The public relations (PR) business is one of the fastest growing
industries in the global market economy. In order to face perils
like labor unions, organized consumer activists and environmental groups, governments
and corporations have come to rely
more on slick PR campaigns. The peril to popular democracy posed by PR firms
should not be underestimated. Using the latest
communications technologies and polling techniques, as well as an array of
high-level political connections, PR flacks routinely
"manage" issues for government and corporate clients and
"package" them for public consumption. The result is a
"democracy"
in which citizens are turned into passive receptacles of "disinfotainment" and "advertorials" and in
which critics of the status quo
are defined as ignorant meddlers and/or dangerous outsiders.
Burson-Marsteller (B-M) is the world's largest
PR firm, with 63 offices in 32 countries and almost $200 million in income in
1994. Although its name is unknown to most people-- even to many in activist
circles-- B-M is fast becoming an increasingly
important cog in the propaganda machine of the new world order.
Human Rights, Anyone?
On the human rights front, B-M has represented some of the worst violators
of our age. These include:
The Nigerian government during the Biafran war, to discredit reports of genocide.
The fascist junta that ruled Argentina
during the 70's and early 80's, to attract foreign investment.
The totalitarian regime of South
Korea, to whitewash the human rights
situation there during the 1988 Olympics.
The Indonesian government, which got into power
through a CIA- sponsored bloodbath. (It should be pointed out,
however, that B-M denies that it is handling the
issue of genocide in East Timor)
Ideological barriers are no object. B-M also
represented the late communist Romanian despot Nicolae
Ceaucescu.
Other third world human rights violators that
have been represented by B-M include the governments of Singapore
and
Sri Lanka.
Doesn't this bother the consciences of B-M's executives? Not at all.
Commenting on his firm's work for Argentina's
fascists,
B-M founder Harold Burson said that "We regard
ourselves as working in the business sector for clearcut
business and
economic objectives. So we had nothing to do with a lot of the things that
one reads in the paper about Argentina
as regards
human rights and other activities".
Corporate Environmentalism
For years B-M has been involved in major environmental issues all over the
world, not hesitating to give polluters a helping
hand when confronted by activist groups and/or government regulations. Many
transnational corporations have turned to B-M
for help in the creation of a pedantic, elitist and corporate-oriented brand
of environmentalism. It is the hope of entrepreneurial
sectors and neoliberal demagogues that this type of
safe and harmless environmental activism will displace the more militant and
agressive grassroots groups.
B-M's environmental services have benefited industrial polluters, such as
the following:
Babcock & Wilcox, when its nuclear power
plant in Three Mile Island had its famous mishap in
1979.
Union Carbide, to handle the public relations
crisis caused by the Bhopal
tragedy in 1984.
Exxon, to counter the negative press coverage it
got in the wake of the Exxon-Valdez oil spill in 1989.
Ontario Hydro, an industrial concern, headed by
Earth Summit secretary general Maurice Strong, which is the biggest
source of CO2 emissions in Canada.
This corporation is currently selling nuclear reactors to Argentina
and Chile.
The Louisiana-Pacific (L-P) logging company,
famous for its union- busting, clear cutting of old growth forests and
support for anti- environmental front groups. L-P
hopes to convince its employees and the public that ruralunemployment
in North America is caused by environmental
extremists and opressive government regulation and
not by unsustainable
logging practices or the relocation of s awmills to low-wage countries like Mexico.
B-M formed the British Columbia Forest Alliance
(BCFA), a Canadian front group which has L-P among its
founding members. BCFA is campaigning against
restrictions on logging and is actively work ing to
smear and discredit
environmentalists. Other BCFA members include
Mitsubishi and Weyerhaueser.
