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Willey or Willie?
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USA
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Today and the Washington Post lead with Kathleen Willey's "60 Minutes"
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interview. The other papers pretend there was something else on. The Los Angeles
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Times says the day's top story is the government of Iran's crackdown on
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oil shipments to Iraq that violate U.N. sanctions. The New York Times ,
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even more transparent in its attempt to appear above pack journalism, goes
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with--are you sitting down?--the possibility that Republicans could take over
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all the governors' slots of the old Confederacy. This is particularly odd in
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that the NYT 's own front-page Willey story states that "even the
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president's supporters say that if proved true, the accusations of perjury and
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obstruction of justice in the Lewinsky matter could end Clinton's
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presidency."
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In her interview, Willey gave a paw-by-paw description of her encounter with
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President Clinton in a small study off the Oval Office and charged that Clinton
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lied about it. All the papers have Willey's comment that she considered
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slapping him but decided not to because "I don't think you can slap the
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president of the United States.." And everybody has Clinton lawyer Robert
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Bennett's comment that his client is "absolutely bewildered" by Willey's
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allegations, and that there is as yet unreleased information that will undercut
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them.
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USAT reports that "Willey also said during the 60 Minutes interview
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that she told Linda Tripp about her encounter in the Oval Office. Willey said
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Tripp, whose tape recording of conversations with Lewinsky sparked Starr's
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investigation, later told her, 'I'm going to get you, and . . . everyone else
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in this place before this is all over.'" (Tripp's lawyers deny that she ever
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made such a statement.) This passage leaves the reader wondering why Tripp's
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response to Willey's report of her Oval Office incident would be anger towards
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Willey. But what's really going on is that the paper has garbled the "60
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Minutes" interview. In it, Willey says that Tripp was angry at her, not about
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the alleged grope, but because Willey got a White House job--which Tripp
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attributed to Clinton's interest in Willey while Tripp lost hers,.
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In its lead, the WP gets this right. The Post also points out
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that in some ways, Willey could be a more troublesome witness for Clinton than
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the other women alleging sexual harassment, because Willey was originally
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unwilling to tell her story, her accusation is of a non-consensual act, and she
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is hardly a Clinton-hating member of the vast right-wing conspiracy Hillary
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Clinton cited, having worked to get Clinton elected.
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USAT quotes the president of NOW, Patricia Ireland, as saying, "It's
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not just sexual harassment. If it's true, it's sexual assault." The WP
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has this too, but in addition notes the significance of the remark: it's a
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break with the generally complacent attitude most feminists have maintained
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toward the Clinton sex scandals. (Up till now their motto has been: "The devil
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you know is better than...Trent Lott.") Also, USAT decides to leave out
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the rest of the Ireland quote, which the WP includes: "He put his hand
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on her breast; he put her hand on his erection. That is a pretty serious charge
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if true and it is a very big problem." The NYT , in its front page story
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also makes the point about the significance of Ireland's remark, but cuts her
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quote just where USAT does. The LAT goes the other way a little
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bit, saying that Willey claims Clinton "fondled" her breasts and placed her
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hand on his "crotch," even though Willey didn't use either of the words in
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quotes.
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In a wise departure from standard newspaper practice, the Post
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doesn't clean up Willey's quotes, so that its report communicates a good deal
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of the emotion of the televised interview: "And then he, then he, then he
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kissed me on, on my mouth and, and pulled me closer to him. And I remember
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thinking, I just remember thinking, 'What in the world is he doing?' ... And I,
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I pushed back away from him and--he, he, he, he, he's a big man. And he, he had
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his arms, they were tight around me and he, he touched me....He touched my
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breasts with his hand and I, I, I, I was, I, I was just startled."
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There is a dangling thread from the interview that none of the papers tugs
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at: Willey says that one of the first people she saw after she got away from
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the president was then-Secretary of the Treasury Lloyd Bentsen. Why doesn't
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some enterprising reporter go ask Bentsen what his impression of Willey's
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demeanor was?
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The LAT 's Willey story says that in Clinton's Jones case deposition,
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he "acknowledged embracing Willey and perhaps kissing her on the forehead. He
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said he has engaged in similar displays of affection with 'scores and scores of
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men and women who have worked for me or been my friends over the years.'" Maybe
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it's time some of those men Bill Clinton has kissed on the forehead came
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forward to support their president.
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