Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
Janet. The Planet. Will Bill Lann It?
7
8
Janet Reno's rope-a-dope
9
performance before Indiana Rep. Dan Burton's investigative committee earned
10
Issue 1 honors. Reno "took a beating" (Juan Williams, Fox News Sunday )
11
and "didn't give an inch" (Michael Duffy, PBS's Washington Week in
12
Review ) or "flinch" (Mara Liasson, Fox News Sunday ). Then, reported
13
the pundits, she "shellacs them" (Nina Totenberg, Inside Washington ) in
14
a "masterful performance" (Sam Donaldson, ABC's This Week ) and "wins the
15
moment" (Clarence Page, This Week ).
16
17
Reno reversed the standard
18
narrative arc of congressional hearings, in which belligerent congressmen make
19
witnesses look stupid, said Evan Thomas ( Inside Washington ). The
20
attorney general's pugilistic secret? She "bores them to death" (Totenberg).
21
The pundits' appreciation of Reno's idiot savancy stopped short of direct
22
comparisons to Forrest Gump or Chauncey Gardener. They neglected to make this
23
connection only because they failed to think of it, not because they respect
24
her.
25
26
27
Discovering the bright side of the hearing for the Republicans was Paul Gigot
28
(PBS's NewsHour With Jim Lehrer), who snooted out these meager truffles: By
29
calling Reno and FBI Director Louis Freeh into the station for questioning,
30
Burton kept alive the controversy over Reno's decision not to appoint an
31
independent counsel. Also, the increased scrutiny will give Freeh new "freedom"
32
to continue his campaign-finance probe.
33
34
The Clinton administration's embrace of the global-warming
35
treaty was Issue 2. The treaty, which Clinton won't submit to the Senate for
36
ratification any time soon, was pronounced DOA (Pat Buchanan, The McLaughlin
37
Group ) and a political liability to both Clinton and Gore--especially
38
presidential candidate Gore--because it is opposed by business and labor. All
39
agreed that Gore is doomed if the treaty becomes his signature issue. Several
40
pundits (Liasson; Mark Shields, NewsHour ; Tony Blankley, CNN's Late
41
Edition ) compared the treaty's political impact to that of the Clinton
42
administration's first-term health-care initiative: Voters endorse big-think
43
issues like these in principle, but rebel after they get wind of the
44
specifics.
45
46
47
Conservative commentarians damn the Kyoto treaty because they reject the
48
global-warming science and fear the treaty's economic repercussions (Charles
49
Krauthammer, Inside Washington; Robert Novak, CNN's Capital Gang). The liberals
50
salute it for its political ambition. "Bold move," said Shields. It will "get
51
Americans used to the idea that they've got to do something" about global
52
warming, offered Thomas. Showing off his homework, Krauthammer alleged that
53
Germany supports the treaty because the closure of East Germany's dirtiest
54
factories has already brought the Germans into compliance with the coming
55
emission standards, which are set at 1990 levels.
56
57
58
Clinton's threat to make a recess appointment
59
of Bill Lann Lee as the head of the Justice Department's civil-rights division
60
and the indictment of Henry Cisneros dueled for the Issue 3 slot. Partisan
61
squabbling over Lee's impending recess appointment subsided with this
62
face-saving news: It now appears that Clinton will make an "acting" appointment
63
of Lee, which is supposed to clock out in 120 days. Why the Republicans took
64
solace in this retreat is a mystery: The 120-day limit can't be enforced,
65
whereas a recess appointment would end next year.
66
67
The fall
68
of Hispanic political superstar Cisneros was labeled a "tragedy" (Thomas,
69
Liasson). Duffy restated the pertinent question, which nobody on the other
70
shows addressed: Where did public servant Cisneros get the $250,000 to pay off
71
his ex-mistress?
72
73
74
75
Bob Novak's Charm School: Two weeks ago
76
on CNN's Evans & Novak , Novak praised Louis Farrakhan for his good
77
talk-show manners. This week's charm-school ribbon-winner was guest Burton,
78
whom Novak called "very restrained" in the Hill hearings he chaired. Burton was
79
also "restrained on our program," said Novak, adding that the congressman's
80
composure at the hearings disproves the "contention at the White House that
81
he's a wild man, and if they provoke him he'll blow up." Perhaps Novak should
82
invite Saddam Hussein, Latrell Sprewell, and James Cameron onto his show for
83
charm-school lessons.
84
85
86
Doggie Style: Names
87
proposed for President Clinton's First Dog on the weekend shows--
88
89
Juan Williams: "Par."
90
91
Tony Blankley: "Shoes" (so
92
Clinton will have Shoes and Socks).
93
94
Mara Liasson: "Shredder."
95
96
Charles Krauthammer: "Reno"
97
(as in "come, Reno" and "stay, Reno").
98
99
Rahm
100
Emanuel: "Frank" (as in Frank Sesno, the host of Late Edition , who asked
101
Emanuel the question).
102
103
104
105
Punditus Interruptus: Novak and Al Hunt
106
bitch back and forth every week on Capital Gang about who is
107
interrupting whom. "Pundit Central," which can claim impartiality because it
108
cares not for either commentarian, will start counting interruptions. At the
109
end of January, the lead offender will be forever barred from indignantly
110
demanding of the lesser offender, "Can I finish?!"
111
112
113
Chyrons: Why haven't
114
the pundits compared Latrell Sprewell with American legend Ty Cobb? Cobb beat
115
his wife, his children, his teammates, opposing players, umpires, clubhouse
116
attendants, waiters, and store clerks. He is said to have killed a man in a
117
brawl and once stomped a crippled heckler in the stands. ... Earning
118
frequent pundit miles over the weekend was Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, who
119
telepromptered in identical performances about Lee and Reno on Fox News
120
Sunday , This Week , and Capital Gang . Should Hatch be praised
121
for staying on point or ridiculed for being a robot? ...
122
This
123
Week regular George Will turned gangsta rapper Sunday, saying, "Anybody who
124
comes between me and my Ford Explorer dies." ...
125
Washington Week in
126
Review reported that Hillary Rodham challenged the legality of recess
127
appointments in 1982 when she sued the Reagan administration for using one to
128
replace her on the board of Legal Services Corp. Thanks to Rodham's suit, which
129
was rejected, recess appointments are considered constitutional. ...
130
Will busted Jesse Jackson for inconsistently insisting that Bill Lann Lee be
131
approved by the Senate because he's "qualified," even though Jackson opposed
132
the confirmation of the similarly "qualified" Robert Bork for the U.S. Supreme
133
Court. Snared in Will's trap, Jackson could only gibber.
134
135
136
137
--Jack
138
Shafer
139
140
141
142
143
144
145