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The
Final Days: A Behind the Scenes Look at the Last,
Desperate Abuses of Power by the Clinton White House, by Barbara
Olson (Regnery, 258 pp., $27.95).
he
1990s, as a political era, began on September 10, 1991, with the
hearings on the Supreme Court nomination of Clarence Thomas, and
ended abruptly ten years and one day later, with the terrorist attacks
of September 11, 2001. A key figure in both of these events was
Barbara Olson, who rose to prominence during the Thomas hearings,
and died in the crash of Flight 77 into the Pentagon. Along the
way, she became a pundit superstar, with a near-permanent seat on
the Larry King program, fighting the culture wars on a wide range
of fronts, from gender issues to impeachment struggles. To some,
she was the anti-Hillary: a feisty blonde lawyer in a high-profile
marriage (to prominent lawyer, and now solicitor general, Ted Olson),
but one who was honest and funny. Her first book was the bestselling
Hell to Pay, a precise portrait of the unlovable Hillary
Clinton herself. Her final book is The Final Days, a short,
crisp, lethal summation of the events of January 2001, as the Clintons
prepared to vacate the White House, and finally did so, taking much
of the furniture with them. Who can forget those halcyon days of
greed, pardons, and general thuggery? Few will as long as this book
is around.
The Clintons'
last month in the White House shocked the country, and helped get
the contested presidency of George W. Bush off to its unexpected
good start. Even some Clinton supporters were stunned, for the first
time, into condemning the couple. Olson, however, sees nothing surprising
in the Clintons' final days; they differed in degree, not in kind,
from the preceding years of skulduggery.
The scope of
the Clintons' offenses was vast, but easily divisible into two major
categories: greed and abuses of power. Under greed, we can put down
Hillary's book deal, the grand theft of the White House furniture,
and the ornate His and Hers office spaces in New York. As for the
book deal, the freshman senator made off with the third-highest
advance in history. (The two higher went to the Pope and her husband.
"The Pope, of course, was older, and had a few more accomplishments,"
Olson tells us. "But then, the Pope has never been before a
grand jury.") Some were churlish enough to suggest that the
book deal looked like a payoff, as her publisher was part of a vast
conglomerate that owned television stations and a film studio, and
had a huge stake in regulations on which the Senate was voting;
but few were boorish enough to push the matter too far.
Despite the
book-deal windfall, Hillary — with two immense houses to furnish
— set out, while still First Lady, to shake down her friends. Olson
writes that "friends of Mrs. Clinton solicited others, saying
'Would you please buy this silverware, these gifts . . . ?'"
And yes, they would, to the tune of $190,000 in gifts — for a woman
who had just signed an $8 million book deal, and whose husband stood
to make $100,000 a speech.
And this was
on top of what the Clintons had managed to take out of the White
House itself. "In January 2000," writes Olson, "the
Clintons began shipping furniture to their $1.7 million Chappaqua
home, despite concerns raised by White House chief usher Gary Walters
about whether they were entitled to remove the items. Walters rightly
believed they were government property, donated as part of a $396,000
White House redecoration project in 1993." Then there were
the offices: Hillary's will cost taxpayers more than twice as much
as Senator Charles Schumer's; Bill's first choice, in midtown's
posh Carnegie Hall Tower, would have cost taxpayers more than the
office tab for all other living ex-presidents combined; and
even the Harlem office he was forced to settle for is more expensive
than that of any other ex-president.
Let us turn
now to abuses of power. As Olson notes, Clinton had always been
fond of executive orders, and, as his remaining days in office dwindled,
his fondness only increased. "No debate, no hearings, no cumbersome
votes . . . Clinton loved the feel of this kind of power, and [his]
last three weeks in office turned into a gusher of executive orders
and presidential decrees." In his final days, Clinton appropriated
millions of acres for the federal government, signed a great many
dubious treaties, and laid on a blizzard of new regulations that
could — and did, until recent events made them irrelevant — tie
his successor in knots.
Most flagrant
of all were the pardons. On his final day, Clinton commuted the
sentences of Susan Rosenberg and Linda Sue Evans, who were associated
with the murder of policemen in a 1981 armored-car robbery (and
also with the bombing of the U.S. Capitol in 1983). Also released
was cocaine dealer Carlos Vignali, son of a high-rolling donor to
Democrats; Hillary's brother charged $200,000 for his help in pressing
the case. The most noxious example of mercy-for-money was Marc Rich,
a notorious fugitive whose ex-wife had showered the Clintons with
cash. On his last day as president, Olson writes, Clinton "issued
a torrent of 140 pardons and 36 commutations." One TV commentator
observed: "Not since the opening of the gates of the Bastille
have so many criminals been liberated on a single day."
All of the
flaws the Clintons had ever displayed swelled into one obscene bubble.
Olson summarizes: "Bill and Hillary Clinton ended their eight
years in the White House with a grand-finale pyrotechnic show of
historic proportions, [reprising] the lowlights of their two terms
in office by taking public property, soliciting gifts and favors,
selling the powers of the presidency to friends, cronies, [and]
family members."
It is impossible,
of course, to read this book now except through the lens of September
11, with some passages having new meaning. It is, for example, impossible
to read a line like "Soviet aggression had been replaced by
a number of particularly venomous threats, from Timothy McVeigh
to Osama bin Laden," without shivering. Our view of Bill Clinton
has also changed. The relatively generous assessment that Olson
accords him — of having, at least, reigned over a period of peace
and tranquility — must also look rather different, because we now
know that the murderous attacks were even then being prepared. The
terrorists believed that they would pay almost no price for their
actions, unless they coincided with an impending impeachment, or
the discovery of semen on the dress of the president's girlfriend.
The Clinton "legacy," too, is becoming clearer: He will
be remembered less as our Warren Harding — a petty crook, and grand
lecher — than as the Neville Chamberlain of his generation, who
wrote the book on how not to respond to terrorists' actions, and
whose refusal to take them seriously set the battle back several
years.
Barbara Olson
would be delighted to know that the post-attack Clintons have stayed
strictly in character. Bill is in despair at losing his place at
center stage — all that pain he's not feeling — and he fears that
the drama will wash out his memory. He is "worrying that his
peace-and-prosperity presidency will be recast as a footnote to
the Bush family dynasty," his friends tell New York
magazine. As for Hillary, she equates the raw hatred of the terrorists
to the protests she encountered in 1994 while selling her health
plan.
George W. Bush
promised in 2000 to "change the tone" of politics, and
to some extent he did try to; but the fact remains that, until September
11, we were living in Bill Clinton's world — a culture defined by
very large fights over very small issues, payback for injuries barely
remembered, and, above all, unending hostility. On the last Sunday
of her life, Barbara Olson was a guest on Washington Journal,
a C-SPAN morning call-in program that is frequently civil. This
time, it was not. The topic was the Thomas hearings, on their tenth
anniversary, and the calls that came in were electric with fury,
as if no time at all had passed. Names, charges, and threats were
flung around wildly. At one point, Bill Press, Olson's co-panelist,
became rattled, pleading for tolerance, saying that people could
argue as friends. But the hate kept on coming. Close to the end,
one woman called Olson "evil" and said she was "too
filled with hate" to live long. On the very last point, she
was only too accurate. Two days later, Barbara Olson was killed
when her plane hit the Pentagon, and that age, and its rancor, died
with her. It is a great shame that she is no longer among us, to
fight on in this braver new world.
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