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Waiting for Reno to Deal
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With Congress in recess, the
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White House on vacation, and Iraq relatively quiet, the pundits served moldy
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leftovers on Thanksgiving weekend. Issue 1 was Janet Reno's decision whether to
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appoint an independent counsel to investigate Clinton's and Gore's fund-raising
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phone calls. The pundits and political guests unanimously agreed that Reno
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wouldn't.
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Susan
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Page (CNN's Late Edition ) expressed the consensus that such a decision
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will set off "World War III between congressional Republicans and the White
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House," and that Reno will surely appoint an independent counsel to investigate
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the alleged link between campaign contributions and Secretary of the Interior
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Bruce Babbitt's rejection of an Indian casino license. Once authorized, that
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independent counsel will follow the money back to the White House and
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investigate the phone calls anyway, Page explained.
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Offering the only new spin on the independent counsel was
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Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, guesting on CNN's Capital Gang . He
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insisted that Reno must appoint, comparing the sneaky Chinese donations
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to the rampant spying and other efforts to influence American politics by the
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Soviet Union after World War II. The U.S. government concealed the extent of
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the Soviet penetration, injuring democracy and fueling conspiracy theories in
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the process. Unless government comes clean about the Chinese
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influence-peddlers, the tragedy will repeat, Moynihan said.
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The
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pundits combined the ongoing Asian economic meltdown with the Pacific Rim
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economic summit to frame Issue 2. Mark Shields (PBS's NewsHour With Jim
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Lehrer ) and Alan Murray ( Washington Week in Review ) marveled at the
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difference between Vancouver and earlier Pacific summits. In the old days, U.S.
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officials would arrive at the meetings and concede the 21 st century
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to the Asian tigers. Then they'd submit to public browbeatings from the tigers
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for running such huge trade deficits. Roles were reversed at this summit,
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Shields and Murray noted. Asian countries are pandering to the United States
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for bailouts and Asian capital is flowing into U.S. markets.
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Several pundits recited the economic arithmetic
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of the Asian meltdown: 1) Desperate Asian economies will dump goods here,
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benefiting U.S. consumers--but hurting U.S. workers--and reducing our
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inflation. 2) U.S. exports won't fall because Asia isn't an important export
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market for U.S. goods. 3) Japan is rich enough to bail itself out. Pat Buchanan
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( The McLaughlin Group ) denounced the "crony capitalism" of Asia and
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predicted that the coming International Monetary Fund bailout will run into the
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hundreds of billions of dollars. Kate O'Beirne ( NewsHour ) called the
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bailout welfare for undeserving corporations. Al Hunt ( Capital Gang )
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represented the pro-IMF caucus, citing the success of the Mexican bailout.
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Iraq
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dropped to Issue 3 after three weeks at No. 1. Suffering issue fatigue, the
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pundits could only repeat themselves. George Stephanopoulos (ABC's This
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Week ) still thinks we have no alternative but to assassinate Saddam. Bill
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Kristol ( This Week ) still thinks we have no alternative but to commit
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ground troops. George Will ( This Week ) still thinks that the diminished
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U.S. military gives us no alternative at all. In such a situation, description
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substitutes for opinionizing. "Saddam blinks and so does the White House," said
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Margaret Carlson on Fox News Sunday .
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Repetitive Pundit Syndrome took its toll on O'Beirne. On
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NewsHour , recorded Friday night, O'Beirne made sense when she argued for
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a unilateral strike against Iraq. Her logic? Saddam's neighbors "want to
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appease whoever they think--between the United States and Saddam--is going to
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be the ultimate victor." Therefore, a show of force will rally the region to
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our side. By the next evening on CNN's Capital Gang , O'Beirne had fused
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her two salient NewsHour points--the IMF smells like corporate welfare
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and a unilateral strike against Iraq is warranted--into a Unified Bill Clinton
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Theory. She said the president reliably says the correct things about foreign
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policy and economics, and then reliably blows it by deferring to the
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internationalists at the United Nations and the IMF. O'Beirne's theoretical
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overreach proves that pundits--like truck drivers--can only work a fixed number
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of hours before they become reckless.
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Yuck Yuck: We should back the Republican
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proposal to rename Washington National Airport in honor of Ronald Reagan, said
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Bill "Shecky" Kristol on This Week , just to "annoy" Democrats like
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Stephanopoulos every time they land in D.C.
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Surfacing: The pundits plumbed the upcoming global-warming treaty
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conference in Kyoto for its political content. The American left has gone
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international to win a "phony treaty" that curbs greenhouse gases, Kristol
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alleged, because they can't accomplish their goal domestically. He added the
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non sequitur that nerve gas is more of a threat "to our children than global
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warming." Page predicted that no breakthrough would emerge from Kyoto because
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Stuart Eisenstat was attending as lead U.S. representative instead of Gore.
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Bob X: Rowland Evans, Robert Novak, and
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Iraq-bound guest the Rev. Louis Farrakhan all pretended to be reasonable people
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on CNN's Evans & Novak . After Farrakhan left the set, Novak
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congratulated himself and Farrakhan for exhibiting such good talk-show manners.
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Predicting that he would "get a lot of heat" for treating the minister with
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respect, Novak said that Farrakhan was "more measured and a lot less
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confrontational and provocative than a lot of the politicians we talk to
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regularly on this program."
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Yes, yes, the measured and
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polite Farrakhan. Has Novak never attended one of the minister's rallies?
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Farrakhan is always circumspect in the first act. But when the groundlings
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grumble for red meat in the second act, Farrakhan abandons the smiling visage
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and the angel-of-peace routine and spews. If Evans and Novak want to capture
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the real Farrakhan, "Pundit Central" suggests that they accompany him to one of
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his rallies. His transformation from reasonable man to demagogic bigot is as
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frightening as it is predictable.
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--Jack
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Shafer
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