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Bias isn’t
the biggest danger of the new media age - 11/10/2008
What
would an Obama win do for race relations? Who knows - 10/27/2008
Boring old values and the New Media - 10/13/2008
Is
fact-checking candidates a new trap? - 09/29/2008
Will
the media show real spine? - 9/15/2008
Slow
movement toward online privacy reform - 9/1/2008
The
right lessons from the John Edwards affair - 8/18/2008
The
political price of being a media celebrity - 8/4/2008
A
bitter victory in the struggle for justice - 7/21/2008
Does
shaky start for nonprofit newsroom portend bigger woes? - 7/8/2008
When
the facts get in the way of a good tale - 6/23/2008
Scott
McClellan and the rules of punditry - 6/10/2008
Media regulators miss the point 5/26/2008
How to pay for the news - 5/12/2008
First thing we do, kill all the consultants -
4/28/2008
News business gazes longingly at a field of holes - 4/18/2008
Why news ombudsmen matter (maybe even in Manhattan) - 3/31/2008
Why news
media must embrace online rules? - 3/17/2008
No more sex,
please - 03/03/2008
Can journalism survive after the ads are gone?
- 02/18/2008
The media’s Bill Clinton problem - 02/04/2008
Kicking diversity out of campaign coverage -
01/21/2008
Popularity
Pay and the Age of Calibrated Journalism - 01/07/2008
2007
Columns
2006
Columns
2005 Columns
2004 Columns
2003 Columns
|
The media’s
Bill Clinton problem
By Edward Wasserman
Week of
February 4, 2008
For news media, the emergence of Bill Clinton as a key public player in
the presidential campaign of his wife, Sen. Hillary Clinton, raises
unusual coverage issues.
The most obvious, and the easiest to fix, is the problem of
even-handedness. The former president is a celebrity of the first order.
No other U.S. politician, active or retired, commands the crowds and
media that he routinely draws. So any news cycle in which he’s stumping
is likely to feature not just a story about Sen. Clinton, but one about
him too, hence double the coverage her opponents get.
Not that media attention is otherwise precisely balanced, but the
ex-president brings an unusually heavy finger to the scale. So the media
need to compensate. If the campaign were a debate the solution would be
simple: Bill’s time comes out of Hillary’s. That’s the same principle
the media need to apply in getting toward even-handedness in coverage.
But the more perplexing problem, and the one that the media have only
slowly begun to address, is in figuring out just what Bill Clinton’s
public status now is, and what kind of scrutiny he and his own record
ought to be subjected to.
This country treats former presidents very well indeed. They get
material ease, lifetime staff and guards at public expense, and a
license to get as rich as they like speaking, writing, golfing, sitting
on boards, accessorizing the elites of the world.
The media lay off ex-presidents unless they seek attention, and in this
they get a break that’s unusual for the famous they get celebrity
without accountability, they’re allowed to choose between prominence and
privacy.
This comfy sinecure comes at a price: They must keep clear of the rough
and tumble of politics, unless they’re pushing broadly humanitarian
causes that engender little controversy. (Jimmy Carter manages to duck
the no-controversy rule, but I think he’s viewed less as an ex-president
now and more as a global trouble-shooter and Nobelist.)
But Bill Clinton? His sharp-elbowed advocacy on his wife’s behalf during
the South Carolina primary has thrust him into the Democratic
presidential campaign not as a benign senior statesman offering vanilla
platitudes, but as a steeply partisan politico and has reminded the
public that in a Hillary Clinton administration, he’s almost sure to be
a figure of unique and perhaps formative influence.
Fair enough. So how should he now be covered? If he is, in effect,
campaigning for a position of major national importance, if he’ll be
more a Dick Cheney than a Laura Bush, shouldn’t he get the inspection
the press would routinely give to, say, a vice presidential candidate
few of whom matter anywhere near as much as he will?
Sure, Bill Clinton’s presidency was covered intensively. But it ended in
January 2001, and he has been skating beneath the media gaze ever since.
What causes has he championed, and what obligations has he incurred?
Since South Carolina these questions have started to be raised. In a New
York Times column, Frank Rich recounted a disquieting story of Clinton’s
stonewalling press inquiries into fund-raising for the presidential
library. A front-page Times article last week detailed his service
abroad on behalf of a Canadian mining baron who later donated tens of
millions of dollars to the library.
As Bill Clinton’s role in his wife’s campaign grows and his stature
within a Clinton II administration rises, the armistice under which his
post-White House doings are treated as private business is destined to
crumble.
There’s logic to that, and if it means a better-informed electorate and
a more accountable leadership, such scrutiny will be commendable.
But it may also mean a media establishment eager for the tales and
innuendoes that will be spread about Bill Clinton who was almost
impeached for reprehensible personal behavior when the same well-oiled
smear machine that slimed John Kerry in 2004 starts in on the seven
years he has spent jetting around the world unchaperoned.
Many people in the news media were embarrassed by their complicity in
dignifying the Swift Boat calumnies of ’04. The return of Bill Clinton
may yet offer another opportunity for the media to serve as a tool of
political hitmen. That would make 2008 one more episode of journalistic
shame.
Correction: Bill Clinton was not “almost impeached.” He was in fact
impeached by a vote of the House of Representatives, but the Senate did
not vote to remove him from office. |