The vultures are picking his bones. Bob Herbert, Salon, Barney Frank, Joe
Biden, Lannie Davis ... they've all finally thrown Bill over the side. In
the Wall Street Journal Hamilton Jordan stigmatized Bill and Hillary as "the
First Grifters," the term used for scam artists preying on the poor and
desperate in the Depression of the 1930s. "The Clintons," Jordan sneered,
"are not a couple, but a business partnership, not based on love or even
greed, but on shared ambitions. Everywhere they go, they leave a trail of
disappointed, disillusioned friends and staff members to clean up after
them." Jordan contrasted the elevated moral tone of the Carter White House
against the Augean filth of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue in Clinton time.
If he, Jordan, had recommended something like the Rich pardon, "Carter
would have thrown me out of the Oval Office and probably fired me on the
spot." As for Clinton's hubris after Lewinsky-gate, "If a president can get
caught having sex in the Oval Office with an intern and commit perjury about
it to a federal grand jury, and still get away with it, what could possibly
stop him?"
Yes, this is the same Hamilton Jordan who is now happy to flay Clinton on
the Wall Street Journal's editorial page, a page that mercilessly abused him
and his boss through the Carter years. (One Wall Street Journal editorial
appearing in the wake of some message of doom from President Carter carried
the title "More Mush from the Wimp.") And yes, this is the same Hamilton
Jordan who did his bit for the high moral tone in Carter time by leering
across the table at the wife of the Egyptian ambassador during a formal
White House dinner and making a lewd crack about the pyramids. Jordan
further enhanced the White House's reputation by being accused of snorting
coke at Studio 54.
And yes, it was the Carter White House which opened its doors to Henry
Kissinger, who lobbied successfully for what could be fairly construed as a
U.S. government pardon for the Shah of Iran, allowing the deposed dictator
sanctuary in the United States, thus directly prompting the takeover of the
U.S. embassy in Teheran.
As for liberal Democrats like the folks at Salon, why now? Salon stuck with
Clinton through thick and thin, never conceding the jaunty corruption that
has been Bill's preeminent characteristic since the day he entered the
gubernatorial mansion in Little Rock, Ark., but insisting all the while on
his honesty and innocence on all charges. At the conclusion of her mournful
parting of the ways with Bill, Salon's Joan Walsh wrote, "If Clinton really
abused the power of the presidency -- and the power to pardon may be the
most sacred, in a way, beyond the bounds of any other branch of government
to reverse or rectify -- as part of any kind of quid pro quo, political,
financial or social, he will have done what his enemies never could do:
tarnish his legacy irrevocably, ensuring that when the moral accounting is
complete, he is judged a failed president.
Failed because he pardoned Marc Rich? In other words, Salon could take the
welfare bill, the effective death penalty act, the telecommunications reform
bill, Waco, the war on drugs, the doubling of the prison population, and the
sale of the Lincoln bedroom as testimonies to a successful presidency. That
is until Clinton spoiled everything by issuing a pardon urged him by people
normally held in the highest respect by liberal Democrats, among them
Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak, Shimon Peres, Abe Foxman of the ADL and
Elie Wiesel (if you believe the e-mail traffic flowing through Jack Quinn's
office and no doubt on his billing receipts, though not Elie Wiesel if you
believe Wiesel's recent insistence to the New York Times that he had
compassion in his heart for only one spy for Israel at a time).
Yes, they're kicking Bill over the side. Here's Bob Herbert of the New York
Times, another long-time defender: "You can't lead a nation if you are
ashamed of the leader of your party. The Clintons are a terminally unethical
and vulgar couple, and they've betrayed those who have ever believed in
them. As neither Clinton has the grace to retire from the scene, the
Democrats have no choice but to turn their backs on them."
Yes, this is Bob Herbert, who, only four months ago, managed to avert his
gaze from the mountain of evidence about the ethics and vulgarity of the
Clintons, and who lashed Ralph Nader for presuming to raise the standard of
honesty and dignity in government.
There's nothing more distasteful than listening to a bunch of dupes
suddenly announcing eight years after the evidence was in that they'd been
duped. Bill has a legitimate gripe. Why now? The evidence in 1992 about the
character of the Clintons and the likely contours of a Clinton government
was in. Sure, you could make a calculation, if you cared to, that even
factoring this evidence, the Real Bill and the Real Hillary were a better
deal than a second term for George Bush. And you could say that tacky as
Bill's affair with Monica was, it still offered no sound basis for
impeachment. What you can't say is that you had no idea what the Clintons
were like until he signed off on Marc Rich, or until HRC put in a good word
for those Hasidic Jews.
When it comes to moral symmetry, what's the bigger crime, for the entire
liberal establishment to pardon Clinton and Al Gore for their welfare bill,
or for Clinton to pardon a crooked commodities trader?
Alexander Cockburn is coeditor with Jeffrey St. Clair of the muckraking
newsletter CounterPunch. To find out more about Alexander Cockburn and read
features by other columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate
Web page at www.creators.com.