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Columnist Page: Maureen Dowd
Forum: Discuss This Column
E-mail: liberties@nytimes.com
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OP-ED COLUMNIST
Bush's Barberini Faun
By MAUREEN DOWD
Published: February 17, 2005
WASHINGTON
I am very impressed with James Guckert, a k a Jeff Gannon.
How often does an enterprising young man, heralded in press reports as
both a reporter and a contributor to such sites as Hotmilitarystud.com
, Workingboys.net ,
Militaryescorts .com, MilitaryescortsM4M.com
and Meetlocalmen.com
, get to question the president of the United
States?
Who knew that a hotmilitarystud wanting to meetlocalmen could so easily
get to be face2face with the commander in chief?
It's hard to believe the White House could hit rock bottom on
credibility again, but it has, in a bizarre maelstrom that plays like a
dark comedy. How does it credential a man with a double life and a
secret past?
Advertisement
"Jeff Gannon" was waved into the press room nearly every day for two
years as the conservative correspondent for two political Web sites
operated by a wealthy Texas Republican. Scott McClellan often called on
the pseudoreporter for softball questions.
Howard Kurtz reported in The Washington Post yesterday that although Mr.
Guckert had denied launching the provocative Web sites - one described
him as " 'military, muscular, masculine and discrete' (sic)" - a Web
designer in California said "that he had designed a gay escort site for
Gannon and had posted naked pictures of Gannon at the client's request."
And The Wilmington News-Journal in Delaware reported that Mr. Guckert
was delinquent in $20,700 in personal income tax from 1991 to 1994.
I'm still mystified by this story. I was rejected for a White House
press pass at the start of the Bush administration, but someone with an
alias, a tax evasion problem and Internet pictures where he posed like
the "Barberini Faun" is credentialed to cover a White House that won a
second term by mining homophobia and preaching family values?
At first when I tried to complain about not getting my pass renewed,
even though I'd been covering presidents and first ladies since 1986, no
one called me back. Finally, when Mr. McClellan replaced Ari Fleischer,
he said he'd renew the pass - after a new Secret Service background
check that would last several months.
In an era when security concerns are paramount, what kind of Secret
Service background check did James Guckert get so he could saunter into
the West Wing every day under an assumed name while he was doing
full-frontal advertising for stud services for $1,200 a weekend? He used
a driver's license that said James Guckert to get into the White House,
then, once inside, switched to his alter ego, asking questions as Jeff
Gannon.
Mr. McClellan shrugged this off to Editor & Publisher magazine, oddly
noting, "People use aliases all the time in life, from journalists to
actors."
I know the F.B.I. computers don't work, but this is ridiculous. After
getting gobsmacked by the louche sagas of Mr. Guckert and Bernard Kerik,
the White House vetters should consider adding someone with some
blogging experience.
Does the Bush team love everything military so much that even a
military-stud Web site is a recommendation?
Or maybe Gannon/Guckert's willingness to shill free for the White House,
even on gay issues, was endearing. One of his stories mocked John
Kerry's "pro-homosexual platform" with the headline "Kerry Could Become
First Gay President."
With the Bushies, if you're their friend, anything goes. If you're their
critic, nothing goes. They're waging a jihad against journalists -
buying them off so they'll promote administration programs, trying to
put them in jail for doing their jobs and replacing them with ringers.
At last month's press conference, Jeff Gannon asked Mr. Bush how he
could work with Democrats "who seem to have divorced themselves from
reality." But Bush officials have divorced themselves from reality.
They flipped TV's in the West Wing and Air Force One to Fox News. They
paid conservative columnists handsomely to promote administration
programs. Federal agencies distributed packaged "news" video releases
with faux anchors so local news outlets would run them. As CNN reported,
the Pentagon produces Web sites with "news" articles intended to
influence opinion abroad and at home, but you have to look hard for the
disclaimer: "Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Defense." The agencies
spent a whopping $88 million spinning reality in 2004, splurging on P.R.
contracts.
Even the Nixon White House didn't do anything this creepy. It's worse
than hating the press. It's an attempt to reinvent it.
E-mail: liberties@nytimes.com
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