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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America : Starr
Investigation
Brill article details media role
in plot to oust Clinton
By the Editorial Board
19 June 1998
The 28-page article entitled "Pressgate," published
in the inaugural issue of the magazine Brill's Content,
provides a detailed account of the behind-the-scenes collaboration
between right-wing opponents of Bill Clinton, news reporters and
Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr that resulted in the Monica
Lewinsky sex scandal.
Brill has done a remarkable job, attempted by no one else in
the press, to identify the main protagonists and lay bare the
modus operandi of the media-led, quasi-judicial offensive against
the White House that has dominated American political life for
the past six months. Toward the beginning of his article, he sums
up the ensuing narrative as follows:
"Here [in the Lewinsky story], an author in quest of material
teamed up with a prosecutor in quest of a crime, and most of the
press became a cheering section for the combination that followed....
For in this story the press seems to have become an enabler
of Starr's abuse of power."
Brill refrains from drawing conclusions about the political
agenda of Starr and his co-conspirators. However, the facts he
reports make it clear that the eruption of the White House sex
scandal last January was the outcome of a highly organized and
carefully scripted provocation. Starr and the media were working
together to create a sudden, sharp political crisis that would
destabilize the White House and rapidly force Clinton from office.
Not surprisingly, the media coverage of Brill's exposé--which
makes a devastating critique of supposed pillars of American journalism
like the Washington Post, the New York Times and
the Los Angeles Times, as well as the TV networks--has
been largely hostile. Moreover, the commentary has focused on
Brill's interview with Starr, in which the independent counsel
admits leaking secret information to the press.
But the most serious and important material deals with how
the scandal was prepared and launched, with a journalist for Newsweek
magazine, Michael Isikoff, essentially writing the scenario which
was then implemented by Linda Tripp and Lucianne Goldberg, Tripp's
literary agent. (Goldberg, a right-wing Republican, has acknowledged
spying against Democratic Party candidates as part of Nixon's
"dirty tricks" operations in 1972.) One thing emerges
clearly from Brill's account: without the active intervention
and guidance of Newsweek magazine, the Monica Lewinsky
scandal would never have come to pass.
Here are the most salient facts:
- In January 1997, Newsweek published a cover story
promoting the Paula Jones suit, claiming that it raised serious
and legitimate legal and political issues, not merely the effort
of right-wing political activists to embarrass the White House.
- After the article's publication, Isikoff, assigned by Newsweek
to dig up dirt on the president's sex life, received a tip from
Paula Jones's lawyers which led him first to Kathleen Willey,
the White House volunteer who claims she was "groped"
by Clinton, and then Linda Tripp, the former White House secretary
who was now working in the Pentagon with Monica Lewinsky.
- In August 1997, Newsweek published an item by Isikoff
on Kathleen Willey, the first time a major media outlet had reported
on claims of sexual misconduct by Clinton in the White House.
Tripp was quoted in the article.
- In September 1997, at Goldberg's urging, Tripp began illegally
tape recording telephone conversations with Lewinsky about her
alleged relationship with Clinton.
- In October 1997 Goldberg offered the Lewinsky tapes to Isikoff,
hoping for a sensational story that would lead to a lucrative
book deal for her client and herself. Isikoff said that what
Goldberg and Tripp had brought him was not enough. As Goldberg
later told Steven Brill, Isikoff said that in order to get an
article in Newsweek, "he needed more than just sex.
He said he needed other sources and he needed for this to relate
to something official."
Thus directed by the Newsweek reporter, Goldberg and
Tripp proceeded to generate both the new evidence and the official
connection required to convert an alleged sexual encounter into
potential grounds for impeachment or forced resignation. While
concealing her contacts with Goldberg and Isikoff, Tripp induced
Lewinsky to send letters and packages to the White House, using
a courier service owned by the family of Goldberg's brother. The
records of this courier service were later turned over to ABC
News and to the Starr investigation as proof of a Clinton-Lewinsky
relationship.
It was during this period as well that Lewinsky made multiple
visits to the White House and also approached Vernon Jordan, seeking
to obtain job recommendations. It is not known whether Tripp urged
her to take these actions too, in order to create the appearance
of official misconduct (the "obstruction of justice"
that Starr now alleges took place).
What is known is that during the same month a woman made repeated
anonymous phone calls to the attorneys for Paula Jones, telling
them to subpoena Linda Tripp and Monica Lewinsky. Tripp and Goldberg
(or Isikoff through an intermediary) are the only possible sources
for these calls, since only they knew of Tripp's connection to
Lewinsky.
The subpoenas were duly served, thus making Clinton's relations
with Lewinsky an "official" matter, part of an ongoing
civil lawsuit, just as Isikoff had prescribed. He later told Brill,
"When I found out that they had been subpoenaed, I could
see the perjury possibilities and everything else. It was starting
to be a real story."
