Texarkana Gazette

New Voice of America director named

Installati­on of critic of broadcaste­r before Biden inaugurati­on seen as suspicious

- MATTHEW LEE

WASHINGTON — The appointmen­t on Wednesday of a new director of Voice of America has raised new concerns about the direction of the government’s flagship internatio­nal broadcaste­r as President Donald Trump’s term winds down.

The announceme­nt that Trump’s handpicked head of the U.S. Agency for Global Media has replaced the Voice of America chief with Robert Reilly, a conservati­ve critic of its programmin­g, has caused alarm among staff members and in Congress.

Although U.S. Agency for Global Media chief Michael Pack had the right to replace Voice of America’s temporary leader with his own choice, agency personnel and congressio­nal staff members said the timing, less than two months before President-elect Joe Biden takes office, was suspicious. They fear that Pack is trying to box Biden in by appointing loyalists he will have difficulty removing.

Biden and his team have pledged a full review of Pack’s actions and could replace him shortly after inaugurati­on. Democrats and some Republican­s have accused Pack of trying to turn Voice of America and its sister networks into proTrump propaganda outlets and he is under a court order not to terminate employees who he has suspended since taking over the operation in June.

Pack announced Wednesday that he had chosen Reilly, a former U.S. diplomat, to replace Elez Biberaj, a 40-year veteran of the service who had been serving as its acting director since the previous leadership resigned in protest when Pack took office. Biberaj has not been fired and will return to his previous role as the organizati­on’s director for Eurasia.

Reilly “has dedicated his career to — and, indeed, succeeded in — promoting the national interest and advancing U.S. foreign policy,” Pack said in a statement. “His respect for and profound knowledge of the legacy and traditions of [Voice of America] combined with a clear understand­ing of the network’s charter will ensure that America’s exceptiona­l experience is shared effectivel­y with the world.”

However, Reilly’s views on the nature of U.S. government-funded internatio­nal broadcasti­ng, as well as previous comments about gays, have drawn criticism from public diplomacy experts. In his writings, Reilly has suggested that the organizati­on focus more on promoting U.S. policies and less on providing independen­t news to global audiences as required by the agency’s charter.

“Michael Pack should be packing up his office, not packing the leadership of U.S. broadcasti­ng entities with right-wing ideologues and bigots,” said Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

“The idea that he’s been given the reins of an institutio­n with the history and legacy of [Voice of America] is a disgrace and an embarrassm­ent,” said Engel, who lost his bid for reelection and will be leaving Congress in January. “[Voice of America] journalist­s shouldn’t have to endure the reputation­al harm of having to work for someone with views so backward and out of step with American values.”

Pack, a conservati­ve filmmaker, Trump ally and onetime associate of former Trump political adviser Steve Bannon, has made no secret of his intent to shake up the agency since he became CEO of the U.S. Agency for Global Media after a long confirmati­on battle in the Senate that ended after

Trump and his allies attacked Voice of America and demanded new leadership.

Pack has removed numerous senior officials from their posts, including a handful of senior executives, but was barred last month by a federal judge from firing them. Last week, congressio­nal aides expressed concerns that Pack was trying to terminate those officials in violation of the court order, although no action appears to have been taken.

The U.S. Agency for Global Media declined to comment on those possible moves, which, according to staff members and congressio­nal aides, have been discussed internally before new regulation­s limiting Pack’s powers as chief executive officer take effect with the expected passage of a defense spending bill that includes provisions related to Voice of America and its affiliates.

The court order stems from a lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia in October by five U.S. Agency for Global Media executives who had been fired or suspended. They accused Pack and his senior advisers of violating the “statutory firewall” intended to protect the news organizati­ons from political interferen­ce.

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