Date: Fri 30-Jan-1998
Date: Fri 30-Jan-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
Powell-Clinton-sex-scandal
Full Text:
COMMENTARY: Pursuing Clinton For His Sex Life Risks Trivializing All
Government
BY CHRIS POWELL
Whom the gods would destroy in politics, they first make ridiculous, and the
only thing more ridiculous than President Clinton's denying his latest
philandering the other day was his Cabinet members' lining up so quickly to
say they believed him. Clinton might have salvaged some respect here only by
asserting that he had never used and never would use his official position for
personal gain and that he would stop discussing his personal life.
But this aspect of Clinton's character was on display in both the 1992 and
1996 campaigns and the electorate decided that it wasn't crucial. The business
with Paula Jones, an issue in the 1996 campaign, may be analogous to the
business with Monica Lewinsky now, insofar as both were government employees
when they had their encounters with Clinton as chief executive. There is no
suggestion that Clinton coerced or tried to take vengeance on either. So why
should the Lewinsky business be definitive politically when the Jones business
was not?
Of course some say that the Lewinsky business shows that Clinton has learned
nothing in this regard. But maybe he has learned everything. If his inability
to restrain his appetites did not prevent his election, it may be hard to
recognize it as an impeachable offense.
And while the Lewinsky business has raised the question of perjury, of whether
Clinton lied under oath about their relationship when he was deposed in Jones'
lawsuit the other day and whether he asked Lewinsky to lie under oath about it
too, it's unlikely that anything approaching obstruction of justice could be
proved here even if their affair itself could be proved, unlikely that this
ever could be more than a matter of his word against hers.
So what would be the point of seizing on this bit of lying about personal
lives amid all the lying, dissembling, corruption, and betrayal of the public
interest that engulf government on matters of public policy and whose cost is
infinitely higher?
Richard Nixon could be threatened with impeachment because he was waging a
pointless war the country was sick of, burglarizing his political foes and
otherwise using the government to crush dissent, and covering it up. People
were dying and liberty was in jeopardy while power remained in the hands of an
evil man who, the archives now show, was worse than even his enemies thought.
Ronald Reagan escaped the threat of impeachment by implausibly denying
knowledge that his closest assistants violated federal law to raise money for
the Nicaraguan insurgents. George Bush had convenient lapses of memory about
his involvement in what could have been considered impeachable conduct too.
John F. Kennedy of heroic memory cavorted more in the White House than Clinton
seems to have done yet, and the greatest president of this century, Franklin
D. Roosevelt, died in the arms of a mistress, as did a former vice president,
Nelson Rockefeller, and if they ever had been asked about their private
relationships, they surely would have lied and encouraged lying too.
In those days most people would have wanted an important reason of state,
involving public policy and the national interest, before even asking such
personal questions. These days it seems that so little dignity attaches to the
presidential office and to the country itself that there can be open
speculation about Clinton's bodily fluids.
While he can be venal, Clinton is not evil and he is not going to be impeached
unless there are two-thirds majorities in Congress to do so, and there will be
no such majorities unless the country wants him out. Polls long have suggested
that the country is happy with his official performance, and the polls of the
last few days suggest that the country doesn't think that the Lewinsky
business is worth getting obsessed with as a matter of justice or as a matter
of state -- probably because it isn't a matter of either.
Clinton long has had no credibility on the matter of girlfriends, but, after
all, how much more credible than the president is special prosecutor Kenneth
Starr? Having been commissioned four years ago to inquire into Clinton's
personal financial dealings in Arkansas and having spent millions of dollars
to produce nothing, Starr now has sunk to trafficking in the tape recordings
of a guileless young woman tortured by jealousy and to swarming her with FBI
agents for eight hours without counsel in a hotel room as if she was an atomic
spy.
Starr, a former tobacco company lawyer, piously insists that he is not out to
get the president, but someone should put the special prosecutor himself under
oath and ask the question again. Surely a look at the intrigues and leaks in
the special prosecutor's office would be as fascinating as Clinton's sexual
escapades, and more relevant to the condition of government.
Without a confession by the president or tape recordings or other witnesses
proving that he advocated perjury about his sex life, would putting him on
trial in court or before the Senate be worth the humiliation to the country
and the distraction from serious issues, as it was with Nixon? Would leaving
Clinton in office imperil the nation, the Constitution, or liberty?
Only the worst of the Clinton haters and the most partisan of Republicans
could think so. Indeed, some Republicans who are patriotic as well as partisan
figure that their party will be better positioned for the next election if a
discredited Democrat serves out the remainder of the presidential term.
In any case this is the man the country elected twice, and surely few voters
were terribly fooled the second time. Pursuing his old character flaw would
just discredit and trivialize all government and make the whole country
ridiculous when the public is already dangerously alienated from its
responsibility to democracy. Indeed, maybe that is the point of pursuing it.
(Chris Powell is managing editor of The Journal Inquirer in Manchester.)
