Misleading advertisements
October 28, 2008 | By Nathaniel Ward
The Heritage Foundation today asked Barack Obama to immediately pull two ads that misrepresent the views of Heritage's Rea Hederman. The campaign has released a 30-second TV ad with false information and repeats it on the campaign website.
The following letter was sent by Heritage lawyer Alan P. Dye to the Obama campaign.
Dear Senator Obama:
Two recent campaign advertisements seriously misrepresent the views of my client, The Heritage Foundation. They suggest, quite falsely, that The Heritage Foundation and one of its analysts support your tax plan.
The print ad on your Website as well as your ad entitled "Try This" reference a quote from policy analyst Rea Hederman. In fact, Mr. Hederman never said what is quoted there. Rather, the words you quote are from a New York Sun reporter who interviewed Mr. Hederman and summarized his views erroneously.
That the reporter's summary is erroneous is evident from the actual quotes from Mr. Hederman presented in the article, which make is quite clear that Mr. Hederman believes your tax plan would be bad not only for the country, but for the middle class. By omitting the direct quotes from Heritage that are contained in the article and attributing to Heritage a conflicting statement not made by its analyst, the advertisement appears to be an intentional attempt to mislead.
Surely there can be no doubt within your campaign as to how Heritage truly views your tax plan. When one of your economic advisors, Jeffrey Liebman, made this same misrepresentation in a September 4, 2008 letter to The Wall Street Journal, Mr. Hederman promptly sent a corrective and very public letter. It appeared in the September 16 issue of The Wall Street Journal under the title: "A Bad Plan That Is Less Bad Is Still Not A Very Good Plan." In it, Mr. Hederman strenuously decried Mr. Liebman's blatant misrepresentation and set the record straight.
The Heritage Foundation believes that your advertisements' use of its name is not only not a fair use of its intellectual property, but is an intentional attempt to mislead and misinform voters. As a responsible candidate, you should insist that your campaign cease to run these false advertisements immediately.
Very truly yours,
Alan P. Dye
The Heritage Foundation has conducted several analyses comparing Senator Obama's tax proposals to that of Senator John McCain.
- Heritage's most recent analysis concluded that McCain's tax proposals would do more to strengthen the economy than Obama's.
- A comprehensive report by Heritage's Center for Data Analysis closely compared the two tax plans and measured their economic impacts. It concluded that the McCain plan would have overall better economic effects. A related study compared job creation arising under the two tax plans on a state-by-state basis.
It's perhaps telling that the campaign advertisement did not cite any of these reports.
Other Heritage work of note
- Congress continues to turn to The Heritage Foundation for analysis of their economic proposals. Last Friday, Heritage expert Bill Beach testified before lawmakers about the effects of their proposed new "stimulus" package. You can watch his latest testimony online on MyHeritage.org.
- The collapse of Hawaii's government-run health care program for children reveals the fundamental weakness of all such programs, Heritage President Ed Feulner writes in the Indianapolis Star. What happened? People started canceling their private health insurance to take advantage of the "free" public health coverage, driving up costs for taxpayers. This, Feulner writes, "was a predictable outcome," but too many liberals seem determined to press ahead with their insurance schemes regardless.
In other news
- Chrysler and General Motors are looking to merge, and they want taxpayers to help foot the bill. They may get funds from the $700 billion economic rescue plan—on top of the recent $25 billion bailout for automakers.
- Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) was convicted yesterday on seven counts of corruption.
- After American forces targeted terrorists in Syria over the weekend, that country's government has shuttered American institutions in their country.
- Twelve million Americans have already voted in next week's election, according to one tally.
Upcoming webcasts
All webcasts will be shown live on MyHeritage.org. Recordings will be made available for online viewing after the event concludes.
- On Wednesday, October 29 at 8:00 p.m., Richard Allen, who served as President Reagan's national security adviser, delivers the annual B.C. Lee Lecture to celebrate the 25th anniversary of Heritage's Asian Studies Center.
Coming up at Heritage
To attend these or any other events at Heritage please RSVP at Heritage's website. Or you can view these events live online. All times are Eastern.
- On Thursday, November 6 at 11:00 a.m., Sichan Siv recalls his escape from the killing fields in Cambodia.
- On Friday, November 14 at noon, Guatemalan Vice President Rafael Espada discusses his country's ongoing challenges and opportunities.
Nathaniel Ward is the Editor of MyHeritage.org—a website for members and supporters of The Heritage Foundation. David Talbot contributed to this report.