Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Chris Lehane's Long Record of Union Busting, Political Smears - and Failure

"I like dealing with CEOs. I like taking strategies and tactics we used in the White House and applying them to the corporate world."

– Chris Lehane quoted in the San Francisco Chronicle, May 19, 2002

The following study is broken up into two major sections: Lehane and Workers and Lehane and Political Failures. Two things stand out – his penchant for taking the corporate side against the public and the workers’ interest (in some cases when he was on the public payroll), and his unsuccessful record as a political campaign adviser. His work for the AMPTP should be seen as the culmination of both of these trends – taking the side of corporations against striking workers, for a cause he helps doom to failure.

Lehane and Workers

This section focuses on three specific issues in which Lehane dealt with working Californians – his double-dealing during the 2001 energy crisis, his work for the Screen Actors Guild in 2002, and his work for the Bay Bridge contractors against sick workers. All three show his pronounced tendency to work for corporations against a fair deal for working Californians.

Double-Dealing During the Energy Crisis, 2001

In 2000-2001, the “energy crisis” hit California. As we now know, the crisis was manufactured by energy companies such as Enron who manipulated the energy market to make enormous profits at the cost of widespread blackouts across California and the West. Enron’s actions and the foolish deregulation of California’s electricity market in 1996 combined to force PG&E into bankruptcy and Southern California Edison faced a similar crisis. By the spring of 2001 it was clear that Edison was facing financial collapse, unless it could get help from the state government.

As part of their lobbying agenda, Edison brought Fabiani and Lehane on board. In spring 2001, Gray Davis did the same, hiring Fabiani and Lehane to help advise the governor and to salvage his public image. While the State Legislature debated an Edison bailout bill, including a dispute between State Sen. John Burton and then-Speaker Bob Hertzberg over how much in losses Edison would have to eat, Lehane helped to turn Davis’ office into a wholly-owned subsidiary of SCE. Lehane went around telling the media “"The governor and Edison," he said, "have the same energy policy; there's no conflict in working for both."”

The obvious conflict of interest between working for the state and working for Edison became a major issue for Fabiani and Lehane. Initially the duo were being paid $30,000 a month by Davis’ office. But questions began to be asked about Lehane’s double-dealing. Lehane claimed there was no conflict, as noted above. Not everyone agreed. Thomas Hiltachk, of all people – he of the recent dirty tricks effort to steal CA’s electoral votes – sued in 2001 over Lehane’s conflict of interest. State Controller Kathleen Connell refused to cut checks to pay them. Davis began to distance himself from the duo, first firing Fabiani, telling Lehane he had to accept a 1/3 pay cut, and quit working for Edison. The suit continued and finally a the end of July 2001 it was settled out of court – Davis cut all remaining ties with Fabiani and Lehane and they agreed to not be paid anything at all for their work.

What did Davis get for all this trouble? Lehane’s efforts to shift the blame to Bush and Cheney did not succeed, as Davis’ public approval ratings collapsed. In 2002, when the state budget crisis hit, Davis’ political position was already weak, and he was unable to fend off a recall the next year. Chris Lehane had become a lightning rod for criticism at a time when Davis could not afford it – and Lehane’s work wasn’t very good to begin with.

Taking Sides in SAG 2002

When word of Lehane’s hiring by the AMPTP became public, many pointed to his work for the Screen Actors Guild in 2002 as an example of his hypocrisy – at one moment he helps Hollywood workers, the next he’s fighting them?

A closer look at Lehane’s work with SAG, however, suggests that the story is even worse. Fabiani and Lehane weren’t brought on board by SAG to help negotiate a great deal for the rank and file. Instead they were hired by a majority faction of the board to sell a bad deal to skeptical members.

The 2002 negotiations were over a 50-year old SAG rule that prevented talent agencies from being owned by companies that employ actors. The SAG board in early 2002 negotiated a deal, championed by President Melissa Gilbert, that would have allowed ad agencies and independent production companies, but not the major studios, to own up to 20% of the talent agencies. Many SAG members opposed this weakening of the old rule, concerned that it would hurt their interests to allow greater corporate ownership.

