April 17, 2002 | In March 1998, two months after the Monica
Lewinsky maelstrom had begun
convulsing the political and media establishments, I was invited
along with two other Salon editors and
our Washington reporter to attend an afternoon reception at
the White House. The gathering consisted
mainly of a group of young White House fellows; I think the
Salon contingent was invited out of
curiosity about this maverick West Coast Web site that had begun
breaking stories on the Whitewater
investigation and its ties to the secretive anti-Clinton operation
known as the Arkansas Project. The idle
chit-chat in the room where FDR had delivered his fireside chats
suddenly paused as Hillary Clinton
breezed in, followed shortly after by her husband and his entourage.
The president worked his way
through the room and when he got to us, he immediately began
discussing Salon's allegations that Ken
Starr's chief Whitewater witness, crooked Arkansas judge David
Hale, had received cash payments
and legal assistance from the Clinton-haters who financed and
ran the Arkansas Project. Clinton, quite
understandably, wanted to know, "When is the rest of the press
going to pick up on this stuff?"
After Clinton moved on, I drifted over to a knot of people gathered
around the first lady. Several
weeks before, she had elicited scorn and derision from the media
with her comments about a "vast
right-wing conspiracy" arrayed against her husband. Her small
audience that day, however, was more
sympathetic. After all, Salon was in the process of documenting
the conspiracy, which if not "vast" was
certainly extensive -- stretching literally from the swamps
of Arkansas to the top of the GOP --
well-coordinated and financed, and relentless in pursuit of
its prey. She talked with feeling about how
difficult it was to withstand the intense political and media
pressures, which had reached a frenzied
level. And then she told us something that I don't believe she
had said in public before, or has since:
"When we were getting ready to announce for the 1992 campaign,
the Bush people said to us, 'Don't
run this time -- wait four years and you'll have a free pass.
If you do run, we'll destroy you.' And I said
to Bill, 'What are they talking about -- how could they do that?'
And now we're finding out."
The Washington commentariat would have had another field day
with these remarks -- they would
have cited the story as one more example of Hillary's inclination
toward political melodrama and
exaggeration. But even though I didn't get the chance to ask
her more questions, I believed the story
and still do. It came back to me as I was reading David Brock's
stunning new memoir of his days as a
right-wing character assassin, "Blinded by the Right." There
has been a dark and ruthless side to
modern Republican politics ever since the Roosevelts were reviled
as Jews and black-lovers and Joe
McCarthy and Richard Nixon worked their poisonous craft. But
in the last decade, as Brock
documents in often repulsive detail, this virulent conservatism
-- which one of its more cunning
practitioners, Lee Atwater, famously referred to as "extra-chromosome"
Republicanism when even he
grew exasperated with it -- has taken full control of the party.
Confronted with these relentless opponents, the Democrats have
all too often caved in. When Al Gore
blasted Bush last week, it was a painful reminder of what he
and Joe Lieberman didn't do in Florida,
when GOP bullies simply ripped the presidency out of their hands.
Until the Democrats learn to fight
for what they believe in as tenaciously as their opponents,
they will never be an effective political
force.
Brock paints a baroque portrait of the conservative movement
and its GOP Jacobins, including the
paranoid and reclusive billionaire Richard Mellon Scaife, who,
through generous disbursements of his
fortune (including to the American Spectator magazine's Arkansas
Project), was able to make his
hatreds and delusions those of the party; the movement's roly-poly
Lenin, Newt Gingrich, who when
not inveighing against the moral rot of 1960s demon seeds like
Bill Clinton was pursuing the illicit
delights offered by a young congressional aide; Ted Olson, the
distinguished barrister and current
Solicitor General who was not above penning anonymous smears
of Clinton, soiling himself in the funky
loam of the Arkansas Project and even joining a bizarre raiding
party that, in search of more White
House "Travelgate" dirt (remember that gravely important issue
the GOP and Washington media so
dutifully rubbed in the Republic's face?), trespassed onto the
gated grounds of a private Georgetown
compound to peep through the windows of a White House aide;
the esteemed Supreme Court Justice
Clarence Thomas, who in his never-ending campaign to discredit
Anita Hill and her supporters, leaked
to Brock embarrassing personal information about a former female
colleague that had been sealed in
divorce court documents; C. Boyden Gray, the former Bush White
House counsel whose attempt to
pull off an "October surprise" against Clinton in 1992 would
help spark the serpentine Whitewater
investigation and who in graceful defeat kept urging Brock to
pursue Vincent Foster murder tales and
other gothic Clinton lore.
