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


To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (6360)9/30/1998 3:40:00 PM
From: Les H  Respond to of 67261
 
Before-the-Scenes Look at New Starr Papers
Scandal: Democratic attorneys for House panel, GOP
insiders each seek to play down, and up, the significance of the
next batch of documents.
By MARC LACEY and RICHARD A. SERRANO, Times Staff Writers


WASHINGTON--The House was out of session. There were
no new investigative documents to read. Still, a roomful of
Capitol Hill journalists assigned to the impeachment beat scribbled
like mad Tuesday afternoon, trying to keep up with the spin.
Three Democratic attorneys with the House Judiciary
Committee--who, of course, would not permit use of their
names--described the thousands of pages of documents that the
panel will release later this week as not particularly damaging to
President Clinton.
"Old news," one attorney said.
Later in the day, however, a GOP source provided a different
take on the same papers: They contain damaging tidbits that only
strengthen the case for an initial impeachment inquiry.
As next week's vote on the matter nears, the bitterly divided
Judiciary Committee is shifting into overdrive to put a spin in one
party's direction or the other on the mountain of facts collected by
independent counsel Kenneth W. Starr.
So far at least, Democrats have had the edge.
They fretted so much over how angry Clinton was going to
appear in his videotaped grand jury appearance that he came off as
not all that angry. Someone--believed to be a Democrat--even
spread the rumor that Clinton stormed out of the room midway
throughhis testimony, an incident that was not on the videotape.

GOP, Admitting Being 'Out-Spun,' Fires Back
Democrats also have repeatedly portrayed the committee's
proceedings as partisan and unfair, a well-worn strategy designed to
discredit whatever the panel accomplishes.
Acknowledging that they have been "out-spun" by the
competition, Republicans have begun firing back with a vengeance.
Judiciary Committee Chairman Henry J. Hyde (R-Ill.), for
instance, has launched regular press conferences--folksy affairs that
are televised live and feature Hyde bantering playfully with the press
corps while repeatedly asserting his intention to be fair.
Asked Tuesday what he thought about the latest Democratic
slant, the Illinois Republican's spin was that he did not care a bit.
"My God," he said, "it's a free country."
By week's end, another mountain of documents from Starr's
investigative files will begin rolling off government printing presses
and into the public domain. There will be transcripts of Monica S.
Lewinsky's telephone conversations with her Pentagon colleague,
Linda Tripp, as well as grand jury transcripts from scores of other
figures in the investigation--from Secret Service agents to
presidential aides to Lewinsky's mother, Marcia Lewis.

How Democrats, GOP See What's Ahead
Here's a look at some of what's to come, through Democratic
and Republican eyes:
Democrats say the Tripp tapes will show that Lewinsky was
being manipulated by her elder colleague. They say that the
testimony suggests it was Tripp who recommended that Lewinsky
seek job assistance from Clinton confidant Vernon E. Jordan Jr.
Republicans do not stick up for Tripp. "I certainly wouldn't want
a friend like Linda Tripp," one official said. But the GOP line is that
Tripp's scheming nature does not affect the core case of whether
Clinton committed perjury or obstructed justice in attempting to
conceal his affair with the former White House intern.
Democrats also contend that the documents present a far more
harmless picture of the effort by White House aides to help
Lewinsky find a job. The assistance is not clearly tied to her
emergence as a potential witness in the Paula Corbin Jones sexual
harassment case, they argue.
Republicans, meanwhile, prefer to stress the grand jury
testimony of former Clinton advisor Dick Morris. He testified, they
say, that presidential allies had mounted a "secret police operation
to go around and intimidate women" who had had some kind of
relationship with the president.
Another highlight from the Republican perspective is the
testimony of presidential aide Sidney Blumenthal, who said that he
once mentioned Lewinsky to First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton.
She assured him, officials said, that the president was just
"ministering to a troubled young person."
For now, with the documents still at the printer, only spin is
available. Release of the actual records, originally expected
Thursday, may be delayed for several days because of printing
problems.
The Government Printing Office is normally overwhelmed this
time of year reproducing appropriations bills for the start of the new
fiscal year on Thursday.
House rules dictate that the printing of appropriations bills takes
precedence over run-of-the-mill House documents--even
sought-after ones like the Starr report.

<<<Judging from the quotes from Hillary, it looks like Bill's BJ's
<<<may have been an approved therapy by Hillary. Wink, Wink.



To: Lizzie Tudor who wrote (6360)9/30/1998 4:39:00 PM
From: Who, me?  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 67261
 
Michelle, are all the streets in your town one way? Life is a two way street!!! (Now don't throw a temper tantrum!)

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