Bush Hates the Free Press. What Else is New?
THURSDAY OCTOBER 18 2007 12:00 PM
Submitted by Subrosa. Edited By erin_broadley.
TAGS: Shield Law, Bush, Congress, Josh Wolf, journalism, Free Press

I know, I know, guys. Writing articles about Bush is sooooo 2005. Forget outrage fatigue, I know most of us are bordering on outrage catatonia at this point. But for a moment, try to harken back to that fall of 2004 when you thought that George W. Bush was the Most Evil Man in the Universe and that the Neo-Cons would rule for ages and ages to come. You know, back to when Bush was polling above even his own pathetic IQ.
Back then, if Congress had gotten up the balls to pass a Federal Shield Law by an overwhelming majority and Bush said, “Fuck it, I like putting journalists in jail,” wouldn’t that piss you the hell off?
Welcome to Tantrum Town. Population = You.
The House overwhelmingly approved a media shield bill Tuesday that would protect reporters from having to reveal their confidential sources in federal courts, despite warnings from the White House that it could lead to more leaks of classified information.
The measure was passed on a broad bipartisan vote, 398-21, with 176 Republicans joining virtually all Democrats to support the bill.
In an unusual alliance, senior Republican like House Minority Whip Roy Blunt, R-Mo, broke with the Bush administration to join the majority in passing a bill that supporters said would bolster the freedom of the press.
"In the past few years, there have been too many instances where the pendulum has swung against the free flow of information and in favor of the government," Blunt said on the House floor. "I was troubled by the instances I've seen where reporters have been jailed or threatened with jail for simply protecting their sources."
The White House issued a statement Tuesday afternoon saying President Bush's advisers would recommend he veto the legislation unless it's changed, claiming the bill is too broad and could harm national security.
Here you’ve got a bill with about 95% of the House of Representatives voting for it that is designed to aid the free flow of information to the public. The free flow of information happens to be something that the founders of our country thought was so important that they made journalists the only private occupation to have specific Constitutional protection. Moreover, it’s a bill that that would enact a law that is already working comfortably for thirty-one states and the District of Columbia. And then the President comes along and says he’s gonna veto it. What a twat, right?
But wait, there’s more! Want to know the reason why Bush threatened to veto the bill?
"It is likely that the legislation will encourage more leaks of classified information by giving leakers such a formidable shield behind which they can hide," the statement read.
Oh that is fucking rich. Just ask Scooter Libby and Richard Armitrage how much the President cares about leaking classified information. Can’t have the press finding out about another flap like the NSA wiretapping program, can we? God damn, they’re pricks.
The real reason we’re getting pushback from the White House on the proposed federal shield law is that enacting one would lessen the power of the executive to strong-arm reporters into giving up their sources. Thus, the Administration loses a crucial end-run around actually doing their jobs. Why waste time investigating crimes yourself when you’ve got the press to do it for you? And if they don’t, well, throw them in jail like you did with Josh Wolf or Judith Miller, or like you threatened to do with Lance Williams and Mark Fainaru-Wada.
Look, I’m all in favor of the sanctity of the judicial process. It bothers me when, like in the BALCO case, sealed grand jury testimony gets leaked. And I understand the “Law and Order” viewpoint that often the only way to find illegal leakers and prosecute them is to go through the reporter they leaked the info to. I’m sympathetic to those concerns. But that doesn’t mean they should trump the ability of the Fourth Estate to do their jobs. The public has a right to know and journalists have a right... nay, a goddamned Constitutional responsibility to tell them. If that means some people get away with breaking the law in certain circumstances, so be it.
I recognize that we live in a time where the mainstream press is so coagulated, so docile, so lazy and so institutionalized that wealthy benefactors have to set up non-profit press corps to insure that true investigative reporting actually gets done. I recognize that the mainstream press is so laughably bad that two shtick-y comedians who do almost nothing but poke fun at the press are pretty much universally perceived as having more integrity than the whole lot of 24 hour news networks combined. The profession of journalism needs a massive overhaul, starting with a “Ma Bell” style de-consolidation of the media conglomerates. That much is certain. Another part of the solution is to ensure that reporters don’t risk jail time for seeking out important stories. This bill would do that.
Luckily, if the support that this bill received in the House is at all translated to the Senate, we won’t have to worry about President Gargamel’s veto pen. Thank goodness for that. This Federal shield law has been a long, long time coming.

















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RileyStClair
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