And these were the high-profile guys! The bit players in the
conservative revolution, as described by
Brock, were an even seamier lot. Lonely, fat, horny lawyers
who brooded bitterly over Clinton's easy
way with women; sleaze-peddling Arkansas troopers out to make
a dirty buck; upright, gay-bashing
conservatives who tried to bed Brock -- and then there's filthy-minded
Lucianne Goldberg, who
secured her footnote in American political history as Linda
Tripp's accomplice, delightedly hawking a
story to the equally spiteful New York Press about Clinton "finger-fucking"
his daughter Chelsea.
There was simply nothing that these people were incapable of
saying or doing to advance their political
agenda. They shamelessly and self-righteously crossed dozens
of lines that marked what once were
the acceptable bounds of political battle. Everything was permissible,
the Leninist Gingrich told them,
because this was a war to the finish. The Clinton presidency
was illegitimate, "a cultural coup d'état,"
they informed the country -- this from the same people who denounced
Democrats for not "moving on"
after George W. Bush was handed the presidential election by
a stacked Supreme Court.
Brock's book, which must rank as the most sickening -- and entertaining
-- exploration of the underside
of American politics ever written, has rocketed up the bestseller
lists. But the book has, for the most
part, prompted an eloquent silence from Brock's former allies
in the conservative propaganda wars --
Clarence Thomas, Ted Olson, Bill Kristol, Rush Limbaugh, Laura
Ingraham, Ann Coulter, John Fund
and so on. Some conservatives have tried to airily dismiss the
book as the work of an unreliable
observer -- "He says he lied about Anita Hill and Troopergate,
how can we believe him now?" is the
standard line. (To be fair, some liberal commentators, including
Salon's Kerry Lauerman, have asked
the same question. ) Of course, Brock was lying on behalf of
the conservative cause back then -- and
despite how quickly the media dismantled much of his American
Spectator reporting (and how some
right-wing colleagues personally knew Brock's anti-Clinton charges
were at the very least shaky), none
of these conservatives questioned his veracity in those days.
It's only now, with "Blinded by the Right,"
that conservatives have grown a sense of journalistic skepticism
when it comes to Brock.
The fact is, none of Brock's most damning allegations in "Blinded
by the Right" have been knocked
down by the media or his conservative critics. In a letter to
the New York Times Book Review on
Sunday, Brock's old boss at the American Spectator, R. Emmett
Tyrrell, attempted to salvage the
shredded Troopergate story as well as defend Ted Olson against
the Brock charge that he
"encouraged conjecture that [Clinton counsel Vincent] Foster
might have been murdered." But since
Tyrrell, a clownish self-promoter and Clinton conspiracy freak
whose own attempts at journalism never
even reached Brock's old standards, is the conveyor of this
rebuttal, it's safe to dismiss it as
self-serving twaddle. With the exception of David Horowitz,
who strongly denies Brock's claim that he
made homophobic comments to a book editor he did not know was
gay, no one has plausibly
challenged even Brock's minor charges.
Yes, there is something disturbing about the way Brock writes
of his consistently unheeded pangs of
conscience -- which began plaguing him as early as his Troopergate
story for the American Spectator
in 1993, and which Bill Kristol, to his credit, was the only
conservative to advise Brock not to publish.
"Bill told me that conservatives should focus on substantive
disagreements with the Clinton
administration, and he warned that the piece would stigmatize
me as a tabloid journalist."
(Unfortunately, Kristol would abandon this principled position
in the following years as the GOP
escalated its personal assault on Clinton.) But if it took too
long for the scales to fall from Brock's eyes,
he is brutally honest about the reasons: An ambitious young
journalist whose gay sexuality had
estranged him from his conservative parents, he grew intoxicated
with the sense of moral
righteousness -- and the creature comforts (a sleek black Mercedes
and a posh Georgetown address
among them) -- that his role as the conservative movement's
Bob Woodward afforded him. "I bought it
all because I wanted to. War for war's sake was really the only
way I knew since coming to
Washington ... I also had career considerations."
What matters most is that in the end, Brock did the right thing,
beginning with his refusal to smear
Hillary Clinton in his 1996 book about her (which began to fracture
his relationship with the
conservative crusade) and continuing with his apologies to Anita
Hill and others whose characters he
had assassinated, all the way to "Blinded by the Right." His
former comrades on the right accuse him
of mercenary motives, but as Brock responded last Saturday on
Tim Russert's CNBC show, it's
certainly not a "clever career move to admit to everything I
did. Most people in my profession are loath
to admit their mistakes."
