Archive for the 'Public Campaign Action Fund' Category

Weekend Quick Hits Open Thread

Terri Whitehouse January 5th, 2008

Gov. Steve Beshear appointed Eleanor Jordan as executive director of the Commission on Women. Bill Stone, former Jefferson County GOP chairman, opined:

Stone said he does believe that a separate commission for women is part of “government silliness.”

“I personally, and I think conservatives think, the Commission on Women is another wasteful government department,” he said.

Stone, however, said that he knows Jordan and that if there has to be a commission she is a “probably a perfect fit for that job.”

I guess being in the bottom third in just about every indicator of stability, health, and well-being, is A-OK with some bourgie city folk.

Sen. Mitch McConnell has shitloads of money. I know our readers must find this absolutely shocking. The Public Campaign Action Fund gets it right:

No one in Kentucky ought to see McConnell’s fundraising as anything but his mastery of a corrupt political system that places the interests of donors ahead of all Kentuckians.

Finally, Rep. John Yarmuth puts his money where his mouth is, donating his whole first-year congressional salary to the Louisville community as he promised. MediaCzech provides the Republican response.

What other interesting things have you read in the last few days?

Great new PCAF parody ad on McConnell

Joe Sonka November 12th, 2007

(crossposted at BlueGrassRoots)

The Public Campaign Action Fund has a devastating new ad parodying McConnell’s new “I am the big government pork king” advertisement. This ad mentions some of the earmarks he created that Mitch left out.

Here’s the ad being parodied by PCAF. As we’ve already mentioned, this ad is a big steamer, featuring a head-scratching starring actor.

Here’s the real news behind Sen. Mitch McConnell’s iPods-for-Afghanis initiative

Matt Gunterman September 10th, 2007

So, while some in the press have been spending all their time deconstructing and parsing the words of the new Public Campaign Action Fund’s latest television spot that highlights the sketch way in which Senator Mitch McConnell (R) and his goons got $8.3 million of taxpayer funds allocated to a Kentucky-based corporation that sends $50 audio players to Afghanis with recorded messages about democracy and other civic lessons, others have been searching out the whole story about the operation behind this ludicrous scheme is coming out.

Here’s what CorpWatch had to say:

Pink “iPods” for Democracy!
by Fariba Nawa, Special to CorpWatch

The employees of Voice for Humanity, in a fever of righteous idealism, traveled six hours on donkeys and horses through the remotest parts of the Afghanistan countryside. They were on a mission: to deliver what they thought was an invaluable literacy tool for Afghans. Pink for women, silver for men.

They were custom digital audio players which function like the trendy iPod although they look more like generic radios or MP3 players. They are made in China and filled with public service messages on topics including human rights, women’s rights, Afghanistan’s election process, and health.

The aid workers distributed 65,800 recorders, which cost $50 each, to remote villages and some of the most dangerous and volatile areas in the country. The staff of Voice for Humanity, a non-profit humanitarian aid agency that claims to be dedicated to developing literacy in the world, says it has trained tribal chiefs and other community leaders to listen to the recorders and then pass them on to individuals and families.

The pseudo-iPods were funded by a group of U.S. government funders that included the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). An $8.3 million contract was awarded to Kentucky-based Voice for Humanity, a small group run by two Lexington businessmen, to use its audio players to “promote democracy” in advance of the 2004 Afghan presidential election as well as to similar projects in Nigeria

How VFH got the contract is a matter raising some skeptical eyebrows in the aid community. When the two founders needed to sell their idea to the federal government, they turned to a lobbying group run by Hunter Bates, the former chief of staff to Senator Mitch McConnell. McConnell, it turns out, chairs the senate subcommittee that controls the money allocated to USAID.

Critics say it was those connections that resulted in millions of taxpayer dollars going to an ineffective and laughable program of throwing trendy technology at serious international issues.

“It shows how foolhardy people can be when they’re not thinking practically,” said Patricia Omidian, an aid worker heading the American Friends Service Committee.

There are further questions about the propriety of the US government distributing “public service messages” about an election in which it openly backs one candidate over the others. VHF has gone to great lengths to ensure that the recorders “have no US footprint,” despite the fact they are funded by the U.S. government and distributed by an American NGO.

Assuming that the content of the recorded audio on the players was purely educational and did have value as a literacy tool, it would have been cheaper and more affective to provide these communities with radio transmitters, which cost about $500 total. Radio programming would have reached more people, and is already how most Afghans get their information. Further, the information could be updated on the fly, whereas the VFH recorders must be rounded up and fitted with new chips bearing new material, and then redistributed. Each new chip costs $10, plus the cost of labor and travel.

¨Why not radios?¨ said one aid worker critical of the deal. “You see this time and time again to what (the politicians) think makes political sense regardless of feasibility or viability.”

Yet Pete McLain, director of Voice for Humanity, said that Afghan focus groups and surveys have shown that the recorder has educated the public about pertinent material they had no access to before.

¨Some of the work can be done with the radio. We’re different because of the depth and the fact that it can be repeated whenever you want it, like in the kitchen, in the field. There’s an ability to listen to it as a group and rewind it. Radio is good for soundbites,” McLain said. “This is about training. We don’t want to compete with radio. It’s apples and oranges. This is supplemental. We see some synergy.”

