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On Dec. 1, the frontrunner for the Democratic presidential
nomination went where few national politicians have dared to go --
directly challenging the media conglomerates.
Don’t get me wrong. Dean’s record in Vermont hardly reflects an
inclination to take on corporate power. His obsession with balancing
budgets and coddling big business often led him to comfort the already
comfortable and afflict the afflicted. Low-income people suffered the
consequences of inadequate social services.
But let’s give the doctor-turned-politician some credit for a new
direction. Midway through his Dec. 1 appearance on MSNBC’s “Hardball”
show, Dean said that he wants to “break up giant media enterprises.”
Dean went well beyond the hold-the-line stance adopted last summer
by large majorities in Congress, who voted to prevent more media
deregulation by the Federal Communications Commission. He declared that
maintaining the media status quo isn’t good enough.
“Eleven companies in this country control 90 percent of what
ordinary people are able to read and watch on their television,” Dean
said. “That’s wrong. We need to have a wide variety of opinions in
every community.”
Host Chris Matthews asked whether Dean would “break up these
conglomerations of power” -- specifically “large media enterprises.”
The candidate replied: “The answer to that is yes. I would say that
there is too much penetration by single corporations in media markets
all over this country.”
Dean added a comment that could be echoed in communities across
the nation: “We need locally-owned radio stations. There are only two
or three radio stations left in the state of Vermont where you can get
local news anymore. The rest of it is read and ripped from the AP.”
Pressing for more clarity about Dean’s presidential agenda,
Matthews asked: “Are you going to break up the giant media enterprises
in this country?”
“Yes, we’re going to break up giant media enterprises,” Dean
responded. Moments later he went on: “What we’re going to do is say
that media enterprises can’t be as big as they are today. I don’t think
we actually have to break them up, which Teddy Roosevelt had to do with
the leftovers from the McKinley administration. ... If the state has an
interest -- which it does -- in preserving democracy, then there has to
be a limitation on how deeply the media companies can penetrate every
single community. To the extent of even having two or three or four
outlets in a single community, that kind of information control is not
compatible with democracy.”
That kind of talk is not compatible with media oligarchy.
As it happened, Dean was appearing on a cable channel partly owned
by General Electric, which possesses the NBC network and many other
outlets. His remarks were certain to raise hackles in the corporate
boardrooms of GE and huge media firms such as AOL Time Warner, Disney,
Viacom and News Corp.
Regardless of ideology, the top man in the White House has always
been afraid of the broadcasting industry. While sometimes clashing with
reporters, editors and even media owners, each president has routinely
gone along with the handover of the “public” airwaves to private
interests.
When radio was becoming a mass medium in the late 1920s and early
’30s, newspaper owners extended their investments into profitable radio
stations. Media magnates made deals in high governmental places.
Greasing the wheels was the fact that elected officials wanted
radio networks to air their speeches. Among the politicians aiding the
media barons was President Franklin Roosevelt, who needed the radio
chains to broadcast his fireside chats.
Seventy years ago, on Nov. 30, 1933, a syndicated column by
Washington watchdogs Drew Pearson and Robert S. Allen explained: “A
secret move is on foot to perpetuate the present monopoly which the big
broadcasting companies have on the choice wavelengths.” Corporate
backers of the landmark Communications Act of 1934, setting up the FCC,
proceeded to steamroller over strong grassroots opposition from
educators, religious leaders, farmers’ groups and labor unions.
In recent decades, many right-wing politicians -- including Spiro
Agnew, Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush -- have postured as foes of
media elitism while boosting the fortunes of various media elites.
Howard Dean’s recent comments may turn out to be a fleeting
excursion into criticism of media monopolization in the United States.
But if Dean continues to raise sharp questions about media diversity
and democracy, he is likely to face the wrath of a corporate media
behemoth that does not tolerate major threats to its outsized power.
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Norman Solomon’s weekly syndicated column is archived at
. His latest book, co-authored with Reese
Erlich, is “Target Iraq: What the News Media Didn’t Tell You.”