A Century of Spin: How Public Relations Became the Cutting Edge of Corporate Power
By David Miller and William Dinan
()
About this ebook
The authors show how the origins of PR were always covertly political. Spin has been around for a long time and its anti-democratic potential is well known to all those who have made use of it. Based on extensive use of original archival material, the book presents a clear chronology of PR's development, culminating with a detailed examination of Gordon Brown and David Cameron's use of spin and how it relates to their connections with big business.
David Miller
David A. Miller is the vice president of Slingshot Group Coaching where he serves as lead trainer utilizing the IMPROVleadership coaching strategy with ministry leaders around the country. He has served as a pastor, speaker, teacher, and coach in diverse contexts, from thriving, multi-site churches to parachurch ministries.
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A Century of Spin - David Miller
A Century of Spin
Also available from Pluto Press
Thinker, Faker, Spinner, Spy
Corporate PR and the Assault on Democracy
Edited by William Dinan and David Miller
‘Corporate Spin is one of the great toxins of democracy and a free society. Thinker, Faker, Spinner, Spy is a foundational book to educate us about this sleazy realm and equip us to do battle with it.’
— Robert W. McChesney, author, Communication Revolution: Critical Junctures and the Future of Media
‘Essential reading for anyone concerned with the rise of corporate power and with seeing the world as it really is.’
— Mark Curtis, journalist and author of Unpeople: Britain’s Secret Human Rights Abuses
First published 2008 by Pluto Press
345 Archway Road, London N6 5AA
and 839 Greene Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48106
www.plutobooks.com
Copyright © David Miller and William Dinan 2008
The right of David Miller and William Dinan to be identified as the authors of this work has been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Hardback
ISBN-13 978 0 7453 2689 4
ISBN-10 0 7453 2689 7
Paperback
ISBN-13 978 0 7453 2688 7
ISBN-10 0 7453 2688 9
ISBN-13 978 1 7837 1073 7 ePub
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This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. Logging, pulping and manufacturing processes are expected to conform to the environmental regulations of the country of origin.
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Contents
List of Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
1. The Cutting Edge of Corporate Power
2. Public Relations: The Zelig Complex
3. The Hidden History of Corporate Propaganda, 1911–30
4. The Second Wave of Corporate Propaganda, 1936–50
5. The Case for Capitalism – the Third Wave, to the 1980s
6. The Real Rulers of the World
7. The Global PR Industry
8. Pulling Labour’s Teeth
9. Blair and the Business Lobby
10. Cameron and the Neo-cons
11. Corporate Propaganda and Power: The Manufacture of Compliance?
Appendix: Labour MPs’ Business Interests, 2007
Notes
Index
List of Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
This book emerged as we began to write a small historical chapter for a monograph on corporate public relations in the contemporary period. We felt the need to contextualise modern day PR and found ourselves chasing up obscure leads and biographical details on figures largely forgotten in the historical record. The result was that the historical chapter soon became a section of the planned book, and on the advice of the editorial term at Pluto, a book in its own right. The research underpinning this book stretches back over a decade and we acknowledge the support of the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) for this endeavour (‘Corporate Public Relations in British and Multinational Companies’, ESRC grant R000238993) which opened up the area of corporate PR for us and aroused our curiosity about the history outlined in this book.
This book has had a long gestation and is part of a wider collaboration between a number of people and organisations. We are grateful for the encouragement of our co-directors at Spinwatch, Andy Rowell and Eveline Lubbers, and the various contributors to the Spinwatch initiative, including Muhammad Idrees Ahmad, Billy Clark, Suzanne Garnham, Michael Greenwell, Claire Harkins, Tor Justad, Tommy Kane, Jonathan Matthews, Peter McQuade, Mat Pringle, Paul De Rooij and Bill Stevens. Special thanks are due to Julie-Ann Davis, Lynn Hill, Oliver Howard and Tracey Day for help with different parts of the manuscript.
