Obama Labor Dept. Forces Journalists to Use Government Issued Computers?

Journalists are crying foul at a new Obama policy that will deny them the right to use their own computers to write stories from economic data issued inside the halls of the Department of Labor. Instead, the DoL says, journalists will have to use government owned computers, government selected software, and government owned Internet transmission lines to write their stories about the data issued by the department.

All news organizations have been ordered to remove their computers, tools, and other electronics from the Department of Labor by June 15 and will not be allowed to bring any of their own electronics into the place from that point forward.

Until this change, the practice had been that the economic data was released to journalists ahead of the official release date in a special “lock-up” room inside the DoL. Reporters then used their own computers and software to write their draft reports and create their graphics and tables on the data. Then, once the release time for the data was reached, the DoL allowed the journalists to transmit their stories from inside the special room over Internet lines that have been installed and paid for by news media outlets.

The new policy, however, will demand that reporters use only government issued computers and Internet transmission lines from now on. DoL authorities are citing security as the reason for the policy change saying that the already stringent past practices were not secure enough.

Media organizations have expressed all sorts of worries over this draconian policy. Not only could the government now have access to the rough drafts of the journalist’s work, but there is a fear that the new transmission lines will not be able to handle the onrush of filings once the release time arrives.

Carl A. Fillichio, the department’s senior adviser for communications and public affairs in Washington, was quizzed during a conference call by media outlets if the new government owned transmission system would allow all of them to transmit their stories at the same time, but Fillichio said, “I’m not going to guarantee anything.”

Matthew Winkler, editor-in-chief of Bloomberg News, says this extreme policy is “troubling.”

There are few government reports that have the wide- ranging impact on the market as the Department of Labor statistics, and we are troubled by the degree of government restrictions on how the press can fully and accurately report this data to the public

Others agreed.

“Requiring journalists to draft and publish stories using government owned computers loaded with government-controlled software simply crosses the line the First Amendment clearly drew to separate the press from the government,” said Lucy Dalglish, executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

Another troubling aspect about this new policy is that the change was made out of hand with no period of public comment. Obama’s DoL simply made the decision without informing the public or the media ahead of time.

This authoritarian aspect of the policy change also raised the eyebrows of some in Congress. As Bridget Johnson reports, Congressman Darell Issa was alarmed over the whole thing saying this “unprecedented action has serious freedom of the press implications”

“The abrupt nature of this change, coupled with the absence of a clear explanation and a lack of public input, raises key questions about who made this decision to implement this change and why,” Issa said. “Did that individual have the authority of law?”

Issa held a hearing recently and was critical of Labor Secretary Hilda Solis for refusing to come testify sending underlings instead. “Ultimately, if you’re the secretary of Labor the buck should stop with you,” he said.

Others are wondering why any change had to be made at all.

“The public has benefited enormously from the process the department currently uses,” Rick Blum, coordinator of the Sunshine in Government Initiative, wrote May 8 in a letter to Labor Secretary Hilda Solis. “The practice used to this point ensures the simultaneous release of information while also providing time that enables reporters to place the new data in meaningful context.”

Requiring all journalists to use government-provided software, hardware and dedicated lines would inhibit journalistic independence, and, “as the government grows more concerned about cybersecurity, the proposed policy would create a single point of failure,” according to the letter.

While running for President in 2008 Obama complained about the Bush Administration’s lack of transparency. While in office, however, it seems that transparency and a free and open government has been of far less importance to him.

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Posted by on June 11, 2012.
Filed under Barack Obama, Big government, Business, Constitutional Issues, corruption, Culture Of Corruption, Democrats, Economics, Liberals, Media.
Warner Todd Huston is a Chicago-based freelance writer, has been writing opinion editorials and social criticism since early 2001 and is featured on many websites such as Andrew Breitbart's BigGovernment.com and BigJournalism.com, RightWingNews.com, CanadaFreePress.com, RightPundits.com, StoptheACLU.com, Human Events Magazine, among many, many others. Additionally, he has been a frequent guest on talk-radio programs to discuss his opinion editorials and current events.He has also written for several history magazines and appears in the new book "Americans on Politics, Policy and Pop Culture" which can be purchased on amazon.com. He is also the owner and operator of PubliusForum.com. Feel free to contact him with any comments or questions, EMAIL Warner Todd Huston: igcolonel .at. hotmail.com"The only end of writing is to enable the reader better to enjoy life, or better to endure it." --Samuel Johnson

