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Clinton Turns Yellow
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By Jacob
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Weisberg
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(I,531 words; posted
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Friday, Oct. 25; to be composted Friday, Nov. 1)
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In a small office in the
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West Wing of the White House, next to Press Secretary Mike McCurry, sits an
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intense, wiry political operative named Rahm Emanuel. Though he is not among
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President Clinton's best-known advisers, Emanuel may be the administration's
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most diabolically effective tactician. On the issue of crime, in which he
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mostly specializes, Emanuel has gotten celebrated victims like James Brady and
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Marc Klaas to appear in Democratic TV spots. He is also largely responsible for
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moving the Clinton campaign beyond mere "rapid response" to pre-emptive
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strikes--engineering, for instance, Clinton's endorsement by the Fraternal
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Order of Police on the day Bob Dole was set to launch a major attack on the
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president's crime record.
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So it wasn't hard to guess
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the origin of the president's latest "little things" proposal: to require drug
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testing of teen-agers who want a driver's license. Dole's attack on Clinton for
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presiding over an increase in drug use by young people had the potential to
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bite; by tossing out the drug-testing idea, Clinton could claim to be doing
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something about the problem. "Our message should be simple," Clinton said in
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his Saturday radio address. "No drugs or no driver's license."
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Clinton's "simple" proposal
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might be better described as simple-minded, not to mention impractical,
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useless, and offensive to notions of privacy and constitutional rights. But the
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truth is that though Emanuel pushed the proposal--along with domestic policy
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adviser Bruce Reed--it can't be blamed on advisers, or even laid at the
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doorstep of "election-year politics." No one had to work very hard to talk
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Clinton into accepting yet another abridgment of individual freedom for the
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sake of political expediency. What the drug-testing proposal should remind us
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is not just that Clinton is an opportunist, who, with a 20-point lead, is now
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pandering beyond the call of victory. It should also put us on our guard about
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a man who, if he is a liberal at all, is a liberal of an odd sort: One with no
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instinctive regard for civil liberties or the Bill of Rights.
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Clinton's abysmal record
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on liberty goes back to his days as governor of Arkansas. The low moment was in
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1989, when, under no pressure from anyone, he proposed a law to ban
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"desecration" of both the American and Arkansas flags. "It was totally
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gratuitous," says Joseph Jacobson, who was director of the state chapter of the
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American Civil Liberties Union at the time. Under a then-recent Supreme Court
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decision, "It wasn't even in doubt that it was unconstitutional." Clinton
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seemed more First Amendment-friendly after he was elected president, when he
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reversed himself and opposed amending the Constitution to ban flag burning. But
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that stance turned out to be a false positive for the president on civil
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liberties. Since then he has consistently insulted both the First and the
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Fourth amendments. (Some would say he has disregarded the Second Amendment,
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too. But that's a different discussion.)
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Clinton's First Amendment slovenliness first
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became apparent in 1993, when he boxed his own solicitor general on the ears
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for having been on the wrong side in the Knox case, in which a graduate student
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at the University of Pennsylvania was convicted for possessing videotapes of
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teen-age girls wearing bikinis and underwear. When the Supreme Court overturned
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the graduate student's conviction, Clinton joined in the chorus condemning the
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court's decision.
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You might grant Clinton that
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one as a necessary surrender--no politician in his right mind wants to be
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allied with child pornographers. But what Clinton did on the Communications
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Decency Act is truly unforgivable. When Sen. James Exon of Nebraska introduced
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a foolish bill which would have criminalized the transmission of "indecent" or
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"patently offensive" material via the Internet, the administration backed
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it.
