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Chatterbox Goes Right!
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Deborah Mathis of Gannett caused a stir in Republican circles with her
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report last Wednesday that presidential aspirant Sen. John Ashcroft of Missouri
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had all but locked up the oh-so-coveted political consulting services of former
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Christian Coalition leader Ralph Reed. Mathis notes that "Every chance he gets,
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it seems, Reed praises and promotes" Ashcroft. She adds: "If and when John
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Ashcroft decides to make his presidential ambitions official ... Reed will
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disappear from the market." Wrong! says Chatterbox, in its best John
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McLaughlin voice. Think about it for a moment. Who benefits if Ashcroft gets in
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the race and splits the social conservative primary vote with Steve Forbes?
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Answer: Forbes' biggest potential rival, and Reed's other potential client,
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Texas governor George W. Bush, Jr., that's who. An Ashcroft entry might also
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kill the candidacy of Beltway conservative Gary Bauer, thereby freeing up the
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allegiances of the followers of Bauer's ally, radio moralist Dr. James Dobson.
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... Reed is with Bush all the way. Trust Chatterbox on this one. ...
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Dept. of Faux-Groveling: Chatterbox (3/19) shouldn't have been as
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nasty as it was about John Broder's front page New York Times story last
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Thursday on Kathleen Willey's detractor, Julie Steele. Chatterbox should have
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been nastier! Not only did Broder forget to mention Newsweek
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reporter Michael Isikoff's contention that Steele had changed her story at
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least two times, but Broder also forgot to mention that--as Isikoff had
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reported a week and a half earlier--Steele had taken $7,000 from the
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National Enquirer after shifting to an anti-Willey posture. ... Not that
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Steele is lying. Not that she isn't. But given the volume of detail the
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Times provided on Kathleen Willey's past, including her attempts to sell
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her story, you'd think Broder would at least mention the main questions
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surrounding Steele ... Now it turns out, as Newsweek reports this week,
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that Steele also met with an editor for the tabloid Star, who claims Steele was
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asking $20,000. ...
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Time vs. Isikoff, cont.: As predicted in Chatterbox for 2/23,
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Time magazine is heavily wedded to Steele's credibility. Newsweek
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is wedded (slightly less heavily) to Willey's. Time readers still
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don't know about the Steele-Isikoff dispute, or Steele's tabloid dealings,
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though they know all about Willey's aborted tab and book deals. ... Time
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also somewhat sleazily ends its anti-Willey piece by noting that a grant of
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immunity "may help protect [Willey] from prosecution in connection with any
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financial or tax improrieties," without ever saying what those improprieties
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might be. ...
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No, Jim, We Think This One Might be a Dealbreaker:
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"People have tried to suggest they are former friends, but when the dust
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settles I think they'll be okay."
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--Jim Moody, lawyer for Linda Tripp, referring to the friendship between his
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client and Monica Lewinsky, whom Tripp secretly taped and exposed to a
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potential perjury prosecution.
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