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


To: Bill who wrote (33999)2/14/1999 11:14:00 AM
From: greenspirit  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 67261
 
Bill, here is an example of the hypocritical/porno parties idea of reconciliation. It still amazes me how decent people can defend this KGB like administration. Can you imagine what the outcry in the media would be if Ronald Reagan stole thousands of FBI files and then used them for political thuggery? We may find out in about 30 years how many votes were effected by the illegal use of FBI files.
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02/12/99 11:48:09

Despite denials, Clinton is planning a full campaign of retribution

By Daniel J. Harris
Capitol Hill Blue

Despite official denials, the Clinton White House has collected new dossiers, complete with financial records, FBI investigative information and IRS reports on House impeachment managers and other perceived enemies of the administration, Capitol Hill Blue has learned.

"It's payback time and payback will be a bitch," one White House aide said Thursday. "This won't be a gloat-free zone. It will be a 'get even' zone."

Some White House aides worry privately that the President's lust for revenge will be so great it will create a new scandal and charges of abuse of power.

"I've seen FBI and IRS files on members of Congress, complete dossiers on reporters and more," one worried aide admitted. "This is really scary."

As the Senate prepared to acquit Clinton on charges of perjury and obstruction of justice and end four weeks of impeachment trial, the White House is prepared to launch a campaign of terror against those who tried to remove the President from office.

At the center of this campaign will be White House smearmeister Sidney J. Blumenthal, who recently got caught lying about his efforts to smear former White House intern Monica Lewinsky.

"There are new files from the investigators, files from the FBI and IRS financial information on Hyde, Barr, Hutchinston and others," one source confirmed Thursday night. "We will get even."

Another source said Blumenthal has been working on the campaign "at the expense of everything else. This is Sid's bailiwick and he is ready to serve his President."

According to White House sources, the revenge list includes not only the 13 House managers, but Senators, journalists and others that Clinton feels need to taste revenge at the hands of the White House.

Those on the list include:

Rep. Henry Hyde and the other 12 House impeachment managers;
Rep. Dan Burton of Indiana, a frequent Clinton critic;
Senator Tim Hutchinson of Arkansas, brother of House impeachment manager Asa Huthinson;
Newsweek reporter Mike Isikoff, who developed the original story on Monica Lewinsky and the Linda Tripp tapes;
Larry Klayman, founder of Judicial Watch, which has filed both legal cases and investigative material against Clinton;
"The list is long and growing," one aide said. "There will be blood on the floor before this affair is over."

A Thursday New York Times article said Clinton was prepared to put all his efforts into defeating as many of the House impeachment managers as possible in the 2000 elections and restore control of Congress to the Democrats.

The Times article infuriated Republicans, who accused the president of arrogantly seeking revenge against the 13 House ''managers'' who pressed allegations of perjury and obstruction of justice on the floor of the Senate.

The flap demonstrated that even as Clinton's impeachment trial draws toward an expected acquittal in the Senate, it is becoming a powerful theme for both parties ahead of the 2000 elections.

White House spokesman Joe Lockhart told reporters Clinton would work hard to help Democrats recapture control of the U.S. House. Democrats, the minority party in the House since January 1995, need to capture seven seats to win an outright majority.

But Lockhart said there was no strategy of targeting the House Republican managers. Lockhart noted that many of them hold safe seats, adding that the prospect of Democratic control of the House was motivation enough for the president.

''I can't think of a worse, more dumb strategy than going after people based on whether they were a House manager or not,'' Lockhart said. ''We're going to go out, do the best we can at articulating a message, and do it based on where we think we can win seats.''

However, other White House aides told Capitol Hill Blue that Lockhart was lying.

"The payback has been in the planning stages for weeks," one said. "The President is not a man to take this without fighting back. There will be retribution against those who tried to take him down."

The Times cited unidentified Clinton advisers as saying the president was determined to work for a Democratic victory in the House as an affirmation of his legacy. The Times quoted the advisers as saying Clinton was particularly angry at the 13 managers, believing they needlessly prolonged the impeachment trial, which is expected to end with his acquittal Friday.

The White House has been trying hard publicly to keep expressions of vindication to a minimum and has said there would be no gloating over an acquittal.

But privately, aides say Clinton is unrepentant and angry and wants revenge for the attempts to remove him from office.

"The President doesn't feel any remorse over what has happened," one aide said, "but he is angry...very, very angry."

Lockhart said it was still unknown how Clinton would respond publicly to the Senate vote.

But Republicans leaped on the Times story as a sign that Clinton had no sense of contrition over the impeachment drama, which stemmed from his sexual affair with former White House intern Monica Lewinsky.

Rep. Christopher Cannon, a Utah Republican and one of the trial managers, said any electoral vendetta by Clinton represented ''the height of arrogance.''

''What the president is doing is wrong. What happened to repentance, atonement and contrition? This is gloating,'' Cannon told reporters.

The Republican National Committee put out a news release saying, ''How does Clinton spell contrite? R-E-V-E-N-G-E.''

Lockhart sought to distance the White House from the Times article, saying Clinton has ''thousands'' of advisers who claim to speak on his behalf to the press.

He said the White House did not intend again to portray the impeachment as a partisan venture, as it did when the House passed two articles of impeachment in December.

Lockhart said that Clinton, as he appears in political events with an eye toward the 2000 races, will stress, in addition to his policy agenda, a need to put ''progress over partisanship.''

This was a theme sounded by Clinton repeatedly in the 1998 off-year elections, when Democrats scored a surprising gain of five seats in the House that was attributed to voter disgust with Republican impeachment tactics.

Republicans have heard many voices this week citing or alluding to impeachment as a reason voters should reject them.

Vice President Al Gore, in an initial fund-raising letter sent this week for the 2000 presidential campaign, cast the race as a choice pitting his agenda of social and economic issues against ''the forces of divisiveness, extremism and personal destruction that threaten to engulf Washington.''

The liberal activist group People for the American Way Wednesday said it would target for defeat 68 House Republicans who voted to impeach Clinton and who represent districts the president carried in 1996.

The Times article quoted Clinton supporter David Geffen, a Hollywood mogul, as saying many in his circle would spend ''time and money'' to defeat Rep. James Rogan of California, one of the House managers.

On the other hand, former vice president Dan Quayle, exploring a run for the 2000 Republican presidential nomination, charged this week that Gore was ''attached at the hip'' to Clinton and would have to explain to voters why Clinton ''trashed the White House.''

--Reuters News Service contributed to this report