B-M is a key player in the nuclear industry
lobby. According to Canadian journalist Joyce Nelson, B-M has for years
"represented top nuclear power/nuclear weapons
contractors such as General Electric, AT&T, McDonnell Douglas,
Asea Brown Boveri and Du Pont. In fact, Canada's first Candu [nuclear] reactor sale to Argentina in the early
1970's
was later renegotiated during the reign of the
military junta, for whom Burson-Marsteller did an
image-cleanup from
1976-1981". In addition to this, since 1993 B-M
subsidiary Black, Manafort, Stone & Kelly (see
sidebar) has been
representing Nordion International,
a newly-privatised subsidiary of Atomic Energy of
Canada Ltd., Canada's
state-owned nuclear power company.
B-M coordinated the oil industry's campaign to
discredit and destroy president Clinton's proposal for a BTU tax.
A B-M executive sits on the board of Keep America
Beautiful, a front for the packaging and waste hauling industries
that lobbies against mandatory recycling laws,
especially the passage of a national bottle bill in the US.
B-M's most powerful and influential
'environmental' client is the Business Council for Sustainable Development
(BCSD), an eco-capitalist outfit founded by Swiss
banker Stephan Schmidheiny. A leading theorist and
advocate of
neoliberal dogma and
corporate environmentalism, Schmidheiny agressively combines entrepreneurship and
statesmanship. He is a board member of NestlE9, and
a director and shareholder (5% owner) of B-M client Asea
Brown Boveri. BCSD's original task was to act behind the scenes at the
1992 Earth Summit, which was chaired by the
current head of B-M client Ontario Hydro Maurice
Strong, to neutralize and silence any voices critical of the
irresponsible behavior of polluting corporations. In
the words of Joyce Nelson, "With the able assistance of public
relations giant Burson-Marsteller,
a very elite group of business people (including B-M itself) was seemingly
able to plan
the agenda for the Earth Summit with little
interference from NGO's or government leader s". Nowadays BCSD is
advocating free markets and unfettered corporate
activity as the only salvation of the environment. Its members include
the CEO's of Asea Brown Boveri, Browning Ferris Industries, Ciba-Geigy, Dow
Chemical, DuPont, BCFA member
Mitsubishi, Maurice Strong's Ontario Hydro, Royal
Dutch-Shell, and companies from Argentina, Brasil,
Chile, Spain,
India, Kenya, Nigeria, Thailand and Venezuela.
Dirty Tricks and Front Groups
B-M was hired by the pharmaceutical corporation Eli Lilly and Monsanto
subsidiary Nutra Sweet to promote the use of the
genetically-engineered synthetic bovine growth hormone rBGH.
This hormone, which increases milk output in cows, is strongly
opposed by dairy farmers and consumer and environmental activist groups.
Their two main arguments are that 1) There is
already a milk glut in the US.
To bring more of it into the market would depress prices so severely that
small dairy farmers
would be run out of business; and 2) the use of rBGH
has already been linked to severe health problems in cows and to calves
born with grotesque birth defects.
B-M's campaign to neutralize the opposition to rBGH
included the use of spies to penetrate activist groups. This fact became
public when University of Vermont
spokesperson Nicola Marro admitted that a mole had
been placed in an anti-rBGH ad-hoc
group headed by Jeremy Rifkin, a well- known critic of biotechnology and
author of several books. Participants in the group
singled out a woman named Diane Moser as a suspect. Moser, who attended a Washington
DC meeting of the group, avoided
small talk and read a paperback during the meeting. Vermont
state representative Andrew Christiansen, who a ttended
the
meeting, told journalist John Dillon that "She said she represented housewives
concerned about BGH...I had suspicions
immediately. I've never seen anybody with a paperback coming to a me eting like that". When
the activists called the number
she left in the sign-up sheet, it rang in the Washington
DC offices of Burson-
Marsteller. B-M executive Timothy Brosnahan
acknowledged that Moser was a B-M employee but denied knowing of any snooping
on her part.
A freedom of information act (FOIA) request by activists Tim Atwater and
John Stauber, who were then with Rural Vermont
and the Foundation on Economic Trends respectively, uncovered a broader
pattern of espionage against foes of rBGH.