One of the most repellent aspects of Brock's book is his reminder
of how the right-wing sleaze
campaign eventually succeeded in dictating mainstream news coverage.
The most avid bulldog on the
Clinton sex beat was not an American Spectator hack, of course,
but Newsweek's Michael Isikoff.
Brock reports that while he was researching his book "The Seduction
of Hillary Clinton," Isikoff passed
on to him a number of Clinton sex tales that his Newsweek editors
decided weren't up to their
standards, in the apparent hope that they would meet Brock's
less exacting ones (they didn't).
Even the New York Times played an instrumental role in the criminalizing
of the Clinton administration,
with Jeff Gerth's seminal -- and specious -- reports on Whitewater.
Gerth's principal blunder was
allowing himself to get taken in by the hucksters and con men
who worked Arkansas' anti-Clinton
carny show. Brock, himself a frequent visitor to these gaudy
peddlers of political dirt, writes that it was
Sheffield Nelson, the grandaddy of Clinton smear artists, who
put Gerth in touch with his Whitewater
source James McDougal. Speaking of being loath to admit their
mistakes, a decade later Gerth and the
Times' editorial mandarins have yet to concede the bankruptcy
of their investment in the Whitewater
story, even after two relentless and politically malicious special
prosecutors failed to find any proof of
crimes on the part of the Clintons. The Times' editorial excellence
is matched only by its breathtaking
arrogance. By now it's abundantly clear that it was the scrappy,
independent reporting of dogged
journalists like Murray Waas in Salon and Joe Conason in Salon
and the New York Observer that had
it right about Ken Starr and Whitewater -- not the Times or
the Washington Post.
Sheffield Nelson, who had lost a bitter governor's race against
Clinton in 1990, was also behind the
peddling of the Juanita Broaddrick rape charge against Clinton.
While researching his Hillary Clinton
book, Brock worked tirelessly to corroborate the story. But
even he had to finally conclude that
"Juanita came up with the rape claim ... after having consensual
sex with Clinton ... to get herself out
of trouble with her boyfriend (and later husband) Dave Broaddrick."
But in a familiar pattern, the Wall
Street Journal's editorial page injected the poisonous story
into the legitimate news stream and in the
subsequent media feeding frenzy, NBC aired a Lisa Myers interview
with Broaddrick that its
producers had formerly considered too sketchy to broadcast.
No news organization sullied itself more during the Clinton years
than the Wall Street Journal. The
tabloidization of the Journal's editorial pages in the service
of the get-Clinton propaganda campaign is
one of the great scandals of American journalism. It was one
thing for publisher Peter Kann, long
before Clinton, to encourage editorial czar Robert Bartley to
turn his pages into a forum for aggressive
conservatism. It was quite another to allow Bartley and his
fellow zealots to publish every crackpot
defamation of the Clintons that excreted its way into the right's
imagination. They loudly and repeatedly
suggested that White House counsel Vincent Foster had been murdered
(perhaps, Brock surmises, to
deflect attention from their own role in his death; Foster,
clearly ill equipped for Washington's
increasingly savage climate, pointed to "WSJ editors [who] lie
without consequence" in his suicide
note). They brooded obsessively about "mysterious Mena," the
Arkansas airport where Clinton and his
cronies allegedly trafficked in drugs and where "Clinton death
sqauds" murdered two teenagers to
cover up their nefarious business. It is unclear whether Bartley,
who emerges as one of the strangest
fishes in Brock's weird aquarium, really believed any of this
Clinton frothing or whether he had simply
sold his journalistic soul to the far right. But the more important
question is why the top editors and
executives of the Journal allowed him to get away with it. Bartley
no longer runs the Journal's opinion
section; he's been kicked up the corporate stairs. But in his
golden years he has been awarded his very
own column, where recently he took a typically wild swipe at
Brock as "the John Walker Lindh of
contemporary conservatism." Like his fellow right-wing propagandists,
Bartley could offer nothing of
substance to rebut Brock.
At the White House reception I attended, Clinton remarked, "Maybe
I'll be remembered as the
president who took the poison out of American politics." This
theory has since been embraced by a
number of political commentators, including the New York Times'
keen-eyed Frank Rich, who
characterized Brock's memoir as a chronicle of a faded, pre-Sept.
