Updated 09/16/98 7:20PM
Details, Details
Asked at a press conference today whether he told the truth to the grand
jury last month, the Commander-in-Chief replied, "I don't want to get
mired down in details."
Nothing to Hide
Anyone who was paying attention knew that, for all the bipartisan praise
of Henry Hyde for his integrity and fairness over the last several
months, he would eventually become a target of the Clinton attack
machine. That's the fate of anyone who tries to call this President to
account for lawbreaking and sleaziness. The hit came today, in Bill
Clinton's favorite magazine, Salon, which dredges up an affair Hyde had
thirty years ago. Almost equally sleazy is the magazine's tortured
four-and-a-half page defense of itself for doing so. Moral distinctions
have never been the strong suit of Sidney Blumenthal and Co.: for them
an affair is an affair is an affair. Getting oral sex at the office from
a nameless intern while taking phone calls is just normal human
weakness. And to have an affair is to lie about it, and lying is lying.
A guilty lie to a spouse, a calculated lie to a grand jury, a lie in
front of the American people during the biggest test of one's life: it's
all the same. Attacks on people who have the temerity to tell the truth
also go with the territory.
When Salon asked Hyde about his ancient mistake, he did not retreat to
legalisms or lie or stonewall for seven months: he took responsibility
for his actions. This smear will redound more to the discredit of the
people spreading it than to Henry Hyde, and quite properly so.
Hatching a Plot
At first we couldn't believe the CBS report that Sen. Orrin Hatch (R.,
Utah) had told the White House that he would lead an effort to prevent
any criminal prosecution if the President would just admit to perjury,
but the story checks out. Are there any other prosecutions Sen. Hatch
will intervene to stop? And just how, by the way, does the Senate
Judiciary Committee chairman propose to do so? One would think Hatch
would want to avoid giving the impression that law enforcement can be
blocked by political pressure--let alone that it should be.
Some Defense
It's bad enough that Al Goldstein, publisher of Screw magazine, says he
feels "humiliated" by the President (all quotes in this item courtesy of
Hotline). It's even worse when people defend him. Juan Williams told Fox
News viewers, "There has been so much talk around Washington about what
that detail was going to be, that some of the excesses don't appear. For
instance, there's no charge of any drug use , and that had been in the
ether around town. There's no sense of the kind of dastardly sexual acts
that were supposedly there." Rep. Barney Frank told the Boston Herald,
"There was a lot more fear before the report came out than after. . . .
There [had] been fear there were other things in there, Whitewater or
him coercing her." Leave aside any questions about how Juan Williams
defines "dastardly." The amazing thing is what the Clinton defense is
now reduced to: hey, at least he's not a rapist! At least he's not doing
drugs in the Oval Office! It's even worse than that, really, since
Frank's colleagues didn't have the minimal confidence in Clinton's
character necessary to rule these things out.
More Clinton Fallout
Hits to www.nationalreview.com went up 189 per cent in August. But it
looks like we have some catching up to do: hits to the "Washington
Bulletin" specifically were up only 50 per cent.
Introducing- The Goldberg File
National Review Online is proud to announce a new regular feature, "The
Goldberg File": commentary and asides from new NR Contributing Editor
Jonah Goldberg. Be sure to check out today's commentary at
http://www.nationalreview.com/goldberg/goldberg.html