Obama administration wins Jefferson Muzzle award for restricting free press
The United States
Department of Justice and the White House Press Office are this year’s top winners of a dubious award extended to those considered to be “responsible for some of the more egregious or ridiculous affronts to
First Amendment principles.”
On Wednesday this week, the
Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression announced that the US Justice Dept. had topped
this year’s list of “Jefferson Muzzle” recipients, an award handed out every April since 1992 “
as a means to draw national attention to abridgments of free speech and press and, at the same time, foster an appreciation for those tenets of the First Amendment.”
The White House Press Office was listed in the second slot among this year’s “winners,” trailed immediately by a third-place tie between the
National Security Agency and the
Department of Homeland Security.
It isn’t unusual for the free-speech loving organization named in honor of the third president of the US to condemn federal agencies for infringing on the
constitutional rights of
American citizens, but the
Obama administration swept this year’s honors, undoubtedly lending further credence to allegations that the White House has ravaged First Amendment-protected freedoms by interfering and attempting to influence even the most venerable mainstream press outlets in the country.
According to the Jefferson Center, first place honors this year were awarded to the Justice Dept. due to the Obama administration’s relentless aggressive pursuit of individuals alleged to have leaked government information, while the press office’s routine shunning of journalists from official functions in exchange for regularly relying on a private White House photographer earned that department second place standing. The NSA and DHS were selected not as a result of any new infringing policies put in place by those offices, however, but rather because they went after Americans who parodied the official government seals of either department.
Elsewhere on this year’s list of winners are the
North Carolina General Assembly Police and the Kansas Board of Regents rounding out the top five, followed by Modesty Junior College, the Tennessee State Legislature and the principals of schools in Florida and New Jersey.
“
From the White House to the statehouse, from universities to high schools, members of the press have had to defend against a variety of challenges, some never seen before,” Jefferson Center Director Josh Wheeler said in a statement this week.
Indeed, the Obama White House in particular has been accused in recent years of treating the press in a manner unheard of since the administration of Richard Nixon — an allegation that would seem overblown had it not been made by the likes of the internationally renowned Committee to Protect Journalists and some of the country’s most well respected reporters.
“
I think we have a real problem,” New York Times
national security reporter Shane Scott told the CPJ for their
report on eroding press freedoms in the US last October. The administration’s prosecution and persecution of leakers was having a real “
deterrent effect,” Shane acknowledged, adding, “
If we consider aggressive press coverage of government activities being at the core of American democracy, this tips the balance heavily in favor of the government.”
Six months later, the Jefferson Center agrees and has put the White House’s war on leakers and the journalists accused of “aiding and abetting” them at the top of this year’s list.
“
The government surely has a legitimate interest in identifying those disclosing such information,” the center said in an explanation included in this week’s report. “
Yet if the press is to fulfill its role as a government watchdog and report what it sees to the public at large, it has to be able to assure its sources of confidentiality.”