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Politics : Did Slick Boink Monica? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Les H who wrote (18897)9/6/1998 10:26:00 AM
From: Les H  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 20981
 
Dirty Dozen
Twelve ethical legacies of the Clinton presidency

By Thomas W. Hazlett

President Clinton is casting about for his legacy. When you look at his
accomplishments--rescuing Haitian democracy, resurrecting George
Bush's five-year budget plan, saving Social Security and Medicare from
reforms that might unfairly slash the tax rate for future Americans below
84 percent--you've got to marvel at how the whole system just keeps on
purring. Indeed, since November 1994, the Dow has increased from under
4,000 to around 8,000, arguably the greatest bull run in history. And no
one can say that Clinton wasn't the magician who produced the
impossible: a Republican Congress.

But Clinton will be remembered for even more profound changes: He has
redrawn the rules of the political game itself. It used to be that if you got
caught redhanded, you were ashamed--and you were gone.

Thanks to Clinton, however, disclosure of unethical behavior--from a
$100,000 bribe for then-Gov. Clinton laundered through Hillary's pork
bellies account, to shaking down Indian tribes for campaign cash, to a
national security adviser's failing to unload stock shares that violated
ethics rules, to a sitting president's breaking campaign finance laws by
agreeing to set aside $1 million to pay Federal Election Commission fines
(signing off on the memo with a most descriptive "ugh")--just doesn't pack
the same wallop. Clinton's ability to bob and weave--and to let his
opponents punch themselves out--has allowed him to lead "the most
ethical administration in history" by a revolutionary moral standard.

Here's a brief synopsis of Clinton's ethical legacy, a string of
rationalizations for opportunism which have turned humiliation into
ho-hum.

1. No controlling legal authority. You laughed--but it worked! Despite the
testimony of one irate Democratic mark who dubbed White House-based
phone calls a "shakedown," this was the fig leaf our Accomplice General
Janet Reno donned to let the vice president and the president slide after
violating the plain language of the statute prohibiting fund raising on
federal property.

2. Personal foibles are off-limits. The press now dutifully reports that
"womanizing" (expansively defined to encompass on-the-job solicitation
of subordinates) is a matter of personal preference--a private issue for the
First Couple. But, alas, these politicos keep pushing their family stories
on us. These days, Bill boasts of Chelsea no less than Hillary, and who can
forget tobacco farmer Al strategically recounting his sister's cancer death
at the Democratic Convention in '96?

3. Who cares about Arkansas? There's a brand new statute of limitations: If
you get elected president, all crimes committed prior to the election get
wiped clean. Poor Spiro Agnew, getting busted on that petty theft as
governor--of a small Southern state, no less.

4. Even if we did sell access, contributors weren't given anything of value.
Donors like Roger Tamraz, various Indian tribes, and Johnnie Chung (who
likened the White House to a toll gate) tell a different tale. The
administration claims that the influence seekers who forked out millions
to the Clinton-Gore '96 effort were just plain suckers. Right. And Al
Capone was a legit businessman who just forgot to pay his taxes.

5. According to the polls, no one cares about political scandals. A
groundswell of concern cannot logically precede revelations of
skullduggery. The media must first expose and excoriate the
banditos--which they have not done, citing the lack of public interest!

6. It's the economy, stupid. The received wisdom is that the citizenry is fat
and happy: Why care about political shenanigans when fourth quarter
GDP growth is above 3 percent? If only the Teapot Domers had thought of
that.

7. These charges of wrongdoing are thinly veiled attacks by Republican
partisans! Excellent point--as is the precisely opposite point that charges
of Republican partisanship are pure Democratic partisanship.

8. The bumpkin defense. In violation of every administrative protection an
innocent citizen has against his government, 900 FBI files are purloined
and quarantined in the office of a political dirty trickster in charge of
opposition research. Clinton's winning defense: It was just an "honest
bureaucratic snafu."

9. All this illegal fund raising proves the need for campaign finance
reform. Swallowed whole by the "watchdogs" of the press, this line
suggests more than an "honest bureaucratic snafu." It declares: Passing
laws is the business of government--not abiding by them.

10. Everybody does it. There's not a teenager in America who hasn't tried
this one, but usually only those who grow up to be featured on America's
Most Wanted actually get away with it.

11. It's nothing like Watergate. Well, Watergate was nothing like
Watergate until people talked, subpoenas were answered, and the tapes
played.

12. Prove it! As indictments and convictions mount, big shots above the
Webb Hubbells and Mike Espys remain tough nuts to crack, especially
when a code of silence kicks in. As FBI Director Louis Freeh observed last
year during campaign finance hearings, he had seen so many witnesses
flee the country or take the Fifth only once before in his career: when
looking into organized crime.

The president promised to bring the American people change. Promise
kept. Legacy claimed.

>>>http://www.reason.com/
>>>
>>>Clinton's greatest legacy is a Republican Congress.