XXXXX DRUDGE REPORT XXXXX TUE DEC 02, 2003 10:01:24 ET XXXXX
DEAN VOWS TO 'BREAK UP GIANT MEDIA ENTERPRISES'
If elected president, Howard Dean vows to "break up giant media enterprises" out of a concern "how deeply media companies can penetrate every single community" in America.
The Dem hopeful made the comments on GENERAL ELECTRIC-owned MSNBC during HARDBALL WITH CHRIS MATTHEWS.
"The essence of capitalism, which the right-wing never understands
-- it always baffles me -- is, you got to have some rules," Dean explained to Matthews and students at Harvard.
MATTHEWS: Well, would you break up GE?
(APPLAUSE)
DEAN: I can`t -- you...
MATTHEWS: GE just buys Universal. Would you do something there about
that? Would you stop that from happening?
DEAN: You can`t say -- you can`t ask me right now and get an answer,
would I break up X corp...
MATTHEWS: We`ve got to do it now, because now is the only chance we
can ask you, because, once you are in, we have got to live with you.
(LAUGHTER)
DEAN: No.
MATTHEWS: So, if you are going to do it, you have got to tell us now.
(CROSSTALK)
MATTHEWS: Are you going to break up the giant media enterprises in
this country?
DEAN: Yes, we`re going to break up giant media enterprises. That
doesn`t mean we`re going to break up all of GE.
What we`re going to do is say that media enterprises can`t be as big
as they are today. I don`t think we actually have to break them up, which
Teddy Roosevelt had to do with the leftovers from the McKinley
administration.
Dean explained how "11 companies in this country control 90 percent of what
ordinary people are able to read and watch on their television. That`s
wrong. We need to have a wide variety of opinions in every community. We
don`t have that because of Michael Powell and what George Bush has tried to
do to the FCC."
Matthews continued:
"Would you break up Fox?"
(LAUGHTER)
MATTHEWS: I`m serious.
DEAN: I`m keeping a...
MATTHEWS: Would you break it up? Rupert Murdoch has "The Weekly
Standard." It has got a lot of other interests. It has got "The New York
Post." Would you break it up?
DEAN: On ideological grounds, absolutely yes, but...
(LAUGHTER)
MATTHEWS: No, seriously. As a public policy, would you bring
industrial policy to bear and break up these conglomerations of power?
DEAN: I don`t want to answer whether I would break up Fox or not,
because, obviously
(CROSSTALK)
MATTHEWS: Well, how about large media enterprises?
DEAN: Let me -- yes, let me get...
(LAUGHTER)
DEAN: The answer to that is yes.
I would say that there is too much penetration by single corporations
in media markets all over this country. We need locally-owned radio
stations. There are only two or three radio stations left in the state of
Vermont where you can get local news anymore. The rest of it is read and
ripped from the AP.
MATTHEWS: So what are you going to do about it? You`re going to be
president of the United States, what are you going to do?
DEAN: What I`m going to do is appoint people to the FCC that believe
democracy depends on getting information from all portions of the political
spectrum, not just one.
Developing...
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