Fabiani and Lehane were hired by Gilbert and Robert Pisano, CEO of SAG, to sell the deal to a skeptical membership base. As with the double-dealing in the 2001 energy crisis, the hiring of Lehane itself aggravated the internal split within SAG. SAG Treasurer Kent McCord, a leader of the opposition to the talent agencies deal, refused to sign off on pay for the duo until the fees were disclosed and complained about not having been informed about the hiring of the pair. It was at this point that Lehane gave his self-serving quote about taking a reduced fee – 1/3 of the usual – in order to help workers:

"we believe strongly in the need to preserve the strength of the union and this agreement does that. We both come from liberal, progressive backgrounds, and this union represents working people." source
The quote was specifically designed to defuse the criticism over the pro-agreement SAG faction having hired the duo. Lehane continued to spin the agreement, trying to divide the SAG membership by pointing to the agreement’s provisions to create a “Actor Theft Protection Fund” and rules about pay for overseas work.

It didn’t work. Although Valerie Harper, another agreement opponent, failed to beat Gilbert in the race for SAG president in March 2002, the SAG rank and file rejected the agreement in an April 2002 vote. Once again, Lehane’s hiring became the issue, exacerbating an existing divide without actually bringing anything of value – in this case ratification of the agreement – to his employers.

Lehane and the Bay Bridge Welders

In 2004 welders working on the new span of the Bay Bridge filed a Cal/OSHA claim against KFM, the consortium contracted to build the span. 48 workers were sick with respiratory problems that they believed were caused by exposure to dangerous levels of manganese.

Extended exposure to high levels of manganese, an element common in welding rods, can cause vomiting, flu-like symptoms, paralysis and permanent damage to the part of the brain in control of motor function, according to the National Safety Council.

After a 2004 Cal/OSHA investigation found that KFM knew about manganese overexposure on the Bay Bridge but had done little to solve the problem, a group of sick welders sought out Rosemarie Bowler, a lecturer at San Francisco State University who researches the toxic effects of manganese on the brain.

Months later, when she had secured funding and approval for the project, Bowler and her colleagues examined the welders, finding a correlation between the manganese overexposure the welders were subject to on the Bay Bridge site and their illnesses.

"They had increased respiratory problems, and their working memory was impacted from the manganese," Bowler said.


The conditions of their work contributed to this sickness, a condition that is lifelong and potentially terminal:

"It's definitely a chronic disease," said Robert M. Park, a researcher at the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health who collaborated with Bowler on her study of the welders. "Even in welders, the few studies done have found some permanent effects."

Manganism, the neurological disease associated with manganese overexposure, is irreversible at higher levels than the researchers recorded in the welders' blood, Park said. The exposures faced by manganese miners and smelters usually puts them at a much higher risk than welders. But Park said the Bay Bridge welders were in an unusual position, working in confined spaces with sometimes substandard respirators and ventilation.

The Bay Bridge crews worked in the tight spaces between the six 8- foot-wide steel cylinders at the core of each support pillar and the steel plates that separate them.

Those confined spaces may have factored into manganese levels measured above the legal limit at least five times between May 2003 and March 2004 by IHI Environmental, an industrial hygiene consulting firm with an office in Emeryville.


The workers also claimed that not only had the welds made them sick, but that they were faulty and threatened the structural integrity of a bridge designed to withstand a major earthquake. KFM denied any problem existed – and fired the sick workers who complained. KFM claimed an excellent safety record on the bridge project, but only accomplished it by punishing injured workers and rewarding those who did not report injuries. But to ensure that they could fight off the sick workers’ claims, who did they turn to? Chris Lehane. Lehane’s job was to defend KFM’s record in the media and prevent the sick workers from receiving the justice they were owed.

The media had been the key player in the matter all along. The sick workers had filed Cal/OSHA claims in early 2004, but chronic understaffing and underfunding caused the claims to be ignored, until the workers got the Oakland Tribune interested in the story. With the Tribune’s reporting Cal/OSHA finally got involved, and KFM realized that to keep the safety concerns quiet and to avoid paying the sick workers, they needed someone to keep the media away from the truth. Lehane was their man.

