NPR President Schiller Resigns Following Hidden-Camera Sting

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POLITICS

NPR President Schiller Resigns Following Hidden-Camera Sting
Published March 09, 2011 | FoxNews.com

Embattled NPR CEO Vivian Schiller resigned Wednesday after a hidden-camera video was released showing a fellow executive criticizing Republicans as "anti-intellectual" and calling the Tea Party "racist."

The resignation caps a tumultuous period for Schiller and comes just two days after she delivered a major speech in Washington outlining her vision for NPR's future. NPR Board of Directors Chairman Dave Edwards, in a statement on NPR's website, said the board accepted Schiller's decision, which is "effective immediately," with regret. According to The Associated Press, the board asked Schiller to step down.

"The Board accepted her resignation with understanding, genuine regret, and great respect for her leadership of NPR these past two years," Edwards said.

The announcement was made one day after a conservative activist released an undercover video showing an NPR senior executive criticizing conservatives. NPR swiftly condemned the comments by Ron Schiller, who is not related to Vivian Schiller. Ron Schiller later apologized and, though he was already planning to leave NPR, said his resignation as a senior vice president and president of the NPR Foundation would be effective immediately.

But the video was gaining traction in the media by then, potentially distracting from Vivian Schiller's message in her speech Monday in which she stressed NPR's objectivity.


NPR President Vivian Schiller
The activist who released the footage, James O'Keefe, said in a fundraising letter on his website Wednesday that his organization "just exposed the true hearts and minds of NPR and their executives."

The controversial comments from Ron Schiller were made during a meeting with two people posing as members of a fictitious Muslim organization. The two activists, who recorded the February meeting on hidden camera, were trying to convince NPR executives to accept a $5 million donation -- money NPR apparently refused.

During the meeting, Ron Schiller talked about how the Republican Party had been "hijacked" by the Tea Party.

"The current Republican Party, particularly the Tea Party, is fanatically involved with people's personal lives," he said.

Schiller described that movement as "white, middle America, gun-toting," and added: "They're seriously racist people."

Ron Schiller went on to lament what he called an "anti-intellectual" component of the Republican Party.

"Liberals today might be more educated, fair and balanced than conservatives," he said.

Schiller also suggested NPR would be better off if it did not accept federal funding, fueling the argument of GOP lawmakers who for months have been pushing to halt taxpayer support for NPR.

"This disturbing video makes it clear that taxpayer dollars should no longer be appropriated to NPR," House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., said.

Schiller had been planning to leave NPR to join the Aspen Institute. However, the institute released a brief statement Wednesday saying Schiller informed the think thank he would not be coming on board, "in light of the controversy surrounding his recent statements."

The video was released by O'Keefe, the conservative activist best known for producing undercover videos that showed employees with the community advocacy group ACORN helping a couple posing as a pimp and prostitute.

It comes several months after NPR was criticized for the way it handled the firing of analyst Juan Williams last fall. Williams, who later took on an expanded role at Fox News, was fired after he said he felt uneasy when he sees passengers in "Muslim garb" on planes.

Vivian Schiller, in her address Monday on NPR's future, said the incident was handled "badly."

In its statement, the NPR board praised Schiller for her contributions.

"Vivian brought vision and energy to this organization. She led NPR back from the enormous economic challenges of the previous two years. She was passionately committed to NPR's mission, and to stations and NPR working collaboratively as a local-national news network," the statement said. "I recognize the magnitude of this news -- and that it comes on top of what has been a traumatic period for NPR and the larger public radio community. The board is committed to supporting NPR through this interim period and has confidence in NPR's leadership team."

The board announced that Joyce Slocum, a senior vice president at NPR, would take Schiller's place on an interim basis.
 
I don't see why she resigned. She didn't make the comments and the person that did didn't work for NPR when he made the statements. Liberals (real or perceived) need to learn how to weather storms like Republicans politicians and Conservatives do. You can catch Murdoch and Ailes saying all kinds of stuff and no one steps down.

And I don't see anyone calling Schiller a liar.

O'Keefe, a known hack and liar, seems to leave out that NPR didn't accept the money offered. Strange.
 
I don't see why she resigned. She didn't make the comments and the person that did didn't work for NPR when he made the statements. Liberals (real or perceived) need to learn how to weather storms like Republicans politicians and Conservatives do. You can catch Murdoch and Ailes saying all kinds of stuff and no one steps down.

And I don't see anyone calling Schiller a liar.

O'Keefe, a known hack and liar, seems to leave out that NPR didn't accept the money offered. Strange.

Totally agree with you. Dont know why she's resigning if she wasn't the actual culprit caught on hidden cam either.
 
Totally agree with you. Dont know why she's resigning if she wasn't the actual culprit caught on hidden cam either.