Tripp waited until after Lewinsky had given a sworn deposition
to Paula Jones's lawyers, denying any sexual relationship with
Clinton, before she approached the independent counsel's office
on January 12, 1998, giving them the tapes she had begun making
the previous September.
After debriefing Tripp, Starr's investigators immediately made
her available to the attorneys for Paula Jones, who were preparing
to take Clinton's deposition. As Brill describes this close coordination,
"the president's criminal inquisitors, having just finished
with Tripp, had now made it possible for his civil case opponents
to be given ammunition with which to question the president in
his sworn testimony--from which Starr, in turn, might then be
able to extract evidence of criminal perjury."
Starr cited Tripp's tape recordings to persuade Attorney General
Janet Reno to expand his jurisdiction--originally limited to the
1978 Whitewater land deal--to include Clinton's sexual activities
20 years later. FBI agents and investigators for Starr's office
began interrogating Lewinsky even before Reno had approved extending
his jurisdiction.
At the same time, Isikoff was in contact with Starr's deputy
prosecutor Jackie Bennett, who asked him not to phone Jordan,
Lewinsky or the White House so as not to preempt efforts to tape
record Lewinsky and then persuade Lewinsky to tape record Jordan
or Clinton himself.
Newsweek held up its planned story to give Starr the
opportunity to entrap the president, only to have a report on
its decision to delay publication posted on the Internet by a
right-wing gossip peddler, Matt Drudge. Within days, Monica Lewinsky
and her alleged connection to Clinton were the focus of an unprecedented
media barrage. Brill notes the extraordinary fact that media pundits
began to speculate about impeachment or forced resignation of
the president before a single fact had been established and without
any evidence that a crime had been committed.
The political lessons
What does this entire affair say about the state of American
political life? How is it possible that such a tawdry scheme,
carried out by a pair of right-wing political adventurers and
a journalistic smut-peddler, could bring an elected government
to the brink of collapse?
There were, of course, more powerful forces involved. The Lewinsky
affair could never have developed as it did without the intervention
of the Supreme Court, which authorized the Paula Jones lawsuit
to go forward. This gave right-wing opponents of the White House
the opportunity to bring together the Paula Jones suit and the
Starr investigation, with the aim of creating a legal noose for
Clinton.
Playing a pervasive role throughout has been the media, increasingly
dominated by a handful of giant conglomerates which decide what
is "news" and seek to mold public opinion along the
lines desired by corporate America.
The most fundamental feature revealed in the Washington crisis
is the general decay of American democracy, as the entire political
structure shifts ever further to the right. The lack of political
alternatives to the agenda of big business, the decades of right-wing
propaganda against socialist and radical thought, the absence
of a genuinely critical intelligentsia, the lack of mass organizations
of the working class with any independence from big business,
the exclusion and alienation of the broad masses of working people
from political life: all these leave the political structure increasingly
fragile and subject to manipulation by a handful of people.
In such a social environment conspiracy comes to the fore as
a method of political struggle, and right-wing cliques feel emboldened
to move for the ouster of an elected president, using a venal
press and a prosecutor deeply hostile to considerations of democratic
rights and due process. In the fetid atmosphere of contemporary
Washington, unsavory characters like Goldberg and Tripp are utilized
by a right-wing camarilla in what amounts to an attempted political
coup d'etat.
The conspirators assumed that their provocation would quickly
generate an overwhelming public demand for Clinton to resign.
This factor--the response of the populace at large--was the one
contingency they could not script.
In fact, the media firestorm over Monica Lewinsky failed to
generate the expected public reaction. While Tim Russert and Sam
Donaldson were suggesting that Clinton could be out of office
in "48 to 72 hours," the anticipated public groundswell
against the White House failed to materialize. Instead the polls
showed growing hostility to Starr and disgust over the media frenzy.
The broadcast media and press are contemptuous of public opinion,
regarding the American people as passive objects of manipulation.
But the deep alienation of masses of people from the existing
political system, their confusion and distraction, are not merely
apathy and disinterest. The public is not without critical judgment
and has developed an increasing skepticism towards the sensation-driven
attempts to stampede it.
This was again demonstrated only a month after the Lewinsky
scandal broke, when the Clinton White House and the media sought
to whip up a war fever against Iraq. After an embarrassing fiasco
at the official teach-in at Ohio State University, and other signs
of public opposition to a renewed Persian Gulf war, the administration
backed off from its planned confrontation with Saddam Hussein
and accepted a UN-mediated compromise.
The atmosphere of crisis and conspiracy that pervades the political
system, including the virtual paralysis of the Clinton administration
itself, has far deeper roots than the personality of the present
occupant of the White House. It arises from the increasingly narrow
social basis of American political life, controlled by corporate
interests and catering to the needs of the most privileged layers
of the population.
The underlying feebleness of the political order will become
obvious in the period ahead. The eruption of a major economic,
social or political crisis will quickly expose the weakness of
the leading personnel in all of the institutions and parties of
the ruling class, and the social chasm between the elite and the
great masses of working people.
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