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Exit Paula
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"Frame Game" is an
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occasional Slate department based on the premise that who wins in
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Washington is often determined by how the issue is framed. The author neither
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endorses nor condemns any of the views expressed, however laudatory or
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repellent.
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At 4:15 p.m. ET on April 1,
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CNN reported that Judge Susan Webber Wright was granting President Clinton's
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motion to dismiss the Paula Jones sexual harassment case. Within minutes,
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Clinton's allies waded into the media to frame the decision. In one scene,
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replayed on television throughout the evening, a reporter asked Monica
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Lewinsky's attorney William Ginsburg what the ruling meant. "It means that
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there never was a Paula Jones case," said Ginsburg. "I trust you'll put the
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proper spin on that."
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Actually,
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reporters didn't have to spin Ginsburg's remark or any other line put out by
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the Clinton camp. The Clintonites gave them the spin prepackaged: Clinton was
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"vindicated," Wright was the country's most honest Republican, and Independent
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Counsel Kenneth Starr had lost the legal excuse for his vendetta against the
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president. The most breathtaking spin of the evening--that "there never was a
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Paula Jones case"--was swallowed whole. The war of words between Clinton and
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his enemies looked, as it so often does, like the ground war between the United
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States and Iraq: one side advancing with remorseless efficiency, the other side
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fleeing in disarray.
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1 "No Merit." Reporters like to show off
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their savvy by picking out the most obvious spin they've been fed and exposing
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it as such. In this case, the buzzword put out by former White House Counsel
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Lanny Davis and other Clinton flacks was "vindication." Journalists were so
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fixated on maintaining a skeptical distance from the V-word that they neglected
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to screen out subtler phrases through which Clinton's surrogates equated his
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legal escape with moral exoneration. On ABC's Nightline , George
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Stephanopoulos proclaimed, "This wipes away any question of guilt." Seizing on
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Wright's conclusion that Jones' legal case was "without merit," the Clintonites
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constantly repeated this phrase to imply that Wright had dismissed Jones' whole
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story. By the end of ABC's World News
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Tonight , Peter Jennings was
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telling viewers that according to the judge, "the charges against the president
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had no merit."
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The advantage of the "no
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merit" line over the "vindication" line was that it enabled Clinton's
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supporters to maintain their delicate policy of defending him without having to
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vouch explicitly--and perhaps falsely--for his innocence. "I've never believed
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[Jones'] story," proclaimed Democratic consultant Mandy Grunwald on CNN's
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Crossfire . On CNN's Larry King Live , Davis offered a
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magnificently hollow testimonial: "I believe the president's denial."
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Jones'
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lawyers disputed the "vindication" spin but failed to organize an effective
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message of their own. The most promising line, auditioned by Pat Buchanan on
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Crossfire , was that Clinton's alleged behavior, even if legal, was
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offensive. But Jones' lead attorney, John Whitehead, lacked Buchanan's delicacy
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in making the point. Wright had ruled that if Jones' allegations were true,
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they still didn't amount to a breach of law. Whitehead simply removed the
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hypothetical. "She presumed, basically, what Paula Jones testified, did
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happen," Whitehead declared on Larry King Live . "The judge says very
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clearly that the attitude of the president was boorish." At every opportunity,
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Whitehead graphically told viewers that Clinton had fondled Jones' crotch,
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exposed his genitals, and asked her for oral sex. News anchors responded to
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these clumsy tactics by turning to other guests and changing the subject.
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2 Judging the judge. When a federal
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judge acts against you, you can't just profess shock and outrage, as Jones'
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attorneys did after Wright's decision. The judge starts with a presumption of
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fairness, and you have to tear that presumption down. The Clinton team's
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assault on Starr is a textbook example. There were obvious avenues for a
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similar attack on Wright: her student-teacher relationship with Clinton in law
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school and her previous ruling--subsequently overturned--that Clinton couldn't
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be sued until he left office. But Jones' advisers failed to organize a
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concerted attack on these points. In one breath, they doubted her integrity; in
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the next, they affirmed it.
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The Jones
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camp also tried to take the focus off Wright and put it back on what happened
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between Clinton and Jones in the hotel room. If the case was bogus, asked
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Buchanan, why did Clinton's lawyer Bob Bennett offer $700,000 and an apology to
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make it go away? Ordinarily, this is a good strategy. But in this case, the
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story line of the hour--"Judge dismisses Jones case"--was too strong to evade.
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On television, as in court, you need an alternative theory (e.g., that Mark
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Fuhrman planted the evidence) to lend coherence and persuasiveness to the
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various holes in the prosecution (e.g., that the gloves don't fit). Jones'
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advisers failed to put out an alternative story line explaining not just
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how Wright had ruled incorrectly, but why .
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Consequently and disastrously, the Jones team's expressions
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of shock played into the Clinton team's spin: that the surprise in Wright's
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decision lay in her defiance not of the facts of the case, but of the politics.