I saw that she was planning to leave anyway but going out like this looks like she was pressured out because of this "scandal".
 
It's not just one thing.




http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/41986715/ns/politics-more_politics/?GT1=43001

Folkenflik, speaking to NPR's Morning Edition, said the O'Keefe videotape had been "damaging of itself," but added that it was the latest "in a series of episodes" at NPR during Vivian Schiller's tenure.

Noting the renewed calls on Capitol Hill to take away federal funding from public broadcasting, Folkenflik said, "I think the (NPR) board ... felt that this was one misstep, one major back eye, too many."

In October, NPR fired Juan Williams after he said on Fox News that he got nervous when he got on a plane with people wearing clothes that identified them as Muslim. At the time, Williams complained he was ousted because he appeared on Fox and because "I'm not a predictable, black, liberal."


In January, NPR said Senior Vice President for News Ellen Weiss, who fired Williams, resigned, but no reason was given.

Vivian Schiller kept her position after the Williams' incident, but the NPR board voted against giving her a bonus because of "concern over her role in (Williams') termination process."
 
The Republican governor of SC was caught neglecting his job to go out of the country and have an affair but refused to step down....and he's just one example.

Liberals need more of a backbone in the face of scandal.
 
I guess she resigned because, as a journalist or a person responsible for the operation of a media outlet that is at least partially public funded, she "may" have failed to avoid the appearance of impartiality. Maybe. Or, maybe she resigned so that she wouldn't become a lightening rod for those already on the NPR attack. I don't know.

BUT, what about the truth of Ron Schiller's words ??? When does that debate begin ??? And who will argue the contrary ???

QueEx
 
I guess she resigned because, as a journalist or a person responsible for the operation of a media outlet that is at least partially public funded, she "may" have failed to avoid the appearance of impartiality. Maybe. Or, maybe she resigned so that she wouldn't become a lightening rod for those already on the NPR attack. I don't know.

BUT, what about the truth of Ron Schiller's words ??? When does that debate begin ??? And who will argue the contrary ???

QueEx

Someone will but they really shouldn't.
 
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No Shocker: O'Keefe's NPR Video Is A Lie


March 14, 2011

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2011/03/14/956201/-No-shocker:-OKeefes-NPR-video-is-a-lie

The ACORN video was a fake. The Shirley Sherrod video was a fake. So why should anyone be surprised to find that the NPR video is also a fake? James O'Keefe has absolutely no interest in the truth. Instead, his well-funded hit machine has only one purpose: to distort and manufacture controversy.
<div align="right"><!-- MSTableType="layout" --><br>James O'Keefe
<img src="http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcThCBvcU3dYNVg9l84kQt5sM1yZrXGMUSqWs3xmjlsXeWxXla5S" align="right"></div>
A closer look at his most recent video shows that the NPR hit piece includes lies of both omission and commission. At many points in the raw footage, former NPR fundraiser Ron Schiller can be seen rejecting attempts by the fake Muslims to buy favorable coverage. Instead, Schiller makes it clear that NPR's coverage is not for sale.

Al Tompkins, a senior faculty member for broadcasting and online at the Poynter Institute also says that O'Keefe's edited tape ignores the fact that Schiller said "six times ... over and over and over again" that donors cannot buy the kind of coverage they want on NPR.

None of this material made the tape. Neither did several complimentary or thoughtful things that Schiller said about Republicans and conservatives. Unable to get Schiller to say what he wanted, O'Keefe resorted to creating statements in the best traditions of comedy sketches -- he stitched an answer to one question onto a completely different question.<blockquote>
One "big warning flag" Tompkins saw in the shorter tape was the way it made it appear that Schiller had laughed and commented "really, that's what they said?" after being told that the fake Muslim group advocates for sharia law. In fact, the longer tape shows that Schiller made that comment during an "innocuous exchange" that had nothing to do with the supposed group's position on sharia law, David reports.</blockquote>
That "innocuous exchange"? It's actually from earlier in the conversation. O'Keefe didn't just chop minutes out of the interview, he cut, copied, pasted, and rearranged the video to make Schiller into the parody of an NPR executive that the right expected.

The real scandal here isn't anything that Schiller said, it's that anyone treats O'Keefe and his video sausage grinding seriously. And that NPR, like the Obama administration in the last round of this unmitigated, bald-faced manipulation, reacts as if anything O'Keefe is producing can be trusted.

There may be no clearer marker of media's decline than in their treating O'Keefe as a legitimate source. Like Scott Walker's actions against the unions in Wisconsin, O'Keefe isn't out there to find the truth. He's out there to smash anyone not part of the conservative club, and if what that takes is an unending stream of sewage... he has no problem with that.

He's not a muckraker. He's a muck maker.

 
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