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Affronts to freedom of the press

Some of the stories coming out of Minnesota this week are enough to make my stomach turn, especially after the appalling arrest of an ABC News producer in Denver last week as they attempted to videotape Senators and lobbyists emerging from a reception.

The biggest one this week is Democracy Now's Amy Goodman getting arrested--along with two of her colleagues--for obstruction and riot charges and then released.  Goodman and her team had been reporting on the 'preventive' raids of activists and independent journalists by police before the RNC started.  The video is an ugly scene.

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Tags: convention, dnc, rnc, first amendment, abc news, media and democracy (all tags)

Wexler hits inherent contempt, abuse of power

This morning, we ran a full page ad on the back of the Denver Post convention section called "Democracy in Distress."  Check it out here.

This same morning, Rep. Robert Wexler spoke at the Progressive Central forum in Denver and if I hadn't known better, I'd have thought he was reading from the ad and from our Recapture the Flag campaign agenda to restore the rule of law and the Constitution.  Apologies for the shoddy video quality, but it's worth watching just to hear Wexler hitting the bulls eye on torture, executive privilege, inherent contempt for Karl Rove, and other examples of executive abuses of power that should not stand as precedent for future administrations.

I handed Wexler a copy of the ad after he spoke, and he was pretty excited by it.  Here's hoping we find a few more like Wexler in Congress ready to join us and take back our democracy.

On a tangential note, Denver has been enlightening, worthwhile and sometimes fun, but I am ready for a full night's sleep again.

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Tags: robert wexler, abuse of power, recapture the flag, inherent contempt, karl rove, dnc, convention (all tags)

Are telecom companies funding this convention?

Everywhere in Denver
Really, everywhere
It's private, and it's sponsored by Verizon

In Denver, it's easy to get the feeling that the telecom companies are funding this convention.  And it's pretty close to true.  AT&T, Qwest, Verizon, and Comcast are heavily invested in the Denver DNC, and are similarly paying for a good chunk of the RNC next week.  If you want to see a big special interest buying its way further into the halls of power, you've got it here.  And anyone who cares about the future of the media, the internet, and the election system in this country should be getting mad.

On the ground in Denver, it's the little things that catch your attention - like almost every delegate has a lanyard around their neck that says "Qwest Qwest Qwest" (see the pics).  When half the people you see have a Qwest band around their neck, you notice.  And it gets in your head.

And then it's the parties.  Of course, folks like me can't get in - but delegates, elected officials, lobbyists and their staffs usually can.  AT&T is hosting a reception virtually every day, sometimes several.  (Check out Sunlight's Party Time blog for some great coverage of the convention parties.)  Yesterday I went to see who was at the AT&T-sponsored luncheon for "western delegates" only to get turned away at the door and informed that the event had been moved to a different fancy restaurant on the other side of town.  Tuesday night I wandered past a private event sponsored by Verizon for Iowa delegates; they had reserved a café on the main drag through town and locked out the public, as you can see from the photo.

Those are the obvious images, but what's less visible to the naked eye is more significant.

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Tags: telecom, bigtentdenver, dnc, convention, money in politics, net neutrality, media and democracy (all tags)

Convention Symposium Demonstrates Need for Citizen Journalism

Cross-posted from The Hill...

The highlight of Tuesday-indeed, the most widely-attended presentation at the Big Tent so far-was longtime newsman Dan Rather giving a powerful, and at times emotional, talk that Jon covered in more depth earlier.

His key message at our symposium on media and democracy is that we NEED citizen journalism, we NEED owners with the guts to take any heat from talk radio, and we NEED to stop media consolidation. I caught a few minutes on video that don't do it justice, but hopefully they give a sense of his passion, including a moment of choking up about a minute and a half in.

But the day was about much more than Dan Rather. Indeed, that was the whole point -- that a healthy democracy depends on a diverse and free media that prods, questions, and educates the public rather than a small handful of networks controlling what people see and hear and what constitutes "news."

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Tags: bigtentdenver, DNC, citizen journalism, dan rather, media and democracy (all tags)

Common Cause in Denver & Minneapolis

Cross-posted from The Hill...

Common Cause will be very active this week and next at the Democratic convention in Denver and the Republican convention in Minneapolis. Today, along with FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein, I will kick off the Symposium on Media and Democracy at the "Big Tent." It will be a panel discussion on how the media and technology increasingly shape our democracy and how we can ensure more diverse and independent news sources.

The Big Tent is an 8,000 square-foot structure near the convention center that will be home this week to hundreds of bloggers and citizen journalists covering the convention. There are bloggers from small sites you've never heard of, as well as some of the most popular political blogs on the Web, like Daily Kos. You can watch a live feed of the Big Tent on our website at: www.commoncause.org/BigTent. We will also be sending back regular updates through the course of the week about what's happening, which you can find at www.commonblog.com.

Next week, in Minneapolis, I will speak on several panels with journalists, academics and activists about some of the most pressing issues our next president will face.

Check out this full-page ad that Common Cause is running Thursday in the Denver daily newspapers and then again in the Minneapolis Star Tribune on Monday, when the Republicans start their convention in that city.

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Tags: recapture the flag, conventions, DNC, RNC, bigtentdenver (all tags)

Convention fever

I'm spending the week in Denver at the site of the Democratic National Convention, along with several other Common Cause staff.  We're helping to lead a full day on media and democracy issues at the Big Tent, home of bloggers, independent media, and other activists, which you can view through a live web feed.

We'll also be watch dogging the many lavish parties to see who's trying to buy access and influence with lawmakers, and contributing to the Party Time blog of the Sunlight Foundation.  We'll be urging candidates to sign the Voters First Pledge for public financing of elections and to Recapture the Flag by committing to restore the rule of law and the Constitution.

Keep an eye out here for updates from Denver.  Here's one to start off, with a quick look back to a week ago.

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Tags: dnc, convention, election 08, money in politics, ethics in government, bigtentdenver (all tags)

Convention for sale

In what will no doubt be a frequent topic for conversation -- at least around here -- the Rocky Mountain News covers the dozens of national corporations who will cosponsor the Democratic National Convention.  The same is happening at the RNC, and in fact, 20 corporations are cosponsoring both events.  Most folks, even those at the DNC, mince few words about what's at stake:
The answer is simple, said former Denver City Councilwoman Susan Barnes-Gelt: "It's always about access."
It is not a phenomenon unique to the Democrats or Denver. A slew of corporate donors have lined up for the Republican National Convention in Minneapolis, and 20 of them also are sponsoring the DNC.

They include companies like 3M, Allstate, AstraZeneca, AT&T, Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway Co., Ford, Merck, Qwest, the Service Employees International Union, US Bank, Visa and Xcel Energy.

"Welcome to the American political system," Barnes-Gelt said of the companies ponying up money on both sides of the aisle.

Chris Lopez of the Democratic National Convention Host Committee acknowledged that sponsors get "opportunities" that depend on the level of their support. Those opportunities can include tickets to events surrounding the convention and even access to the Pepsi Center itself, where the convention will be held.

The host committee does not have to file documents outlining the level of sponsorships until after the convention. But Lopez said the access goes up as the contributions do.
At least he doesn't beat around the bush -- they pay for access to the lawmakers and party elites.  The interests of those sponsoring companies get a further breakdown, below.

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Tags: dnc, conventions, money in politics, soft money, campaign finance reform (all tags)


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