Blogged Down
Belief:
Why I Want to Turn Religious People Into Atheists
Greta Christina
Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
4 Myths About Taxes, Debunked
Paul Buchheit
DrugReporter:
The War on Weed: Marijuana Is Basically Harmless -- The Monumentally Stupid Drug War Is Not
Jim Hightower
Environment:
White House Garden Won't Make Up for Obama's Nomination of Pesticide Lobbyist for US Chief Agriculture Negotiator
Jill Richardson
Food:
Don't Be Scared of Food: Are We Being Needlessly Hysterical About Food Safety?
David E. Gumpert
Health and Wellness:
47,000 Women Could Die As a Result of the New Mammogram Guidelines
George Lakoff
Immigration:
Hate Group, FAIR, Is Looking for "Ethnically Ambiguous" Actors to Amplify Its Racism
Adam Luna
Media and Technology:
The Memory Scrub About Why Ft. Hood Happened Is Almost Complete ... If It Weren't for Archives
Mark Ames
Movie Mix:
The Yes Men: Pranksters Out to Fix the World
Mark Engler
Politics:
White House's Ties to Health Care Industry Deeper Than Visitor Records Show
Daniela Perdomo
Reproductive Justice and Gender:
Why Can't We Look Away From Sarah Palin?
Vanessa Richmond
Rights and Liberties:
Citing "National Defense Needs," Obama Administration Says it Won't Sign Ban on Land Mines
Amy Goodman
Sex and Relationships:
Hot Mormon Muffins and Models for Jesus: What's With All the Sexy Christians?
Liz Langley
Take Action:
G-20 Meetings: Nothing Much Happened in the Suites, and There Was Too Much Punch in the Streets
Laura Flanders
Water:
Poseidon's Financial Shell Game: Why Is a Private Desalination Plant Asking for Public Money?
Peter Gleick
World:
Is Obama Following in the Footsteps of Bill Clinton?
Jeff Cohen
This article is reprinted from The American Prospect.
During one especially hectic week in mid-February, the Internet took three scalps in what appeared to be unrelated events. Liberal bloggers forced Talon News White House correspondent James D. Guckert, aka Jeff Gannon, to resign after it was revealed that he was writing under a false name for a Republican activist group (GOPUSA), that he was not really a journalist at all, and that he had posed nude on the Internet in an effort to solicit sex for money. Conservative bloggers, meanwhile, created a firestorm after Eason Jordan, the chief news executive for CNN, made controversial remarks during an off-the-record panel discussion at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, suggesting that the U.S. military had targeted journalists in war zones. Jordan was forced to resign. Finally, in Maryland, Joseph Steffen, a longtime aide to Republican Gov. Robert Ehrlich, was fired after reporters exposed him as the author of e-mails and anonymous web-site postings encouraging rumors about the marriage of Baltimores popular mayor, Martin OMalley, a potential 06 challenger to Ehrlich.
All unrelated stories, except for the Internet angle, right? Well, no. Scratch the surface and the same names turn up in each scandal, revealing the events of mid-February to have been part of an ongoing and coordinated proxy war by Republican political operatives on the so-called liberal media, conducted through the vast, unmonitored loophole of the Internet.
Are bloggers journalists? is a question thats been kicking around for a few years, and both bloggers and journalists answer it by saying no. Journalists insist on the distinction because most bloggers dont do original reporting or double-check information for its accuracy. Bloggers, for their part, often see themselves as polemicists and activists and chafe at being held to journalistic standards.
But these three episodes – combined with last years Dan Rather controversy, when conservative bloggers contributed mightily to the CBS anchors downfall – still represent something new. Not only are most bloggers not journalists; increasingly they are also partisan operatives whose agendas are as ideological as they come. Using the cover of anonymity (many bloggers use pseudonyms), the cacophony of the relatively new medium, and the easily inflamed passions of the web, these partisan political operatives are becoming experts at stirring up hornets nests of angry e-mails to editors, mounting campaigns to force advertisers to pull out of news shows, and, most disturbingly, spreading outright false information. The irony is that, at the same time this is happening, many in the mainstream media have decided its finally time to take bloggers seriously. But people who blog about politics and journalism arent just a 21st-century media story; theyre part of an ongoing political story with roots stretching back more than 40 years.
Blogging began around 1998, and slowly: Only 23 blogs were known to exist at the beginning of 1999. The practice really took off later that year, after several software programs were developed for the express purpose of setting up web logs (aka blogs), allowing even technophobes and Luddites to enter the fray. For blogs devoted specifically to politics, Sept. 11 was – as in so many other matters – a turning point, with political blogs proliferating throughout 2002. The first prominent ones were operated by independent actors – citizen-bloggers, if you will, indebted to no one and out to satisfy nothing more than their own creative urges. The medium, it turned out, filled a need, creating echo chambers and communities of the like-minded on both the left and the right, which felt that the mainstream media were biased against them.
