This article originally provided by AlterNet
July 29, 2004
The Scaife Strategy: Smother Teresa
Colin McNickle, the political wife-beater for billionaire Richard Mellon-Scaife's right-wing attack machine, has set
his sights on Teresa Heinz-Kerry – good thing she's
willing to stand up to it.
Colin McNickle did not enter the Democratic Convention as
an ordinary reporter. As the editorial page editor for the Pittsburgh
Tribune-Review, a newspaper owned by eccentric rightist
billionaire Richard Mellon-Scaife, McNickle came to Boston
as an agent provocateur. "What happens when a
conservative commentator infiltrates the Democratic National
Convention?" the Tribune-Review asked in
pre-convention promotion of McNickle's coverage. McNickle
answered that question on Sunday, July 25 by provoking a
spat with Teresa Heinz-Kerry.
The dustup occurred after Heinz-Kerry gave a speech to
the Pennsylvania delegation denouncing "some of the
creeping, un-Pennsylvanian and sometimes un-American traits
that are coming into some of our politics." McNickle
approached her and asked what she meant by "un-American
activities," in effect accusing her of McCarthyism.
Heinz-Kerry denied using the phrase "un-American
activities" and stormed off. Yet when Pennsylvania
Governor Ed Rendell pointed out to her that McNickle was a
reporter from the Tribune-Review, Heinz-Kerry
returned to him with a rebuke. "You're from the Tribune
Review?" she asked McNickle with a face tightened
with rage. "That's understandable. You said something I
didn't say. Now shove it."
Most of the mainstream press characterized the incident
as The New York Times' Jim Rutenberg did: another
example of "Teresa being Teresa." For them, the
dustup was a resounding confirmation that their hastily
scrawled sketch of an incurable free spirit who was filling
John Kerry's campaign coffers while draining his political
fortunes was an accurate one. However, there is much more to
it than that. McNickle's provocation of Heinz-Kerry
represents the latest manifestation of a poisonous dirty
tricks campaign Scaife has financed to undermine
Heinz-Kerry, a fellow Western Pennsylvania philanthropist
whom he considers his rival. And now that Heinz-Kerry has
been thrust into the national spotlight by her husband's
presidential candidacy, Scaife's smears are likely to
intensify.
"The dust-up between Teresa Heinz-Kerry and Colin
McNickle has a long history behind it that goes back a good
15 years before McNickle even worked there," said
Dennis Roddy, a columnist for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette,
who has covered Pennsylvania politics for over 30 years.
"Scaife has had it in for [Heinz Kerry] because she's
not sufficiently conservative, she's a moderate voice. She
has always felt badly treated by the Tribune-Review
and it doesn't surprise me that her grievances finally came
out."
The Tribune-Review routinely sniped at Teresa
Heinz during her marriage to Pennsylvania's Republican
former Senator John Heinz. When the senator died in 1991,
and the Massachusetts Junior Senator John Kerry stole
Teresa's heart, the paper's attacks grew increasingly
slanderous. On December 28, 1997, the paper featured an
anonymously penned cover story falsely insinuating that a
woman named Sheila Lawrence had had affairs with both Bill
Clinton and Kerry. "Far from giving all to Bill, there
was still something left over for Sen. John Kerry," who
had "a very private tete-a-tete" with "sexy
Sheila," the columnist alleged. In another column, the Tribune-Review
mocked John Kerry as "Mr. Teresa Heinz."
Perhaps the most spurious of the Tribune-Review's
attacks came in December, 2003, when it ran a
piece accusing Heinz-Kerry of secretly "funneling
cash" from her Heinz Endowment to the Tides Foundation,
a group that "supports extreme left wing groups...
anti-war protests... unlimited abortion rights, gay,
lesbian, bisexual and transgender advocacy, as well as and
[sic] environmental extremism." The piece was based on
research conducted by the right-wing think tank Capital
Research Center, yet failed to mention that Scaife
granted the center $240,000 in 2002 or that he was connected
to it in any way. The article also omitted the fact that the
Heinz Foundation's grants were all strictly earmarked for
mainstream Western Pennsylvania environmental charities, an
inexcusable omission that could have been avoided if the
paper had bothered to call either the Heinz Foundation or
the Tides Foundation to confirm its wild claims.
