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Tim Karr

It's Time to Uproot Washington's Astroturf Economy

Written by Tim Karr
11/17/2009 10 comments
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Astroturf. You may have heard the word or even seen the fake grassroots groups in action.

Astroturf groups are front operations that take corporate money to promote an industry's policy agenda, covering their tracks behind phony grassroots Web façades.

It's a formula for success that works in favor of deep-pocketed corporations. So much so that astroturf has spread over Washington like kudzu, stifling genuine public debate under a tangle of industry spin.

Astroturf is Washington's new invective. It's hurled left and right to dismiss groups that are engaged on both sides of President Obama's reform efforts.

"I'm pretty sure the grass is Astroturf-er over on the NetRoots [side]," wrote Phil Kerpen, policy director of Americans for Prosperity, a conservative forum funded at least in part by big corporate benefactors. MSNBC's Rachel Maddow shot back, calling Kerpen's boss an astroturf "parasite" who "gets fat" taking corporate money to spread fear about reform.

But how can you tell astroturf from... well, the real grassroots?

It should be as simple as following the money. That trail usually leads directly to ExxonMobil (in the case of "Energy Citizens"), Peabody Energy (the "Clean Coal" campaign), the health insurance industry ("Patients United Now"), phone and cable companies ("Information Technology and Innovation Foundation"), and to any number of corporate special interests that are well practiced in Washington's art of deception.

But following the money is exactly what these groups don’t want you to do. Even when pressed, astroturf spokespeople duck and dodge, often claiming that revealing the identities of their donors would hamper a noble cause -- such as transparency.

Seems outrageous, right? Not to the many Washington insiders who regularly reap the rewards of the astroturf economy. Just look at the money flooding in to oppose net neutrality, an issue that has transformed the arcane debate over telecommunications policy into a full-fledged mudfest.

In the first three quarters of 2009, AT&T Inc. (NYSE: T), Comcast Corp. (Nasdaq: CMCSA, CMCSK), Time Warner Cable Inc. (NYSE: TWC), Verizon Communications Inc. (NYSE: VZ), and their trade groups spent nearly $75 million, according to the Senate Office of Public Records. They have used this to hire more than 500 lobbyists to discredit public interest calls for an open Internet.

Over the last four-year political cycle, they maxed out their legal allowance, contributing $33 million to federal campaigns to win the hearts and minds of elected leaders. And that's just the money we know about.

Because they're bankrolling astroturf behind a fig leaf of "public relations," large corporations aren't legally required to disclose the lion’s share of their funding of these fake grassroots groups.

"The estimates range from double to two to three times the $3.2 billion that was spent [in 2008] on direct lobbying in Washington," says Craig Holman, the legislative representative for watchdog group Public Citizen. "Astroturf work is expensive."

Massive undisclosed sums include costs for high-end public relations firms, legal fees, push polling, direct mail efforts, and dubious think tank research.

On Internet policy, astroturf groups have pocketed millions from industry to fulfill Job No. 1: Lock in incumbent phone and cable companies' control over high-speed Internet connections in America. At present, these companies provide 97 percent of fixed connections into American homes, a status quo they are willing to spend untold sums to maintain.

This means hiring astroturf spokespeople to oppose any Internet consumer protections or policy reforms that would open the market to more competitors and consumer choice. In the hands of a skilled astroturf spokesperson, such reforms are radical, untested, and cumbersome regulations designed to smother the cyberspace economy, which has thrived in a magical realm free of government oversight.

Never mind that Federal Communications Commission (FCC) rules -- from the Carterfone decision to the Part 15 unlicensed ruling and "white spaces" decision -- were responsible for everything from the introduction of the first Internet modems to the proliferation of WiFi, and for prying open spectrum for the next generation of smartphones.

This evidence doesn't stop Mike McCurry from telling the world that "the Internet has worked absent regulation," a song the White-House-press-secretary-turned-hired-gun has been singing to the tune of a quarter-million-dollar paycheck from phone and cable companies.

This is how astroturfers hijack the debate. And if they're not debunked, it's how control over Internet access and -- if they get their way, over content -- will be handed over wholesale to the few ISPs that dominate the marketplace.

That's the destructive irony of the astroturf economy. Millions of dollars are funneled into campaigns to spread populist-sounding rhetoric that actually undermines the public and furthers the swindle that has turned Washington into a big company town.

— Timothy Karr is the campaign director of Free Press, a national, non-partisan media reform group. Free Press accepts no money from industry, industry groups, political parties, or government.

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zacherystaylor
Rank: Cave Painter
Tuesday November 24, 2009 12:25:07 PM
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Another way to tell whether it is an Astroturf organization might be whether they are ignoring obvious facts to advance an unstated cause. If they use manipulation tactics to convince naïve people to prop up the organization this may be easy for an educated person to recognize. It may be possible to point this out from within one of these Astroturf organizations but if you try they may try to discourage you or persuade you to leave. This is a good way to recognize Astroturf to open organizations are more likely to allow debate.