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It was Republicans, more
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than Democrats, who tried unsuccessfully to derail the CDA in Congress. One
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oddity of this political moment is that while our Democratic president has no
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special love of civil liberties, civil libertarian sentiment is growing in the
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unlikely soil of the GOP--where vilification of the American Civil Liberties
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Union has been campaign boilerplate, at least until recently. This surprising
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development is partly a matter of pandering to anti-government paranoids in the
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gun lobby and militia movement; partly anti-Clinton opportunism; partly
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explained, at least in the CDA case, by the interests of business; but partly,
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perhaps, principled.
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In the CDA debate, Republican Rep. Christopher
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Cox of California led the push for an alternative; both Newt Gingrich and
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Majority Leader Dick Armey supported Cox's position. But it was left to a
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three-judge U.S. Court of Appeals panel in Philadelphia to throw out the law,
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calling it "profoundly repugnant." Did Clinton learn his lesson? Hardly. The
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administration is appealing the decision to the Supreme Court. And Clinton
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recently signed an immigration bill giving the government the power to exclude
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anyone who advocates "terrorist activity." This threatens to become a modern
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version of the McCarran-Walter Act, which was used during the Cold War to
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exclude lefty writers and intellectuals.
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On Fourth Amendment rights,
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Clinton has been no better. In his crime bill, passed in 1994, he went further
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than any Republican president would have dared to restrict habeas corpus, the
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writ by which state prisoners, including those on death row, can get their
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cases reviewed by federal courts. Under the immigration bill, Clinton directed
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the Immigration and Naturalization Service to deport asylum seekers without
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giving them any opportunity to appear before a tribunal. And in his most recent
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anti-terrorism proposal, which he tried to wing through Congress in the wake of
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the TWA 800 disaster, Clinton requested vast new wiretapping powers for the
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FBI. Once again, it was primarily a few liberty-loving Republicans who
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restrained him.
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The drug-testing
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proposal may be Clinton's most obnoxious gesture of all. In the other
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instances, there is at least a trade-off posited between individual rights and
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competing public purposes, like the protection of children. In the case of drug
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testing, however, the proposed warrantless blanket invasions of privacy serve
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only a symbolic value. A scheduled drug test is easily beaten; you just need to
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stay clean for a short time before the test. Then you can celebrate your
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license by getting high. In answer to the objection that urine tests reveal
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only very recent use of hard drugs, Bruce Reed says that before long,
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drug-testing technology will have advanced from urine to hair tests, which may
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reveal chemical traces for up to a year. But here the insult to civil liberties
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becomes staggering. The explicit purpose becomes finding out who among the
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young has ever indulged in the kind of experiment that both members of
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the Democratic ticket have acknowledged participating in themselves. Clinton
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made this purpose clear in his speech Thursday at Birmingham Southern College,
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where he said the reason for the tests was to "to find those kids and help them
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before they're in trouble and it's too late."
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That Clinton simply has no conception of why
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such an intrusion might be worrisome was evident from that speech, as it was
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from his radio address, in which he compared his proposal to the requirement
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that parolees take drug tests. Parolees are convicted criminals. People
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applying for driver's licenses aren't even suspects of anything. It has been
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suggested that Clinton limited his idea to under-18s in order to affront only
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people who cannot vote. The more likely reason, however, is that if the idea is
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ultimately judged constitutional--a big if--this will only be because it
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applies to those who do not have the full legal rights of adults.
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On top of this sorry
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civil-liberties record are the misuse of the FBI in the White House's own
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original travel-office investigation, and what has come to be known as
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Filegate. No one has yet traced these abuses to the president himself. But
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there is something to the argument that his cavalier attitude about individual
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rights helped to create an atmosphere in which thuggish members of his
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administration could regard invasions of privacy very lightly. Dole is hardly
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better than Clinton when it comes to the Bill of Rights, and there are lots of
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Republicans, like Bob Barr of Georgia, who decry only those incursions that
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perturb the National Rifle Association. But if Clinton sets the new Democratic
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standard, the day may not be far off when some Democratic candidate accuses a
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Republican opponent of being a card-carrying member of the ACLU--and the
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Republican proudly admits it.
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