VFH has hired Altai Consulting to audit the project for efficiency and effectiveness. Its results will be presented to USAID to bolster VFH’s claim that the program is successful.

In Kabul, VFH’s staff of 40 is entirely Afghan. The supervisor, Abdul Wakil, is a firm believer in the product and its utility. He recalled a case where the device was played at a wedding in front of 500 women in Logar province. The program included information on women’s right to vote, including instructions on how to go about it. Although the women had been warned by traditionalists not to vote, many of them had the courage of conviction to register upon hearing the messages, Wakil said.

“It’s a school for them,” he added.

The Women’s Affairs Directorate in Logar confirmed that the players had provided beneficial information before the election, but that it was an impractical means of educating their communities. At their offices, a child could be seen playing with one of the audio players, switching the buttons like it was a toy.

In Khoshi, one of the districts in Logar where the player was distributed before elections, men in shops said they had listened to the material on the tape and gained some insight into the election process but afterwards, the digital device became a toy for their children.

The color-coded idea for the players emerged when VFH learned that men had taken the devices from women and were using them for themselves. Then the Ministry of Women’s Affairs suggested changing the color of some of the silver recorders to pink so that men would be too embarrassed to carry them around. So VHF ordered more players, this time in pink.

Wakil sat in his guesthouse in his pressed black suit showing me the recorder’s features. It’s a set with a solar charger and a hand crank. The programming now includes informational dispatches and dramatic performances read in the Afghan languages of Dari and Pushto.

Wakil said VFH is now lobbying to receive more grants so that it can continue making new chips with additional information on health, counter narcotics and children and eventually, build a library of data.

But many at USAID aren’t buying it. “We had to play it politically so we gave them some money. But they could not leverage us to give them too much,” said another USAID source.

The Sleazy Insight Censorship of PCAF’s McConnell Ad

Joe Sonka September 7th, 2007

The Public Campaign Action Fund has just issued a press release related to Mitch’s buddies at Insight deciding to censor their new ad on McConnell’s sleazy $8 milllion giveaway to his cronies.

Cable company execs big donors to Sen. McConnell

Washington, DC - Public Campaign Action Fund released a statement this morning demanding to know if there was any political interference in the decision by Insight Communications to censor the group and refuse to air their commercial that is critical of Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) during last night’s University of Louisville’s football telecast. The ad can be seen at http://www.bigmoneymitch.com.

The statement is as follows:

“Executives at cable giant Insight Communications have given Senator Mitch McConnell $17,000 in campaign contributions for his campaigns. And they now are helping him even more by engaging in political censorship by refusing to run Public Campaign Action Fund’s commercial that criticizes McConnell for his special interest politics.

“Network affiliates and another cable system in Kentucky ran the ad after reviewing its content for accuracy. But with Insight, Public Campaign Action Fund was neither given an opportunity to respond to any of their concerns, nor were we notified of their decision to pull the commercial from rotation on a prime viewing slot. This is highly irregular and their action reeks of censorship.

“This action raises serious questions that must be answered:

“Since every other outlet in Kentucky ran the ad after reviewing its content for accuracy, what is Insight’s justification for deciding not to air the ad?

“Which executives made this decision and did they make it without reviewing the background documentation that supports the ad that other media companies found adequate?

“What role did Insight lobbyist Keith Hall or Insight CEO Mike Willmer, both McConnell donors and allies, play in making this decision to censor the ad? Were they or anyone else at Insight urged by McConnell or his aides to censor this ad?

“There is a hotly contested debate in Congress and Washington on competition and regulatory affairs that will affect the entire telecommunication industry. Insight CEO Mike Willner is the former two-term head of the cable industry’s trade association, and a leading lobbyist for industry causes in Washington DC. What has Mitch McConnell done for Insight on the issues that directly impact Insight’s bottom line? Has Insight lobbied McConnell to further its interests, and how much campaign money have Willner and his associates bundled for McConnell’s campaigns and PACs?

“Big money donors. Lobbyists with connections. A powerful Senator. Unaccountable big media. The result? Political censorship that squashes freedom of speech. This ought to disturb everyone - in Kentucky and around the nation.”

Public Campaign Action Fund is a national nonpartisan organization with more than 150,000 members working to advance comprehensive public financing of elections. PCAF also holds elected officials accountable for doing special favors for political backers. To learn more, visit http://www.campaignmoney.org.

Something’s rotten near Lexmark

Matt Gunterman September 6th, 2007

Man, oh, man. Something’s rotten about this.

It seems that Senator Mitch McConnell (R) and his cronies got Public Campaign Action Fund’s latest ad pulled from Insight Communications cable systems.

The connections between McConnell and Insight Communications involve both direct personal interests and finances. In other words: it’s a simple and juicy story.

What’s worse, they used some sloppy reporting by the Herald-Leader’s Ryan Alessi to justify ditching the ad.

Mark Nickolas at BluegrassReport (click here for coverage) and PageOneKentucky (click here for their coverage) are working on developing this story into its full potential.

I expect there to be developments on this throughout Friday.