Atwater and Stauber's
FOIA request uncovered documents of the quasi-governmental, farmer-funded
National Dairy Board
(NDB), which promotes rBGH. These documents
revealed that the NDB hired the PR firm of Creswell, Munsell,
Fultz &
Zirbel (CMF&Z). This firm is a subsidiary of
communications conglomerate Young & Rubicam
(Y&R), which happens to be
B-M's parent company. Given that Y&R represents rBGH
backer Monsanto, Stauber concluded that "The
day-to-day work is
done out of Burson-Marsteller and CMF&Z. But
I'm sure there's overall coordination with Young & Rubicam".
Stauber is now
editor of PR Watch, a newsletter that provides critical reporting on the PR
industry, and is co-author, along with Sheldon
Rampton, of Toxic Sludge is Good for You: Lies,
Damn Lies and the Public Relations Industry (Common Courage Press,
1995).
B-M works for Hydro-Quebec (H-Q) promoting the James Bay
2 project. If the final stages of the construction of James Bay
2 are finished, it will become the most destructive hydroelectric project in
the history of North America, disrupting the
ecological balance of an area the size of France
and permanently displacing the Cree and Inuit indigenous populations in the
area. To undermine grassroots opposition to James Bay
2, B-M created a phony group of concerned citizens called the
Coalition for Clean and Renewable Energy (CCRE), which was headed by Harvey
Schultz, former head of New York City's
department of environmental protection. According to John Dillon,
"Schultz, Burson-Marsteller, and (CCRE) have
hosted
briefing sessions for academics, and business and community leaders-- opinion
makers who can carry the good word about
Hydro-Quebec back to their institutions".
The state of Vermont has
proved particularly reluctant to buy electricity from H-Q because of pressure
from local activists. In
order to counteract this threat, B-M hired the Vermont
law firm of Sherman & Kimbell to lobby the
state government in favor
of electricity purchases from H-Q. This law firm registered as a foreign
agent under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, which
requires America
n lobbyists to list their foreign clients and how much they're being paid to
represent them. However, since
B-M itself has refused to register as a foreign agent for H-Q, most of its
work for the James Bay 2 project remains a secret.
Selling NAFTA
In 1990 the Mexican government hired B-M to sell NAFTA to the American
public, media and politicians. B-M subcontracted
this job to one of its subsidiaries, The Brock Group (TBG), a consulting firm
that has done work for American Express, Bell
Atlantic, Bacardi, Toyota and the
Taiwanese government. TBG is headed by former senator, Republican National
Committee
chairman, US trade representative and labor
secretary William Brock. He was certainly qualified for the job. As US
trade
representative, Brock engineered the Caribbean Basin Initiative and the
US-Israel Free Trade Agreement, and began the
negotiations that would eventually culminate in the signing of the US-Canada
Free Trade Agreement.
William Brock co-chairs the Multilateral Trade Negotiations (MTN)
Coalition, which was founded in 1990 to 'educate' the
public-- and lobby for--the now-completed Uruguay Round of the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). The
coalition's members include American Express, General Motors, IBM, General
Electric, Cargill, Citicorp, Procter & Gamble
and other companies and trade associations. According to Malaysian
activist Martin Khor Kok Peng, the MTN Coalition had
a big influence on the 1990 G-7 Summit
meeting held in Houston, USA,
in which GATT figured prominently. At the Houston
Summit, MTN held a high- profile press conference and released a report by an
'eminent persons group' on world trade.
The Contra Connection
One of TBG's top executives happens to be former
Miami businessman and ambassador
to Venezuela Otto Reich. During the
Reagan administration, the Cuban-born Reich headed the US
state department's Office of Public Diplomacy (OPD), whose
task was to disseminate disinformation about the Sandinistas and discourage
reporting critical of the contras. This outfit, whose
operations were later found to be illegal by the US
General Accounting Office, was staffed with five psychological warfare
specialists from the 4th Psychological Operations Group of Fort
Bragg. According to John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton,
"the
OPD...helped spread a scurrilous story that some American reporters had
received sexual favors from Sandinista prostitutes in
return for writing slanted stories". In 1987, after the US Congress shut
down the OPD, congressman Jack Brooks called it "an
important cog in the (Reagan) administration's effort to manipulate public
opinion and congressional action".
