Washington Report, December 2005, page 27
Media Watch
Israel-Firster Cheryl Halpern Named Head Of Corporation for Public
Broadcasting
By Richard H. Curtiss
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| CPB head Cheryl F. Halpern (www.cpb.org). |
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CHERYL F. Halpern, a major Republican fundraiser, has been elected
the new chairwoman of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB).
The private, nonprofit corporation, created by Congress in 1967,
describes itself as “the largest single source of funding
for public television and radio programming.”
Halpern has served on the CPB board since 2002, and has criticized
National Public Radio’s Middle East coverage, calling it
biased against Israel. She has overseen such U.S. government-funded
media projects as Voice of America, Radio Marti in Cuba and Radio
Free Iraq. Formerly chairwoman for the Republican Jewish Coalition,
Halpern currently sits on the board of the Washington Institute
for Near East Policy, a spinoff of the American Israel Public Affairs
Committee, Israel’s Washington, DC lobby. In 2001 she used
her own personal funds to commission a review of anti-Semitism
in Syrian textbooks.
Halpern was a delegate from the Coordinating Board of Jewish Organizations
to the 4th United Nations World Conference on Women’s Rights
in 1995 in Beijing, and from 1998 to 2002 chaired the United Nations
Advisory Council of B’nai B’rith International. Halpern’s
selection as CPB chair, warned the citizens’ group Common
Cause, may “mean more politicizing for public broadcasting.”
Perhaps not surprisingly, Halpern’s family has business
interests in Israel. She is married to Fredrick Michael Halpern,
a real estate developer born in Bayreuth, Bavaria, who is a member
of the Anti-Defamation League of B’nai B’rith as well
as of AIPAC. The couple has three children.
In her new role Halpern will oversee distribution of the $400
million in funds for public radio and television stations that
CPB receives from Congress. In mid-October, conservative House
Republicans proposed that taxpayer support for CPB be eliminated
as part of a cost-cutting effort to pay for repairing the damage
from Hurricane Katrina. Indeed, for many years some Republicans
have sought to permanently eliminate CPB’s public funding.
At her 2002 confirmation hearing for a position on the CPB board
of directors, Halpern suggested that journalists in public broadcasting
need to be punished for editorializing in programs.
A spokeswoman for National Public Radio, Andi Sporkin, criticized
the corporation under the chairmanship of Kenneth Y. Tomlinson,
Halpern’s predecessor, who conceived, but did not implement,
a plan to monitor NPR for anti-Israel bias: The Sept. 27 Los
Angeles Times quoted Sporkin as saying, “The events at
CPB over the last six months have been disappointing for public
radio as we’ve watched an organization that has supported
public broadcasting for four decades, and through all administrations,
become an instrument of ideology and agenda. Our hope is that the
new leadership acknowledges the value Congress and millions of
Americans have placed on public broadcasting’s service and
integrity, restores the vital fire wall, and rights the course
of CPB.”
For people who have generally supported NPR, Halpern’s appointment
will come as a shock. Some people may shift their voluntary contributions
to such alternatives as Pacifica Radio. Others may withhold their
contributions from their local public television and radio stations
as long as Halpern is in charge of who gets CPB funding and hope
for a better day in the next year or two.
Excellent PBS Documentary
“Elusive Peace: Israel and the Palestinians” is an
excellent150-minute PBS documentary covering the entire
history of the Arab-Israeli conflict. For those new to the subject
as well as for those who just want to review it, there are few
better resources. While people on all sides of the issue will wish
that some elements had been included, given the fact that the imbroglio
has gone on for more than a century the film is a remarkable achievement.
Although it’s remarkable that the film was aired at all,
it unfortunately was not widely publicized, at least not in the
Washington, DC area. Hopefully it will be re-broadcast—although
given the situation described above, that may be an increasingly
dubious eventuality. Not willing to wait, however, the AET Book
Club has taken matters into its own hands and is making the documentary
available at $24.99.To order a copy, call (800) 368-5788,
ext. 2. You’ll be glad you did.
Richard H. Curtiss is executive editor of the Washington Report
on Middle East Affairs. |