A L S O+T O D A Y Clinton takes the offensive Transcript of President Clinton's statement Part Two Part Three Part Four T A B L E+T A L K
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W H A T _ T H E Y ' R E _ S A Y I N G
While President Clinton became the first president in American history to testify as the target of a criminal grand jury investigation, Salon spoke with a range of people about the historic occasion, media coverage of the event and Clinton's choice of admitting an "inappropriate" relationship with Monica Lewinsky while attacking Kenneth Starr's politicized probe of his presidency.
"There are several things Starr has done since the commencement of this investigation over four years ago that all by itself would be grounds for his automatic dismissal, one of which is his preexisting bias against the president. He had an obligation at the time he was appointed to say, 'I'm flattered by the appointment but I cannot accept because I have a conflict of interest.' It is a terrible situation here because someone who is the virtual legal opponent of the president was appointed to investigate the president and ever since then he has conducted himself in a manner that is totally incompatible with what a responsible prosecutor would do. "He is not the Whitewater prosecutor -- that's a misnomer. He is the Bill and Hillary Clinton prosecutor, determined to investigate every breath these two have taken and to get them out of the White House and behind bars. He's totally partisan, and again, his conduct is a disgrace to prosecutors everywhere. "The right wing -- these are dangerous people. They are the most un-American, unpatriotic people that there are. They always thought that I was one of them, but they are learning now -- through my book "No Island of Sanity" -- that I'm not one of them. They've caused more damage to the Republican Party than the Democrats could ever dream of doing. An example of a true conservative would be John McCain. McCain's first words after he learned about the Monica Lewinsky allegations were, 'I hope and pray that the charges against the president are not true.' You know what the right wing said? They said, 'We hope the charges are true and that the president will be humiliated in front of the American public and the entire world.' "These are the people responsible for this mess, with the assistance of the New York Times, the Washington Post, liberal papers that are catering to the far right. These people haven't learned that there is nothing you can do to appease the far right, except change your voter registration. Starr has been allowed to get by with [his investigation] because papers like the Times and the Post have been complicit in letting him. "If the president stood up to Starr today, I salute him. If he did stand up to Starr then I'm very happy that he did that not just for the grand jury's sake, but for the American people." -- Vincent Bugliosi, federal prosecutor and author most recently of "No Island of Sanity: Paula Jones v. Bill Clinton"
-- Susan Faludi, journalist and author of "Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women"
-- Christopher Hitchens, Vanity Fair columnist
"We can be mad at the press, we can be mad at the pollsters, we can be mad at the world, we can be mad at the right-wing conspiracy, but one person could have put a stop to this at so many different points along the way. That's the problem Clinton's got here. People can appreciate human behavior, human nature. But (the Lewinsky affair) was ongoing, systematic, not casual, which means he liked her -- take that one, Hillary, but he liked her. He could have settled the Paula Jones case early on and we would not have known who Monica Lewinsky was -- there are so many things that were under his control. Every time he's asking us for a second chance, he's really asking us for a 20th chance." -- Kellyanne Fitzpatrick, president of the Polling Company and a conservative commentator
-- Mark Hertsgaard, author of "On Bended Knee: The Press and the Reagan Presidency"
"As for Hillary, there's only two possibilities. Either she's Lady Macbeth, who's made a deal for power, or she's a classic abused wife, that is to say, she knows what her husband does but she keeps coming back for more, she makes excuses for him, she blames everybody else but him. Those are all the classic descriptions of an abused wife. So those are the only two possibilities, and I believe it's the first." -- Barbara Ledeen, policy director of the conservative Independent Women's Forum
"If Bob Woodward was right and Hillary found out this weekend, then I cannot imagine that she would immediately be strategizing about how to move on the offensive when she must have also felt betrayed -- not only as a wife, but as a partner who went on the 'Today' show and told Matt Lauer that these allegations were not going to be proven true, that if they were proven true, then they would be a serious offense. "As a mother who has a 7-year-old and a 9-year-old, I want this to have a conclusion that has some type of moral lesson for children, and a free pass is not a moral lesson. To have no consequences is not a moral lesson. "I think it's very sad. I'm somebody who has actually admired Hillary's commitment to reform even when I disagreed with her proposal. I admired the fact that she really wanted to change things. The message that she's now sending to women is very disturbing to me because it's not just stand by your man, it's go out there and defend his lies." -- Arianna Huffington, commentator
"In the long haul, I think this is all going to enhance the possibility that we are going to see a woman as president. People do not see women as having as weak a moral compass as men. I think the public is tired of all this tawdriness and macho business, all these stories about Kennedy's womanizing and Johnson's philandering, and even the lust in Jimmy Carter's heart. I would not be surprised if we saw women on both vice presidential tickets next time around." -- Robert Dallek, presidential historian SALON | Aug. 17, 1998 |
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