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President Calls For End to Tax-Funded PR for His Policies

Bush says such contracts were news to him and his staff. In the latest case, Maggie Gallagher was paid to promote his marriage initiative.

The Nation

January 27, 2005|Maura Reynolds, Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON — As fresh evidence surfaced Wednesday of the Bush administration's use of taxpayer dollars to promote its policies in the news media, the president disavowed such practices and ordered that his Cabinet secretaries remain independent from the press.

Bush spoke as Democrats produced statistics showing that contracts to private public relations firms by the administration have more than doubled since he took office.

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Separately, it was disclosed that a syndicated columnist had received $21,500 from the Department of Health and Human Services to assist the department's efforts to promote marriage among aid recipients.

Earlier this month, published reports disclosed that the Education Department, under former Secretary Rod Paige, had paid conservative commentator Armstrong Williams $240,000 to promote the president's education policies.

During a White House news conference, Bush denied that he and his staff knew about such contracts, which Democrats denounced as "covert propaganda" directed at the American people and paid for by their tax dollars.

"I expect my Cabinet secretaries to make sure that that practice doesn't go forward," Bush told reporters. "We didn't know about this in the White House, and there needs to be a nice, independent relationship between the White House and the press, the administration and the press."

According to a report by Democrats on the House Committee on Government Reform, the administration spent at least $88 million on public relations contracts in 2004, more than twice the $37 million the Clinton administration spent in 2000, its last year in office.

The report also said that 41% of such contracts last year were awarded on a no-bid basis, while in 2000 under Clinton only 16% were noncompetitive. The report said the numbers were preliminary and likely to increase because some government agencies had yet to disclose their 2004 public relations expenditures.

The report tallies up all government contracts with 40 large public relations firms, and notes that the totals include legitimate contracts to help educate the public about health risks and other "legal and appropriate" topics.

"Each day seems to bring another example to light where this administration is funding covert propaganda by hiring public relations firms to produce and disseminate fabricated video news reports or to pay off journalist/commentators to advance the Bush line," said Rep. Henry A. Waxman (D-Los Angeles), ranking Democrat on the committee. "This sort of thing is illegal and unethical. We need to get more of an explanation from the administration as to whether the revelations this month are just the tip of the iceberg."

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