Do it for the children:
December 11, 1998
To the Wavering Republicans
By Mark Helprin, a novelist and contributing editor of the Journal.
If you think of the achievements of your predecessors, you need neither waver nor fear. Yours is the party of Lincoln. It was born of unpopular principle and did not hesitate to wage civil war and tear the nation asunder for the sake of equal justice. More recently and despite insult and injury from the advocates of accommodation it held the line at the end of the Cold War, to defend the principle of self-government. There is no end to principles it can support, no end to battles it can fight, and no brake on the number of adherents it can attract if it will operate courageously and in service of what is great and transcendent.
Greatness and transcendence are why people join political parties, and why they go to war. It is why they risk and sacrifice, and engage in political argument. Ultimately they are moved by principle, and will for its sake throw aside or forgo the material things that scoundrel politicians think they hold above all else.
Though Republican leaders have not dared to address it forthrightly, thus leaving the field to a president and his supporters who grow day by day in boldness and mendacity, Bill Clinton's problem is neither personal nor political, it is how he governs. Regardless of the precise nature of the independent counsel's legal referrals, such things as the FBI files, the Travel Office firings, the extortion of money from impoverished Indian tribes, and the abuse of presidential powers to evade criminal responsibility happened on the president's watch, they all point to him, and he is answerable. President Nixon did not himself burglarize the Watergate, and was originally unaware of a break-in. He was, however, rightly held to account, and according to the standards by which he was judged President Clinton would by now have been required to leave office.
Every springtime does not bring a semen-stained dress. Of the key Whitewater witnesses, two live in the family quarters of the White House; one died in a federal prison alone and in disgrace; one is dead by his own hand, the documents from his White House office levitating into a closet in the family quarters alluded to above; one, a felon, speaks of rolling over for the residents of these same family quarters and has obviously been paid to do so; one, the former wife of the dead federal prisoner, will not testify until fish grow hair; one, with credibility problems, has sung; and all others hang tough.
Quids, Pros and Quos
This pattern, as if plagiarized from a Martin Scorsese movie about the Cosa Nostra, continues into the campaign finance investigation, with 60 witnesses taking the Fifth and many others rendered inaccessible by flight. All fight doggedly, but apprehensible by everyone who can read a newspaper is that the president's campaign received millions of dollars originating in the People's Republic of China, that the contributors have been identified as agents of China, that by presidential exception much in the way of nuclear-relevant supercomputers, missile technology, and previously restricted machine tools have found their way to China, and that the quids, the pros, and the quos go all the way back to Little Rock.
There is so much more that one needs thick guidebooks (which The Wall Street Journal has actually published) to describe just the portion of the iceberg visible above the water. But the trails are brushed and the tracks are covered with obsessive and remarkable industry, even in the relatively transparent Lewinsky affair. To this day, the president admits only to having misled, which all presidents do from time to time, and to having had an inappropriate relationship, which could mean, for example, flirting while playing knock-hockey.
But Clinton/Lewinsky is an anomaly. No one is dead, no one is in China, and purely by accident the president's habitual practices and methods have come to light and been pinned down ineluctably. No matter how heavy the torrents of obfuscation, it is clear that the president has committed a number of serious crimes against the system of justice he is sworn to uphold, and they are no more about sex than the theft of money from a cash register is about business.
Perjury is not sex, obstruction is not sex, and abuse of power is not sex. They stem from an effort to cover up the evidence of a case in which the highest elected official in a state selected a woman who was then escorted to him by his police, and who was next commanded to get down on her knees and the rest is well known. That is not sex, it is abuse of power, plain and simple. It is the root of the Paula Jones case (tried unfittingly under the law of sexual harassment, as a body of regulations concerning abuse of power is obviated by the existence of impeachment). It is thus the root of the Lewinsky case. And it is the reason the president went to such lengths to suppress the essentially political truth of this incident.
No American politician or officeholder in any capacity who under color of his authority treats a citizen with such contemptuous injustice has the right to any office of public trust at any time thereafter, including, and perhaps most obviously, the presidency.
The defense of the president by his allies has become a nightmarish excursion into sophistry, stupidity, and insincerity. Are we now in the fifth or the sixth cycle of false contrition? What could be more telling, and perhaps divinely appropriate, than that one of his chief defenders is a man who did not know that a prostitution ring was operating out of his own apartment? Other indignant enthusiasts of the point of order, with throbbing conviction, liken the president of the United States, the most powerful man in the world--he who raises millions at a single dinner, who commands armies of soldiers and lawyers, who has bent the vast apparatus of state into his own interest, who is protected by an immense guard for which he asserts privileges previously unknown in American history, who sits in his huge plane on the runway at LAX as his hair is cut--to a slave.
