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AP 'GOP Says' Story on DOE's Election-Driven Solyndra Layoff Delay Cites No GOP Sources

By Tom Blumer | November 16, 2011 | 13:53

A  A
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You would think that a story headlined "GOP says Energy Dept. tried to delay solar layoffs" would have a quote or two from a Republican Party spokesperson, politician, candidate or even a rank-and-file party member alleging that, well, the Energy Department tried to delay layoffs at now-bankrupt Solyndra. It doesn't. The "trifling" matter clearly didn't concern the headline writer at the Associated Press, which one again is showing that it deserves to be called "The Administration's Press."

Without attribution, Matthew Daly's early afternoon story (saved here at host for future reference, fair use and discussion purposes) largely relays and only slightly builds on what Carol D. Leonnig and Joe Stephens reported yesterday at the Washington Post. What follows are selected paragraphs from Daly's report, including two (in bold) which only generically cite GOP criticism:

Story Continues Below Ad ↓

GOP says Energy Dept. tried to delay solar layoffs

The Obama administration wanted the failing solar energy company Solyndra to delay announcing employee layoffs last year until after the 2010 midterm elections, according to newly released emails.

An October 2010 email from a Solyndra investment adviser to a colleague said Energy Department officials were pushing "very hard" to delay making the layoffs public until Nov. 3, 2010 - the day after the midterm elections.

"Oddly they didn't give a reason for that date," the email states. The email was released Wednesday by the House Energy and Commerce Committee, along with dozens of other emails related to the Solyndra investigation.

Last week, the White House said congressional Republicans were using the Solyndra investigation as a partisan "political football." Spokesman Jay Carney said at the time that GOP lawmakers have "cherry-picked" certain documents trying to create controversy over a decision-making process that the White House insists involved no political influence.

... Solyndra announced dozens of layoffs on Nov. 3, 2010, after the election, but continued to receive federal assistance.

... The Oct. 30, 2010, email was from Steve Mitchell, managing director of Argonaut Private Equity, a major Solyndra investor, to Ken Levit, executive director of the George Kaiser Family Foundation. Both organizations are controlled by George Kaiser, an Oklahoma billionaire who was a "bundler" for President Barack Obama's 2008 campaign and a frequent White House visitor in 2009 and 2010. Argonaut invested $400 million in the solar company. Mitchell also served on Solyndra's board of directors.

... Solyndra's implosion and revelations that administration officials rushed to complete the loan in time for a September 2009 groundbreaking have become an embarrassment for Obama and a rallying cry for GOP critics of his green energy program.

Getting back to the story's misleading headline (which also could have mentioned Solyndra by name, but avoided doing so): Daly quotes no one from the Republican Party. He quotes no current GOP candidate, officeholder, party official, or even a run-of-the-mill voter. Yet the headline gives readers the impression that GOP criticism is what the story is entirely about.

The Administration's Press apparently can't publish a story which puts the Obama administration in a bad light without engaging in some kind of tactic to make it appear as if it's really about what the opposition has said instead of what the administration has done. In this case, it was a "don't read this; it's just the same-old same-old about Republican attacks" headline. Daly also fails the collegial decency test by acting as if it he learned everything in his story on his own.

Somehow, merely calling this "disgraceful" doesn't suffice.

Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com.

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Comments

Cronyism and Corruption

Submitted by harris65 on Wed, 11/16/2011 - 2:37pm.

The level of cronyism corruption in our country is starting to resemble Nigeria or a banana republic.

Consider also what just happened in a federal court in Texas. In this case, As described at http://LawInjustice.com , a Dallas business owner was involved in a civil dispute and paid millions of dollars to lawyers, and when he objected to additional fees after settling the case, they had a "friendly" judge, appointed by President Clinton, seize all of his possessions, without any notice or hearing, and essentially ordered him under “house arrest” as an involuntary servant to the lawyers and denied a jury trial. The business owner has been under this "servant" order for 10 months and is prohibited from owning any possessions, prohibited from working, etc.

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"GOP Says" - - just the ole "they say" routine.

Submitted by Gary Hall on Wed, 11/16/2011 - 6:56pm.

When our national media is out to investigate a story (be it a scandal, graft, corruption, crony capitalism, or wealth inequality) which involves Republicans, or conservative views, it's the reporters who are out digging on the story, seeking any interviews which they believe they need, and/or poking around for dirt. When they write the story up, the story comes from the point of view of the journalist, thru the lens of, " we the people want to know,"  and either exposes what they uncovered, or what they want the story to be.

They don't even need the Democrats to help out here; , only I suspect, that much of the time, the tip comes from a friendly Democratic party source. The story, mind you, will instantly take the form of an "emotionally involved in,  and deeply committed to getting to the bottom of the story," effort of investigative journalism.

When the story is about a Democrat, or a liberal issue or view, there is seldom any investigative work required. When - usually, only when - there has been enough chatter out there or enough pressure forced on them - so that it becomes obvious that they can no longer withhold mention of the issue at hand, they come out with one of the following leads:

  • They say
  • Republicans, or the GOP, are charging that
  • Republicans are putting pressure on . . . to do . .

Never do/will we see, "our investigation has uncovered evidence which leads to the Obama White House."

This reminds me (once again) of that surprising admittance by the ex-liberal opinion writer at the Los Angeles Times, Timothy Rutten.  As many of us know, the LAT's editors actually notified their staff not to engage covering the developing John Edwards scandal during the 2008 primary season - H A N D S   OF F.

  • As pressure mounted on major newspapers to take some aspect of the unfolding scandal into account, editors and ombudsmen issued statements saying it would be unfair to publish anything until the Enquirer's stories had been "confirmed." 
  • Well, there's confirming and then there's confirming. One sort occurs when an editor mutters, "Find somebody and have them make a few calls." Then there's the sort that comes when that editor summons an investigative reporter with a heart like ice and a mind like Torquemada's and says, "Follow this wherever it goes and peel this guy like an onion."
  • Suffice to say that the follow-up of the Enquirer's story fell into the former category in too many newsrooms, including that of The Times.

Which meant - don't even looks towards the onion.

That reminds.  NB  covered some of this, right here, with Tom covering it here.

(;~/ gary

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