But success bred change. Along has come a new group of bloggers who arent mere citizens at all. On the left side, some of these became deeply enmeshed with political parties, 527s, and campaign advocacy groups – and are now a new generation of no-holds-barred partisans and major party fund-raisers, the liberal equivalent of George W. Bushs Rangers and Pioneers. On the right, a number of these bloggers were already political operatives or worked at long-standing movement institutions before taking up residence online. They are, at best, the intellectual heirs of L. Brent Bozell of the Media Research Center and Reed Irvine, who founded the ultraconservative, media-hounding nonprofit organization Accuracy In Media (AIM) in 1969 as part of the first generation of postBarry Goldwater right-wing institutions. At worst, they're the protégés of conservative fund-raiser Richard Viguerie and dirty-tricks master Morton Blackwell, who has tutored conservative activists since 1965, most recently mocking John Kerry at the Republican national convention by distributing Band-Aids with purple hearts on them.
Which brings us back to Jordan. He was brought down not by outraged citizen-bloggers but by a mix of GOP operatives and military conservatives. Easongate.com, the blog that served as the clearinghouse for the attack on CNN, was helped along by Virginia-based Republican operative Mike Krempasky. From May 1999 through August 2003, Krempasky worked for Blackwell as the graduate development director of the Leadership Institute, an Arlington, Va.based school for conservative leaders founded by Blackwell in 1979. The institute is the organization that had provided Gannon with his sole media credential before he became a White House correspondent. It also now operates Internet Activist Schools designed to teach conservatives how to engage in guerilla Internet activism.
Indeed, Krempasky could be found teaching this Internet activism course one recent February weekend to about 30 young conservatives at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Washington. He advocated that people write from their experience – and not necessarily as conservatives, a Democratic consultant who attended the seminar incognito told me. For example, Krempasky told a conservative firefighter that he should write about firefighting because that would be of interest to readers. Using that angle, he could build an audience. And if push ever came to shove, he could respond to an online dogfight from the unassailable position of being a firefighter – and not as just another conservative ideologue. Krempasky then offered to help all the attendees set up their own blogs. Were definitely in serious trouble, said the Democratic attendee.
The tactics Krempasky promotes are directly descended from those advocated by the late Reed Irvine of AIM, whose major funder was, for the past two decades, Richard Mellon Scaife. Many bloggers and blog readers might not even know who Reed Irvine was, nor understand the debt we owe him as conservatives, Krempasky wrote upon Irvines passing last year. But that debt is tremendous. In the late 80s, Irvine had started the campaign to Can Dan Rather, coining the phrase Rather Biased. Last fall, Krempasky was operating the main anti-Rather site, Rathergate.com, and using Irvines slogan as a rallying cry to organize a vast letter-writing and e-mailing campaign to contact CBS and express themselves, as he put it in an interview with Bobby Eberle of GOPUSA, an activist web site founded by Texas Republicans and now owned by Bruce Eberle (no relation), the proprietor of a conservative direct-mail firm. Conservatives have operated through alternative media for 40 years, direct mail being the first one, Krempasky told me, sitting in the food court of the Ronald Reagan International Building as the CPAC wound down. As far as the Internet goes, conservatives have largely been ahead of the left.
Also part of the Easongate.com team was La Shawn Barber, who writes a biweekly column for – again, the name pops up – GOPUSA and has written for AIM about the Bush-bashing media. Working alongside Krempasky and Barber was another site, RedState.org, a Republican community weblog registered with the Federal Election Commission as a 527. Krempasky helped found that site along with Senate staffer Ben Domenech, the chief speechwriter for Bush ally and Texas Sen. John Cornyn; and former U.S. Army officer Josh Trevino, a conservative blogger who used to write under the name Tacitus. The goal of RedState.org? [T]o unite
voices from government, politics, activism, civil society, and journalism in service of the construction of a Republican majority.
Power Line, another conservative blog deeply involved in the Rather controversy, helped push the Jordan story as well. Described by Time magazine as three amateur journalists working in a homegrown online medium [who] challenged a network news legend and won, Power Line was voted Times 2004 Blog of the Year. In reality, its three writers are all fellows at the conservative Claremont Institute who attended Dartmouth College in the early 1970s and now work as attorneys; two of them have been writing articles as a team for conservative publications such as the National Review and The American Enterprise for more than 10 years.