Quite obviously these partisans are attempting to infect the law with Alice-in-Wonderland gobbledygook designed to enforce the idea that truth is merely the servant of power. By their facile reckoning Kenneth Starr is Inspector Javert in mad pursuit of Jean Valjean. But, for once stealing a loaf of bread, the upright and saintly Jean Valjean would have been returned to the quarries and almost certain death. Is Javert comparable to the independent counsel, whose struggle has been merely to establish the truth of a thing against hysterical resistance and every type of log throwing imaginable? And the punishment in this case is not death for having long ago stolen a loaf of bread but, rather, on account of multiple, habitual, and continuing violations, transgressions, and lies, to move out of the White House.
Bill Clinton is neither Jean Valjean nor a persecuted slave. Rather, he is a unique creature devoted to the frenzied cultivation and consumption of the adoration of strangers.
He is a man who takes credit for what he has not done, denies responsibility for what he has, lies with a Picasso-like genius, uses the Oval Office as a kind of duck blind for hunting zaftig Valley Girls, and, had he honor, shame, or even a sense of humor, would already have resigned a hundred times.
The wonder that even out of pure partisanship or indelible loyalty he has so many defenders in his own party may be explained by the greater wonder that Republican leaders have sat so long on such a low fence. This they have done out of fear that the American people may be sufficiently corrupted that in 2000 they will punish the GOP for standing against, among other things, perjury. This is not a heroic view of the American sense of justice, which though at times slow to awake has, like the long gray line, never failed us.
Perhaps the leaders, who seem not to have the courage even to follow, think we have sunk irretrievably into moral relativism and have forgotten whence we came and what we did along the way. Perhaps they believe that in a Senate trial, in which the jury would be asked to judge carefully narrowed charges, more than a third of the senators will disregard and offend the Constitution by basing their decisions not on a finding of innocence or guilt but on their opinions of the proceedings or their partisan loyalties--as perhaps they will, though perhaps they won't. Certainly the Republican leaders fear an electoral debacle when the two-thirds of the American people commonly cited as opposing impeachment next vote.
But if the middle third does not swing--as it did, after long delay, against slavery, for intervention in World War II, for universal suffrage, for equal justice regardless of race--it is because it will not have heard the appeal of those in appropriately high places, that appeal never having been made.
Where are the speaker designate, the Senate majority leader, the governors, the emerging presidential candidates, and the former presidents? Certainly they must have an opinion on this grave matter that has so long preoccupied the nation. Are they for impeachment, or against it? This vote is up or down. It is either one thing or another, pro or con, night or day, freeze or boil. We know very well who the president is, some of what he has done, and what he is made of. Of Republicans, however, even Republicans are now entitled to ask, who exactly are you, what do you stand for, and what are you going to do?
Blob of Ooze
The leaders should know and the waverers should know that even from a purely political perspective it is better to fall with the truth firmly in hand than to stand for a few additional moments the prisoner of one's own ambition. It is, as well, poor politics to surrender in the face of every difficulty and danger and to stand consistently for nothing but what is safe. That is not how a political party gains adherents or even respect. It is not how a political party wins elections. It is, rather, how a political party is transformed into a blob of ooze.
Honorable members, vote what you think is right, not what will preserve your office, and, God willing, you will get what is right and your office will be preserved. Think of the American soldier, who gave his life for the principles you are now charged to uphold. When, over the course of centuries, he was asked to give all for the sake of holding a hill or taking a trench, he was able to see that upon small things great things ride. Neither a lawyer nor a member of Congress nor sometimes even schooled, he understood the way things connect and the way battles are won. If you keep in mind what he sacrificed and with what knowledge, can you then, out of fear, ratify one standard for the president and one for the common man? Can you not rise to the occasion, as he did?
You must be able to say, when all this is long done, "I was there. I was told that America had lost its will to justice, that the country had changed, that I would have no say about this, and that it was not for me to judge. But I voted otherwise." For when you vote you will be deciding not the life of the nation but your honor, which is the only thing you have that no one can take from you if you so determine. When you vote you will either reaffirm that we are a nation of laws or you will decide that we are not. You will either bestow upon the president kingly rights that no president ever has had, or you will keep the president one of us. You will either give your imprimatur to corruption, or you will withhold it. You will either confirm the exceptional constitutional character of these United States or you will, after more than 200 years, carelessly contradict the hopeful chapter of history in which we have proclaimed that no man is above the law.
Though you have no choice but to vote in the moral twilight of our times, you can be certain that what you do in the next few days will be illuminated by the light of history. Therefore, rise to the occasion. Lead the people. Uphold your oath. Protect the Constitution. Confound power, and put it in its place. Honorable members . . . stand and deliver. interactive.wsj.com |