Read A Woman in Charge Online

Authors: Carl Bernstein

Tags: #Fiction

A Woman in Charge (60 page)

Wright said she called Bruce Lindsey a couple of times to relay the message, but nothing ever came of it. “Bruce was not a dialogue person with me. I never got answers.” There was no question, Wright said, that troopers had pulled women out of crowds for the governor at Bill's direction (and for themselves), but that the situation was more volatile than she had realized. “Bill had told me before he announced [for president] that any indiscretions he ever engaged in were in the presence of only two troopers that he knew he could trust…and that nobody else would have ever been around so there wasn't anything to say. Well, that was a flat-out lie. I was a little taken aback by it at the time he told me because it was completely unlike him to have that much foresight and care in the situation.”

Another story (the day after the
Spectator
's appeared) ran in the
Los Angeles Times
—whose reporters had been pursuing the same line of inquiry for weeks—saying that Clinton had recently called the troopers and dangled the possibility of federal jobs in return for their silence.

The
Spectator
story and its fallout in the mainstream press represented the convergence of all the avenues of pursuit of the Clintons by a press corps already frustrated with Hillary's refusal to be forthcoming about the family finances and increasingly convinced of her lack of truthfulness; by their avowed enemies back in Arkansas; by Republicans in Congress and far-right-wing allies, especially on talk radio; and, eventually, by the law, as represented by a special prosecutor who seemed more than willing to feed and be fed by all of those parties.

Bob Barnett, the Clintons' personal lawyer upon entering the White House and, to this day, one of their most trusted friends and counselors—especially Hillary's—attempted to comfort her, and, judging from Hillary's own comments later, keep her anger from exploding, whether at Bill or the press. She pointed out that Bill had been elected, not her, and admitted to feeling “very much alone,” something she almost never said, and which signaled she was at her lowest ebb. And Bill, clearly, could be of no comfort.

Hardly a year had passed since Bill's election. Her attitude now—frustrated, angry, weary—announced, “I thought we were through with this; and now, here it comes again,” said McLarty. She told him, “It's going to distort everything that we do.”

As aides to Hillary and Bill considered how to respond publicly, they were understandably self-conscious about discussing such matters around the president and first lady. Hillary seemed to have absorbed the full force of the story by the time she and Bill attended another Christmas party at the White House, for family and close friends, the next night. Her press secretary, Lisa Caputo, took her aside to tell her that the troopers were now telling their tale on CNN. “My first thoughts were of Chelsea and for my mother and Virginia, who had already been through too much,” said Hillary. The plausibility of at least some of what the troopers were claiming was exacerbating matters.

It was obvious to White House aides that Hillary was deeply humiliated by the stories, and that Bill “was deep in her doghouse,” in Gergen's words—“like a bouncy golden retriever who has pooped on the living room rug, he curled up and looked baleful for days.” But Hillary and Bill tried to project a lawyerlike detachment, and when they did explode, their anger was always triggered by some detail of the story they said was wrong, or misinterpreted, and they conveyed a sense that there were higher principles at work here, rarely their own lives. Bill insisted that the troopers were vengeful because they'd wanted jobs in Washington and he hadn't offered them; Hillary was certain the stories had been carefully timed to sabotage the Clinton agenda.

The policy implications of what was occurring were of course clear to Hillary, and as distressing as the private hurt. Now, the familiar dynamic of the Clinton marriage in extremis was again in play, but for the first time on the Washington stage. Hillary held the upper hand; Bill would not risk her further ire. He would challenge her on nothing remotely in her purview. As the first anniversary of the Clinton presidency approached, they were moving into the crucial period of the health care struggle. “I cannot recall him publicly confronting her on any health care issue after that,” said Gergen. Her continuing refusal thereafter to compromise with either leaders on Capitol Hill or her husband's economic team was a major factor in the failure of the Clinton initiative for health care reform.

