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Telling the Hearings to Shut Up
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Wall Street came in third,
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surprisingly, on the weekend talk shows, which dwelt primarily on Campaigngate
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and China--the same topics they chewed over last week. Why? Oh, partly because
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the stock market was a Monday-Tuesday story--a mountain that, from the
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foreshortened perspective of TV producers, loomed smaller at week's end than
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nearby hills; and partly because the Washington commentariat will always prefer
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political stories to financial ones (perhaps sensing that their views on the
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latter are especially baseless). Also, TV producers--even of talk shows--prefer
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stories with good visuals (such as Jiang Zemin in a colonial hat). How often
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can you play tape of that damned bell at the New York Stock Exchange?
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Congressional hearings delight the commentariat as a reliable source of grist,
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and the pundits did not care for Sen. Fred Thompson's announcement that his
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campaign-finance investigation is closing shop. Both conservative Brit Hume
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( Fox News Sunday ) and liberal Clarence Page (ABC's This Week )
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berated Thompson for failing to put a better "focus" on the hearings. Thompson
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himself insisted on CNN's Late Edition that his hearings had revealed a
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"pattern of illegal foreign money" as well as "money laundering." But Hume
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delivered the consensus line that Thompson had doomed the hearings from the
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get-go with his overly ambitious opening argument that the Chinese government
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had engaged in a "broad-based conspiracy" to buy the 1996 presidential
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election.
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Democrats like Sen. Tom Daschle, appearing on NBC's Meet
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the Press , found the hearings insufficiently bipartisan. NewsHour With
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Jim Lehrer 's Paul Gigot said Republicans had shuttered the hearings because
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Thompson was "too bipartisan." Having portrayed Thompson as a political
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incompetent, the pundits weren't completely ungrateful. They lauded him for
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presenting a "picture" of (Gloria Borger on Face the Nation ) and a
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"window" on (Tom Oliphant on NewsHour and Juan Williams on Fox News
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Sunday ) standard-issue Washington corruption. It's a "government for rent,
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if not for sale," said Borger.
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Bowing to
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Congress' prerogative to shape the news, the shows feigned interest in Sen.
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Trent Lott's public promise--reprised in person on Meet the Press-- to
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allow a vote on new campaign-finance legislation in March. By contrast, genuine
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enthusiasm greeted the unfolding Bruce Babbitt story, as Gigot and Bob
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Schieffer (CBS's Face the Nation ) both predicted that Babbitt's Supreme
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Court ambitions would be ruined by accusations that he had blocked a casino
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license for an Indian tribe at the behest of another tribe that had given money
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to the Democrats.
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The consensus on Jiang's state visit was that
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it was a "win-win," in the words of Eleanor Clift of The McLaughlin
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Group . Al Hunt (CNN's Capital Gang ) declared that "Clinton got it
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right" by simultaneously criticizing China's human-rights violations and
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toasting the dictator. Clinton's centrist approach produced a "domestic
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consumption summit" for both leaders, said The McLaughlin Group ie Morton
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Kondracke, and the talk-show chorus agreed that Jiang benefited from the summit
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because he emerged a co-equal of Clinton's and didn't really give up anything.
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Likewise, Clinton benefited because he engaged Jiang and didn't really give up
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anything. Pat Buchanan ( The McLaughlin Group ) and George Will ( This
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Week ) were lonely dissenters, taking the view that warm relations with a
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hideous human-rights violator are not especially praiseworthy. But the New
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York Times ' Thomas Friedman expressed the pundits' consensus on
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Face : The business of American foreign policy is business, and "[w]hen
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it comes to business, we engage."
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Alan Greenspan's blessing of
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the Monday crash attracted only buyers. Everybody urged investors to buy stocks
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for the long term. The United States remains "the envy of the Japanese and
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Europeans," said Hunt.
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Emerging: Ross Perot
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gave identical performances on Meet the Press and Late Edition ,
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sounding off about his usual themes. He did introduce one new subject: the
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impending rewrite of the patent laws that (he says) will allow foreigners to
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steal U.S. inventions. The topic went nowhere because his hosts had no idea
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what he was talking about. On This Week , George Will, Sam Donaldson, and
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Cokie Roberts all but cheered when Bill Richardson drew a line in the sand over
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Saddam Hussein's ouster of three U.S. weapons inspectors in Iraq. Donaldson
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seemed ready to suit up for Gulf War II as he enthusiastically summarized
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Richardson's position. "There is no negotiation, Saddam Hussein is in
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non-compliance, and he must comply."
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--Jack
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Shafer
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