At the time that Lehane was hired, Confined Space, a workplace safety blog, “did a double take” at the news:

Yeah, I'd say it's tougher than Monica Lewinsky. On one hand you have a blow job, on the other hand you've got workers who have been knowingly exposed to welding fumes, including manganese, in violation of OSHA standards. On one hand you have a company covering up injuries and punishing workers who are hurt on the job, and on the other hand you have someone covering up....a blow job.

Now, I'm the first to admit that everyone's got to make a living, and from personal experience, I'll admit that it's not easy for former political operatives and appointees to find challenging jobs (that pay decently) in a Republican world. I'll also admit to being a bit judgmental on occasion, but after decades in the health and safety business, to me there is almost no creature lower than the pond scum corporate P.R. flacks who cover up the fact that their clients are hurting or killing workers, and then insisting over it all that the company is "committed to safety."

Democratic consultant Roger Salazar worked with Lehane in Gore's office and on the 2000 presidential campaign. He called Lehane and his partner, Mark Fabiani, also formerly of the White House, "the masters of crisis communications — they know how to manage an issue and look at it from every conceivable angle, find all of the strengths, weaknesses, threats and opportunities."

All well and fine. But it makes me sick to think that this talent is now being used to stomp abused and poisoned workers further into the ground for a company that is rapidly rising to the top of the corporate outlaws list.

What's next Chris, Bill Frist's communications director?

Lehane’s strategy was to play up FBI investigations that could not conclusively prove anything was wrong with the welds or the workers. When the FBI found that they could not get at the actual welds – by then encased in concrete – nor prove criminal intent, they had to drop the probe. Lehane celebrated this as proof that the welds were good, telling the San Francisco Chronicle that there was no reason for any further investigation and the NY Times that “KFM always puts the safety of its workers and the public first,” refusing to acknowledge the sick workers whose own bodies were proof that KFM was dangerous.

The sick workers’ case is now pending trial in Oakland, but there has been virtually no media coverage of their case since 2005. Lehane successfully helped cover up KFM’s responsibility for the sick workers and deflected media attention from one of the most egregious acts of corporate malfeasance in California this century. In fighting against justice for the Bay Bridge workers, Lehane proved that he has no principles whatsoever, no interest in helping workers even when they are literally sick.

Lehane and Political Failures

For Governor Davis and for SAG, Lehane’s hiring came at a high cost and brought little reward. They’re not the only political figures to have found that Lehane’s high cost is not worth the reward. His bombastic and confrontational style have alienated voters and may even have cost Democrats two presidential elections.

Lehane Smears Bill Bradley

In February 2000, Chris Lehane helped drive an unnecessary wedge between supporters of Bill Bradley and Al Gore with a smear of Bradley’s record in the Senate. As David Corn wrote at the time:

Lehane more than exemplifies spin-he lives it, he celebrates it, he worships it. At Gore events, Lehane relentlessly bends, manipulates, dodges or obliterates the truth [...]

The questions turned to campaign finance reform. For weeks, the Gore camp had been dumping on Bradley's call for extensive reform. In December, on Meet the Press, Gore had said, "I have fought for this for 20 years. Bill went 17 years in the U.S. Senate before he ever sponsored a campaign finance reform bill. Only after announcing his retirement and heading out to run for president did he sponsor a bill on this."

Two days before the New Hampshire election, former Labor Secretary Robert Reich, a Bradley supporter, had read to reporters in Concord a statement written by Fred Wertheimer, a leading reform advocate in Washington. "Vice President Gore's statements about Bradley and his campaign finance reform record are not true," Wertheimer declared. He noted that Bradley had sponsored several different reform bills.

Wertheimer also observed that "Gore's own public track record over the years does not reveal him to be a 'fighter' for campaign finance reform."

So what about it, Chris? we asked Lehane. "Bill Bradley went over 6000 days [in the Senate] without authoring a piece of [reform] legislation," he replied, ignoring Gore's accusation that Bradley had not sponsored reform legislation. But, we answered, Wertheimer says you're wrong.

"Bill Bradley went over 6000 days without authoring a piece of legislation," he repeated. But, we shot back, Wertheimer says he sponsored a host of bills. "Bill Bradley went over 6000 days without authoring a piece of legislation," he said again. Wait a minute, I added, we all know that in Congress authoring legislation is not the only way of promoting an issue. Often a committee chairman authors the bill and other lawmakers work hard as cosponsors. "Bill Bradley went over 6000 days without authoring a piece of legislation," he countered.