Interestingly enough, the OPD was conceived at an August 1983 meeting
between then CIA director William Casey and a
small group of PR industry executives. The meeting, whose purpose was to
create a propaganda strategy for the Nicaraguan
contras, was attended by B-M senior vice- president Kenneth D. Huszar and Philip Morris publicist James Bowling, who
later
moved to B-M. Their advice to Casey included the creation of a communications
function within the White House, a
recommendation that led to the creation of the OPD.
B-M, Mexico
and the Neoliberal Project
B-M's success in insuring the passage of NAFTA encouraged the Mexican
governing elite to retain the firm's services. It now
has a luxurious office in the posh Colonia Anzures district on Mexico City
that caters to customers like the Council of
Businessmen, the National Stockbrokers' Association, the ministry of commerce
and industrial development, and the Office of
the President of the Republic. In addition to this, B-M parent Young & Rubicam rakes in over $100 million every year from
Mexican clients. It is not an exaggeration to say that the credibility of the
neoliberal project in the western hemisphere hinges
on
Mexico.
Businessmen, politicians and neoliberal ideologues
all over the hemisphere have touted Mexico
as a symbol of
capitalist success because of its privatization policy and its faithful
adherence to the economic formulas prescribed by
multilateral development banks (a.k.a. the Bretton
Woods institutions). After the massive expenditure of political energy in
getting NAFTA passed, business elites in both Mexico
and the US
are hard-pressed to put on a convincing performance in
order to give credibility to future trade agreements. Bringing Guatemala
and Chile
into NAFTA has already become an agenda
item.
However, neoliberal designs for Mexico are
endangered by a series of crises, including the blatantly fraudulent
elections of
1994, the embarassing collapse of the peso, revelations
of drug-related corruption that compromise the Mexican elite all the
way up to the president's office, a spate of political assassinations that
seems to be beheading the ruling political party's
leadership, and the popularity of the EjE9rcito Zapatista de LiberaciF3n Nacional (EZLN). B-M has a lot of work to do in
Mexico. In the
words of reporter Jon Reed, who investigated B-M's activities in Mexico,
"Burson-Marsteller and other
Mexican and transnational PR firms have demonstrated their effectiveness by
working behind the scenes-- gauging public
opinion, counseling government and corporate leaders, shaping media coverage,
and facilitating elite-to-elite communications--
in short, guaranteeing that the inevitable upheavals in an authoritarian and
unjust society do not interrupt business as usual".
Destroying Health Care
One of NAFTA's most nefarious consequences will
be the dismantlement of Canada's
government-run health care system.
Since it places very strict limits on what domestic or foreign corporations
can do, its more progressive features--such as
compulsory licensing in order to control drug costs-- will eventually be
challenged as barriers to trade. Once the Canadian
system is gutted by NAFTA's notoriously secretive
and undemocratic dispute resolution mechanisms, Canadian citizens will
have no choice but to turn to the 'free market' for medical services and
insurance.
However, American and Canadian pharmaceutical and insurance companies that
want to crack open the Canadian market are
frustrated by the fact that Canadians are very happy with their health care
system. Worse yet, more and more Americans,
especially in Vermont, are now calling for the introduction of single-payer
health insurance in their country--a step in the
direction of a Canadian-style system. This presents a grave problem for neoliberal demagogues, since it exposes the basic
conflict between capitalism and democracy.
Enter Burson-Marsteller's health care unit,
whose staff includes "a medical doctor/physician; former FDA (Food and
Drug
Administration) commissioner; former hospital administrator; former
pharmaceutical communications executives; former
non-profit communications chiefs; grassroots specialists, and former
reporters" according to the senior editor of O'Dwyer's
newsletter, which monitors the PR business.
