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News :: Media |
News-Gazette Smears Socialist Candidate |
Current rating: 0 |
by Tom Mackaman Email: mackaman (nospam) uiuc.edu (verified) |
25 Aug 2004
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From wsws.org |
Champaign newspaper publishes smear against SEP candidate Tom Mackaman
By the Editorial Board
25 August 2004
On August 23, the Champaign-Urbana News-Gazette published an article containing unfounded and libelous accusations against SEP candidate Tom Mackaman.
The basic charge made by News-Gazette reporter Phil Bloomer is that Mackaman violated University of Illinois rules and state ethics laws by sending a press release from his university email account to the News-Gazette. The law in question prohibits state employees from engaging in certain forms of partisan political activity during working hours.
In a âReporterâs Notebookâ article entitled âOf Politics and Ethics,â Bloomer alleges that Mackaman, a graduate student at the University of Illinois who at the time was working as a teaching assistant, violated this law by using a University employee email account to send the press release last month. The item dealt with Mackamanâs struggle against an attempt by state and local Democratic officials to invalidate his nominating petitions and keep him off the ballot for the November election.
Mackaman is the Socialist Equality Party candidate for state representative from the 103rd District, which includes Champaign and Urbana. The incumbent state representative from the district, which is the home of the main campus of the University of Illinois, is a Democrat.
In the course of a successful five-week battle against the Democratic Partyâs attempt to keep him off of the ballot, Mackaman and the SEP demonstrated that the Democratsâ challenge to his petitions was without merit and filed in bad faith. A detailed review of the 2,003 signatures gathered by Mackamanâs supporters conducted by the Champaign County Electoral Board showed that a large majority of the signatures challenged by the Democratic official who filed the objection were, in fact, valid signatures of registered voters, and that the SEP candidate had far more valid signatures than the 1,325 required to gain ballot status.
On July 29, the Democrats withdrew their objection, and on August 2 the electoral board officially placed Mackaman on the ballot as the SEP candidate.
In the course of this battle, Mackaman sent a letter (July 17) to the Illinois Inspector General requesting that he undertake an investigation into the direct role of state employees on the staff of House Speaker Michael Madigan in conducting the challenge to Mackamanâs nominating petitionsâa flagrant violation of the state ethics law proscribing such activity.
The basic thrust of Bloomerâs August 23 article is to allege that Mackaman is guilty of the same ethical and legal breaches that the SEP maintains were committed by Democratic Party officials against his campaign. This, on its face, is an absurd contention, not only because it hinges on a trivial technicalityâthe email account used by Mackaman to send out a press release on his campaignâbut, more importantly, because it equates Mackamanâs effort to defend his democratic right to participate in the elections and the rights of those who signed his petitions with a brazenly anti-democratic attempt by the Democratic Party machine to exclude himâan effort that is part of a nationwide drive to keep all independent and third-party candidates who oppose the Iraq war and the policies of the two big business parties off of the ballot.
That Bloomerâs allegation is both groundless and irresponsible is demonstrated, in the first place, by the false factual premise of his entire argument. In his article, he bases his charge on the claim that the email account used by Mackaman to send his press release was a university employee (and therefore a state employee) account. In fact, it is a student email account, paid for not by the University, but by Mackaman, as part of his student fees.
Bloomer was made aware of this fact several days prior to the publication of his article. Mackaman responded to an inquiry from the reporter by both phone and email on August 19, explaining that his email account was part of the student cluster. Bloomer could easily have verified this fact by telephoning the university or conducting a search of the university web site.
Mackamanâs full university email address ends with âstudent.uiuc.edu,â signifying that it is part of the student cluster of email accounts. University staff email addresses have the suffix âstaff.uiuc.edu.â
Bloomer and the News-Gazette are well aware that Mackaman and the SEP scrupulously followed all Illinois state guidelines and laws in carrying out their signature campaign. They are likewise aware that the Illinois State Legislatureâs Ethics Commission has been delegated by the inspector general to conduct an investigation into the role of state employees working as Democratic Party functionaries in conducting the challenge to Mackamanâs nominating petitions. On August 13, Bloomer sent Mackaman an email inquiring into the status of the investigation.
Now, following the SEPâs vindication before the County Electoral Board and with an investigation pending against the Illinois House Democratic staff, the News-Gazette publishes an article with the clear intent of placing Mackaman and the SEP under a cloud and prejudicing the Ethics Commissionâs investigation.
Bloomerâs column employs the unscrupulous technique of the amalgam. The first part of the article deals with an official with the Champaign County YMCA (Young Menâs Christian Association) who used his employee email account to send out a press release announcing a campaign fundraiser for George Bush. Bloomer cites the YMCA officialâs actions as an unethical use of his official status for partisan political purposes, and notes the disavowal of these actions by the individualâs superiors, as well as the individualâs own apology.
All of this does not prevent Bloomer from including a paragraph in his column that amounts to an advertisement for the Bush campaign function, including contact information for those interested in attending.
The News-Gazette reporter then proceeds to cite Mackamanâs emailed press release as an example of a similar transgression, aiming thereby to associate, in the minds of his readers, Mackaman and the SEP with the Republicanâs self-avowedly unethical activity.
