Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Politics

USN Current Issue

Washington Whispers

By Bay Fang
Posted 7/23/06

False Advertising: DeWine Take 2

Sen. Mike DeWine was a bit out of sorts last week after his re-election campaign experienced an embarrassing hiccup. The Ohio Republican was forced to pull a TV commercial featuring video of the World Trade Center under attack after a U.S. News investigation revealed that the images were doctored.

The revelation launched a new round of bad press for the senator, who is battling Rep. Sherrod Brown in a particularly tight race. The ad was meant to accuse Brown of being weak on national security, but then came the news that the images of the smoke-belching twin towers were actually a computer-enhanced still photograph taken before the attack, and the discussion turned to DeWine's honesty. "Mike DeWine has always run campaigns with ... distortions," Brown told U.S. News. "And this is another example." DeWine, for his part, blames his ad agency, Stevens, Reed, Curcio & Potholm, saying he didn't know about the computer effects until alerted by U.S. News. He immediately ordered the doctored images replaced with an untouched photo of the towers before 9/11. And he said he would continue to employ the ad agency. But why would someone alter an image when you can just use the real article? "I can't tell you why graphics people do things," DeWine says. "I had some very choice words for them that you can't print in a family magazine when I found out." DeWine said the amended ad will remain on the air in major Ohio markets.

Reviewing Those Signing Statements

Up to your nose in "unitary executive" theory? Stop whining and get to the courts! That's the suggestion an American Bar Association task force will make to Congress this week. At issue is Bush's use of "signing statements," the controversial missives he sometimes attaches to bills after signing them. In one, Bush seemed to take back everything antitorture he had ever agreed about with Sen. John McCain. Another suggested he wouldn't allow oversight reports Congress demanded as a requirement of its renewal of the Patriot Act. The ABA plan: Urge Congress to pass a law allowing for judicial review of the statements. For some task force members, that means giving Congress the right to sue. Other task force members won't characterize what sort of judicial review might emerge.

Social Ties and Big Contracts

In a blistering report, the Interior Department's top investigator says that senior officials responsible for managing $3.2 billion in Indian trust funds pressured underlings to award lucrative contract work to company executives with whom they had close social ties. Inspector General Earl Devaney criticized, among others, Donna Erwin, the No. 2 official in the Office of the Special Trustee for American Indians. His report examined the ties between OST officials and an accounting firm, Chavarria, Dunne & Lamey LLC, which was handed millions of dollars in sole-source work. In a summary, Devaney says OST officials "created an appearance of preferential treatment" by socializing and exchanging gifts with the firm's executives over an eight-year period. He says "contract personnel felt pressured by these senior OST officials" to award work to the firm. Erwin denies the firm was given preferential treatment.

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