11 era. But this, unfortunately, is
wishful thinking. The Old Testament fervor that inflamed the
GOP and the conservative movement
throughout the Clinton era is still very much alive, from the
attack ads on Tom Daschle comparing him
to Saddam Hussein for his opposition to Alaska oil drilling
to John Ashcroft's suggestion that anyone
who opposed his attempts to shortcut the Constitution was on
the side of terrorism. The excesses of
the current conservative crusade may not match the outrages
documented by Brock -- but only
because Bill Clinton, or any other Democrat, does not occupy
the White House. And it's not necessary
for the GOP to go scorched-earth when, ever since Sept. 11,
the Democrats have obligingly turned
themselves into "war wimps," in Rich's phrase.
But now that even chronically cautious Al Gore has begun raising
his voice against the Bush
administration, it seems that political life might be coming
back in America. This means the holy
warriors of the right will once again be on the march, eager
to put any moral or political enemy
(generally one and the same) to the torch. With the Bush political
operation run by the win-at-any-cost
heirs of Lee Atwater, and the GOP ranks filled by passionate
Christian activists, the Republican cause
still carries the air of a religious war, even without revolutionary
prophets like the disgraced Newt
Gingrich (who undoutedly is plotting a Nixonian resurrection).
The question that arises for any liberal or moderate, especially
after reading Brock's book, is how do
you fight successfully against this kind of political ruthlessness
-- without doing even more damage to
democracy. Can you counter the GOP's ferocity by attacking opponents
with equal ferocity on the
issues and not on their human flaws?
Politics is a blood sport, but it doesn't have to be so savage
that it subverts our political system, as
Republican zealots like Bob Barr, Ted Olson and Robert Bork
did when they began intriguing for
Clinton's impeachment long before the nation heard of Monica
Lewinsky. The problem for Democrats
in recent decades is that the party's national standard bearers
have often felt unsuited or uncomfortable
at playing this sport, preferring governance over politics.
But as John Kennedy observed, you can't
have one without the other. When JFK was reminded of Eisenhower's
disdain for the very word
"politics," he responded, "I do have a great liking for the
word 'politics.' It's the way a president gets
things done." The Democratic candidates who obviously were more
enamored of policy than politics
proved to be losers -- Dukakis and Gore. The ones who thrived
at the game of politics -- JFK, LBJ,
Clinton -- have been the party's winners. And they knew how
to play the game hard.
If John Ashcroft's team at the Justice Department can invoke
the spirit of Bobby Kennedy in their war
on terrorists (let's hope it's the spirit of Bobby's crackdown
on organized crime, not his law-bending
surveillance of Martin Luther King Jr.), Democrats should be
calling on RFK's political fighting spirit.
The feckless Gore recount battle in Florida cried out for the
Kennedy brothers' brawling Irish machine.
In fact, Democrats don't even have to conjure ghosts from as
far back as Camelot. The party simply
needs to clone a lot more Ragin' Cajuns. The single-minded commitment
to framing the debate ("It's
the economy, stupid") and the "instant response" counterpunching
methods developed in James
Carville's war room during the first Clinton campaign need to
become part of the Democrats' DNA.
In their new book, "Buck Up, Suck Up ... And Come Back When You
Foul Up," Carville and political
partner Paul Begala argue that it's possible to employ "smash-mouth"
tactics without resorting to the
politics of personal destruction. Carville, who is married to
Dick Cheney advisor Mary Matalin, must
live out this "love your enemy, hate his (or her) ideas" sentiment
every day of his life. But Republicans
have long claimed it was the Democrats who kicked off the modern
era of trash politics with their
aggressive 1987 battle to block Robert Bork from the Supreme
Court. So primal was this wound to the
Republican psyche, that to this day whenever a conservative
ideologue is rejected by the Senate, the
GOP screams he's been "borked." The truth is, however, that
while the liberal rhetoric against Bork
sometimes grew inflamed, Bork was rejected on the basis of his
legal record, which included opposition
to the 1964 Civil Rights Act and Roe vs. Wade -- not because
of any personal attacks. As the
Washington Post's former Supreme Court correspondent John P.
MacKenzie recently wrote, it was
not "smear tactics or dirty tricks" that defeated Bork, it was
his own "caustic writings and rigid
philosophy." Bork's extremist pronouncements in recent years
-- including his endorsement of a radical
conservative call during the Clinton administration to reject
the American "regime," including our
system of government, as "morally illegitimate" -- demonstrate
the wisdom of his rejection from the
highest court. (Republicans have a better case for Democratic
foul play in the Clarence Thomas
hearings; Anita Hill undoubtedly told the truth, but Thomas'
tacky personal behavior was irrelevant to
the proceedings and should not have been used as a last-ditch
gambit to derail him.)
