Mike Elk has an interesting post over at the Michael Moore website:
Dismissal Signals Change in Direction for Huffpost:
Last Thursday, I was "fired" as a labor blogger from the Huffington Post by executive business editor Peter Goodman for helping a group of union construction workers disrupt a conference of bankers. (I put fired in quotations marks because I, like the majority of people who blog for the site, was not paid for my contributions.) The workers demanded to know why Pulte Group's vice chairwoman was leading the summit, and how her company grabbed a $900 million government bailout made up of funds that came from the Worker, Homeownership and Business Assistance Act of 2009. That bill was intended to create jobs and extend benefits to unemployed workers,
but union workers said no jobs were created with this money.
Goodman, who was recently hired away from the New York Times, informed me in a phone conversation that he received complaints from the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA) about my role in disrupting their convention. I received media accreditation for the conference based on my status as a blogger with the Huffington Post. I then shared my accreditation with a union leader in order to help him gain access to this event.
Goodman said this warranted the termination of my role as a blogger with the Huffington Post. During our phone conversation, he said I misrepresented my relationship as a blogger with the Huffington Post, and he compared my actions to those of disgraced New York Times reporter Jayson Blair. Up until last week, my relationship with the Huffington Pot consisted of me producing over 100 posts without them paying me a dime.
Huffington Post recruited Mike Elk as a contributor because: "its editors thought I could tell an entertaining and often edgy story by personalizing my involvement in labor struggles." He did not receive pay for his articles and was never offered a contract. He remained because HuffPost did not place any restrictions on what he could write about and because it offered him an opportunity to represent the struggles of working people.
The action that led to his dismissal was his decision to take an activist stand at the Jan 19 Mortgage Bankers Association summit in Washington, DC. He got in by identifying himself as a blogger for Huffington Post. He also shared his press credentials with a union leader, which helped that leader get 200 members of the Sheet Metal Workers' International Association and the International Union of Painters and Allied Trades onto the conference floor. The union members were protesting against the Pulte Group, one of the largest homebuilders in the US. Union members complained that Pulte received $900 billion in tax breaks from the federal government, which was intended to create jobs. The jobs never materialized, in fact Pulte has laid off workers.
Union members apparently have a valid beef with Pulte; but, editor Peter Goodman informed Elke that his 'stunt' had damaged Huffpost's reputation. This was the first time that Huffington Post has dismissed any blogger for using 'guerilla tactics' in pursuit of a story. Mike Elk's departure means that the Huffington Post no longer has any full-time labor blogger or reporter. Does this signal a shift to the right by the website?
The Huffington Post has helped redefine journalistic rules and ethics. Now, with actions like my dismissal and the hiring of mainstream establishment journalists like Howard Fineman and Peter Goodman, it's signaling that it is abandoning its guerilla roots and adopting a more mainstream, corporate style of objective journalism. This strand of corporate journalism was unable to expose unnecessary wars and looming economic catastrophes. It has failed us time and again. In contrast, my unconventional actions helped expose a nearly $1 billion scandal.