demopnstrate that this corruption and politicization of every aspect of government is unacceptable.

  • “As Nico noted, Reps. Howard Berman (D-Calif.) and Tom Lantos (D-Calif.) and Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.) wrote Bush, urging him to immediately remove Tomlinson from his position. Given what we know, it seems like the least he could do.”

    Given Tomlinson’s history and his shield from accountability–provided by Karl Rove–don’t hold your breath.

  • How long will the White House stand by this clown?
    –CB

    Looking into my coffee cup cyrstal ball this morning, I see a Presidential Medal of Freedom in Tomlinson’s future, followed by a quiet resignation and life as a lobbyist …

  • How long will the White House stand by this clown?
    –CB

    From the Washington Post this morning:

    A White House spokeswoman, Emily Lawrimore, said Bush continues to support Tomlinson’s pending renomination as BBG chairman. She had no further comment.

  • This administration seems to have an endless supply of patience for it’s own crook or incompetents unless they decide to throw them under the train as scapegoats when the PR just gets too bad (i.e. Brownie). I wouldn not be at all surprised if he doesn’t go because of this, his profile is not as high as Brownie’s. This can be ignored by an administration who knows the press won’t do more now that the original story has been written.

  • A little tidbit from the Times article:

    “The horses, according to track records, include Karzai, as in Hamid Karzai, and Massoud, from the late Ahmed Shah Massoud, references to Afghan leaders who have fought against the Taliban and the Russians, as well as Panjshair, the valley that was the base used by forces to overthrow the Taliban.”

  • Tomlinson = Tapeworm. Dipylidium governmentium clings to the gut of the American gov’t and sucks nutrients to feed it’s life purpose of venal mediocrity. The lowest leech has more dignity and worth than Kenneth Y. Tomlinson.

  • As Nico noted, Reps. Howard Berman (D-Calif.) and Tom Lantos (D-Calif.) and Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.) wrote Bush, urging him to immediately remove Tomlinson from his position. Given what we know, it seems like the least he could do.

    Given what we know—including the bald audacity of this administration and its terribly low popularity—it seems that the least the Democratic Representatives and Senators could have done would be to do more than write a letter to Bush. I mean, it seems about as useful as writing to Santa.

    Maybe—just maybe—the letter was a PR tool to get the story out. But come on, we need more that a blurb in a NYT piece. Try raising your voice a touch.

  • “This administration seems to have an endless supply of patience for it’s own crook or incompetents unless they decide to throw them under the train as scapegoats when the PR just gets too bad (i.e. Brownie).” – ET

    And having had Mike Brown on all the talk shows telling everybody that it was not his fault, that the Bushites wouldn’t listen, they must by now realize that scapegoats don’t stay quiet and take one for the team, so they can’t fire anyone at all.

  • Dale, how can Bush still be supporting this guy? Did noone fill him in that there were NEW accusations??? I mean, this is way worse than Claude Allen.

  • Further proof that these guys are as incompetent as the crew of German-speaking morons were 70 years ago. Their “public image” was of ruthless efficiency, but any study of the reality leads one to conclude that it was only the general competence and determination of the average German (however misguided they were in the cause) that kept that Potemkin Village of a government going for 12 years.

    But given that “right winger” is a synonym for “talentless moron,” where’s the surprise??

  • “This administration seems to have an endless supply of patience—-.” It also seems to have an endless supply of these incompetent, goonish cronies. If they dumped Tomlinson we’d get another similar parasite.
    The right-wing utopia that has been under construction for over a decade is more reminiscent of a badly run business (sorta like Enron). The boss surrounds himself with spinless yes-men and con-artists, funds are looted for personal agrandizement, misinformation disarms the critics, enemies are fired, and loyalty is defined by gullibility. Goals are defined by greed. Vision is without depth. It’s like the country was being run by a gas station owner.

  • “We’re dealing with a man who has lied, schemed, and politicized his way through nearly three years of government service.”

    I smell a promotion!

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