B-M has plenty of experience in matters of public health. On behalf of
client Philip Morris, B-M created the National Smokers'
Alliance (NSA) to fight against smoking restrictions. According to John Stauber and Sheldon Rampton,
the NSA "is a
state-of-the-art campaign that uses full- page newspaper ads, direct
telemarketing, paid canvassers, (toll free) numbers and
newsletters to bring thousands of smokers into its ranks each week. By 1995
NSA claimed a membership of 3 million
smokers". The NSA is headed by B-M vice-president Thomas Humber and its
members include B-M executives Pierre
Salinger and Kennetz Rietz,
as well as Peter Kelly, senior partner of B-M subsidiary Black, Manafort, Stone & Kelly (see
sidebar). In addition to this, B-M was hired by the A.H. Robbins company when
its Dalkon Shield IUD contraceptive injured
thousands of women who used it, and it is now currently promoting the
'virtues' of Eli Lilly's anti-depressant wonder drug
Prozac.
The winners of the health care debate in the US
were beyond any doubt the pharmeceutical
transnational corporations (eleven
of which are B-M clients) and the major insurance companies (which include
B-M clients Met Life, Equitable Life, Aetna, State
Farm and Mutal of Omaha). Now both businesses are
vertically integrating themselves into superconglomerates
known as
health maintenance organizations (HMO's). According to Joyce Nelson,
"During 1994 both the pharmaceutical industry and the
private insurance industry consolidated into even bigger players on the
health care scene, with B-M playing a major role in
arranging the mergers among its clients". HMO's are not required to
cover all illnesses or people, but can instead discriminate
against elderly citizens and/or people with health problems in order to
reduce operating costs.
What can we do?
The awesome power of the 'manufactured consent' of the mass media, created
in no small part by PR firms like
Burson-Marsteller, can be discouraging to many politically
aware citizens. However, despair is what the PR business sells:
despair from even the smallest possibility of positive social change from
below. If we are to believe that organized citizens
cannot effectively challenge corporate and government power, then the PR
flacks will have truly triumphed. But, as Rampton
and Stauber say in their book, "The fact that
corporations and governments feel compelled to spend billions of dollars
every
year manipulating the public is a perverse tribute to human nature and our
own moral values".
The author is a Puerto Rican journalist living in Vermont,
where he is a guest lecturer and research associate at
Goddard College's
Institute for Social Ecology.
Recommended reading:
PR Watch. This quarterly newsletter, edited by John Stauber,
provides a progressive and critical perspective on the public
relations business. 3318 Gregory Street, Madison,
Wisconsin 53711, USA.
Sources:
Center for Public Integrity. Private Parties:
Political Party Leadership in Washington's
Mercenary Culture. 1992.
Center for Public Integrity. The Trading Game:
Inside Lobbying for the North American Free Trade Agreement. 1993.
Deal, Carl. The Greenpeace Guide to
Anti-Environmental Front Groups. Odonian Press,
1993.
Dillon, John. "Burson-Marsteller:
Poisoning the Grassroots" Covert Action Quarterly: Spring 1993.
Greenpeace. The Greenpeace Book of Greenwash. 1992.
Khor Kok Peng, Martin. The Uruguay
Round and Third World Sovereignty. Third
World Network. 1990.
Nelson, Joyce. "The Time of the
Hangman" Adbusters: Winter 1989-1990.
Nelson, Joyce. "Burson-Marsteller,
Pax Trilateral and the Brundtland
Gang vs. The Environment" Covert Action
Quarterly: Spring 1993.
Nelson, Joyce. "Dr. Rockefeller Will See You
Now" Z Magazine: May 1995.
Nelson, Joyce. "NAFTA's
Nuclear Agenda" Z Magazine: June 1995.
Parry, Robert. Fooling America:
How Washington Insiders Twist
the Truth and Manufacture the Conventional Wisdom.
Morrow, 1992.
Rampton, Sheldon & Stauber, John. Toxic Sludge is Good for You: Lies, Damn
Lies and the Public Relations Industry.
Common Courage Press, 1995.
Reed, Jon. "Interview with the Vampire: PR
Helps the PRI Drain Mexico Dry" PR Watch: fourth quarter, 1994.
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