How this unnecessary attack on Bradley helped Gore solidify his base in the 2000 election isn’t clear. As some comments on Daily Kos from 2003 suggest, it cost Gore voters and perhaps worsened the split between Gore and progressives in that pivotal election.

Lehane Alienates Reporters During the Gore Campaign

Lehane’s relationship with the press was critical to Gore’s 2000 campaign – and not always in a positive way. The hatchet job that the DC press corps did on Gore that year, helping produce the Bush administration, is notorious to all Democrats and progressive Americans. In a 2004 profile in the San Francisco Chronicle several unnamed journalists claimed that this unflattering coverage was in part the result of frustration with Lehane:

Several national reporters asked not to be identified, knowing they probably will have to deal with Lehane again in the small world of elite consultants and top reporters. Their complaints were similar:

Said one who worked with him since the Clinton Administration: "He burned a lot of bridges with the Washington press corps in the 2000 campaign. He is an operator more interested in his own image than his candidate's."

Some said Gore was too inaccessible for the last part of the campaign. Another said they would play reporters off each other. "He'd tell me that (one media outlet) was playing a story on page one, so why aren't you going with the story. But they were never playing it on page one."

Yet again, it seems, Lehane’s attack-dog style backfires badly on his employers. For what it’s worth, one of the Bush-Cheney campaign’s talking heads said Lehane’s style made her job on the cable shows easier that fateful fall (also from the same Chronicle article):

Mindy Tucker Fletcher, his counterpart for the 2000 Bush campaign, developed a strategy when appearing with Lehane on one of those split-screen TV debates.

"He's got that Northeastern way of talking really fast, so one of my strategies was just to let him rant, rant, rant," said Fletcher, who now works for a public relations agency. "I'd get more done just saying nothing and rolling my eyes.


Lehane Quits Kerry…and Runs the Clark Campaign Into the Ground

In September 2003, frustrated with Kerry’s unwillingness to smear Howard Dean, Chris Lehane quit the Kerry campaign. Daily Kos (in its pre-Scoop form) praised the move and Markos presciently said “the Kerry campaign is better off without him.” As it turned out this was the case – Kerry memorably won Iowa, New Hampshire, and catapulted himself toward the 2004 nomination.

Kerry’s path to the nomination was aided again by Lehane in the crucial weeks of January 2004. Lehane, now working for Wesley Clark, was the subject of a front-page NYT article that noted his “devious” manner and how his methods of shopping Kerry oppo were alienating other Democrats:

The documents those nasty tidbits that campaigns euphemistically call ''opposition research'' -- are flying in the scrappy final days of the Democratic contests here and in Iowa. At the center of the maelstrom, Democrats say, is a 36-year-old aide to Gen. Wesley K. Clark, a frenetic, colorful and, some contend, devious communications strategist named Chris Lehane.

Every campaign has people behind the scenes feeding unflattering facts about opponents to the press. But Mr. Lehane -- a veteran of Al Gore's 2000 campaign and the Clinton White House, where his specialty was blunting queries from investigative reporters -- is such a shrewd practitioner of what one admiring strategist called ''the political black arts'' that lately, when a negative story appears, rivals point to him.

Now, Mr. Lehane has become a target in a fight among Democrats about whether opposition research is going too far. With General Clark rising in the polls in New Hampshire and Howard Dean facing a spate of negative news reports, from stories about stock he sold as Vermont's governor to remarks maligning the Iowa caucuses, many Democrats are convinced they see the invisible hand of Chris Lehane…

Minutes later, Mr. Lehane produced two documents: a flattering remark Mr. Kerry made about General Clark, and a not-so-flattering synopsis of a 1996 Boston Globe article that said Mr. Kerry had stayed rent-free at the home of a lobbyist. All this transpired two hours before the Kerry camp said a single word.


Clark’s campaign never got off the ground and once again, Lehane became the story, hurting his candidate’s overall narrative and cause.

