In New
Hampshire, TV Station Partners With Interest Groups
That Push Candidates on War and Austerity
By Lee Fang
February
03, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"The
Intercept
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A New
Hampshire television news network owned by a former
Republican candidate for Senate is working
closely with conservative interest groups that are
pressuring presidential candidates to take more
aggressive positions on use of military force,
entitlement reform, and tax cuts.
One group,
Americans for Peace, Prosperity, and Security, was
formed last year on behalf of military contractors
to hold events in early primary states with the
explicit goal of pushing the candidates to support
military engagement abroad.
And while
local television stations regularly work with
non-partisan, non-ideological groups to host and
broadcast events such as candidate debates, the NH1
News network, owned by Bill Binnie, has gone a step
further, providing its on-air talent to press the
candidates on issues championed by its interest
group partners.
Binnie’s NH1
News network, which operates WBIN-TV and includes
over a dozen radio stations, also hosts a special
interview series called “Fiscal
Fridays” on behalf of Fix the Debt and the
Concord Coalition, two groups
bankrolled by billionaire Pete Peterson. Both
groups encourage candidates to adopt the
recommendations of the Simpson-Bowles commission —
which in practice translates into pushing for
corporate tax cuts and reductions in Social Security
and Medicare.
Binnie, who
amassed a fortune in plastic and manufacturing, did
not respond to a request for comment. Binnie has
said he began building his media empire after
his failed 2010 Senate campaign. His television
station caused a minor uproar in 2013 when it
suspended its nightly news broadcast in favor of
a celebrity gossip show called “OMG! Insider.”
Marco Rubio
appeared at an NH1/APPS forum at the University of
New Hampshire in Manchester last week. The candidate
discussed his opposition to receiving Syrian
refugees, the war against ISIS, and other foreign
policy-related issues.
APPS was the official host, while NH1 was “the media
partner for APPS and for this great series,” said
NH1 News anchor Paul Steinhauser, who moderated the
event. Steinhauser kicked off the forum by asking
Rubio a question provided to him by APPS “honorary
chairman” Mike Rogers — the former chairman of the
House Intelligence Committee-turned-CNN national
security contributor — about how he would respond to
reports that Russian President Vladimir Putin had
ordered the assassination of former KGB operative
Alexander Litvinenko.
“Chairman
Rogers wants to know how you would reassert the U.S.
and how you would kind of stymie Vladimir Putin if
you were in the White House,” Steinhauser said.
Rubio
responded that he would boost the defense
capabilities and back more missile defense programs.
The “Fiscal
Friday” program, which began in October of last
year, was
billed as a forum for critical information about
the nation’s budget. But Fix the Debt has come under
fire for promoting only a narrow set of policies.
Fix the Debt organizers are given
talking points that encourage activists to ask
about tax reform that must include reducing
corporate rates and entitlement reforms that raise
the eligibility age and reduce benefits.
When Martin
O’Malley appeared on the program, NH1 News’
Steinhauser
pressed the former Maryland governor on whether
his idea of tax reform would include lowering the
corporate tax rate.
Similarly,
when Chris Christie appeared on the “Fiscal Friday”
program, Steinhauser noted that other Republican
candidates had proposed killing off entire federal
agencies, and
asked if he would do the same.
During both
programs, neither candidate was asked about
debt-reduction strategies that fall outside the
Peterson network’s comfort zone, such as a financial
transactions tax.
The
Peterson network has also
flooded
Iowa and New Hampshire with television ads promoting
its vision of debt reduction through entitlement
cuts and tax reform. Records
show the Peterson groups have purchased
advertising on Binnie’s WBIN-TV.
Timothy
Karr, the senior director of strategy at Free Press,
a media watchdog, says this is not the first time
he’s seen a television station company use the
public airwaves to promote a narrow agenda during a
presidential election. In 2004, Sinclair
Broadcasting Group, a media company owned by a
Republican donor, aired “Stolen Honor,” an
election-year movie designed to tar Democratic
candidate John Kerry.
For
Binnie’s television network, Karr says, “It’s not
really a new phenomenon but a blatant brand of
influence peddling that station owners believe they
can engage in with impunity.”
Lee Fang
is a journalist with a longstanding interest in how
public policy is influenced by organized interest
groups and money. He was the first to uncover and
detail the role of the billionaire Koch brothers in
financing the Tea Party movement.
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