Here is what FAIR has to say. Without defending Olbermann, they raise some
pretty good questions. If it is wrong for Olbermann to make political
contributions, why is it okay for his corporate bosses (GE, Robert Wright,
and Comcast) to make them? Why was it okay for Scarborough? Why is it okay
for Hannity?



***************************
If Olbermann's Donations Are Bad, What About GE's?

11/5/10

MSNBC host Keith Olbermann has been placed on indefinite suspension without
pay in the wake of a Politico report (11/5/10) that revealed Olbermann had
donated $7,200 to three Democratic candidates, in violation of NBC's
standards barring employees from making political contributions.

A journalist donating money to a political candidate raises obvious conflict
of interest questions; at a minimum, such contributions should be disclosed
on air. But if supporting politicians with money is a threat to journalistic
independence, what are the standards for Olbermann's bosses at NBC, and at
NBC's parent company General Electric?

According to the Center for Responsive Politics, GE made over $2 million in
political contributions in the 2010 election cycle (most coming from the
company's political action committee). The top recipient was Republican
Senate candidate Rob Portman from Ohio. The company has also spent $32
million on lobbying this year, and contributed over $1 million to the
successful "No on 24" campaign against a California ballot initiative aimed
at eliminating tax loopholes for major corporations (New York Times,
11/1/10).

Comcast, the cable company currently looking to buy NBC, has dramatically
increased its political giving, much of it to lawmakers who support the
proposed merger (Bloomberg, 10/19/10). And while Fox News parent News Corp's
$1 million donation to the Republican Governors Association caused a stir,
GE had "given $245,000 to the Democratic governors and $205,000 to the
Republican governors since last year," reported the Washington Post
(8/18/10).

Olbermann's donations are in some ways comparable to fellow MSNBC host Joe
Scarborough's $4,200 contribution to Republican candidate Derrick Kitts in
2006 (MSNBC.com, 7/15/07). When that was uncovered, though, NBC dismissed
this as a problem, since Scarborough "hosts an opinion program and is not a
news reporter." Olbermann, of course, is also an opinion journalist--but
MSNBC seems to hold him to a different standard.

Two years earlier, the Washington Post reported (1/18/04):

NBC chief executive Robert Wright has contributed $8,000 since 1999,
including $3,500 to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee and
$1,000 to Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.). Andrew Lack, a former NBC News chief,
gave $1,000 to Rep. Billy Tauzin (R-La.) while NBC president, and Wright
contributed $1,500--after the House committee Tauzin chairs held hearings on
the networks' election night failures. NBC spokeswoman Allison Gollust said
the network allows its executives to make contributions and that Wright
"does not make any decisions specific to news coverage."


Wright, however, was reported in a recent New York magazine piece (10/3/10)
to have told then-NBC News chief Neal Shapiro to move to the right of Fox
News in response to the September 11 attacks: "We have to be more
conservative then they are," the magazine quoted Wright.

MSNBC's treatment of Olbermann is also in sharp contrast to Fox News'
handling of Sean Hannity, who was revealed by Salon (9/23/10) to have given
$5,000 to the campaign of Rep. Michele Bachmann (R.-Minn.), a Tea Party
favorite--without Fox expressing any public disapproval. Hannity has allowed
Republican candidates to use his Fox program for fundraising (Mediaite,
10/17/10); as Salon noted, Hannity was this year's keynote speaker at the
National Republican Congressional Committee's annual fundraising dinner.

If the concern is about how giving money to politicians threatens
journalistic independence, then companies like NBC should explain why their
parent companies can lavish so much money on political candidates or causes
with no concern about conflicts of interest or the need to disclose these
donations to viewers. The lesson here would seem to be that some of the
workers shouldn't make political donations, but the bosses are free to give
as much as they'd like. Anyone who watches Olbermann's show knows what his
political views are. So what do the far larger contributions from GE tell
us?

-- 
TV or Not TV .... The Smartest (TV) People!
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