Politics

Filmmaker bungles facts in attack on Roger Ailes, Koch brothers

Matthew Boyle Investigative Reporter
Font Size:

Robert Greenwald, the liberal filmmaker behind an anti-Fox News documentary, conceded to The Daily Caller that he did not practice due diligence when he attacked Ohio University’s George Washington Forum ahead of a presentation from Fox News Channel Chairman and CEO Roger Ailes.

In a column that ran on the Huffington Post and several left-wing blogs Monday, Greenwald alleged that Koch Industries magnates David and Charles Koch were subsidizing Ailes’ speech to Ohio University students. Greenwald wrote that because the Koch brothers donate to the Ohio University organization that hosted Ailes’ speech, they’re behind an effort to indoctrinate young people.

“Why would the esteemed Ohio University host a talk by the likes of Roger Ailes?” Greenwald wrote. “Maybe we should ask one of the talk’s patrons, Charles Koch.”

“Is it just me, or does it look like Charles Koch is paying the university to spread his right-wing ideology?” Greenwald asked later in his piece.

Greenwald also allowed that he was unsure of the details of the Kochs’ role with the sponsoring organization at the school. “In the case of Ohio University,” he wrote, “the full extent of Koch’s donations to the George Washington Forum isn’t known.”

The Koch brothers do contribute to the George Washington Forum, which is run by conservative professor Robert Ingram. But Ingram told The Daily Caller before Ailes’ presentation that he publicly lists his organization’s donors on its website, and that no outside figures — donors or otherwise — control its activities.

“A few years ago, we got a little seed grant from the Jack Miller Center and they said, ‘See what you can do with it,’” Ingram said. “So, I thought we’d set up a speaker series and try to bring not just conservatives and libertarians, but sort of contrarians — idiosyncratic people.”

“It’s about promoting intellectual diversity on this campus, and it’s also about promoting civil debate.”

Ingram said Greenwald did not attempt to contact him before publishing his column, which he said “seemed like bullying.”

Ingram said his first thought after reading the column was, “I have an email. People can ask me what my thoughts on this are.”

He added that Greenwald’s writing seemed calculated  “to intimidate me and, I have to assume, the university.”

“And it seemed that it was not at all ‘reported,’ which was strange for something — for stories — that complain that Ailes isn’t a reporter, right? So, you have reporters who don’t even check their facts.”

TheDC asked Greenwald why he hadn’t interviewed Ingram. “I have no idea who Robert Ingram is,” he replied. “Therefore [I] did not reach out to him.”

Still, Greenwald quoted Ingram, without naming him, in his column.

“The guy who invited him says the point was to get ‘perhaps the most influential newsman in America’ to spark a discussion about ‘free speech and the media,’ particularly given OU’s ‘first-rate school of journalism,’” Greenwald wrote, referring to comments Ingram made to an Ohio newspaper.

Confronted with this inconsistency, Greenwald backed off, explaining his first answer to TheDC by saying he had been “typing too fast this morning.”

Greenwald also defended his column as “an opinion piece posing a critical question: What does it mean when a billionaire, right-wing ideologue funds a program, and then that program gives a bullhorn to a right-wing ideological anti-journalist like Roger Ailes? What does it say about academic integrity?”

“I would be happy to write a follow-up piece incorporating Ingram’s comments,” Greenwald added. He did not, however, answer follow-up questions.

Ingram told TheDC that while some of the facts in Greenwald’s column are defensible, including the Kochs’ donation to his George Washington Forum, the result was unfair.

“It’s a tissue of misrepresentations and ad hominem,” Ingram said. “I mean, some of the facts are all correct, but they’re put together in a way that’s not intended to present the truth. They’re intended to present a kind of bald partisan position. It’s offensive.”

Media Matters for America’s Eric Boehlert also attacked Ohio University and Roger Ailes last week over the planned speaking event. Ingram said it was Boehlert’s writing that “just seemed to engage in sort of ad hominem.”

“I dealt with this same type of thing when [former Bush Justice Department official] John Yoo came on the campus” to speak, Ingram said in a later interview outside a campus coffee shop.

“Sitting right here, in this very spot, I had a very senior professor say to me: ‘I am a free speech absolutist, except in this case.’ Then I said, ‘Well, then you’re not a free speech absolutist.’ You either are or you aren’t. It’s like you can’t be ‘kind of pregnant.’ You have to be, or have to not be, and I think it’s just hypocritical.”

Ingram uses his faculty tenure — something conservatives and libertarians often criticize — to ensure contrasting views are heard on campus. “Tenure exists for academic freedom,” Ingram said. “I have tenure, and I’m going to exercise it. I don’t really care what they think.”

He added that his goal is to bring speakers to campus who can present alternative viewpoints.

“The Washington Forum is the way to express that, for me,” he said. “Much of your daily job [as a professor] is spent making sure trains run on time.”

This piece was updated after publication.

Follow Matthew on Twitter