Public Eye
January 17, 2006 11:40 AM

Howell-ing At The Abramoff Scandal

Readers of The Washington Post aren’t happy with its ombudsman, Deborah Howell, after her weekend column praising the paper’s investigative reporting on Republican lobbyist Jack Abramoff. It seems they’re so unhappy that they may have overloaded The Post’s blog. Here’s what Washingtonpost.com Opinions Editor Hal Straus writes on post.blog:
“Some of the comments posted to this blog's entries aren't appearing on the site. We're working with our blog software vendor to resolve the issue as quickly as possible.

The problem may be related to the large number of comments (more than 700 so far) received over the weekend concerning Deborah Howell's Sunday, Jan. 15 column on The Post's coverage of the Jack Abramoff story.

We may also have unintentionally caused or made the problem worse by trying to remove a few comments -- about a dozen -- that failed to make a substantive point and were simply personal attacks on Howell and others.

We apologize for the problem and will post updates here.”
Reading through the comments, it seems that most are upset over Howell’s assertion that Democrats “have gotten Abramoff campaign money.” We’ve been through this before, and it’s worth revisiting.

The root of the problem here is semantics and spin. Republicans would very much like the Abramoff investigation to snare a few Democrats so they could say this is a bipartisan issue. Democrats would like nothing more than for this to become seen as a Republican scandal heading into a crucial midterm election year. What can be said at the moment is not quite so clear.

There is no doubt that Republicans are much more tied into Abramoff than Democrats. Whether that is simply because they control Congress and are thus more likely to be targets of graft and favor-trading or were more directly involved in schemes to bilk millions from Indian tribes is not yet known. But the relationships between Abramoff and members of Congress are certainly there to, in the end, make this a Republican scandal.

But seeing the circumstantial evidence is not enough to make that judgment yet, and here’s where I think it gets tricky. It is a fact that Jack Abramoff personally only donated money to Republicans. But it isn’t his personal contributions that have the lobbyist in such hot water, it’s the vast amounts of money given to politicians and causes by clients Abramoff represented – and what they may have received in return – that is at the root of this scandal. And Democrats are among those who received money from those clients.

The Abramoff investigation is ongoing and he is expected to fully cooperate with prosecutors, but at the moment, all we have to go on is some of the facts, not all the intentions behind those facts. Democrats and their supporters make all sorts of arguments designed to demonstrate that the money they took was not an attempt by Abramoff to buy influence (something that is hard to buy when Democrats are returning or giving away that money). But we don’t know that, at least not yet.

In the end, presumably, we’ll know the reasons behind who took money from Abramoff’s clients and be able to reasonably say whether this is a Republican scandal or not. Chances are that it will be if for no other reason than even a bipartisan scandal will focus more on the party in power. But reporters must report what they know, not what they think they know and until the picture becomes clearer, all this posturing and spinning is just that. And until we know, even media watchdogs like Deborah Howell will find it impossible to please everyone.
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by mikezwolf January 19, 2006 6:15 PM EST
The campaign of lies and intimidation by the right-wing continues. And the power-worshipping media co-opted by the Bush Republicans is all-too-happy to bend over for them. The only story in town regarding corruption is the K-Street Project -- which over more than ten years sought to not only illegally funnel money to the Bush Republicans, but also to illegally punish campaign donors to the Democratic Party. Abramoff, Delay, Santorum, Frist, Rove, Reed and the other players in the K-Street project engaged in corruption and extortion in a completely unprecedented scaled in the pursuit of their goal to establish a de facto one-party rule. Personal graft (and there's plenty of it!) is a big story, but this is even bigger. It threatens the viability of our democracy. Contrived 'balance' in reporting on this is an unprofessional and cowardly lie. Why are the media afraid to factually and *fairly* report this story? Why are you afraid to report that Democratic donors who were extorted into becoming Abramoff clients reduced their donations to Democrats? Let's see, here's your logic: A was a donor to B; A is extorted/conned into hiring C; A reduces its share of donations to B; C is shown to be engaged in a gigantic criminal enterprise; your conclusion: B and C are in a criminal enterprise together. The mendacity blows the mind. And I hope you do know you're being dishonest -- it this comes out of stupidity I'm even more frightened about how low our media has reached.
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by foobarbaz-2009 January 19, 2006 3:41 PM EST
Why are you holding the story on the multiple scnadals of Dem. Representative William Jefferson while at the same time focusing only on Republicans?
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by mikezwolf January 18, 2006 5:30 PM EST
"Even if a substanial percentage of takers were Democrats" -- back up your words or stop lying. Even Rich Lowry and Grover Norquist, those greatest luminaries of the conservative movement, say you're lying. So that's really got to be one damned humongous lie! And still the media tries to portray it otherwise to give the Republican Party political cover... The media is in the pocket of the Bush Republicans, and part of it is because of this twenty-year campaign of lies and harassment by right-wing extremists. That and a lot of money spent to get direct control of enough of the media to be able to control the story.
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by lucyrick1 January 18, 2006 4:47 PM EST
Not a doubt in my mind that the vast majority of MSM will try and pin this scandal ENTIRELY on the Republicans,esp. in this an election year.Even if a substanial percentage of takers were Democrats.I would bet everthing I own on this path being taken.The MSM and Democratic Party are in lock step on almost each and every item in the political and cultural universe.The only time Republicans get heard is when they "purchase" air time.
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by mikezwolf January 18, 2006 2:43 AM EST
Let's recap. 1) Abramoff is a life-long Republican operative, a former head of the College Republicans, and has close personal ties to about every senior Republican in Congress and the White House. 2) Abramoff engaged in extortion and corruption on a scale of unprecedented proportions. There is substantiated speculation that this may yet land maybe a dozen Republican Congressmen in jail. 3) The avowed goal of the Republican operation of which Abramoff was a part (the K-Street project) was to starve the Democratic Party of funding. This was done by using Congress to not only illegally reward donors to Republican candidates, but also to illegally punish donors to Democratic candidates. This attempt to establish a de facto one-party rule is not politics as usual, it threatens the very foundations and viability of our democracy. That was the 'facty' version. The media's 'truthy' narrative? Let's find one Democrat with any kind of remote, indirect ties to Abramoff and make *that* central to the story! It is frightening that Washington-insider journalists cannot even begin to understand how obscene, unprofessional, and noxious to the country their 'balanced' writing on this critical story is. The Republic is in danger. The fourth estate, when not just plainly bought and sold, has been either co-oped or cowed into submission by the corrupt Bush Republicans. The Imperial Administration advances unchecked.
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