Lehane and the Kerry Intern Smear

One of the most notorious Kerry oppo pieces that floated around in the winter of 2004 was the claim that Kerry had an affair with an intern named Alexandra Polier. The claim, which obviously threatened not just Kerry’s entire campaign but also the chances of beating Bush in the general election were Kerry to become the nominee, turned out to be false. Polier herself mounted a vigorous defense, including an in-depth article she wrote for New York magazine, “The Education of Alexandra Polier.” In her article, it becomes clear that the most likely source of the smear was Chris Lehane.

As I continued to try to understand what had happened, I found that shortly after his first story, Drudge had posted a leaked private e-mail from Craig Crawford, a political columnist at The Congressional Quarterly, to some colleagues at MSNBC: “Drudge item on Kerry intern issue is something Chris Lehane has shopped around for a long time.” Drudge quickly dropped the posting, and Lehane complained to Crawford that it wasn’t true, but Lehane’s name was familiar to me. I knew he was feared by rival campaigns as a master of the black art of leaking political-opposition research. A former spokesman for the Kerry campaign, he had quit amid some acrimony and gone to work as a strategist for Clark.

He was a sufficiently controversial figure to have earned his own recent profile in the New York Times, in which he was described by some as a “devious communications strategist.” The piece quoted rival politicos complaining that it was one thing to attack Republicans but quite another to attack rival Democrats, “spilling blood in our house.” I wondered if Lehane had been the source, especially since he had switched horses mid-race. As Steve McMahon, a Dean media consultant, put it to me: “To work for someone and then walk across the street and work against them is beneath contempt. The one person who should hope John Kerry doesn’t become president is Chris Lehane.”

Joe Trippi, Howard Dean’s former campaign manager, told me he’d also heard Lehane had been shopping the rumor—presumably on Clark’s behalf.

Drudge claimed Clark himself had told reporters on his campaign bus that Kerry was going to “implode” over a scandal, but when I called Wesley Clark Jr., a screenwriter in L.A., who had helped out on his father’s campaign, he told me Drudge had ignored the context of his father’s quote. “He was reacting to the latest issue of The National Enquirer, which had just run a front-page story about Kerry and possible scandals, when he said that.”

Writing about Clinton recently in Vanity Fair, Robert Sam Anson added to my suspicion by suggesting that “Clinton types” in the Clark campaign had been vigorously pushing similar rumors.

I called Lehane himself, who, having backed the wrong team, is now running his own political PR firm in San Francisco. I asked him where he’d first heard the rumors about Kerry and me. He blamed political reporters. I asked him if he had used the rumors to try to help Clark. He denied it. “There are just so many media outlets out there now, Alex, that these kind of baseless rumors can easily get turned into stories,” he said smoothly, and then the phone went dead.

I called him right back, but he didn’t answer. I called again less than an hour later, and this time his outgoing message had been changed to, “Hi, you’ve reached Chris. I’m traveling and won’t be able to retrieve my voice mail.” I wondered how he was able to run a PR company without retrieving voice mail.


This reckless smear not only failed to help Clark beat Kerry, but could well have been used by Karl Rove later in 2004 to defeat Kerry. Only Polier’s exceptional defense (putting Lehane to shame, really) prevented the story from doing major damage.

Hillary Clinton Dragged Into Chris Lehane Scandal

Fresh off Chris Lehane caught lying to Matier & Ross, a second San Francisco Chronicle column weighs in. Jon Carroll has this to say about Hillary Clinton and Chris Lehane:

And I really would appreciate it if Hillary Clinton would stop taking Chris
Lehane's phone calls.

Still no official comment from Hillary Clinton's campaign (which, in unrelated news, in tanking in California).

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Chris Lehane Busted Lying to San Francisco Chronicle

Ace San Francisco Chronicle political columnists Matier and Ross might want to think twice about believing anything from Chris Lehane.

UPDATE: Jane Hamsher has more on Chris Lehane and the Matier and Ross scandal.

Monday, December 17, 2007

San Francisco Chronicle on Chris Lehane Union Busting

Every progressive in the bay area reads Matier and Ross and today they are reading about Chris Lehane selling out:

The Democratic PR team of Fabiani & Lehane (as in former Clinton-Gore White House and campaign staffers Mark Fabiani and Chris Lehane) is being paid $100,000 a month to spin for the movie studios in their battle with striking writers.

