The White House faced fresh accusations of a clandestine propaganda campaign on Thursday after it emerged it granted regular access to a right-wing blogger with a habit of asking President George Bush easy questions.
Jeff Gannon, who represented a rightwing site owned by a Texas-based Republican activist, had been a regular at White House briefings since 2003 but aroused reporters’ suspicions after posing ideologically loaded questions.
The fake White House correspondent quit his job at the Talon News site on Wednesday after liberal bloggers found he had been operating under a pseudonym, and that he was linked to several gay pornographic web domain addresses under his real idenity, James Guckert.
The White House spokesperson, Scott McLellan, has dismissed charges that Gannon was part of an underground propaganda effort as ”just a wild conspiracy theory”.
But questions remained on Thursday about why the White House suspended the normally rigorous vetting process to issue daily passes to an organisation rejected by the Senate last year for not being a legitimate media outlet.
The extent of Gannon’s links to an earlier White House scandal — the leaking of the name of the CIA agent Valerie Plame — also remained unclear on Thursday. Gannon has been targeted for questioning in that case.
”It’s just common sense that the White House knew who Jeff Gannon was, and they were waving him in for a reason,” said David Brock, director of Media Matters for America, the liberal monitoring group which named the reporter last week.
Gannon’s unmasking comes only weeks after the Bush administration admitted paying handsome sums to three conservative commentators to promote its social programmes in print, radio and TV, and has led to calls from Democrats for an explanation.
”It appears that Mr Gannon’s presence in the White House press corps was merely a tool of propaganda for your administration,” the Democratic congresswoman Louise Slaughter wrote in a letter to Bush.
In its investigations, Media Matters for America discovered that Talon News was owned by a Texas-based Republican activist called Roger Eberle, and that its so-called correspondent was in the habit of lifting verbatim large chunks of White House and Republican party press releases without attribution.
It also discovered a disturbing pattern at White House press conferences during the year or so when Gannon was a regular fixture.
”You could see there was a pattern in which the White House press secretary, Scott McLellan, would be getting a more aggressive and less friendly question, and then would seem to call on Jeff Gannon to change the subject. And when he did he got a softball question in return,” Brock said.
The fake reporter’s downfall came last week when he attracted suspicion with a particularly loaded question to the president on how he would enlist Democratic support for his social security reforms.
After falsely attributing quotes to Democratic leaders, Gannon asked: ”How are you going to work with people who seem to have divorced themselves from reality?”
Brock then launched his investigation. Subsequent inquiries by liberal bloggers uncovered Gannon’s links to gay porn domain addresses under his real name, and a posted photograph of a man posing in his underwear with his initials.
The exposure prompted Gannon to resign his job at Talon, although he has shown no remorse about his conduct at the White House.
”I asked a question at a White House press briefing and this is what happened to me. If this is what happens to me, what reporter is safe?” he told a newspaper in his hometown in Delaware on Thursday.
Meanwhile, Talon News was looking for a replacement correspondent on its website on Thursday. – Guardian Unlimited Â