Probe:
'Pundit Payola' was poor judgment, but not illegal or unethical
Published: April 15, 2005
4:20 PM ET
WASHINGTON (AP) Senior Education
Department officials showed poor judgment in hiring conservative
commentator Armstrong Williams to promote agency programs, a department
investigation found Friday.
However, the department's inspector
general said there was no evidence of legal or ethical violations.
The department paid $240,000 to
Williams, a commentator with newspaper, television, and radio
audiences, to promote President Bush's "No Child Left Behind" law. The
deal was part of a $1.3 million contract the department had with
Ketchum, a public relations firm.
Williams, who is black, was hired
to conduct "minority outreach" about Bush's law by producing ads with
then-Education Secretary Rod Paige. Records show Williams was also
hired to provide media time to Paige and to persuade other blacks in
the media to talk about the law.
"We did find that department
officials made some poor management decisions and exercised poor
judgment and oversight," the inspector general said. "As a result, the
department paid for work that most likely did not reach its intended
audience and paid for deliverables that were never received."
Responding to the report, Education
Secretary Margaret Spellings referred to the influence of department
leaders.
"When the secretary, his/her chief
of staff, and other senior officers urge, hint, suggest, or recommend
anything, it can start a chain reaction within the building to carry
out the request, such as what occurred beginning in March 2003," she
said. "As a result, it is the secretary who must be careful about and
is ultimately responsible for the signals that his/her office sends."
Both Paige and Spellings were
appointed by Bush.
Putting a pundit on the payroll has
proven embarrassing for the Bush administration, which has also been
criticized for distributing "news" videos that don't make clear they
were government produced.
Bush has said the hiring of
Williams was wrong, and that videos made for TV broadcast should
disclose their source to avoid being "deceptive to the American people."
Paige, in his final days as
secretary, defended the contract as legal but apologized for
"perceptions and allegations of ethical lapses." He called for a fast
inspector general's review so the matter would not burden his
successor, Spellings, or "sully" the department.
Spellings, who began her tenure in
January, said that she and her chief of staff, David Dunn, were unaware
of the deal when they worked at the White House.
The top Democrat on the House
education committee, Rep. George Miller of California, said this week
that the Bush administration had kept the inspector general from doing
a full investigation by refusing to allow interviews with key current
and former White House officials. The White House said the inspector
general had no legal authority to demand such access.
Miller, briefed in advance because
he had been a requester of the investigation, also warned that
Spellings might invoke a privilege that would cause information to be
deleted from the final version. It appeared that did not end up
happening, a Miller aide said Friday.
After news accounts revealed his
contract in January, Williams apologized for accepting ad money to
promote the law while he also did so as a commentator, acknowledging a
conflict. Tribune Media Services, which syndicated Williams, dropped
his column.
The Ketchum contract has gotten the
department into trouble in other ways.
The department paid for a video
that looked like a news story, but it was not clear that the reporter
in the segment was hired by the government. That is the same approach
that congressional investigators have said amounted to "covert
propaganda" in other cases.
Also, the department paid for
ratings of education reporters based on how they covered Bush's
education law. The government-funded study used several criteria,
including points for pieces that made the law, the Bush administration,
and the Republican Party look good.
Copyright 2005 The Associated
Press. All rights reserved.
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