Presented by ProPublica

By Justin Elliott — ProPublica

News orga­ni­za­tions cultivate a repu­tation for demanding trans­parency, whether by suing for access to government docu­ments, dispatching camera crews to the doorsteps of recal­ci­trant politi­cians, or edito­ri­al­izing in favor of open government.

But now many of the country’s biggest media companies, which own dozens of news­papers and TV news oper­a­tions, are flexing their muscle in Wash­ington in a fight against a government initiative to increase trans­parency of political spending.

The corporate owners or sister companies of some of the biggest names in jour­nalism — NBC News, ABC News, Fox News, The Wash­ington Post, The Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Politico, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and dozens of local TV news outlets — are lobbying against a Federal Commu­ni­ca­tions Commission measure that would require broad­casters to post political ad data on the Internet.

As we have recently detailed, political ad data is public by law but not easy to get because it is kept only in paper files at each station. The FCC has proposed fixing that by requiring broad­casters to post online the details of political ad purchases, including the identity of the buyer and the price.

(ProP­ublica has been inviting readers and other jour­nalists to send in the files to be posted as part of our Free the Files project.)

Over the past few months, several major media companies have dispatched top exec­u­tives or outside lobbyists to the FCC to oppose the proposed rule or to push a watered-down version, disclosure filings show. (The FCC will vote on the issue April 27.)

Among them are:

(ProP­ublica has published stories in part­nership with many of these news orga­ni­za­tions, and has an agreement with NBC’s owned and operated TV stations for pre-publication access to our news apps and a contri­bution by NBC to ProPublica.)

In a speech this week at the National Asso­ci­ation of Broad­casters convention in Las Vegas, FCC Chairman Julius Gena­chowski exco­riated the broad­casters as working “against trans­parency and against journalism.”

The industry’s oppo­sition to the trans­parency proposal has some­times been heated. In filings submitted to the FCC in January and March, Allbritton Senior Vice Pres­ident Jerald Fritz raised the specter of “’Soviet-style stan­dard­ization” of ad sales if political ad files are required to be put online in a single format.

In a February meeting with the FCC, Walt Disney exec­u­tives complained about the “logistics and burden” of putting the political ad infor­mation online.

That month, exec­u­tives from Disney, NBC and News Corp. argued in a meeting with FCC offi­cials that posting the political ad data would allow “competitors in the market and commercial adver­tisers [to] anony­mously glean highly sensitive pricing data.”

Tele­vision stations must by law offer political candi­dates the lowest rates on ads. Broad­casters have argued that making this infor­mation available online — and not just at stations — would hurt their ability to nego­tiate with other advertisers.

Advo­cates for the online disclosure rule have coun­tered that the political ad infor­mation is already public by law and the measure would simply make the existing disclosure rules relevant for the Internet age. Advo­cates have also pointed out that keeping paper files in elec­tronic form should actually be more effi­cient for stations.

Allbritton, NBC and Walt Disney did not respond to requests for comment on the FCC chairman’s charge that they have posi­tioned them­selves “against trans­parency and against jour­nalism.” News Corp. declined to comment.

Some media companies have also pushed a watered-down proposal to post only some of the public political ad data, and to put it up on indi­vidual station websites instead of a central FCC website.

Wash­ington lawyers repre­senting the other companies fighting the rule — Barrington Broad­casting, Belo, Cox, Dispatch, E.W. Scripps, Gannett, Hearst, Meredith Broad­casting, Post-Newsweek Stations, Raycom Media and Schurz Commu­ni­ca­tions — lobbied FCC offi­cials in February, March and again this week.

The group suggested that instead of putting the full, itemized political ad data online, stations would post aggregate data once a week.

What we were saying is, if you want the public to be informed about what’s being bought at what price, maybe there’s a simpler way to do it,” Mary Jo Manning, an attorney repre­senting the group, told ProP­ublica. “Trans­parency is giving people infor­mation that is useful.”

But when the FCC pressed the group for details on its plan, the stations said they opposed posting even the aggregate data in a single format prescribed by the FCC. They also opposed posting the data on a central FCC website, saying they wanted to post the limited data only on the stations’ own websites. If enacted, both of those stances would make it more difficult to get and analyze the data.

Since there is a one-week sunshine period ahead of FCC votes, today is the last day that inter­ested parties will be able to lobby the commission before its public meeting April 27.

ProP­ublica

ProP­ublica is an inde­pendent, non-profit newsroom that produces inves­tigative jour­nalism in the public interest. Our work focuses exclu­sively on truly important stories, stories with “moral force.” We do this by producing jour­nalism that shines a light on exploitation of the weak by the strong and on the failures of those with power to vindicate the trust placed in them.

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