The Republican attack machine has a habit of crying loudly --
and even calling for government
intervention -- whenever their bullying brings them a punch
in the nose. Take the case of Salon's 1998
story about Henry Hyde's adulterous past -- or as Hyde, in his
late 40s at the time of the
home-wrecking affair, preferred to call it, "his youthful indiscretion."
By the time this story was brought
to Salon by a friend of the family that was destroyed by Hyde's
affair, it was clear that the Republican
Party planned to bring impeachment charges against the president
of the United States solely on the
basis of a consensual sexual affair. There was nothing in Ken
Starr's report to Congress about
Whitewater; the machinery of government was convulsed over a
blow job. (Yes, yes, it wasn't about
sex, as the right wing never grew tired of telling us, it was
about the law -- but the American people
knew better.) Salon normally would not have published a sex
exposé of this kind -- and indeed we have
rejected many over the years. A public figure's consensual sex
life should not determine his or her
fitness for office. And that was the whole point -- in the hands
of the GOP impeachment machine,
private sexual behavior was about to determine the fate of the
presidency. As many in the Washington
and media establishments knew (but weren't telling the public)
-- and as Brock's book would vividly
detail -- the sexual hypocrisy on display in the impeachment
frenzy was stunning. Hyde, who was to
preside over the House impeachment hearings, and GOP leader
Newt Gingrich, who vowed to use
Monica Lewinsky in every speech he made, were just two of those
in glass houses throwing stones at
Clinton.
By publishing the Hyde story, Salon shattered the self-righteous
hypocrisy that cloaked the
impeachment crusade. And though Republicans like Tom DeLay denounced
the Salon story as "an
assault on the institution of Congress" and called for an FBI
investigation to find out if the White House
had leaked the information to us (they hadn't, as the media
quickly determined), the public drew its own
conclusions. Democrats and Republicans alike have human flaws
-- that's no reason to paralyze the
government, let's move on.
One of the key lessons of the 1990s witch hunts should be this:
Keep sexual McCarthyism out of the
political fray. Those who live by the sexual sword can die by
it. Though Clinton's hope of detoxifying
American politics might be too unrealistic, perhaps the attack
dogs on the right can agree with this
hard-won wisdom: If you dump your wife while she's in a cancer
ward, if you desert your marriage for
a young aide, if you expose yourself to park rangers, if you
beat your girlfriend, if you advertise in
swinger magazines for buff men to help enliven your marriage
bed, if you frequent prostitutes, if you
avidly collect hardcore porn (all of which prominent moralistic
conservatives were revealed to have
done in recent years) -- then it's probably not a good idea
to launch holier-than-thou attacks on heathen
Democrats.
If Republicans need to learn to take the fire-and-brimstone out
of their politics, Democrats need to turn
up the flame. This doesn't mean resorting to dirty campaigning.
It means fighting to win. On Saturday,
Al Gore emerged from self-imposed exile to stir the party faithful
at the Florida Democratic
Convention, amping up his rhetoric on Bush ("I'm tired of this
right-wing sidewind!") -- and finally
embracing the Cliinton-Gore legacy (hey, better late than never).
But not all of the assembled partisans
were willing to buy this new action-man Gore. Florida Rep. Corrine
Brown told the New York Times
she was undecided about backing Gore in 2004: "He has to be
hungry." Like many other Democrats in
her state, Brown is still haunted by Gore's wilting act there
during the presidential recount. "[The
Republicans] sent in the lions. And he let them take it away
from us."
If David Brock's book is a must read for every liberal and moderate
who wants to know what the
conservative movement is capable of doing to win power, there
is another book that is equally
important for Democratic voters to read as they contemplate
the political future. This is a book that
shows not just how Republicans win, but more important, how
Democrats lose. It is Jeffrey Toobin's
"Too Close to Call: The 36-Day Battle to Decide the 2000 Election."
Published last fall while ground
zero was still smoldering, the book did not get the attention
it deserves. But as Al Gore and Joe
Lieberman emerge again into the political spotlight, it is essential
reading for any voter who dreads a
replay of the 2000 election.
