Rick Berman and the Libertarian Shell Game
By David Weigel
Every few years, when a political battle becomes a slog for the left, the media recalls the existence of Berman and Co. The venerable right-wing marketing firm and its related network of "think tanks" (bare-bones organizations that place ads and op-eds) are not especially mysterious. Berman sat for a 60 Minutes profile in 2007, happily revealing how he churns donations from corporations into conveniently pro-corporate libertarian activism.* In 2010 the New York Times took a hard look at Berman's Center for Consumer Freedom and related organizations, cheeky groups that attacked animal rights and nutrition campaigns at the behest of the restaurant industry.
Berman's time has come again; today he's the subject of an A1 investigation and shaming from Eric Lipton, one of the best public interest journalists there is. Fittingly, it's probably the best "what the hell with this guy?" pieces in the Bermania genre. The hook is the Employment Policies Institute's push against a possible minimum wage hike, which Washingtonians have encountered every time they disembark at Capitol South Metro and see signs blaming Nancy Pelosi when teenagers can't find jobs. (Capitol South is the station closest to the House, which demonstrates how pointless the spending isthe House is not going to bring up a minimum wage hike.) Lipton buries EPI's** research with a few lines.
(EPI research director Michael) Saltsman, 30, who has an undergraduate degree in economics from the University of Michigan and previously worked for the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics, drafts dozens of letters to the editor and opinion articles for newspapers, arguing that increasing the minimum wage would hurt more than help. Other special institute projects included a recent survey of lawmakers who support the minimum wage increase asking if they pay their interns a report The Daily Caller, a conservative online publication, then released, calling out the lawmakers with unpaid interns as hypocrites.
The major reports released by the institute are prepared by outside academics, like Joseph J. Sabia, an associate professor of economics at San Diego State University, who has collected at least $180,000 in grant money from Mr. Bermans group over the last eight years to deliver seven separate reports, each one concluding that increasing the minimum wage has caused more harm than good or at least no significant benefit for the poor.
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http://www.slate.com/blogs/weigel/2014/02/10/rick_berman_and_the_libertarian_shell_game.html?wpisrc=burger_bar