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Clinton's surrogates advertised Wright as a Republican appointee, and numerous
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media outlets, including NBC, CBS, and NPR, highlighted that point. By saying
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nothing about Wright's student-teacher relationship with Clinton, the Jones
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camp allowed the Clintonites to define it as adversarial. Wright's successful
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petition to Clinton for a better grade became, in Dan Rather's words, an
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illustration of her "long, often unfriendly, history with Bill Clinton."
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One of the
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Clinton team's most impressive feats was to sell the idea that throwing out the
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case was courageous. Beginning with Bennett's afternoon press
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conference--"Judge Wright should be complimented on her courage to make the
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right decision, notwithstanding all of the political atmosphere surrounding the
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case"--the Clintonites incessantly lauded Wright's bravery. Network legal
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analysts and reporters followed suit, marveling at Wright's "guts" and
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"gumption," even as their own instant polls showed the public favored the
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ruling. The media's willingness to buy this line was a result, in part, of the
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White House's ongoing campaign to depict Clinton as the victim of an inexorable
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right-wing machine.
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3 Clinton vs. whom?
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Jones vs.
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Clinton may be the case's official title, but it isn't the matchup the
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White House wants. To begin with, it threatens to pit the world's most powerful
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man against working women in general, a theme assiduously promoted by
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Whitehead. And since Jones is widely regarded as poor and stupid, the very idea
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of a contest between them makes Clinton the bad guy. For both of these reasons,
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victory over Jones, regarded as such, would actually be a defeat for Clinton.
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Hence Whitehead's argument, repeated in several venues, that the ruling would
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discourage sexual harassment victims from coming forward. As Buchanan put it,
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"the boys in the War Room" had "won a little victory today over this little
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girl who is going to be denied justice."
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Recognizing this trap, Clinton instructed his aides not to gloat. Even his pit
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bulls restrained themselves. Bennett told reporters that the decision spoke for
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itself, and James Carville brushed aside Jones as a pawn of larger, darker
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forces. The Clintonites had a worthier foe in mind. Crossfire co-host
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Bill Press summed up their story line: "Big victory for Clinton, big loss for
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Ken Starr." Starr fought off the linkage, telling reporters that his criminal
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investigation was "independent of the civil litigation." But the Clinton camp's
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message was less nuanced and therefore more effective. On every network,
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reporters and anchors talked about Starr's expensive and fruitless
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investigation and about his obligation to "put up or shut up," as Rather
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expressed it. CNN's Bob Franken declared that Starr and the Jones team were
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"joined at the hip."
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The Clintonites owed this portion of their victory in part
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to shrewd preparation: For weeks, they had argued that Starr was in "collusion"
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with Jones' lawyers. Meanwhile, Jones' lawyers foolishly cooperated by
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grumbling that Starr was "shadowing" them and hijacking their investigation of
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Lewinsky. The Clinton surrogates also held the high ground in the context war.
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Starr's investigation of whether Clinton covered up an affair with Lewinsky
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arose in the context of the depositions both gave in the Jones case. No matter
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how carefully Starr's sympathizers explained the distinction between the two
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cases--and even the superior gravity of the criminal case over the civil
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case--journalists fell back on the Clintonite spin that, as Tom Brokaw put it,
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Starr's probe "grew out of the Paula Jones case" and had therefore lost its
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viability.
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To this
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end, Clinton's allies weren't content to pronounce the Jones case dead. They
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proposed to erase it from history, as though Clinton's and Lewinsky's
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depositions had never happened. Ginsburg's assertion that "there never was a
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Paula Jones case" echoed a Democratic refrain, first delivered by Sen. Bob
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Torricelli, D-N.J., that the Jones case--and hence the foundation of Starr's
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investigation--"no longer exists." Bill Press, CNN political analyst Bill
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Schneider, and the Washington Post soon adopted the "no longer exists"
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formulation. The New York Times opened its front page analysis by
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saying, "it is now politically inconceivable that Congress will consider
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impeachment for President Clinton's alleged lies and obstruction in a case that
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no longer exists." The Starr camp's plea that cover-ups should be judged by
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their significance at the time they were committed, not by their significance
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today, was washed out in a tide of Orwellian revision.
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Not everyone in the Clinton camp wants Jones erased.
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Carville, who has always been a step ahead of his colleagues in framing
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Clinton's fights (remember when he declared war on Starr?), sees Jones' suit as
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a weapon that can be turned against its makers. He wants her captured alive.
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"Paula Jones is but one part of a larger mosaic," Carville charged on Larry
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King Live , weaving together reports that Jones, Arkansas troopers, and
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other Clinton accusers had received right-wing money. "I don't want this to end
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anything. I want this to go on. Because I want this to be the linchpin of an
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investigation of who got paid, how much, by whom, and to say what." The
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Orwellians, it turns out, were too modest.
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