Conservatives Choose Torturing
Clinton Over the Constitution
"I can't answer it in a phrase because it
is complicated. Part of it is that you have conservative Republicans who just
want to torture the President for as long as they humanly can. But part of it
is that you have serious constitutionalists who really think the process
should play out - Senator Byrd among them...."
-- ABC's Cokie Roberts answering Peter Jennings' question on why it has
been hard to start the trial, January 5 World News Tonight.
"Hardest to convince was the 'damn the torpedoes' faction, conservatives
who want to barbecue Clinton as long as possible or who hope something might
turn up to draw 12 Democrats into the hanging party."
-- Time Senior Editor Nancy Gibbs, January 25 issue.
Dan Rather, Defense Counsel
"Bob, is there or is there not any sense
among the Senators, any talk among the Senators, that there's other very
important business that needs to be attended to? Saddam Hussein has his
aircraft in the air threatening U.S. fighting men and women in the military.
There are questions about Social Security, what to do about health care.
There's a long line of the people's business that seems to have been put aside
and apparently is going to be put aside for weeks if not months now."
-- Dan Rather to Bob Schieffer at about 1:25pm ET during the signing of the
oath book by Senators, January 7.
"Senator, when you talk to other Senators, particularly older Senators -
those who've been around for a bit - is or is there not some concern of the
public, concern in some quarters, not all of them Democratic, that this is in
fact a kind of effort at a quote 'coup,' that is you have a twice elected,
popularly elected President of the United States and so those that you
mentioned in the Republican Party who dislike him and what he stands for,
having been unable to beat him at the polls, have found another way to get him
out of office."
-- Dan Rather to former Senator Warren Rudman during CBS coverage of the
impeachment trial swearing in, January 7.
"What options are open to Trent Lott at this moment, keeping in mind that
he is under considerable pressure from his own basic constituency, which is by
anybody's analysis, the harder right part of the Republican Party?"
-- Dan Rather to CBS News analyst Gloria Borger of U.S. News,
January 7.
Don't Blame Clinton for Delays?
"But Senator, if there's no way that this
is going to turn around, if the votes aren't there, why is your party dragging
this thing out?"
"But what is certain is what the public
sentiment is on this thing. People want it over with, and if the votes aren't
there, why not, why go through all this business about witnesses? Why not just
get it done?"
-- Good Morning America co-host Charlie Gibson to Bob Dole, January
18.
"Bob Dole was here yesterday, a Republican, who said, look, the 67 votes
aren't there and aren't going to be there to convict the President. So why,
why drag this out when the public, so obviously, doesn't want it dragged
out?"
-- Gibson to Democrat George Mitchell, next day.
Charles Ruff: Eloquent & Clever;
Republicans: Tedious
"Even if they think the President
committed these offenses, do they constitute a threat to the Constitution and
if they do, should he be removed from office? I thought that Mr. Ruff was
quite eloquent in the way he wound that up. Just prior to that, a very clever
pre-emptive strike...."
-- CBS's Bob Schieffer after Charles Ruff completed his defense case on
January 19, referring to Ruff's effort to counter Henry Hyde's recollection of
what soldiers died for and how he demonstrated the futility of gaining
insights from witnesses.
vs.
"Thus far, Dan, we have not heard either
Clarence Darrow or William Jennings Bryan. This has been fairly tedious."
-- Schieffer on the opening statements by House managers Henry Hyde and
James Sensenbrenner, January 14.
Journalists Like Clinton-Lovers Much
More Than Clinton-Haters
"I'm surprised at how polarized our
country is in relation to President Clinton. A lot of people don't think he's
done anything wrong, or if he has that it's anyone's business but his own. And
then there are the people who hate Bill Clinton. They've always hated him.
Nothing he can ever do will keep them from hating him for the rest of their
lives. They call him Slick Willie. You can't talk to these people. I'm glad
everyone else is so sure of what they think about Bill Clinton because I don't
know what I think. I do know I like the people who like him better than I like
the people who hate him."
-- Andy Rooney on 60 Minutes, January 17.
Scaife and American Spectator: Same As
Larry Flynt
"It's obscene that Larry Flynt gets any
kind of attention. You're right. He is sleazy. I would point out I didn't hear
the same objection from conservatives when The American Spectator, funded by
Richard Mellon Scaife, the right-winger, launched an inquisition into Bill
Clinton's private life."