It's especially noteworthy because nearly every Democratic presidential contender has shown up on the picket line in support of the writers - including Hillary Rodham Clinton, with whom Lehane has been working as an unpaid adviser for months.

And while Clinton and Co. may choose to look the other way (after all, they're still taking checks from the Hollywood moguls themselves), Service Employees International Union President Andy Stern's "Change to Win" unions were severing ties with Lehane.

Labor leader Stern also predicted that Lehane's days in the labor movement "are numbered."
One hundred thousand dollars a month. It reminds me of the old joke:

Man: Will you sleep with me for a million dollars?

Woman: OK

Man: Will you sleep with me for $1?

Woman (slaps him): What do you think I am?

Man: We already established that, now we're just negotiating the price.

Chris Lehane and Collusion

Apparently union busting isn't enough for Chris Lehane. The AMPTP has unveiled its latest media strategy - playing up the virtues of collusion!

Nikki Finke:

Below is the new ad seen at AMPTP.org and soon in print that the Big Media moguls are running. "How ironic that a couple weeks ago the WGA was trying to conquer the moguls by portraying them as divided. Now, as evidenced by the ad, the moguls have never been more united at a time the organizers are hoping to divide and conquer," an AMPTP source tells me.

Just one problem: legal sources tell me the ad also exposes potential issues relating to collusion, price-fixing, and anti-trust among the Big Media companies who are supposed to be business competitors. It also once and all establishes that the AMPTP, rather than a supposed umbrella group for 350 production entities as it claims, is really just what I've been saying all along: a handful of moguls who control Hollywood because of infotainment consolidation brought on by the lifting of financial syndications rules

United Hollywood:
As Robert J. Elisberg stated in his Huffington Post column, it would be unconscionable if the major automakers - Ford, GM, Daimler-Chrysler, Honda, Toyota, Nissan - banded together and bargained as one against a single, isolated division of the UAW. Yet not only is a similar situation happening in Hollywood - with six mega media corporations up teaming up against a single Guild - as the statement above reveals, it's even worse: the collusion is so bad, the individual mega-corps won't even entertain an offer that might give their company a competitive - and thus financial - leg up....

Or then again, maybe it's time for Congress to take a look.


Surely the AMPTP didn't hire Lehane partly to ensure a Democratic Congress would look the other way while they colluded with each other against the writers and smaller, independent producers. Of course not. No, they must have looked at Chris Lehane's failure to get Gray Davis through the energy crisis and his inability to ram a bad talent agency deal through SAG in 2002 and thought "there's our man!"

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Chris Lehane Takes Verbal Cues From George W. Bush

A recent item from Nikki Finke at Deadline Hollywood Daily points out that for all his Democratic connections, Chris Lehane's work for the AMPTP brings to mind someone very different:

That said, the latest AMPTP news release, issued in response to the WGA filing unfair labor practice charges against the media companies, misquotes that "old lawyers' adage: When the facts are on your side, argue the facts. When the law is on your side, argue the law. And when you don't have either the law or the facts on your side, you pound the table." The actual saying is “When the law is against you, pound the facts, when the facts are against you, pound the law, and when they’re both against you, pound the table”.

For a bunch of Democrats, the flackery of Fabiani & Lehane sure are committing a heck of a lot of Bushisms.


It's rather appropriate, don't you think? Chris Lehane, whose work put Al Gore, John Kerry, and Wes Clark in the White House, is now taking his cues from Mr. 24% - one of the lowest rated presidents in modern history.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Chris Lehane Compares Workers to Spoiled Children

Chris Lehane starts trying to earn his union buster salary by attempting to drive a wedge between writers and their negotiators. This quote in the LA Times has his name written all over it:

The Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which represents the studios, fired back: "The WGA has now been reduced to pounding the table, and this baseless, desperate NLRB complaint is just the latest indication that the WGA's negotiating strategy has achieved nothing for working writers."


"Pounding the table?" Lehane is apparently unveiling a new innovation in the union buster playbook - compare workers fighting for a fair wage to spoiled children. Or perhaps it's just a simple case of projection - after all, it was the AMPTP, with Lehane on their payroll, who stormed out of the negotiations last Friday.