There are many individuals who have helped, advised and inspired us in producing this book, including: Matthias Beck, Sharon Beder, Mark Brown, Bob Burton, Bill Carroll, John Casey, Colin Clark, David Collison, Paul deClerk, Aeron Davis, David Deacon, John Eldridge, Stuart Ewen, Bob Franklin, Des Freedman, Tim Gopsill, Ed Herman, Olivier Hoedeman, Mark Hollingsworth, Oyvind Ihlen, Nick Jones, Justin Kenrick, Alastair Macintosh, Stephanie and Steve Marriott, Robert McChesney, Niall Meehan, Uli Mueller, Brian Murphy, Greg Philo, John Pilger, Dieter Plewhe, Sheldon Rampton, Patrick Ring, Danny Schechter, Ken Silverstein, Jean Shaoul, Eric Shaw, Leslie Sklair, Tore Slatta, John Stauber, Gerry Sussman, Mark Thomas, Hilary Wainwright, Andrew Watterson, Kay Weaver, Erik Wesselius, Barry White, Dave Whyte, Granville Williams, and Kevin Williams.
We would also like to thank our colleagues and postgraduate students at the Department of Geography and Sociology at the University of Strathclyde for their support, and former colleagues at the Glasgow Media Group and Stirling Media Research Institute. We also want to say thanks to the good folks at Pluto for publishing this book and their continued support. The enthusiasm and assistance of Anne Beech, Melanie Patrick, Robert Webb and Mary Myers was crucial to this project. Thanks are also due to Rob Lilly, Helen Costello, Patsy and Bert Huegenin for their hospitality during our research trips to London and to Marina and James Lindsay for hosting our lengthy writing sessions within sight of Loch Achray. On a personal note we sincerely thank Emma Miller and Catie and Lewis Miller, Carol Clydesdale and Ciara and Niamh Dinan for their support and for tolerating the absences as we tried to break the back of this book and get it to the finishing line.
DM and WD
Glasgow, September 2007
1
The Cutting Edge of Corporate Power
I have no patience with those who try and attribute insidious and mysterious powers to public relations. Such ideas are wholly fanciful and without basis in fact.
John Hill, founder of PR firm Hill & Knowlton¹
This book is about the power of public relations. It is about how corporations invented public relations and used its skills and techniques to impose business interests on public policy and limit the responsiveness of the political system to the preferences and opinions of the masses. The powers of public relations are mysterious in the sense that they are not well known. They are shrouded in secrecy and deception, which often enables PR operatives and PR firms to pursue their objectives undetected. The efficacy of corporate PR has, in fact, been largely suppressed from the historical record. This book is an attempt to reassess some of the history of popular democracy in the twentieth century by looking at how corporations have used public relations – propaganda – to secure their interests.
We argue that PR has played a very significant role in the course of popular democracy over the last century. The powers of PR are not mysterious in the sense that they are magical or superhuman. They are all too human, the products of diligence, hard work, planning and conscious ideological warfare. They result in the institutional political corruption so obvious in neo-liberal societies, where governments are much more responsive to the concerns of big business and the powerful than any other section of society. The result of corporate propaganda can be seen in the contemporary ‘common sense’ that what is good for business must be good for society. This kind of thinking is fostered as a means to protect the corporations and their allies from the possibility of democratic government.
This book sets out to remove the shroud of mystery and show how and why public relations originated, how it is implicated in processes of globalisation, and most seriously, how it has aided and abetted the rise to power of the global corporations and the consequent withering of democracy. This book examines how, since the dawn of representative democracy, corporations and political elites have used public relations and lobbying to subvert and subdue democracy. It shows how every serious prospect of advancing democracy has met a backlash from corporations, hard at work trying to manage and manipulate public opinion, the media, policy makers and anything else that might stand in their way.
SPIN AND PR
Spin has become the ubiquitous term for public relations tactics. It was initially applied to the news management techniques of political parties and the image-polishing of politicians, particularly during election campaigns, but spin has recently come to be used in relation to corporate and government activity. Spin is generally thought of as manipulative or deceptive communications. But the power of the corporations to manage the public agenda – which we examine in this book – is much more substantial than the popular notion of spin allows. This is because, first, the processes we examine are not limited to questions of communications alone. The attempts by the corporations to tame democracy and pursue their interests have to be accomplished by putting words and ideas into action. This can mean direct political action including dirty tricks, spying, burglary, agents provocateurs and even violence, a historical catalogue to which we devote some attention in a later chapter. But, equally, the notion of spin does not really capture the way in which the transformation of western societies towards the free market has been put in place by lobbying and public relations.
