Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
The 94-Minute Man
7
8
A dearth of breaking news
9
helped President Clinton win a clean sweep of the weekend shows. His
10
"encyclopedic" press conference (Mark Shields, NewsHour With Jim Lehrer )
11
was Issue 1, his midweek cancellation of the deadline for U.S. troop withdrawal
12
from Bosnia was Issue 2, and his disarming chat at the White House with
13
conservative critics of affirmative action ranked as Issue 3.
14
15
The
16
commentarians mostly thrilled at the style--not the substance--of Clinton's
17
94-minute press-conference marathon. Nearly every show replayed the president's
18
decorum-breaking response to the ABC reporter who tried to snare him with a
19
sticky-tape question about his race initiative. By the fifth viewing, you sorta
20
saw the president's point. None of the pundits did.
21
22
Ordinarily, the press complains about the president
23
avoiding them. Clinton's wordy outing peeved Evan Thomas ( Inside
24
Washington ) because all the talk proved that he doesn't have anything to
25
say. Charles Krauthammer ( Inside Washington ) found the silver lining: If
26
Clinton doesn't have anything to say, the country must be in good shape. Paul
27
Gigot ( NewsHour ) begrudgingly credited the president with "outlasting"
28
the press, while Al Hunt ( Capital Gang ) slathered on the praise, calling
29
the 30-question romp a "virtuoso performance." Playing to character, two
30
conservative Capital Gang sters found Clinton mean (Robert Novak!) and
31
filled with "self-pity" and afflicted with a "thin skin" (Kate O'Beirne).
32
33
Riffing
34
off the press conference, the pundits reprised last month's line that the
35
president is a lame duck. "Lamer than most," said Jack Germond ( Washington
36
Week in Review ), because he isn't feared or liked by anybody in his party.
37
Instead of noting that anybody who can control the week's news with a press
38
conference, a foreign-policy announcement, and a tea with domestic dissidents
39
is no lame duck, the pundits indulged in psychobiography: Clinton is frustrated
40
because "the end is now in sight" for his presidency (O'Beirne ) and he has yet
41
to establish his "legacy" (George Will, This Week ; Morton Kondracke,
42
The McLaughlin Group ). Because they will be chewing on the legacy thing
43
for three more years, the commentarians recently ordered a crate of
44
dentures.
45
46
47
Reversing his campaign pledge to bring the
48
troops home from Bosnia on June 30 earned Clinton near-uniform praise from the
49
pundits. Mara Liasson ( Fox News Sunday ), George Stephanopoulos ( This
50
Week ), and Steve Roberts ( Late Edition ) stroked the prez for saying,
51
"I was wrong" to promise the troops would come home in June 1998. "Nobody in
52
this town believed him when he set that deadline," said Germond, voicing the
53
majority viewpoint that the promise was an obvious campaign lie. But not
54
everybody loves a mensch . Pat Buchanan ( The McLaughlin Group )
55
barely disturbed the consensus by accusing Clinton of having "deceived the
56
American public" and leading the nation into a "quagmire."
57
58
Clinton's
59
Bosnia plan will require congressional approval--a cinch, the pundits said,
60
because he has already drawn down U.S. troops in Bosnia from 27,000 to about
61
8,500 and no U.S. soldiers have been killed. "Deadlines are a bad idea," said
62
Brit Hume ( Fox News Sunday ), because locals would treat one as the first
63
day of hunting season, locking and loading in anticipation. The only consensus
64
criticism of Clinton is that he lacks an "exit strategy" from Bosnia. Look for
65
an etymological rundown of the phrase in a future William Safire language
66
column.
67
68
All praised Clinton for expanding his national dialogue on
69
race by meeting at the White House with several leading doubters of affirmative
70
action. Hume called it the "legitimizing moment" for conservatives who disagree
71
with Clinton. "A step forward," concurred Gigot, that once again proved Clinton
72
to be an "aerobic listener" (Roberts). The lone dissenting view came from Tony
73
Blankley ( Late
74
Edition ), who recounted how Newt Gingrich, Bob
75
Dole, and Trent Lott all thought on first meeting that they could do business
76
with the president. They soon learned otherwise.
77
78
Jay Carney
79
( The McLaughlin Group ) counseled the president to mix "policy
80
initiatives" with his racial jawboning if he wanted to accomplish anything.
81
Kondracke implored Clinton to prepare for the day when the courts will strike
82
down set-asides based on race. He suggested preference programs based on
83
economic status instead.
84
85
86
87
Oh, Shut Up: John McLaughlin urged the
88
president to augment his racial dialogue with discussion of black racism, jury
89
nullification, hate crimes perpetrated against white people by black people,
90
and violent imagery in rap songs.
91
92
93
At
94
CNN, the Stretching Technique Is Called "Yip-Yap": How slow a news week was
95
it? Meet the Press host Tim Russert took his Christmas vacation five
96
days early by letting Rep. Jesse L. Jackson Jr., Laura Schlessinger, the Rev.
97
Jerry Falwell, and Mario Cuomo run amok in a long segment on the family and
98
morality. Russert regained consciousness at show's end when he introduced a
99
historical segment on Robert Frost's Meet the Press visit. Evans
100
& Novak took a holiday, too, with an inconsequential visit from guest
101
Art Buchwald. Bob and Elizabeth Dole chatted with Frank Sesno on Late
102
Edition for no good reason. And on Capital Gang , the team ran out
103
the clock with silly segments on what hypothetical gift each of the panelists
104
would give to various politicians, and what hypothetical gift they would give
105
to each other. The prescient Sam Donaldson wisely took the weekend off.
106
107
108
109
Note to Mark Shields: If you say it on
110
NewsHour don't repeat yourself on Capital Gang .
111
112
113
Punditus Interruptus, Week
114
1: Robert Novak and Al Hunt were unusually civil to one another in the Dec.
115
20 edition of Capital Gang , foiling "Pundit Central" 's plan to tabulate
116
their numerous interruptions of one another in an attempt to calculate who is
117
the bigger interjector. Novak cut Hunt off only twice. Hunt interrupted Novak
118
once. Blame the good manners on Christmas spirit.
119
120
121
122
--Jack
123
Shafer
124
125
126
127
128
129
130