 

T
HE DETAILS
that emerged from the troopers' stories put the White House in an impossible bind in terms of fashioning a public response. Two of the troopers had been excruciatingly precise in laying out the nature of Bill's sexual activities. They also alleged that he had offered a third trooper, Danny Ferguson, a bribe, in essence—in the form of a federal job—for keeping silent. It is a violation of federal law to solicit something of value in exchange for promising a government job—in this case a position as regional director of the Federal Emergency Management Agency or U.S. marshal in Little Rock, according to the troopers. Buddy Young, himself a FEMA regional manager in Texas by then, had been a go-between, talking to the president and the troopers about possible jobs. As a state trooper in Arkansas, Young had earned the maximum salary accorded after five years of service, $25,600; at FEMA, he was earning $98,000. Bruce Lindsey, too, had been in frequent touch with Young in the preceding weeks.

The initial statement issued by the White House, on Sunday night, December 19, in Lindsey's name, was anything but a convincing denial: “The allegations are ridiculous. Similar allegations were made, investigated, and responded to during the campaign, and there is nothing here that would dignify a further response.” The statement said that no offers of jobs had been made to any of the troopers, but that the president “has had conversations about the fact that false stories were being spread about him.”

Dee Dee Myers and Lindsey were left to deal with the public response while the president stayed mum. Myers announced that the press briefings for Monday and Tuesday, September 20 and 21, were canceled. Hillary had been scheduled to do interviews Tuesday on ABC, CBS, and NBC, for broadcast during Christmas week. All three network news organizations canceled after Caputo informed them they could only inquire about the observance of Christmas at the White House—“about the crafts and the ornaments and the kind of entertainment the Clintons were having.”

However, Hillary went ahead with an interview with the Associated Press. Her remarks seemed carefully fashioned to convey outrage and were totally in character. Her heartfelt words—seasonal references notwithstanding—became the leitmotif of her refrain through many of the troubles of the next six years:

I find it not an accident that every time he is on the verge of fulfilling his commitment to the American people and they respond…out comes yet a new round of these outrageous, terrible stories that people plant for political and financial reasons…. It's prettysad that we're still subjected to these kinds of attacks for political and financial gain from people, and that it is sad that—especially here in the Christmas season—people for their own purposes would be attacking my family…. I think everybody forgets that, even if public figures don't have any protection from these kinds of attacks, you still have feelings.

Hillary's conspiratorial notions about the origins of the trooper story, beyond whatever Bill and the troopers might actually have done, were not far-fetched. This, too, should have been a subject of great interest to the Washington reporters covering the Clinton presidency. But it would be years until such reporting was undertaken by major news organizations. The genesis of the
American Spectator
account was remarkably close to the circumstances she had outlined in her discussions with William Styron.

The author of the
Spectator
story, David Brock,
*18
in 2001 publicly apologized to the Clintons and chronicled his life—with emphasis on his right-to-left conversion—in a memoir entitled
Blinded by the Right.
Brock said in the book that while he was on the payroll of
The American Spectator,
he was also receiving money from Chicago financier Peter Smith, who was a major fund-raiser for Representative Newt Gingrich and, in preparation for the 1996 presidential campaign, bankrolled investigations into a college trip Clinton had made to Russia.
*19
Smith had also helped spread rumors—definitively squelched during investigations by the House Banking Committee and the office of the CIA Inspector General—that Clinton, while governor, had ordered state law enforcement officials to ignore a cocaine-smuggling ring.

Pittsburgh billionaire Richard Mellon Scaife, a major source of funding for far-right-wing activities and causes, was particularly impressed and energized by Brock's article on the troopers, and undertook to finance more such pieces thereafter through a secret operation known as the “Arkansas Project.” Scaife was a pivotal element of Hillary's “vast right-wing conspiracy”—and on the flow charts of her deputy, Sidney Blumenthal, who monitored it—for good reason: Scaife spent more than $2.4 million gathering intelligence and funding anti-Clinton articles based on it.