-- Wall Street Journal's Al Hunt, Jan. 16 Capital Gang on CNN.
"This, ladies and gentlemen, I warned you in January, you get there and
it will filthify, if that's a word, it will make all of us part of this sleazy
process. The urge to destroy the President of the United States is so
malignant that nobody will emerge..."
-- Geraldo Rivera, January 11 CNBC Rivera Live with Flynt.
Brian Williams Picks On Hyde
"Senator Cleland, was it fair of Henry
Hyde to bring in the honor of those who gave their lives in Vietnam for the
United States, in Normandy for the United States, and somehow tangentially tie
them into this Clinton case?"
-- NBC Nightly News anchor Brian Williams to Democratic Senator Max
Cleland, January 16.
"You just heard a very emotional summation, a wrap-up of the arguments,
by Henry Hyde, the Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, the man who is a
former Democrat, the legislator from the state of Illinois, who was once
believed, before the current political climate changed in the country, to be
as rabid a conservative you could find on Capitol Hill, rapidly being referred
to more and more in statesmanlike terms as a, almost a moderate Republican,
although his views certainly are on the right side of center."
-- MSNBC anchor Brian Williams, January 16.
Journalists for Wellstone
"Senator Wellstone, it's been a great
pleasure talking to you and you're not running for President, after those sort
of passionate words there. Not running for President. We'll have to leave it
there. I have to say I'm disappointed."
-- MSNBC's John Hockenberry concluding his interview with liberal Democrat
Paul Wellstone, January 12.
"I am saddened that Wellstone is not physically able to make the race...Wellstone
would have been different, both as a cerebral former college professor and as
a vocal tribune for Democratic issues that challenge the safe, centrist
certainties of the Clinton administration."
-- Former Time reporter Walter Shapiro in his USA Today column,
January 13.
House Managers = The Klan
"I think there are real questions about
separation of powers and I don't think he [Clinton] should go up there [appear
before the Senate]. And second of all, that herd of managers from the House, I
mean frankly all they were missing was white sheets. They're like night riders
going over. This is bigger than Bill Clinton."
-- Newsweek's Eleanor Clift, January 9 McLaughlin Group.
Hastert: Pawn of the Far Right
Host Wolf Blitzer:
"What about the argument that some people fear, is that he's simply a
stalking horse for Tom DeLay, who really put his candidacy out there, and he's
really not his own man, he's going to be beholden to that conservative, very
conservative right wing of the Republican Party?"
Steve Roberts, U.S. News
contributing editor: "Well, I think that's a real issue. I
said earlier that I think Trent Lott can resist those pressures from the House
conservatives. Hastert is going to have a much more difficult time resisting
those pressures from his own constituency, that's going to be his biggest
problem...."
-- Exchange on CNN's Late Edition, January 10.
Clinton Partisan Sees Partisanship
"The President not only had his speech
filled with bipartisan references, but I counted eight times that he added
words of bipartisanship or words of congratulations to the Congress about
their own, about something. This is clearly a very conciliatory speech, trying
very hard to work with these people who are trying him."
-- ABC's Cokie Roberts just after Clinton's State of the Union address,
January 19.
"I guess I disagree with those who say this was very bipartisan and very
conciliatory. All the rhetoric was, but in fact, this was, was quite a
partisan speech. The President took the Republican goals, but he had
Democratic means to get them..."
-- ABC analyst George Stephanopoulos a half hour later.
"Grew" by Moderating Reagan
"She [Nancy Reagan] started out a woman
whose values I questioned....And I believe that she grew enormously in the
presidency and that she changed and that she moderated the administration and
I ended up, I ended up admiring her greatly and thinking that she held things
together much more than we ever knew and we may never know because she will
continue to protect him forever, I think."
-- CBS News reporter Lesley Stahl promoting her new book, Reporting Live,
January 12 Today.
Publisher: L. Brent Bozell
Editors: Brent H. Baker and Tim Graham
Media Analysts: Geoffrey Dickens, Jessica Anderson, Brian Boyd,
Mark Drake, Paul Smith
Research Associate: Kristina Sewell
Circulation Manager: Michelle Baetz
Intern: Ken Shepherd |
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