If there are any other unions still keeping Lehane on their payroll, now would be a good time for them to reconsider. And it doesn't sound as if the WGA workers are falling for this weak ruse.

Mitchell Report: Chris Lehane Not Named

According to an analysis by media organizations, neither AMPTP union buster Chris Lehane nor his partner Mark Fabiani have yet been tied to the steriod distaster scandal rocking Major League Baseball. To date, the Writers Guild of America has not issued an official comment. Developing...

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Solidarity Means Fighting Democrats Who Hire Chris Lehane

Matthew Saroff in 40 Years In The Desert will not support in the primary any Democrat who employs Chris Lehane:

SEIU Local 99 in Los Angeles, representing teachers and other school workers, has fired Chris Lehane because he took a job consulting for the producers, and against the writers, with regard to the writers' strike.

I think that this sort of solidarity is what Democrats lack. FWIW, I will not support any primary candidate who employs Mr. Lahane. He is a strike breaker.

If we want our control of congress, and hopefully the White House in a year and a month, to mean anything, then we have to impress upon the national Democratic party that solidarity means something.
This has been a week when Chris Lehane is learning that Democrats care about solidarity.

Chris Lehane Theme Song

Blame it all on my roots
Those Clinton cahoots
What blogs say I don't care

What I do know
My bankbook does show
Busting unions affords my best flair

To the writers' surprise
Comes my spin and the lies
As Dems whine and complain

It sucks to be you, cause
Your unions are through
Read newspapers for my new frame


(chorus)
Cause I got friends in high places
Where the money drowns and the press chases
Your rights away
But I'll be OK

I'm not big on living wages
For all I care, they can write from cages
Cause I got friends, on the biggest stages


I guess you were wrong
It's a studio town
WGA won't get any more

I'll work for the right
Since money is might, and
I'm a disaster whore

Selling out is keen
I'm a publicity fiend
The press fills my ego then
A New Economic Partnership
While I cash my check

(Chorus)
(Chorus)

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Chris Lehane Reamed

Too Truthy for Losing the War on Humor headlines:

Chris Lehane's New Book: "Ex-Lax for the Soul: How to Ream a Labor Movement"

While the striking writers (many with small kids who might like some toys under the tree and hot wives who just might like that special boob job for Christmas or at the very least, a turkey on the table) struggle for fair compensation plans and working conditions, Chris has decided to help bust their balls and their bank accounts, all in the holy name of greed.

Sure enough, Chris Lehane has decided to wallow in the bowels of anti-union sentiment. Lehane was something of a political superstar before he was recently brought in to consult to the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers to battle against the interests of my personal heroes, the genius writers (Writers Guild of America) who are on strike. Lehane has served as senior aide and advisor to both President Clinton and Vice President Gore and in 2004 was strategist to General Wesley Clark during his presidential campaign. Lehane has played the role of "freelance political pundit" quoted occasionally in print and appearing on television. He has also played the unofficial “attack dog” role for Clinton campaign. Read more here.
Yet again, Hillary Clinton gets hit for her surrogate being a union buster.

Chris Lehane Faces the Results of His Actions

And here comes Wonkette on Chris Lehane:

Since then he and his business partner, Democratic hack Mark Fabiani, have built a (one assumes) lucrative business as hacks-for-hire, representing everyone from Kobe Bryant to former California Governor Grey Davis to the Screen Actors Guild to a number of unions united under the Change to Win banner. Recently, though, Lehane and Fabiani picked up a new client: the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, who are trying to bust the writer’s strike. Hmm.

So, a couple of guys who have represented a number of sizable unions including one with whom the AMPTP is expected to have to negotiate in June (SAG) is now running the crisis management operation (i.e., media hit squad) of management. Sound problematic? Or, like, perhaps a conflict of interest? Yeah, a couple of union clients of theirs who are supporting the strike thought so, too.

The Service Employees International Union is severing its ties with Lehane and Fabiani and expect the other Change to Win unions (Teamsters, Laborers, Carpenters & Joiners, United Farm Workers, Food and Commercial Workers, and UNITE HERE) to do so as well. SIEU President Andy Stearn says “His days are numbered in the labor movement.”