Brock's much anticipated 1996 book,
The Seduction of Hillary Rodham,
was a shocking disappointment to his old ideological comrades who were expecting an explosive, vicious attack on Hillary. Some parts were surprisingly sympathetic to its subject, not that the book could be interpreted as friendly. Rather, it was the product of some impressive fact-digging, its narrative swathed in a historical dialectic that emphasized the long ideological struggle of left and right in the Cold War years in America, and tried too hard to place many of Hillary's actions in a context of leftist radicalism. As Brock continued to move leftward himself, he wrote another apologia in 1997 for
Esquire
entitled “I Was a Conservative Hit-Man,” in which he criticized his own reporting in
The American Spectator
and said his stories about Hillary and others were deliberately distorted for ideological purposes.

His conversion seemed complete in 2000, when he received funding from a Clinton friend and major contributor—Steve Bing, who had inherited a real estate fortune and who also financed good government initiatives on the California ballot—for a Web site called Media Matters, dedicated to finding and correcting examples of right-wing media bias. By 2007, as the season of presidential campaigning approached, Media Matters had more than fifty employees, and expended a disproportionate part of its effort to correcting stories about Hillary: so much so that the favor with which it treated her suggested it was almost an outlet for her ambitions.

Later, Elizabeth Drew, the unusually perceptive Washington journalist who wrote for
The New York Review of Books,
would describe December 20—the day
The American Spectator
's story about the troopers appeared on newsstands—as “the most bizarre day thus far in this and perhaps any other administration.” An air of crisis had seized the White House, and men and women who had joined the administration expecting an enlightened battle of ideas were now wrestling in the gutter. Paul Begala walked into the office of George Stephanopoulos and said, “I think I'm going to throw up.” That morning the conservative
Washington Times
published a front-page story that combined suspicions about Whitewater and the death of Vince Foster to sinister and synergistic effect. The banner headline read: “Clinton Papers Lifted After Aide's Suicide.” The subhead was equally suggestive: “Foster's office was secretly searched hours after his body was found.” To ideologues and Clinton enemies who already were proposing the idea that Foster had been murdered (in a government safe house, in some of the versions favored on the far right), the convolution of skepticism about Whitewater and Foster's death was the ultimate gift. Nonetheless, the basic facts reported in the story were solid.

Documents related to the Whitewater land deal had been taken from Foster's office during two searches following his death, the story reported; the first sweep, less than three hours after he was found dead, was conducted by Patsy Thomasson, Maggie Williams, and Bernie Nussbaum. The second, by Nussbaum, was the one that had led the Park Police to complain to the Justice Department that the White House counsel had impeded their investigation. Even before elaborating the most damaging details about the removal of records pertaining to Whitewater, the article noted darkly that Thomasson's previous employment had been as executive director of an Arkansas investment firm run by “a man who had done a lot of bond business with the state of Arkansas and who was convicted of distributing cocaine (including to the president's brother, Roger).” The story said it was unclear exactly what the files contained but that they had been turned over to Foster's attorney, James Hamilton, not federal investigators.

Now the conditions for a perfect conspiratorial storm were gathering in the hothouse atmosphere of Washington. In place of “land deal,” the term “cover-up” was becoming a common appellation for Whitewater. On Capitol Hill, Republicans including Senate and House leaders Bob Dole and Newt Gingrich rushed to microphones to demand the release of the pilfered Whitewater documents and the appointment of a special prosecutor.

Hillary and Nussbaum, from the first mention of a special Whitewater prosecutor, drew a Maginot Line. In the White House she made clear her view that the Clinton presidency would be effectively rendered powerless if that line were crossed. The White House had wiggle room. The 1978 Ethics in Government Act had expired—though Clinton had pledged to renew it in 1994—including its provision for court-appointed independent counsels. So the only procedure available would be for Attorney General Janet Reno, who was confident in the abilities of her own prosecutors, to appoint a special counsel–prosecutor whose powers and independence would be similar to those guaranteed under the expired law. Hillary and Nussbaum wanted no part of that. They understood—from their experience in Watergate, and then watching a special prosecutor in the Iran-contra affair abuse that legacy with a seven-year investigation—all the dangers. A special prosecutor had only one case to focus on, and no time limit. Ambition could figure prominently. No, especially in the current atmosphere, they were certain that was the worst possible road to take.

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