Bloomer begins with a vague indictment of Mackaman that sets the tone for the rest of the column: âOver on the University of Illinois campus, some other rules apply to electioneering. Or maybe it just depends on your point of view.â
This journalistic sleight of hand is an attempt to suggest that Mackaman somehow violated university codes, even though Bloomer offers no such evidence. The News-Gazette column continues by naming Mackamanâs supposed crime. Mackaman, according to Bloomer, âhas sent out campaign press releases on the UI email server.â In the next sentence, Bloomer attempts to tighten the knot: â[Mackaman] is listed in the UI directory under faculty and staff.â
Bloomer goes on to state that âthe UI code governing the use of its computer network says that use is âsubject to all applicable state and federal laws, as well as general university and campus policies.ââ He presents not an iota of evidence that Mackaman in any way violated this all-purpose, general guideline.
Next he quotes from campus regulations that apply to university faculty and staff: ââUse by University employees unrelated to their University positions must be limited in both time and resources and must not interfere in any way with University functions or the employeeâs duties.ââ Bloomer does not even attempt to argue that sending a few emails constitutes a breach of this rule.
Bloomer then attempts to invoke state law: âState law is even more specific regarding prohibited political activity: âState employees shall not intentionally perform any prohibited political activity during any compensated time. State employees shall not intentionally misappropriate any state property or resources by engaging in any prohibited political activity for the benefit of any campaign for elective office or any political organization.ââ
Mackaman did not send the email âduring compensated time,â and Bloomer does not even attempt to present evidence that he did. Nor did Mackaman âmisappropriate,â intentionally or otherwise, state property or resources.
More to the point, Bloomer never defines what âprohibited political activityâ is. Rather, by employing the phrase, he implies, in the classic manner of the smear, that Mackaman engaged in such activity.
In Mackamanâs letter of July 17 to the office of the Illinois Inspector General, in which he requested an investigation into the illegal activities of the House Democratic Staffâa copy of which was sent to the News-GazetteâMackaman quoted from a section of the state ethics law which defines prohibited political activity for state employees during work hours as âcirculating, reviewing, or filing any petition on behalf of a candidate for elective office or for or against any referendum in question.â
Clearly, by this definition the activities of Democratic House Speaker Madiganâs staffers constitute a violation, while Mackamanâs use of his private, student e-mail account does not.
Bloomer goes on to cite Mackamanâs reply, dated August 19, to his own note sent the same day, in which the reporter wrote: âIâm writing a column that raises questions about the use of employee email accounts for political purposes as this has been done by you as well as the local Young Republicans. Please contact me with your thoughts on the subject.â
In his August 23 column, the reporter writes: âMackaman said thousands of people at the UI use their accounts for what might loosely be defined as âpoliticalâ purposes. Canât argue there. He further maintains that with students, such as himself, the email account is paid for through fees and tuition and therefore the UI cannot dictate how students use it.
ââTo interrogate and curb how one uses their private email (and once established they are indeed private) would be a violation of freedom of speech.â Mackaman said in an email. âThis is certainly true of students such as myself who fund their own email accounts, but also employees at the university, where rules against âpoliticalâ emails would have a chilling effect not only on freedom of speech, but academics, where there exists no clear line between politics and intellectual labor.ââ
Bloomerâs rejoinder to Mackamanâs correct and principled defense of the democratic rights of students and employees to freedom of speech and political expression is utterly dismissive and cynical. He writes: âNow thereâs an insight that shows this guy definitely has a future in politics at the university level at least.â
He then notes that the âaforementioned emails sent by Mackamanâ referred to the SEP candidateâs call for an investigation into the Democratsâ use of state employees on the staff of House Speaker Madigan to challenge his nominating petitions, and concludes with the quip, âThe goring of oxen is a fickle thing, the sage once said.â
It is obvious that Bloomerâs malicious conclusion in no way follows from what has preceded it. He has penned a political smear, pure and simple, and a crude one at that.
The News-Gazette bears responsibility for this libel. The Socialist Equality Party and the World Socialist Web Site demand a full and public retraction, and an apology to Mackaman.
See Also:
A letter from Tom Mackaman
SEP candidate in Illinois thanks supporters of ballot access fight
[12 August 2004]
Champaign, Illinois Electoral Board places SEP candidate on ballot
[3 August 2004]
Open Letter to the workers and students of Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, from SEP candidate
Oppose the Democratic Party's attack on voters' rights
[24 July 2004]
SEP candidate demands investigation
Letter to Illinois Inspector General from Tom Mackaman
[17 July 2004]
Statement of SEP candidate Tom Mackaman to Champaign County, Illinois Election Board
[7 July 2004]
Illinois Democratic officials use legislative staffers to attack third-party campaigns
[6 July 2004] |
This work is in the public domain |
Re: News-Gazette Smears Socialist Candidate |
by JK (No verified email address) |
Current rating: 0 26 Aug 2004
|
Say it with me, gang, and this time with feeling: "Back under the bridge, James Mortland-troll. The world is a better place with you there."
While I am still uncertain whether or not I will vote for Mr. Mackaman, he is exactly right in his objection to the slanderous characterization of the News-Gazette article. Moreover, I agree with his well-founded concerns over the stifling of free speech via e-mail. |