WHAT IS PR?
Much of the writing on PR focuses narrowly on what is often called the ‘profession’ of public relations. Sometimes this appears to include lobbyists and sometimes not. Rarely does it consider the wider ramifications of degraded and deceptive communications on public culture and society’s institutions. While the PR industry expends considerable effort lauding and legitimating itself and its ‘best practice’, and many academics specialising in PR attend to the often apolitical technicalities of PR practice, the broader issues of what evasion, deception and manipulative communications are doing to democratic structures are avoided or neglected.
Across the globe PR agencies have a mixed reputation for ethical conduct. Perhaps the one thing that unites PR critics and PR apologists is the recognition that PR itself has a poor image.² Yet here is a real rupture between the PR industry’s self-conception and how it is seen by critics outside. The profession of public relations likes to see itself as a force for good, promoting mutual understanding, positive relationships between publics and wider benefits for society. Yet this does not tally with the understandings of public relations that are current in popular culture. As we have detailed elsewhere, the popular representations of spin doctors usually involve depictions of Machiavellian schemers and fixers.³
Few of these portrayals manage to get beyond a rather onedimensional pastiche of the spin doctor as behind-the-scenes bad guy. A notable exception is Kurt Vonnegut’s modern classic, Player Piano, which takes the social consequences of the dominance of corporate culture as its central theme, and touches on the power of PR and how this is exploited on behalf of business. This book was said to have been inspired by Vonnegut’s time working as a public relations executive in General Electric, one of the corporate leviathans of the post-war era. One can guess from Vonnegut’s references to PR that he loathed the job – one of the minor characters in the novel prefers to turn to prostitution than have her husband work in public relations. The main protagonist is a captain of industry who has misgivings about the alleged benefits of private enterprise and the American way of life. One passage neatly captures the scope of this book and how the inventions of public relations seep into popular culture and consciousness.
The crusading spirit of the managers and engineers, the idea of designing and manufacturing and distributing being sort of a holy war: all that folklore was cooked up by public relations and advertising men hired by managers and engineers to make big business popular in the old days, which it certainly wasn’t in the beginning. Now, the engineers and managers believe with all their hearts the glorious things their forebears hired people to say about them. Yesterday’s snow job becomes today’s sermon.⁴
Vonnegut also offers a definition of public relations which, despite the satire, arguably gets closer to the essence of PR than the volumes of academic theories and industry apologia on spin: ‘that profession specialising in the cultivation, by applied psychology in mass communication media, of favourable public opinion with regard to controversial issues and institutions, without being offensive to anyone of importance, and with the continued stability of the economy and society its primary goal’.⁵
While Vonnegut’s take on PR was well ahead of its time, the reach and influence of corporate PR have unquestionably increased dramatically since the 1950s. We have a wider focus on all the activities used by corporations to win the battle of ideas. This means their lobbying and their media manipulation, but it also means their philanthropy and the good works often undertaken under the title ‘Corporate Social Responsibility’. It means their involvement with local communities and activist groups, their ‘community engagement’ and their dialogue with critics. We also include corporate funded think tanks and policy groups as well as deceptive front groups and ‘institutes’. The lobbying and networking of senior management in peak business associations and corporate/elite social and networking clubs are also important, as are corporate intelligence and spying. Corporations do not see these as separate from their ‘proper’ public relations and nor should we.
We have sought to examine a wide range of activities in which corporations engage because it makes no sense to see PR professionals as divorced from corporate strategies. Nor does it make sense to draw an arbitrary line between the array of strategies corporations pursue to gain advantage in the battle of ideas. The most important reason for having this expansive definition of public relations and spin is to broaden the debate about spin and PR out from its narrow confines which relate to manipulating journalists and media agendas and operating simply in the sphere of ideas rather than seeing the battle of ideas as inextricably linked to questions of action and decision, and their consequences.