 

This may be the case with Wikipedia at times. I have been editing it for a while and found that they often don't allow certain types of material and have written a web page addressing possible censorship. I would prefer to see these problems fixed rather than argue about them. Wikipedia may be Astroturf but the basic idea could be a good one if it was run right so I think it should either be reformed or a new one should replace it.

 

I have also considered the possibility of cooperation with other organization including yours. In put about this would be helpful.

 

I have also considered the possibility that Free Press and media matter are Astroturf. I consider this unlikely though but it is worth considering. The reason I consider it unlikely is that I read McChesney’s book the problem with the media and even if it is Astroturf it seems to be doing the right thing for now at least. There needs to be openness and accountability for all powerful high profile organizations to ensure honesty. The last thing we need is another group trying to bring reform and just replacing one form of corruption with another.

 

To read about my experiences with Wikipedia censorship see the following page:

 

http://zakherys.tripod.com/wikipedia_censorship.htm

 

Or you can comment here:

 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Preventing_school_violence#Review_decision_requested

DHagar
Thinkernetter
Wednesday November 18, 2009 7:46:37 PM
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I like your points Nasimson.  I think the way that corporate astroturf relationships prevail is because we do not pay attention to these relationships and fall into the trap of adopting the "commercial" message.

Staying vigilant and exposing the source and then educating ourselves and others is key.  This post is great.

The corporate giants definitely could strangle the industry and end up limiting the potential for further innovation and true growth.

DHagar

nasimson
Rank: Web master
Wednesday November 18, 2009 5:31:03 AM
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Given the (controversial) nature of the topic, & its criticality to future of the internet I am surprised to see so few comments.

The worst part of the astroturf is that eventually all that is paid by customers, as corporates recover all their investments.

I was very delighted to read your post script:
"Free Press accepts no money from industry, industry groups, political parties, or government." I wish there were more organizations practicing the same policy.

Thread
Rank: Web master
Tuesday November 17, 2009 4:48:01 PM

I liked your post, but you missed a big clump of Astroturf in the health care debate.

The AMA.  They act like they are a kind group of elderly doctors just looking out for their patients when they are really set to make huge profits from this “reform”.

The AMA was given the rights to mange care codes used by the doctors, hospitals and the insurance industry.  The US government gave them this monopoly decades ago.  Every person who has ever seen a doctor pays the cost of these license fees.  For the doctors it’s part of the cost of doing business, like paying the electric or water bill.

The proposed “reform” requires thousands more company’s not directly in the health care industry to pay the AMA for the right to use the care codes when processing insurance claims with Uncle Sam’s “public option” agency.

The AMA is also being allowed to raise the license cost of using the codes.  The bottom line is all green for this Astroturf support of health care reform.

Currently the AMA makes tens of millions of dollars a year licensing the rights to use these codes.

They will make billions in license fees from this monopoly if this reform passes.

SteveGNYC
IQ Crew
Tuesday November 17, 2009 3:46:44 PM

Yes, transparency appropriately applied, but I also think it may be a time to re-think the old way as applicatble in today's world. Like Mary's said, the more things change the more they don't - I just wonder if that way of thinking in Washington can still stand or if the walls of that castle are ready to crumble (or be stormed). Please understand Mary, I mean no personal offense to you. I just am wondering if that still must apply or, like transparency, we can usher a new dawn here too.

NewRulesMitchell
IQ Crew
Tuesday November 17, 2009 2:48:39 PM

Thanks Tim - good piece on an important subject.  These companies put a ton of money in behind the scenes to rig the rules in favor of themselves to increase profits.  This is a self-interested act.  The problem comes not from acting in their self-interest but in their ability to obscure their actions.  We need more transparency. 

 

Mary Jander
Thinkernetter
Tuesday November 17, 2009 2:46:06 PM

Big business will always have its say; and these days, ISPs and cable companies are big business.

I'm thinking back to the days when the railroads ruled. The more things change, the more they don't. It seems like a matter of scale.

Terry Sweeney
IQ Crew
Tuesday November 17, 2009 1:56:32 PM

We really want to believe that principles and a marketplace of ideas are what define the conversation in Washington (and any resulting legislation or regulation). But this is another grim and bracing reminder that money still talks loudest when it comes to how our legislators craft laws -- or don't -- as the case may be.

SteveGNYC
IQ Crew
Tuesday November 17, 2009 1:34:09 PM

Michael - I thought the same thing and then said "oh here's the reason" like you. The amount of lobbying and spending is staggering, and the gamble (by some cases which I wish I cold remember where I read something quite recently) is just HUGE for the hopes of return business at 10X the "all in" pricetag.

In this staggering day of unemployment, slouching economy, etc etc - one would think it different. But it's not.

If I find that writing referred to above, i'll update and post. Fall on the floor, I thought I would have marked it.

Michael P. Kassner
Thinkernetter
Tuesday November 17, 2009 10:00:40 AM

I at first was wondering why not use all that money to better the company, instead of spending it on lobbying. That has to be viewed as a gamble.

Then you pointed out the control factor and that changed everything. Kind of scary, if they win, millions will never climb out of the digital divide.

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