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  • JeffMedcalf

    Simple solutions are available. The media can just refuse to report until they can get the data in a form that they can report on without DoL restrictions. The DoL could stop giving early access to reporters and just release the numbers at the appropriate time. Then who wins depends on who needs the early disclosure more. The DoL policy sounds like the worst of both worlds.

    • retired.military

      But the media bow and scrape at Obama’s feet so they will gladly take it up the ass for him until he loses.  Then they will turn on him like a dog.

  • http://www.rustedsky.net JLawson

     Now, I could see this if they were concerned about viruses and malware – but that’s not the issue here, is it?

    Transparency… they keep using that word, but I don’t think they understand what it means.

  • Hank_M

    Look for unemployment to be below 5%, if not lower by summers end.

    More seriously, it isn’t good when paranoia becomes a major characteristic of the administration.

  • Commander_Chico

    This is outrageous, I am 100% with Warner on this one.  Your security state at work again.

    • warnertoddhuston

      I’d guess we’d agree a lot on the emerging police state in which we are living.

      • Commander_Chico

        Yes, but I see it as a bipartisan project.

        • warnertoddhuston

          Unfortunately, creating the police state is pretty bipartisan, too!!

          • ackwired

            Yes.  There is no discernible difference between the two major parties in this regard.

          • herddog505

            That’s not true.  democrats HATE the police state… when a Republican is in office.  When one of them is in it, it’s full speed ahead!

          • ackwired

            And vice versa.  No discernable difference.

  • herddog505

    I’m glad – and rather surprised – to see MiniTru uttering even a hint of a complaint about this.  Somehow, I’m guessing that the complaints would be rather more vociferous if (A) it was DoD and not DoL, and; (B) Bush did it.

    Would I be stretching things to suggest a modest connection with Jay Carney’s admonition yesterday against MiniTru to “do their jobs”:

    White House spokesman Jay Carney told the media to “do your jobs and report on context” on Monday, but he didn’t promise to keep to the context rule himself.

    Carney was asked about President Obama’s remark last week that “the private sector is doing fine.” He argued the president’s political opponents were twisting the comment and taking it out of context.

    “Certainly we believe that you all ought to do your jobs and report on context, of course, and we think that’s important generally,” Carney, a former reporter, scolded the White House press corps.

    http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-pn-carney-tells-media-you-ought-to-do-your-jobs-on-context-20120611,0,6921706.story

    In order to help MiniTru do their jobs, DoL will provide – totally free of charge! – computers and software to… um… assist them in writing about economic news.  The new program, called “Obamecon”, will helpfully replace vague, inaccurate, or misleading words and terms such as:

    — worse than expected

    — lower than expected

    — highest unemployment in XX years

    — anemic growth

    — revised downward

    — discouraged workers

    — left the job market entirely

    — miserable
     
    — failure

    with more appropriate and accurate language such as:

    — unprecedented progress

    — historic change

    — saved or created [=4+3*RND()] million jobs

    — unmistakable signs of recovery

    — funemployment

    — opportunities for personal growth and fulfillment away from the drudgery of the workplace

    — spontaneous and irrepressible demonstrations of gratitude to President Obama

    — Romney is a pooh-pooh head

    — Paul Ryan wants to kill your grandmother!

    But don’t worry that Obamecon is some government software, created for propaganda purposes: DoL got it from Paul Krugman of the NYT.

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  • http://profiles.yahoo.com/u/4WFXXVPO6IWWPG3EOVMCOFR5ZI Blog

    Don’t put question marks in your headline.  It makes you sound unsure, which is similar to ‘wimpy’.

    Ed Morrissey at HotAir does it quite often.  I suspect that it’s the main reason people don’t take his posts seriously.