Clinton may yet survive By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
THE booming US economy came to a sudden halt in the second quarter of this year. The Clinton presidency is now following suit in the third quarter. If I had to make an idle prediction, I would say that these two events may soon start to feed on each other in an accelerating downward spiral. It will not end until the excesses of the era have been cleaned out of the American system.
Possibly so, respond my friends in Arkansas, but don't bet on the demise of Bill Clinton just yet. They know from long experience that this is a man who carries a special gene for survival. Every kind of scandal swirled around him at one time or another during his 12-year tenure as state governor, whether it was money from a convicted cocaine dealer funding his election campaigns, or rumours of a joint bank account with a convicted fraudster (which later turned out to be true), or a record of seductions that, touchingly, showed no bias on grounds of race, class, age, weight or, for that matter, looks.
But charm always brought him through, and his cultural "cohort" in the American press has been famously unwilling to strike one of their own. In the 1992 presidential primaries, Gennifer Flowers appeared with tapes indicating that Mr Clinton had suborned perjury and had engaged in the criminal obstruction of a court proceeding.
"If everybody kinda hangs tough. If they don't have pictures, and if no one says anything, then they don't have anything," he can be heard saying to the blonde cabaret singer. The press responded by destroying her, not him. Six years later, Gennifer Flowers was essentially vindicated when the President admitted, in compelled testimony, that the two had indeed had a sexual relationship.
But things are rather different in 1998. Charm and a friendly press are no defence against a special prosecutor, appointed by the judicial branch, with a statutory duty to pursue evidence of wrong-doing by the President. There are different views about Kenneth Starr, of course. The White House has succeeded in demonising him as the Inquisitor from Hell, bent on overturning the verdict of a democratic election.
This is very useful. If he exonerates Mr Clinton, it will be said that even Mr Starr could not dig up any dirt, with his army of investigators, in a three-year witch-hunt that saw subpoenas delivered to half the population of Arkansas. (Or so goes the folklore.) If he indicts, or submits a report to Congress recommending impeachment, his motives can be impugned. Judging by the polls, the majority of Americans believe that he is "out to get" Mr Clinton by whatever means.
I can only laugh. In my own experience, Mr Starr is a trimming, limp-wristed procrastinator with the zeal of a plump sheep, who works part-time on the job, craves approval and bears the imprint of the last person who sat on him. He panicked when his own lead prosecutor told him there was evidence of an FBI cover-up of the 1993 death of the White House aide Vincent Foster. Mr Starr was not going to quarrel with the FBI. The case was shut down. His prosecutor resigned in disgust, and later accused the Office of the Independent Counsel of unethical behaviour.
But after years of ineffectual dithering, Kenneth Starr has at last got the bit between his teeth. Something must have nettled him. Mutterings about his incompetence within the legal fraternity, perhaps, or more likely an arms-length White House smear campaign that saw a private investigator hired to watch his social life. (It was alleged, falsely, that he had a mistress in Little Rock.)
In recent days, Mr Starr has secured the grand jury testimony of 11 Secret Service agents who work in the presidential protection detail. One of them reportedly served as a "facilitator", procuring "come hither" women spotted by the President on his trips around the country. It will be interesting to see if this agent can match the tally set by my good friend L D Brown, former corporal in the Arkansas State Police, who has testified under oath that he solicited more than 100 women for Bill Clinton during a two-year stint at the Governor's Mansion in the 1980s.
This Secret Service testimony seems to have convinced Mr Starr that he finally had enough evidence to move against the White House. He promptly issued Bill Clinton with a summons to appear before the grand jury, the first such subpoena ever served on a President. In quick succession, Monica Lewinsky's lawyers announced that she had agreed to a deal with the Office of the Independent Counsel, promising "full and truthful testimony" in exchange for blanket immunity from prosecution. Her mother, Marcia Lewis, who seems to have been an assiduous promoter of her daughter's Oval Office trysts, also struck a deal. And if that was not enough, Mr Starr won a separate victory when a federal appeals court ruled that Bruce Lindsey, the President's closest confidant at the White House, did not enjoy attorney-client privilege and would therefore have to testify as well.
It has been a long wait, but it now looks as if the shoe really is going to drop. According to press reports, Miss Lewinsky is prepared to testify that Clinton "encouraged" her to lie about their "alleged" affair under oath and to take evasive measures to cover their tracks, such as disposing of tell-tale gifts that had been subpoenaed as evidence. If true, she will be accusing him of suborning perjury, obstruction of justice and perjury in a federal lawsuit. That lawsuit, not that it matters much now, was the sexual harassment case of Paula Jones. The suit has since been thrown out of court, but Ms Jones has been granted something of a posthumous victory. The documents of her case have become foundation stones in Kenneth Starr's effort to prove a campaign of witness intimidation, witness tampering, serial perjury and assorted skulduggery by the President and his men.
I hesitate to conclude that Bill Clinton is doomed, however. What if he puts on one of his magnificent, lip-biting, teary acts of contrition in the Oval Office, with the whole nation watching bewitched on television, and ends with an admission of the Lewinsky affair and a plea for forgiveness? He could throw everything in the stew: the early death of his natural father; his abusive, alcoholic step-father; how they teased him at school and called him "fat boy"; his late mother's death from cancer; his feelings of deep remorse over the pain inflicted on his wife and daughter; his regret that he had let down the women and men of America who had put their trust in him, not once, but twice. It would be utterly nauseating, yet it might very well work in the mushy, sentimental, post-Christian morality of fin de siĆ cle America.
He may skate yet, as they say in Arkansas.
telegraph.co.uk |