Despite the article's shoddy research, its accusations
became a favorite tune on the right's Mighty Wurlitzer. FrontPageMagazine
plugged it in a piece called, "Teresa Heinz-Kerry: Bag
Lady of the Radical Left;" The New York Post
followed with the headline, "Teresa Heinz's Cash
Connection;" Rush Limbaugh promoted the claims; the Weekly
Standard picked the story up. By the time FOX's Brit
Hume reported the accusations, they had been brushed clean
of Scaife's fingerprints.
For the past 10 years, the point man in Scaife's
anti-Heinz attack campaign has been Colin McNickle, a brash
ideologue who has shaped the Tribune-Review's
editorial page into a forum for some of the most fanatical
currents of right-wing thought. Characteristic examples of
McNickle's work include the anonymous
obituary he commissioned of Katherine Graham which
implied she murdered her husband, Philip Graham, in order to
seize control of The Washington Post; his
endorsement of the anti-immigrant border-patrolling
Arizona militia leader, Chris
Simcox; his routine
references to Gov. Ed Rendell as a
"socialist;" his penchant for quoting the Austrian
aristocrat and conservative intellectual pioneer, Friedrich
Von Hayek (perhaps Hayek's ideas were the "un-American
traits" Heinz-Kerry referred to in her speech on
Sunday). And there is also the fact that the Tribune-Review
is the only newspaper in America which publishes columns by
White nationalist author Sam Francis, a self-avowed
"racialist" whose views are so extreme he was
fired by the Washington Times.
McNickle has also displayed a disregard for journalistic
ethics throughout his career. His chronic carelessness was
most apparent in his July,
2000, column, "Thus (Mis)Speaketh Al," a
collection of imbecilic quotes by then-presidential
candidate Al Gore. Though the article was laugh-out-loud
funny, there was one small problem: the statements McNickle
attributed to Gore were actually quotes by former Vice
President Dan Quayle. Yet even after his mistake was
exposed, McNickle refused to give an inch. "I'll stand
by where we got the information from," McNickle
told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
Despite McNickle's dubious background, since his dustup
with Heinz-Kerry he has managed to convince the networks and
mainstream press that he is a humble, workaday reporter
victimized by "an arrogant, contentious
billionaire," in the words of CNN's Bob Novak. In an
interview on CNN on July 26, Anderson Cooper allowed
McNickle to describe the Tribune-Review as "a
very objective, middle-of-the-road paper" without a
challenge. Later that evening on MSNBC, The New York
Daily News' ever-credulous gossip columnist Lloyd Grove
described McNickle as "just a reporter who's toiled in
the past for the newswires UPI and AP." The following
day McNickle innocently told
Grove, "I'm a little uncomfortable with all the
attention I'm getting. I'm here to report the news, not make
it." If Grove had only done a quick search for
McNickle's clips, he may have discovered what an absurd
statement that was.
Scaife's dirty tricks campaign against Teresa Heinz-Kerry
is not without precedent. Indeed, it bears ominous echoes to
the Arkansas Project, the $2.4 million dollar dirty tricks
campaign Scaife financed during the 1990's to paint Bill and
Hillary Clinton as drug dealers, thieves and murderers which
included paying "sources" for information that
turned out to be false. Then as now, the spurious
accusations germinated in Scaife's smear factory are eagerly
broadcast by the right-wing punditocracy and naively
entertained by a gossip-starved mainstream press terrified
of appearing to affect any liberal bias.
And just as Hillary was initially derided by the press
for claiming she was the victim of "a vast right-wing
conspiracy," Heinz-Kerry is ridiculed for standing up
to one of Scaife's hatchet men. Nevertheless, Teresa Heinz
Kerry's dustup with Colin McNickle is an encouraging sign.
Because like Hillary, Teresa Heinz Kerry has a keen
awareness of who her enemies are and by telling them to
"shove it," she has demonstrated the courage to
stand up to them.
Max Blumenthal is a freelance journalist based in Los
Angeles. Read his blog at maxblumenthal.blogspot.com.
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