Fri
Feb 4 2011
11:05 am

Haslam's new communications guy Tom Griscom on timing of the announcement regarding disclosures: "I do not want it to be out when there is media at the residence. If he answers any questions, they should be light, tied to the first weekend, getting ready to go to work etc."

According to this AP report in the KNS: The wording of the release and internal e-mails obtained by The Associated Press through a public records request indicate that senior advisers carefully planned the media strategy for informing the public about the decision.

Maybe they need to setup a Yahoo account.

Topics:
R. Neal's picture

This shouldn't come as any

This shouldn't come as any surprise. In case you didn't know, here's more about Tom Griscom:

Previously, Griscom was the executive vice president for external relations for the RJ Reynolds Tobacco company. He was a Director of Communications for President of the United States Ronald Reagan; a Press Secretary for former U.S. Senator Howard Baker, Tennessee Republican;[2] an employee of Rupert Murdoch's News Ltd; and a public relations consultant with Powell-Tate.

Before entering the political and lobbying business, he was political editor at The Chattanooga News-Free Press. In 1978 Griscom joined the staff of Senator Baker and later became part of the Reagan administration. As Baker's senior staff person, he essentially ran day-to-day operations at the White House while Baker was chief of staff, and he maintained the strong links between the administration and the Republican Party. [1]

[..]

In 1990 he joined Reynolds Tobacco as head of its External Relations program, and over the next ten years he was responsible for the company's strategic operations against the growing anti-smoking forces. He also administered and organized the company's involvement in the many cooperative campaigns conducted with Philip Morris and the Tobacco Institute in lobbying the United States Congress to block anti-smoking legislation. RJR also took a lead role at this time in conducting misinformation campaigns for media and public consumption—especially in the promotion of the idea that health regulations were largely the product of junk science.

Not long after joining RJR, Griscom became a key director on the management committee of the Tobacco Institute, responsible for secretly funding friendly think tanks and other organizations, and for organizing scientists, lawyers and other business allies to attack regulatory measures which blocked cigarette advertising, or those which introduced environmental and health regulations. [3]

Steve Milloy, who ran the fake 'scientific grassroots' organisation known as the Advancement of Sound Science Coalition (TASSC) and its website for Philip Morris on behalf of the tobacco industry, was transferred in mid-1996 to the control of Reynolds under Griscom [4] when TASSC and the junkscience.com links with Philip Morris were exposed.

Griscom subcontracted the administration of this "sound-science" operation to Jody Powell (ex-press secretary to President Jimmy Carter) and Sheila Tate, (First Lady Nancy Reagan's adviser) at Powell-Tate. RJR and Powell-Tate also handled the distribution of Milloy's book Science without Sense, supposedly published by the Cato Institute (which was itself funded by tobacco interests). [5] [6] Similar books were commissioned and payment laundered through 'think-tanks' for academic authors. [7]

One other 'successful' program run at this time was to characterise relatively harmless substances as 'potentially cancerous' as part of the industry's 'sound-science' campaign. Attempts were made by Griscom's PR staff to both promote and ridicule the idea that coffee could cause cancer via Milloy's junk-science web pages and op-ed articles planted in newspapers. This created the straw-man idea that everything enjoyable could be classed as potentially dangerous (to counter fears about passive smoking) no one could live without taking the normal risks associated with living. [8] Smoking, they implied, was no different from drinking coffee.

Griscom's communications and media division of RJR was also responsible for the hiring of state and federal lobbyists and the creation and planting of ghost-written articles and letters to the editor in the major newspapers and magazines. [9] They also promoted seemingly normal tours by comedians, musicians, artists, etc. who were all carefully trained and contracted to promote the pro-smoking message. [10] [11]

In 1997-1998, Griscom represented R.J. Reynolds on the long series of tobacco industry negotiations with the State Attorneys-General, the Justices Department, the White House and its agencies, which led to the February 1998 Master Settlement Agreement, in which the tobacco industry agreed to pay hundreds of millions of dollars in compensation for Medicaid costs associated with smoking in order to avoid charges made under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO).

michael kaplan's picture

responsible for the company's

responsible for the company's strategic operations against the growing anti-smoking forces

fits with the governor's 'healthy lifestyle' dictum ..

jcgrim's picture

Manufactured lies

Wow. Maybe electronic media will expose corporate PR flacks and their government toadies.

Griscom represents what has long been an attack on many critical public issues by PR flacks with connections in industry and government. Oil, tobacco and defense industries and now health care and financial institutions are experts in orchestrating and misleading the public about established scientific knowledge. Their goal is to cast doubt. Our government officials capitalize on ensuing confusion and enact mandates or insert wording into laws propping corporate financial interests- not the public interest. Very undemocratic, don't you think?

The PR template follows a predictable pattern. Co-opt small groups of scientists to refute independent data to discredit valid studies. Fund "independent" think-tanks to crank out seemingly valid reports that have pre-determined,industry friendly outcomes. Personally attack established scientists with false smears. Feed the mis-information to an uncritical media. Thus, the public has no understanding of some of the most critical issues facing the country.

Read "Merchants of Doubt" by Naomi Oreskes & Erik M. Conway (2010). Watch our own UTK grad Wendell Potter on the health insurance industry propaganda campaign:

(link...)

(link...)

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

TN Progressive

TN Politics

Knox TN Today

Local TV News

News Sentinel

    State News

    Wire Reports

    Lost Medicaid Funding

    To date, the failure to expand Medicaid/TennCare has cost the State of Tennessee ? in lost federal funding. (Source)

    Search and Archives