Learning organization #fail: Save The Children’s PR to defend Blair is almost worse than award itself
Since I wrote my initial post on the Save The Children award for Tony Blair on Sunday , the story has gained some considerable momentum; it has been widely shared and discussed in my social networks-so I probably underestimated how interested many people are in this story and how disappointed they feel with an award for Tony Blair. So how does Save The Children respond? With, excuse my language, a variety of PR farts , e.g. quoted in the Guardian : The first question was: “Why would Save the Children chose (sic) to provide one of its most prestigious award – ‘a global legacy award’ to a man accused of being a war criminal?” In response, Eileen Burke, STC’s director of media and communications in the US, circulated “a line” explaining Blair was selected for the award for debt relief work and the Make Poverty History campaign. “Otherwise we are not in a position to respond to some of the geopolitical questions below,” she wrote in a separate email. A development INGO (which stands for ...