To read about the Gore-Lieberman "battle" in Florida, if you
can call it that, is to read of cows
lumbering toward slaughter with bovine equanimity. Toobin describes
the glaring "passion gap"
between Gore's and Bush's post-election campaigns. While the
Bush camp, under the masterfully
cunning leadership of James Baker, treated the contest as the
political battle that it was -- putting
protesters in the streets, inciting the always volatile Cuban
community, fighting for every ballot (even
the patently illegal overseas ones) -- Gore generals Warren
Christopher and Bill Daley took a cautious
and dithering approach, relying entirely on the legal system,
and winding up in the abattoir of the
Rehnquist-Scalia Supreme Court.
From election night on, Gore's camp exuded a defeatist air. Ever
attuned to the elite media, Gore
decided to concede as soon as the networks reversed themselves
and called Florida for Bush. It was
President Clinton, exiled from the campaign but still the consummate
political player, who thought to
phone Gore's own vote counter in Florida to double-check the
networks' tally. While Baker was telling
his troops that victory alone mattered, the anemic Christopher
was advising Gore, "You can run again.
You don't want to be known as a sore loser. You don't want to
fight for too long." Daley, who fretted
more about pundits calling him a crooked ballot-stuffer like
his old man than about winning, soon fled
the Florida battleground altogether for the serenity of Washington.
Then there was Joe Lieberman -- a
warrior for victory in private strategy meetings, but a wimp
whenever he went before the cameras,
even conceding in one interview that the Bush team should be
allowed to count illegal military ballots.
(Toward the end, Lieberman would not even go on TV, whining
to the Gore camp that he was
"overexposed.") Like Lieberman, Gore's main concern was to appear
fair and reasonable to the
Washington establishment and the New York Times editorial board.
So while Gore ordered Jesse
Jackson to pull his protesters from the streets -- he found
the demonstrations "incompatible with the
solemnity of the recount process," writes Toobin -- the "Brooks
Brothers" riot of GOP congressional
aides succeeded in shutting down the Miami-Dade County recount.
Late in the game, Gore had second
thoughts about conceding even the streets around his house to
Karl Rove-organized protests. "He
finally grew so irritated by the Republican chants outside his
home at the Naval Observatory that he
asked [campaign manager Donna] Brazile to arrange for some counterdemonstrations
to drown them
out. 'These people don't want to go to your house,' Brazile
told him. 'They want to go to Florida!'"
The tougher Gore combatants in Florida soon grew fed up with
the gentility of the Democratic
strategy. "You don't understand," said one exasperated operative
to his Washington colleagues. "This is
Guatemala down here."
How should the Democrats have fought the Florida battle? The
way the armchair general back in the
White House -- a man who knew something about how to beat the
Bush family -- was telling anyone
who would listen, which unfortunately did not include the Gore
circle.
"Whereas Gore regarded the battle as primarily legal, Clinton
saw it as political -- and fierce," writes
Toobin. "Gore wanted no demonstrators in the streets; Clinton
wanted lots of them. Gore worried about
pressing his case in court; Clinton thought the vice president
should have sued everybody over
everything. Gore believed in muting racial animosities about
the election; Clinton thought that
Democrats should have been screaming about the treatment of
black voters. Gore believed in offering
concessions, making gestures of good faith; Clinton thought
the Republicans should be given nothing at
all but should rather be fought for every single vote. 'He got
more votes -- more people wanted to vote
for him. This is the essence of democracy. But the fix is in.
This thing stinks.'"
These are the instincts and passions of a winning politician.
And this is why Clinton always elicited
rage from his political enemies, while Gore only drew contempt.
"Why did they hate me so much?"
Clinton likes to say. "Because I won."
There's a chance, of course, that Al Gore has learned to become
a winner during his long, dark night of
the soul following Florida and what Toobin calls "the crime
against democracy." But he has to prove it,
and it won't -- nor should it be -- easy. The Democratic Party
should treat him as just one more
candidate for its 2004 nomination, putting him through the type
of crucible he was largely able to avoid
in the 2000 primary contest. During the upcoming primary season,
the winning Democratic candidate
must show that he or she can not only weather the most withering
assaults, but punch back, cleanly
and devastatingly. The Democrats will need a Kennedy or Clinton-style
battler to face the Bush
reelection machine in 2004, because the Bush dynasty has amply
demonstrated it will do whatever it
takes to win. And the Republican candidate will be surrounded
by a movement of true believers that,
as David Brock has revealed in gory detail, will do even more
than that.