So, either Lehane and Fabiani are so stupid about their clients that they didn’t think representing management in the midst of an enormous labor strike would be viewed as a conflict of interest, or they’ve discovered that there’s so much more money to be made by representing companies and management (especially in this day and age when everyone in Washington is scrambling to hire Dems) that they just don’t give a shit.
Way to go guys, not only are you making your other clients looks so awful they are shitcanning you, but now you're making the entire Democratic Party look pathetic because you're Clinton surrogates.

Chris Lehane & Enron & California Taxpayers

Cookie Jill at Skippy the Bush Kangaroo headlines, Chris Lehane, soulless shill:

losing jobs left and right.now if would only refund california taxpayers his $30,000/month he took in for working both sides of the negotiating table during the california electric crisis.yeah, it wasn't just enron that was doing the poochie thing to californians.
Hits just keep on coming.

Chris Lehane's Hall of Shame

Some of Chris Lehane's previous work:

Al Gore, 2000

Wes Clark, 2004

Online "promotion" of Sicko (i.e., nonexistent)

Representing the construction company building the Eastern span of the Bay Bridge against the welders who were exposed to dangerous working conditions (now THAT'S progressive!)

The AMPTP is hiring a guy with this track record?

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Chris Lehane Need Not Fear Paparazzi

Like an 18 year old told she'd be better off working the "movies" in San Fernando Valley, Chris Lehane's first week in Hollywood hasn't gone as he'd hoped.

Variety headlines on Chris Lehane:

Chris Lehane is fired by union, then fired again
Not exactly the type of story a professional writer would write, unless it was one of those, "short rope at the top of the tall ladder" misery tales. Oh well, he's probably better suited for The Valley anyway.

California Labor Federation and Chris Lehane

Despite Chris Lehane working as a union buster, the California Labor Federation membership locals have yet to step up and request Lehane be blacklisted. In fact, their quote leaves the door wide open for Chris Lehane working for them in the future.

Obviously, this make zero sense. Hopefully it won't take long for them to get with the program and join in solidarity against union busters.

AMPTP Wasting Money on Chris Lehane?

Paul William Tenny of The Media Pundit on Chris Lehane:

...[Chris] Lehane coming to work for the AMPTP has been so publicly addressed that some people seem to think there's little point to him coming to work the shadows since everybody will know immediately than any new tactics on the part of big media will point directly back to his manipulative agenda.
There is a growing consensus that the only result of Chris Lehane selling out by crossing the picket line will be his inability to work for progressives in the future.

Chris Lehane has become the story and thus can no longer effectively serve his new masters.

When will California Labor Federation Fire Chris Lehane?

From Gracchus as San Diego Politico on Chris Lehane:

Now that SEIU and Change to Win have fired Chris Lehane when is Cal Labor Fed going to step up and show him the door?
Good question. One would think it would have happened in a very public way by now.

Union Solidarity Against Chris Lehane

Jane Hamsher at Fire Dog Lake has analysis on the union response to Chris Lehane working to bust unions:

Lehane clearly sees himself working for companies that need someone to spin their way through corporate greed and unsafe working conditions. It's really great to see unions hanging together to hold him accountable for the amorality of these relationships and kick him over to the corporatist side of the aisle where he belongs.
I don't know how many progressive holiday parties are going to let Chris Lehane in the doors.

Chris Lehane Fired...Again for Union Busting

Markos at Daily Kos once again slams scab Chris Lehane with the latest news on his persona non grata position in progressive politics:

We found out this morning that major league asshole Chris Lehane had been fired by SEIU. I just got confirmation from Change to Win -- the coalition of seven top unions (including SEIU, Teamsters, and the Laborers) has also kicked Lehane to the curb.

I was given this statement by a CtW spokesman:

Change to Win had a general consulting contract with Chris Lehane. That contract was terminated upon discovery of his role supporting the studios in the writers guild strike. As you know, Change to Win and its affiliates stand solidly behind the writers in their struggle for fairness, so we did not think twice about this decision.
Nice.

Lehane may have a great future helping corporate America bust unions, but as long as he never works in progressive politics, it'll be a net win for our side.

Any progressive organization or Democrat or union that hires Chris Lehane ever again is going to face a united wrath from the base. Still no comment from Hillary Clinton.