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1994-09-27
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Issue Paper from the Center for the Defense of Free Enterprise
April 5, 1994
GORE-GATE UPDATE: an Abuse of Power
Vice President Al Gore convinced ABC News Nightline's
Ted Koppel to unwittingly use an environmentalist attack strategy
against the Wise Use Movement on national television last week.
The Wise Use Movement is a loose confederation of more than
1,000 organizations that defend property rights, jobs and
communities from oppressive environmental demands.
The Nightline program probed Wise Use leader Ron
Arnold, Executive Vice President of the Bellevue, Washington-
based Center for the Defense of Free Enterprise, as well as scientist
Dr. Fred Singer of the Washington, D.C.-based Science and
Environmental Policy Project.
Gore's actions in soliciting this investigation by ABC News
have raised serious civil rights questions about the government's
power to conduct such vendettas against private citizens.
Koppel opened the February 24, 1994 edition of Nightline
with a stunning revelation: Vice President Al Gore had personally
urged him to investigate connections between the Wise Use
Movement and such elements as Lyndon LaRouche and the
Unification Church of Rev. Sun Myung Moon. Gore's office, said
Koppel, sent him a stack of documents.
Koppel agreed to do the story, but notified Gore he would
tell viewers exactly where the story had come from, a highly
unusual move.
Neither Koppel nor ABC News Nightline producer Jay
Weiss knew that Al Gore's documents were actually taken from an
elaborate 292-page "Report on the Wise Use Movement: Strategic
Analysis and Fifty-State Review" sponsored by the Wilderness
Society, written by media political strategy firm MacWilliams
Cosgrove Snider (Nightline flashed their letterhead as one of the
documents from Gore's office, revealing Gore's source) and paid for
by foundations in the Environmental Grantmakers Association
(EGA), a multi-billion-dollar consortium that funds environmental
groups.
Forbes magazine called it "The Search and Destroy
Strategy Guide" (July 19, 1993). ABC News was unaware of this
strategy guide because Gore did not provide it.
The Search and Destroy Strategy Guide, containing
personal dossiers on leaders of the Wise Use Movement, warned
environmental groups that their doomsday message has less public
appeal than the positive Wise Use message, echoing an earlier
report by EGA-member W. Alton Jones Foundation of
Charlottesville, Virginia. The Search and Destroy Strategy Guide
advised environmentalists to "Attack Wise Use," "Drive Wedges
Between Wise Use Groups," "Tar Wise Use Leaders" and "Focus
public attention on ties between Wise Use and extremists."
Vice President Gore, Koppel told his viewers, was
particularly concerned about Dr. Fred Singer of the Washington,
D.C.-based Science and Environmental Policy Project, well known
for debunking the ozone depletion and global warming scares.
Laws have been passed against important industrial
chemicals because computer models predict them to deplete ozone
or cause global warming. Dr. Singer points out flaws in computer
models, noting that realistic risk assessments rather than
computerized guesswork or emotional scare tactics are needed for
sound public policy.
Michael Oppenheimer of the Environmental Defense Fund
told Koppel he was so worried about the Wise Use Movement
because, "If they can get the public to believe that ozone wasn't
worth acting on, that they were led in the wrong direction by
scientists, then there's no reason for the public to believe anything
about any environmental issue."
When asked by Nightline, Dr. Singer openly acknowledged
having accepting free office space and science conference travel
expenses in the past from the Unification Church, as well as funding
from large industries. "Every environmental organization I know of
gets funding from Exxon, Shell, Arco, Dow Chemical, and so on,"
said Singer. "If it doesn't taint their science, it doesn't taint my
science."
A new twist to the intrigue was added when it was
discovered that Jay Weiss was not the original producer assigned to
Gore's smear story. Several of those interviewed on the Nightline
show said a woman named Tara Sonnersheim was the original
producer. The Washington Post reported that she was appointed to
a position in the Clinton administration in February 1994. This
raises the question whether Sonnersheim got the appointment as a
reward for placing the smear story on the ABC News agenda.
Ted Koppel said that Vice President Gore was also deeply
concerned about Wise Use activist Ron Arnold of the Center for the
Defense of Free Enterprise in Bellevue, Washington, and urged
Koppel to look into his "Moonie ties." Arnold had once served on a
local board of the American Freedom Coalition, said Koppel, "a
political organization, which, in the past, has received substantial
funding from the Rev. Sun Myung Moon." Arnold's Center had not
received Moonie money, however, and neither Singer nor Arnold
are followers of Moon or his church.
Koppel evidently felt used by Gore, saying, "In fairness,
though, you should know that Fred Singer taught environmental
sciences at the University of Virginia, that he was the deputy
administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency during the
Nixon Administration, and from 1987 to 1989 was chief scientist at
the U.S. Department of Transportation. You can see where this is
going. If you agree with Fred Singer's views on the environment,
you point to his more impressive credentials. If you don't, it's Fred
Singer and the Rev. Sun Myung Moon."
Koppel noted that Dr. Singer's predictions about the low
atmospheric impact of the Kuwait oil fires was accurate and the
environmentalists' forecast of doom, as voiced by scientist Carl
Sagan, was wrong.
Ironically, key environmentalists including "Limits to
Growth" author Donella Meadows and Marion Clawson of
Resources for the Future have accepted money from the Rev. Sun
Myung Moon's World Media Conference. Al Gore himself
accepted money from the Rev. Sun Myung Moon's American
Leadership Conference to address an invited audience just before he
ran for the Vice Presidency.
"If Moonie money doesn't taint Al Gore, it doesn't taint
anybody," said Ron Arnold.
Koppel, seeming to wash his hands of Gore's smear tactics,
concluded, "The measure of good science is neither the politics of
the scientist nor the people with whom the scientist associates. It is
the immersion of hypotheses into the acid of truth. That's the hard
way to do it, but it's the only way that works."
The same is true of Wise Use activists, says the Center's
Ron Arnold. "The measure of good activists is neither their politics
nor the people with whom they associate, but the truth of what they
say. They environmentalists can't shoot our message, so they shoot
the messenger. The Vice President of the United States has no right
to call out the media on me or any other American--who does he
think he is, J. Edgar Hoover? Gore's arrogance proves that eco-
fascism is here already. I can take whatever Gore dishes out--and I
appreciate Ted Koppel's integrity in blunting Gore's naked
aggression--but nobody is safe as long as Gore has power to
provoke smears of private citizens. Not every reporter is as honest
as Ted Koppel."
Mountain States Legal Foundation, a non-profit public
interest law firm based in Denver, Colorado, has filed a Freedom of
Information Act request with Vice President Gore's office,
according to William Perry Pendley, president and chief legal
officer.
The request is part of a probe to determine the extent of
civil rights violations committed by the Vice President. The FOIA
request also went to George Frampton, Assistant Secretary of the
Interior, who was the president of the Wilderness Society at the
time it commissioned the Search and Destroy Strategy Guide from
MacWilliams Cosgrove Snider. Federal Civil Rights laws forbid
government agents from entering into conspiracies with private
citizens to harm the civil rights of other private citizens.