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The Clintometer is back. Click for the latest update.
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Incoming House
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Speaker Bob Livingston confessed to adultery . "I have on occasion
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strayed from my marriage," he said. Roll Call broke the story (there are
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rumors it may have come through Hustler ), and Livingston spilled the
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beans to his Republican colleagues to head off the story. Livingston's spins:
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1) "I sought marriage and spiritual counseling and have received forgiveness
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from my wife and family." 2) "I was running for speaker, not sainthood." 3)
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"These indiscretions were not with employees on my staff." 4) "I have never
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been asked to testify under oath about them." 5) "To avoid harm to others," he
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won't say more. 6) "Individuals working together with the media" are out to get
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all us Republicans. 7) "I will not be intimidated." Journalists gleefully
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anticipated that Democrats would exploit the story in Friday's House
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impeachment debate. But Republicans embraced Livingston, said his case is
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different from Clinton's, and suggested that the real villains are Clinton
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defenders, who are leaking nasty stories about Republicans.
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(12/18/98)
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The United
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States continued to bomb Iraq . Military briefers say the first day of
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missiles destroyed Saddam Hussein's military headquarters and four barracks at
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weapons sites. The international debate is over whether the attack was
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justified. Russia and China called U.N. weapons inspection chief Richard Butler
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an American pawn and demanded his resignation, but nobody seems angry enough
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about the attack to make a serious effort to stop it. The prevailing view is
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that force may not achieve success in disarming Iraq, but diplomacy had
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definitely achieved failure. (12/18/98)
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The House
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began debating impeachment . The chief controversy is whether the
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impeachment vote and the Iraq bombing should be going on simultaneously.
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Republicans blame Clinton for bombing Iraq just when the GOP was about to begin
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the impeachment debate. Democrats blame Republicans for beginning the
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impeachment debate just after Clinton began the bombing. Senate Majority Leader
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Trent Lott is taking the brunt of editorial criticism for questioning the
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bombing and Clinton's motives. Each party impugns the other's integrity and
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patriotism while calling the other party shamelessly cynical for impugning its
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own integrity and patriotism. For a roundup of the spins, see
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Slate
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's "" on the latest "wag the dog" charges.
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(12/18/98)
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Israeli
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implementation of the Wye peace agreement is collapsing . First, Prime
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Minister Benjamin Netanyahu halted Israel's promised troop withdrawals from the
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West Bank because of Palestinian violence. Then President Clinton went to
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Israel and the Gaza Strip, supervised the Palestinians' annulment of their
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charter language calling for Israel's destruction, and urged Netanyahu to
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resume troop withdrawals. Netanyahu refused, arguing that Palestinian leaders
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must take further steps against terrorism and renounce their aspirations to
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statehood. Now Netanyahu says that if Israel's parliament fails to endorse his
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policies by next week, he will call new elections. The opposition Labor Party,
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which accuses Netanyahu of trying to kill the peace process, welcomed the
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opportunity to get rid of him. The idealistic spin: Netanyahu wants the
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Palestinians to accept his conditions so peace can go forward. The cynical
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spin: He wants the Palestinians to reject his conditions so he can posture
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against them in the election. (12/16/98)
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Gov. Lawton
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Chiles, D-Fla., died at 68. He had a heart attack while working out on his
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exercise bike, just three weeks before he was to turn over his office to
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Gov.-elect Jeb Bush. The lieutenant governor, who lost to Bush, gets to be
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governor in the interim. Commentators lauded Chiles' civility and efforts on
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behalf of the environment, fiscal responsibility, and public accountability.
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Former Rep. Mo Udall, D-Ariz., died at 76 of Parkinson's disease.
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Commentators applauded his "liberal conscience" in the face of conservative
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public opinion. Judge Leon Higginbotham Jr. died at 70 after a stroke.
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He was one of the country's most accomplished black jurists. Commentators spoke
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approvingly of his "unambiguous liberalism," his stalwart defense of the
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downtrodden, and his attacks on Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas.
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(12/16/98)
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Pundits debated
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the fallout from the Clinton administration's latest lobbying
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and testimony before Congress. The spins: 1) Clinton's lies are offensive. 2)
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The Republicans' charges are excessive. 3) Clinton's lawyers refuse to admit
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anything that could put him in legal jeopardy. 4) Duh. 5) The pro-impeachment
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closing argument: The rule of law is at stake. 6) The anti-impeachment closing
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argument: The Constitution is at stake. 7) Impeachment is excessive, so vote
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instead for censure. 8) Impeachment without conviction is censure. 9)
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Impeachment is too serious to treat as censure. 10) Impeachment is only a vote
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for a trial. 11) A trial would be too awful because it would paralyze the
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government and force the Senate to delve into sexual details. 12) The
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impeachment juggernaut is good because it has scared the White House into
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embracing heavy censure. 13) Impeachment is good for the Democrats because it
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would hurt the GOP more than it would hurt Clinton. 14) Clinton will persuade
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the GOP not to impeach him because they both care more about their own skins
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than about the Democrats. (For more on a possible escape route for Clinton see,
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"" in
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Slate
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. (12/14/98)
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