Certainly there were some citizen-bloggers involved in the anti-Jordan effort. Easongate founder Bill Roggio, 35, is a computer-software analyst in Medford, N.J. His blog, The Fourth Rail, demanded that CNN release the video- or audiotape of Jordans comments in Davos. Roggio started Easongate.com on Saturday, Feb. 5, with a couple of right-wing and military blogosphere buddies, Michigan-based Brian Scott (of The Blue State Conservatives) and Josh Manchester (of TheAdventuresofChester.com). Like Roggio, Manchester served in the military, leaving active duty as a U.S. Marine only recently. Scott, a Republican and member of Right to Life of Michigan, started his blog to further his dreams of becoming a conservative talk-radio personality.
As Easongate got cooking, the trio quickly reached out to BlackFive, a former paratrooper and prominent military blogger in Chicago who declined, in an e-mail interview, to reveal his surname (his first name is Matt). BlackFive brought in Cheryl, a 48-year-old advertising sales representative from Southern California who asked me not to use her last name; she gave the group pro bono marketing services and helped to set up a database of CNN advertisers to be contacted. The team even tried to get an active-duty military officer to join their clique. The officer declined.
Jordan had made his comments more than a week before Easongate went live and, by all accounts, quickly backtracked at the panel when pressed. But the next day, Jan. 28, Rony Abovitz, a blogger hired by the World Economic Forum and, according to a later report in the Guardian, one of those conservative online activists who believe the internet is an opportunity to balance what they see as media pro-liberal bias, posted an item on the forums blog demanding that the two members of Congress who had been in Davos press Jordan on his remarks. The demand percolated throughout the conservative U.S. blogosphere as concern grew, and conservative talk-radio host, Weekly Standard writer, and blogger Hugh Hewitt added fuel to the fire by mentioning the controversy on cable television.
During the week that Roggios site was active, it launched a petition, turned readers into letter writers to CNN, worked the phones urging contacts in the military and government to call CNN, and generally acted as a clearinghouse for information on Jordan. Just as it was about to start a wholesale assault on CNNs advertisers, Jordan caved. I have never worked with a more cohesive, like-minded group of individuals in my entire life, wrote Scott after Jordan resigned. Without people like Cheryl,
BlackFive and his contacts,
La Shawn Barber and her writing prowess, and the advice of Mike Krempasky, we would not have succeeded.
Steffens slime
Joseph Steffens online mudslinging toward Mayor OMalley followed a more old-fashioned strategy. Steffen, a political operative who called himself the Prince of Darkness, was fired from Gov. Ehrlichs administration for planting salacious rumors on the Internet in August and October 2004 about a fictional affair between OMalley and an African-American TV journalist. Steffens narrative is simpler, but connections to the same Republican operatives abound.
After Steffen, writing under the handle ncpac, seeded clues to the anchorwomans identity on a FreeRepublic.com thread, other conservative bloggers posted pictures of the reporters face online, defaming her as well as OMalley. The rumors swirled in Annapolis, Marylands capital, for 18 months before the story broke into the open on Feb. 9, a day after a real reporter, from The Washington Post, confronted Steffen with the FreeRepublic postings. According to a profile in The Baltimore Sun, Steffen today is the sort of man who prefers to wear dark clothing and work behind closed doors, with the lights off and writes horror and science fiction stories in his spare time. But in 1985, Steffen worked on a campaign by Viguerie, Krempaskys current employer, for the lieutenant governorship of Virginia. Further, Steffens "ncpac" handle was short for the National Conservative Political Action Committee (NCPAC), a powerful ultraconservative group that viciously targeted Democratic lawmakers through an electoral hit list in the early 80s. Groups like ours are potentially very dangerous to the political process, NCPACs founder, Terry Dolan, told the Post in 1980. A group like ours could lie through its teeth and the candidate it helps stays clean. Steffen was the groups spokesman before joining Vigueries campaign.
The historical ties connect not only Steffens self-destruction and the Jordan takedown but the Gannon scandal as well. GOP operative Blackwell, whose Leadership Institute trained Gannon and employed Krempasky, worked for The Viguerie Company from 1972 to 1979; previously, Blackwell trained a generation of young political operatives in the black arts of politics as the executive director of the College Republican National Committee.
Now a new generation is carrying on the work that these men started. The day Jordan resigned, Krempasky joined the online liberal discussion group Personal Democracy Forum, creating a new category, The Dark Side, to discuss the new potential of online Open Source Opposition Research. A sample:
In the wake of the Dan Rather affair and the Jeff Gannon/James Guckert story – political campaigns should take notice – you cannot and will not hide anything anymore. You cannot assume that your opponent simply won't find that embarrassing picture or boneheaded quote from the bombastic column you wrote in college – and the most important part? Your opponent won't have to dig it up themselves. If they have even a semblance of a netroots community close to them, the enterprising Googler will ferret it out, just for fun.
Garance Franke-Ruta is a Prospect senior editor. Copyright 2005 by The American Prospect, Inc. This article may not be resold, reprinted, or redistributed for compensation of any kind without prior written permission from the author. Direct questions about permissions to permissions@prospect.org.
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