SPIN OR PROPAGANDA?
As a result we don’t think that terms like ‘spin’ or ‘public relations’ are able to capture the full magnitude of what we are describing. Spin might suggest distortion and misinformation, but it does not really capture that strategic use of information intended to undermine the morale of opponents. Although ‘public relations’ as an industry has a poor reputation, the term itself suggests a kind of consensual process, with some level of mutuality. In reality public relations as developed by the corporations is a set of techniques for pursuing corporate interests rather than promoting common interests. Of course as any decent historian of PR will tell you, the term was invented specifically as a piece of spin as a means of re-labelling the activities previously known as ‘propaganda’. As Edward Bernays, one of the founders of ‘public relations’ put it: ‘propaganda got to be a bad word because of the Germans... using it [in 1914–18]. So what I did was to try to find some other words. So we found the words Counsel on Public Relations.’⁶
We think that propaganda is a better term than spin or public relations because it also implies the unity of communication and action. It is communication for a purpose. What we are examining is the rise of propaganda and its harnessing to the interests of great power. Yet, today propaganda sounds like a quaintly old-fashioned term which is perhaps more relevant to communication in times of war, if it has any remaining purchase at all. On the contrary, we contend that one of the many victories of corporate propaganda is that the term is no longer used to describe the activities we uncover in this book. In media and popular debate as well as in the field of academia, those who discuss lobbying or public relations or marketing or spin, do so in terminology which bears the mark of successful propaganda manipulation.
So we refer to the activities outlined in this book interchangeably as propaganda, spin, public relations, but we are always conscious that the terms are both contested and themselves the subject of propaganda. Because we recognise that the use of propaganda techniques is about the pursuit of interests we also see this as a question of the manufacture of consent. That is, we contend that the genesis of the PR industry itself, as well as its operation today, constitutes a huge apparatus for legitimating the interests of the few at the expense of the many.
MANUFACTURING COMPLIANCE
An important feature of our argument, however, is that spin, public relations and lobbying are not only about the ‘engineering of consent’. To win the consent of the public might be desirable for the rulers of the world, but it is not always necessary. The key is to ensure public and political compliance. It is not that the public or decision makers actively agree and support the policy ideas promulgated by business lobbies and the corporations. What is critical is that they do not actively and aggressively oppose them. This is what makes the melding of ideology and action so powerful. In other words the aim and effect of much corporate propaganda is the manufacture of compliance.
There are two important elements to corporate engagement in the battle for ideas. The first of these is the attempt to manage public opinion and sentiment. To engineer consent, certainly, but also, at a minimum, to ensure compliance. The second element is to manage action. All of the networking, planning and policy discussion detailed in this book helps to build alliances amongst different corporate factions and to ensure that corporate and political elites are able to think and act with considerable unity. We think that both of these elements are important for the exercise of corporate power. This means that we do not see the question of ‘consent’ – meaning the consent of the governed – as the only question worth examining. We also think that elite unity is an important question and that it explains much about the conduct of politics in neo-liberal times. Given the progressively declining opportunity for most people to have any meaningful input into the democratic process, it should be clear to all that the political process is increasingly about managing elite consensus.
One cannot fail to notice that big business, the transnational corporations, have a structural advantage in terms of political activism under the conditions of liberal democracy. They have the resources, interest and opportunities to engage in politics and governance.⁷ Yet, it is not simply an issue of corporations being able to throw more money at politics and politicians than any other faction of society (significant as this is). It is critically a question of how resources are targeted and marshalled. Cooperation rather than competition is arguably the hallmark of corporate political activism. To be sure different corporations will have different interests and at times will act alone or against each other. However, corporations’ lobbying against one another does appear to be the exception rather than the rule, and ‘corporate pluralism’ is simply no substitute for proper public participation in democratic decision making.⁸
Nor is neo-corporatism or social partnership. Much of the analysis of corporatist policy making is now outdated, given the declining power of organised labour in the last few decades, and the massively increased power of capital. Under contemporary conditions, where business has taken a more prominent and proactive role in governance, it is difficult to see how trade unions or other social partners can easily act as countervailing forces to business power. This is why the struggles for democratic renewal and participation are critically important. This also explains why corporate propaganda is not simply trained on governments and public servants, but on civil society too. This is where the next challenge to business dominance is likely to come from.
