General Electric And Shareholders Clash Over Tea Parties And Politics
By Floyd and Mary Beth Brown
April 27, 2009
In a twist of irony, the historically conservative General Electric, the company that rebuilt the career of Ronald Reagan and sent him from city to city in the late '50s and early '60s, has become the corporate holding company of some of the most fringe left-wing politics on television.
This transformation has GE shareholders, such as us, spitting mad. It all boiled over at the annual shareholders meeting in Orlando. The usually boring annual meeting was the sight of NBC unit chief Jeff Zucker and CEO Jeffrey Immelt being pelted with questions they refused to adequately answer.
The Hollywood Reporter captured the action this way: "First up was a woman asking about a reported meeting in which [chief executive Jeffrey] Immelt and NBC Unit CEO Jeff Zucker supposedly told top CNBC executives and talent to be less critical of President Obama and his policies. Immelt acknowledged a meeting took place but said no one at CNBC was told what to say or not to say about politics. During the woman's follow-up question, her microphone was apparently cut off."
Here is the inside story at CNBC, the cable channel dedicated to business coverage, which actually sparked the entire national tea party movement when veteran Chicago reporter Rick Santelli called on Americans to protest Obama's plans to have taxpayers pick up the mortgage bills of irresponsible borrowers. Santelli's rant became a YouTube smash hit, and the citizen movement grew rapidly from there. Corporate executives like Zucker, who relish close ties to Obama, want this stopped.
But the discussion didn't end. Jesse Waters, the expert ambush producer who travels the country for Fox News ratings king Bill O'Reilly, had been sent to cover the GE annual meeting.
The Hollywood Reporter continues: "A short time later, Waters asked a question and his mic was cut, too. 'The crowd was very upset with MSNBC because of its leftward tilt,' one attendee said. 'Some former employees said they were embarrassed by it.' When he got the floor, Waters focused his question about MSNBC on Olbermann's interview of actress Janeane Garofalo, who likened conservatives to racists and spoke of 'the limbic brain inside a right-winger.'
'He [Waters] was complaining that Olbermann didn't bother to challenge her,' another GE shareholder said. Immelt told the assembled he takes a hands-off approach to what is reported on the company's news networks, which prompted a shareholder to criticize him for not managing NBC Unit more effectively."
If you watched MSNBC on April 15 you heard David Shuster and Rachel Maddow ramble on like adolescents about "teabagging," their derogatory term for the tea parties. Slandering these protests and attacking them for being "Astroturf," MSNBC never bothered to attempt to understand what the tea parties were really about.
If the GE-owned media were truly impartial, rather than mocking and attacking the tea parties and their participants as lap dogs for "Corporate America," they would actually interview participants and report what they were protesting.
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