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Politics : Bill Clinton Scandal - SANITY CHECK -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John Lacelle who wrote (3890)9/19/1998 8:37:00 PM
From: Les H  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 67261
 
From this next week's Economist:

Just go

"NOTHING in his life became him like the leaving it,"
says Malcolm of Cawdor in "Macbeth". In Bill Clinton's
case, nothing in his presidency condemns him like his
failure to leave it. He has broken his trust and disgraced
his office, but he clings on. Saving his skin at all costs,
against the odds, has become the theme of his political
career. Each escape is notched up as a victory. But every
time he wriggles through-grubbier, slicker, trailing longer
festoons of contrition-he does more damage to his
country.

In New York this week it was as if nothing had happened. "Business as usual"
was the phrase. His wife was smiling at him again. Cabinet members were
applauding. The Dow was rallying. At the party fund-raisers the president
attended, not a seat was empty. Mr Clinton spoke of the huge financial
challenges facing the world, and of America's obligation to lead it "in a way that
is consistent with our values". Words like this are meant to show that he is in
charge, and some will hear them that way. But there is nothing behind them.
What can "consistent with our values" possibly mean, when the overwhelming
majority of Americans think Mr Clinton's values have little to do with theirs?

Power needs principle

It is easy to understand why Mr Clinton is fighting. He has everything to lose and,
in his view, no good reason to lose it. The report into his misconduct by the
independent counsel, Kenneth Starr, has played into his hands. Its 445 pages fail
to deliver a knockout blow. There is strong evidence of perjury before a grand
jury, which is a serious crime: but in the public's mind it is just more lies about
sex, and that is deemed a forgivable sort of perjury. For the
rest-witness-tampering, obstruction of justice, abuse of power-the evidence is
less clear-cut. Altogether it is a tale of the tawdry emotional difficulties of two
people, Bill and Monica, caught out in something they knew they should stop.
Mr Starr has piled on the sexual details, to excess; but the details of anyone's
sex life, presented to an outside audience, could look similarly comic and dirty.
Above all, whatever happened to Whitewater, Travelgate, Filegate and the rest?

Mr Clinton senses, correctly, that the report has caused a backlash against Mr
Starr. The independent counsel has always been unpopular. Now he appears
both prurient and unfair. The long-term effect of this extraordinary inquiry may
well be that no future Kenneth Starr is let loose against a sitting president (see
article) . Meanwhile, according to the opinion polls, most Americans are
content-eager would be too strong a word-that Mr Clinton should stay. No
impeachment, no resignation; perhaps a simple vote of censure by Congress, a
mere slap on the wrist, and swiftly back to work.

But that won't do. Perjury before a grand jury, as exhaustively described by Mr
Starr, is worthy of impeachment. And even if it is not deemed impeachable, that
does not mean it should be tolerated. Those in authority are rightly held to certain
standards. In any other walk of public life, Mr Clinton's flagrant lying (to say
nothing of the sexual dalliance) would have him out on his ear. Is the leader of the
world's most powerful country to be allowed a lower standard of behaviour, just
because he sits in the White House? The reverse should be true; precisely
because he sits in the White House, the perceived exemplar and guardian of his
country, he should be prepared to leave if he cannot behave.

At the centre of Mr Starr's report are two inescapable facts. Mr Clinton held his
office cheap, and held lies dear. There is no reason to think this will change.
Since mid-August he has apologised so many times that, if contrition were taxed,
he would be bankrupt. But if he is so sorry, why the full-throttle legal defence
against Mr Starr's accusations? At the famous prayer-breakfast on September
11th, at which he spoke of his sin and his "broken spirit", the cameras caught him
peeping round in the middle of his prayers, as if to check that everyone was
watching. This is a consummate politician who knows exactly what strings,
including heartstrings, he must pull to stay in office. That skill is the reason
Americans think he should stay. That moral bankruptcy is why he must go.

All Mr Clinton's considerable energies are now turned in only one direction: his
political survival. This means fighting, at full stretch, all charges already made and
still to come. And there are certainly more to come. Mr Starr may yet have
something to report on the other scandals, including Whitewater; he is said to
have found nothing impeachable, but plenty that reinforces the pervading aura of
sleaze. Meanwhile, other sexual skeletons may continue to tumble out of closets.
All will be ridiculed, denied, resisted, rebutted, for as long as it takes.

America and the world at large have already suffered many months of this. They
are crying out for the president's concentrated attention. People may not care
that he is a philanderer, but they cannot afford his distraction. Mr Clinton's
legislative ambitions have long been consigned to the sidelines. His foreign-policy
initiatives-attempting to revive the Middle East's hope of peace, fighting
newly-resurgent terrorism, coping with collapsing Russia-are in desperate need
of new commitment. Even those who still respect this president, a dwindling
band, no longer have any expectations of him. He has severed the trust and
thrown away the moral suasion that make presidents effective. He may well stay
in office for another two years, but consumed with his own image and
continuously on the defensive. No country can afford that.

Mr Clinton still has a chance to do the decent thing. He has primed Al Gore, his
vice-president, to carry on his New Democrat agenda. Now, since Mr Clinton is
no longer a credible standard-bearer himself, he should give Mr Gore his chance.
The vice-president is not free of legal questions, but his impeccable private life
makes him the man for the moment. Democrats would rally to him, the public
would sympathise; he would be able to lead and govern and, at least for a time,
turn the country to a fresh page.

Of course, it will not happen. Mr Clinton, the Comeback Kid, has seen enough
glints of light to persuade him to stay. This is a man who supposes that even after
congressional censure he could bounce back grinning. Perhaps he could. But the
spectacle has become too painful, too empty and too wearying to contemplate.
Don't bounce. Just go.



To: John Lacelle who wrote (3890)9/19/1998 8:45:00 PM
From: Les H  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 67261
 
Hyde Offered to Quit Post
After Affair Was Publicized

Juliet Eilperin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, September 19, 1998; Page A10

Judiciary Committee Chairman Henry J. Hyde
(R-Ill.) offered to resign from the committee last
week after public disclosure that he had had a
five-year extramarital affair during the 1960s,
Republican sources said yesterday. The offer was
tendered to House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-Ga.),
who rejected it.

Disclosure of Hyde's liaison provoked a storm of
controversy in the House, with some Republican
members accusing the White House of trying to
smear Hyde -- who is overseeing an investigation of
President Clinton's affair with Monica S. Lewinsky
-- as part of a "scorched earth" policy against
Clinton's accusers.

The White House categorically denied being the
source of the article, which first was published by
Salon, a left-leaning Internet magazine, and said
anyone involved in disseminating such information
would be fired. Gingrich and other House GOP
leaders sent a letter to FBI director Louis J. Freeh on Thursday asking
him to investigate any personal attacks on members of Congress, including
Hyde, that are aimed at intimidating them.

"It is a sign of the depth of Chairman Hyde's integrity that he would
automatically offer a resignation over a 30-year-old story," said Gingrich
spokeswoman Christina Martin. "The speaker did not consider the
resignation because he can think of no one who has earned more respect
or affection from the House. Henry Hyde is a man of dignity who has
handled the situation well."