CORPORATE POLITICAL ACTION AND NETWORKS OF POWER
The management of consensus by our rulers is done in identifiable ways by identifiable people. There is a long history stretching back at least 50 years of social scientists examining power networks. This is most famously associated with the work of C. Wright Mills and his 1956 book The Power Elite.⁹ A Century of Spin aspires to stand in that tradition of examining interlocking power networks. Our focus on the battle of ideas and how this interacts with, on the one hand corporate board interlocks, and on the other corporate lobby and policy planning groups, suggests not simply that power elites ‘have’ power, but shows how that power is reproduced and enacted. Our argument is that this is done by the unity of communication and action in concrete circumstances. This seems to us a new approach to the relations between power and communication and we return to it in the conclusion in our consideration of communication and power and in particular the use of the concept of hegemony.
THE THREE WAVES OF CORPORATE POLITICAL ACTION
This book reveals how the free market system which underlies the most important challenges facing humanity today (war, poverty, environmental catastrophe and the withering of democracy) were put in place by concerted lobbying and political action by business interests over the last century. The book begins by tracing the involvement of public relations and propaganda at the most important political events of the last 100 years. Like the lead character Zelig in the Woody Allen film, PR practitioners seemed to be present behind the scenes at almost every event of importance. The next chapter deals with the first of what we refer to as the three waves of corporate political activism. The rise of corporate political activism started before the dawn of the modern democratic era in around 1920. In fact it was a response to the threat posed by democracy – the threat that the privilege and power held by the corporations and their owners in the upper classes would be dissipated once universal suffrage was introduced. So the corporations began working single-mindedly to defend their privileges, with the crucial period being between 1916 and 1926. In both the US and UK class-wide propaganda organisations emerged at this time and the business classes cut their teeth on secretive political activities. In both the UK and US 1919 was the decisive year in which the threat of revolution was seen off. In the UK a lesser but nonetheless significant threat was posed by the General Strike in 1926; a threat faced and defeated.
The second wave of political activism by the corporations followed the Wall Street Crash and the rise of the New Deal in the US. This extended period of class warfare lasted until well after the 1939–45 war and resulted in a huge increase in organised class-wide political activism and propaganda from corporate elites. In the UK the second wave started in the early 1940s with the rising threat of reform of industry and social welfare from an incoming Labour government after the war. UK business activists were not as successful as their US counterparts, but did manage to defend themselves against some significant reforms planned by the post-war government.
At first (in the period up until the 1950s), the corporations were only able to slow the march of progress. Democracy campaigners did win significant victories such as the New Deal in the US and the introduction of the NHS and the welfare state in the UK. But latterly, and with renewed vigour from the 1940s, the corporations started to go on the offensive, both in terms of the ‘battle of ideas’ and, critically, the on-the-ground struggles and strategies to put their ideas into practice. This ushered in the third wave of business activism from about 1968 to 1980, which we discuss in Chapter 5.
The decisive victories won by the corporations included the electoral successes of Thatcher and Reagan in 1979/80 and following on from these, the wholesale neo-liberal revolution which has progressively opened markets and transferred resources and industries once held in common into private hands. The result has been ever increasing class polarisation and inequality on the one hand and the looming environmental crisis on the other. We argue that the cutting edge of this campaign has been the battle of ideas – how ideas in the service of great power have been crucial to the project of bringing democracy to heel. Chapter 6 tells the story of the increasingly global dimension of corporate political activism and propaganda. The elite policy planning groups and networking meetings are places for the new global business elite to hammer out compromises and to construct a unity of purpose. The emergence of the global elite was both a consequence of and accomplished by the necessity to take the battle of ideas to the global level. Organisations like the Bilderberg Group, the World Economic Forum and the