Former Time magazine editor Richard Stengel who as former Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs represented Secretary of State John Kerry at meetings of the Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG)–the former governing body of the agency which has been renamed in 2018 the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM)– has been selected by President-Elect Biden to be the team lead transition volunteer for the USAGM agency review team. USAGM, which is an independent federal agency, oversees five networks: two federal organizations — the Voice of America and the Office of Cuba Broadcasting, which oversees Radio and TV Martí — and three non-profit organizations — Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Radio Free Asia and the Middle East Broadcasting Networks — which receive grants from USAGM. Stengel is being criticized for his earlier call to restrict free speech in the United States by making “hate speech” illegal.
Current USAGM CEO, Michael Pack, was nominated by President Trump and after a long delay when former Obama administration appointees were in charge of the agency during the first three years of the Trump administration, Pack was confirmed by the U.S. Senate last June in a largely partisan vote for a three-year term.
It is not clear that Pack can be forced to resign until he completes his three-year term. The bipartisan legislation which established his office and was signed by President Obama in December 2016 set the term of the first agency CEO to three years. However, according to an article in VOX, quoting Andrew Bates, a spokesperson for the former vice president’s campaign, Biden definitely wants to fire Michael Pack.
Other transition volunteers for USAGM are: Rumana Ahmed, National Democratic Institute, Brian Conniff, Middle East Broadcasting Networks (Retired), Raina Gardiner, Juggernaut, LLC, Bruce Sherman, Self-employed, Dana Shell Smith, Self-employed, and Margaret Taylor, Brookings Institution. Agency review teams are responsible for understanding the operations of each agency, ensuring a smooth transfer of power, and preparing for President-Elect Biden and Vice-President-Elect Harris to assume their duties.
Stengel is an on-air analyst at MSNBC, a strategic advisor at Snap Inc., and a Distinguished Fellow at the Atlantic Council. His 2019 book, Information Wars: How we Lost the Battle Against Disinformation and What to Do About It, recounts his time in the State Department countering Russian disinformation and ISIS propaganda.
Stengel’s October 29, 2019 op-ed in The Washington Post, “Why America needs a hate speech law,” has been criticized immediately after it was written, with new criticism emerging after President-Elect Biden has appointed him to lead the transition at the U.S. government agency responsible for promoting free speech and free press abroad.
David Harsanyi, a senior writer for National Review, wrote that that “Biden Appoints Free-Speech Antagonist to Sell Free Speech Abroad.”
New York Post published an op-ed: “Joe Biden transition official wrote op-ed advocating free speech restrictions.”
An article in PJMedia by Robert Spencer was titled: “Biden Transition Official Believes the First Amendment Has a ‘Design Flaw’ — His Remedy Is to Curb Free Speech.”
Richard Stengel’s Washington Post op-ed also received earlier criticism from The Atlantic in a article “Bad Arguments for Limiting Speech .”
The following additional information about Richard Stengel is on the USAGM website:
Stengel has served as the managing editor of Time magazine since 2006, overseeing the magazine, Time.com, Time Books and Time for Kids. Stengel received the News and Documentary Emmy Award in 2012 for Time.com’s Beyond 9/11: Portraits of Resilience, on which he served as executive producer. In 2010, he was awarded Citizen of the Year at the Annual National Conference on Citizenship and the 2010 Lifetime of Idealism Award. He has also authored several books, including Mandela’s Way: Fifteen Lessons on Life, which has drawn praise from President Bill Clinton, Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and Deepak Chopra.
From 2004 to 2006, Stengel was the President and Chief Executive Officer of the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia. In 2000, Stengel served as a Senior Adviser and Chief Speechwriter for Bill Bradley’s Presidential campaign. He graduated magna cum laude from Princeton University and studied English as a Rhodes Scholar at Christ Church, Oxford.
Stengel, Pack, Biden, Trump — it really doesn’t matter a heck of a lot who’s at the top as long as the same mid-level management team that has made mediocrity the status quo is still running the newsroom. With some luck, Mr. Stengel comes equipped with a large broom