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America : Clinton
Impeachment
Kenneth Starr and his accomplices: new aspects of the impeachment
conspiracy
By Martin McLaughlin
23 August 1999
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Two developments this past week have shed additional light
on the connections between right-wing political forces, the media
and the investigation into the Clinton White House by Independent
Counsel Kenneth Starr, which triggered Clinton's impeachment and
trial by the Senate.
On Wednesday the three-judge panel which appointed Starr as
Whitewater special prosecutor five years ago split 2-1 over the
question of whether to authorize the continuation of his investigation.
The panel is required to review the work of the Independent Counsel
and vote annually on his continuation in office.
It was the first time that the three Appeals Court justices
had been divided over Starr's investigation. The two appointed
to the bench by Republican presidents, David Sentelle and Peter
Kay, voted to continue the probe, but Richard Cudahy, appointed
by Democrat Jimmy Carter, filed an unusual dissenting opinion.
After the Senate trial of Clinton and his acquittal, Cudahy
wrote, the Starr investigation had reached a natural and
logical point for termination, since it is not clear how additional
measures against the principal subject of the investigation could
be pursued. He argued that an endless investigation,
which the passivity of the majority invites, can serve no possible
goal of justice and imposes needless burdens on the taxpayers.''
Even more significant was Cudahy's complaint that the other
two justices had rejected his request that the panel formally
ask Starr what was left to investigate. Cudahy said that there
had been no review of the Office of Independent Counsel except
informal contacts between Sentelle and Starr.
In this context it is worth reviewing who David Sentelle is.
While Kay and Cudahy are senior (retired) Appeals Court justices,
Sentelle is a relatively recent appointmenthe was placed
on the bench by George Bushand previously worked for years
as an assistant and political operative for ultra-right-wing Senator
Jesse Helms of North Carolina.
Sentelle was chosen by Chief Justice William Rehnquist, another
far-right Republican, to chair the three-judge panel which selects
independent counsels, ahead of several other Appeals Court justices
who had longer experience and less obvious partisan ties to the
Republican Party.
In July 1994, after the first special prosecutor, Robert Fiske,
had released preliminary findings that the death of Vincent Foster
was a suicide unrelated to Whitewater, Sentelle intervened on
behalf of the extreme-right elements who sought to use the investigation
to disrupt the White House. The three-judge panel which he chaired
fired Fiske and replaced him with Starr, a figure far more closely
identified with the right-wing of the Republican Party.
Only days before the action, Sentelle was seen lunching with
Jesse Helms and Senator Lauch Faircloth, another North Carolina
reactionary. Although both Helms and Faircloth had been vocal
critics of Fiske and had demanded his replacement by a new special
prosecutor, all three denied that this was the subject of their
tête-à-tête.
Cudahy's objections confirm that the judiciary played a critical
role in the behind-the-scenes right-wing campaign to destabilize
the Clinton administration. Rehnquist and Sentelle acted not as
neutral arbiters of legal precedent, but ideologically motivated
participants in a political struggle raging within the ruling
class.
The three-judge panel could still have a major role to play
if, as widely reported, Starr resigns as Independent Counsel some
time this fall. While its legal authority is not clear, given
the expiration last June 30 of the Independent Counsel Law, the
Sentelle panel is expected to select Starr's replacement.
ABC News reported that Starr discussed his impending resignation
with Sentelle on August 2, and that the Appeals Court justice
asked him to forward the resumes of his three top deputies, one
of whom could be chosen to carry forward the legal attack on the
Clintons and their associates.
Another facet of the right-wing destabilization campaign came
to light in the flurry of media reports about the private life
of Newt Gingrich. The former House Speaker filed for divorce from
his wife Marianne last month. On August 14, a divorce court judge
in Georgia granted Mrs. Gingrich's attorneys the right to subpoena
Callista Bisek, a congressional aide who has been Gingrich's girlfriend
for several years. A media frenzy then ensued in the New York
City and supermarket tabloids, and the identity of Ms. Bisek was
reported by much of the national media.
On August 18 the New York Times which has yet
to report the Bisek storypublished a commentary by Maureen
Dowd, the columnist who spent most of 1998 denouncing Clinton's
relations with Monica Lewinsky. Dowd noted, almost in passing,
Newt Gingrich's affair with a young Capitol Hill aide was
an open secret in Washington all during impeachment, and all through
his pompous lectures about America's cultural and moral decline.
Ms. Dowd refrains, for obvious reasons, from saying what follows
logically from this observation: that the media, including the
New York Times and herself personally, covered up this
open secret throughout the time that Clinton's relations
with Monica Lewinsky were being used as the pretext for an attempted
political coup d'etat. Dowd herself was awarded the Pulitzer Prize
for her columns during this period.
His personal vulnerability to exposure undoubtedly played a
role in Gingrich's twists and turns during the Lewinsky affair.
He first downplayed the allegations against Clinton, then reversed
himself and pledged to talk about moral corruption in the White
House in every speech. Later he declared that sex and lying about
sex were not impeachable offenses, but when Starr's 450-page pornographic
report, based wholly on sex and lying about sex, was delivered
to the House of Representatives, Gingrich and the House Republican
leadership decided to release it, in the hope that this would
spark public revulsion against the White House.
Even after Gingrich suddenly stepped down as Speaker and resigned
his seat in the House of Representatives, following Republican
losses in the November 1998 elections, the media kept silent about
the open secret of his relations with Bisek.
There is no question that Gingrich's resignation was demanded
by even more right-wing elements in the House Republican leadership,
spearheaded by Minority Whip Tom DeLay, who were pushing for an
impeachment vote despite the clear public repudiation in the elections,
and regarded Gingrich's foibles as an obstacle to this campaign.
Shortly after Gingrich's ouster, the same forces compelled his
would-be successor, Robert Livingston, to step down even before
election as Speaker, when his own past marital infidelities were
made public.
Gingrich's personal relations are of no greater public interest
than Clinton's, except perhaps as an illustration, for the thousandth
time, of the hypocrisy and cynicism of big business politicians
when they claim to represent morality and virtue. Far more significant
is the role of the New York Times and the media as a whole,
which worked systematically to promote the right-wing campaign
against the Clinton White House and to suppress any information
which might undermine it.
See Also:
Aftermath
of the impeachment drive
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