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A Real Story

21 Feb 2008 09:34 am

Mark Kleiman points out that the AP's version of the of the Vicky Iseman story has less innuendo, but a clearer explanation of actual misconduct:

In late 1999, McCain twice wrote letters to the Federal Communications Commission on behalf of Florida-based Paxson Communications — which had paid Iseman as its lobbyist — urging quick consideration of a proposal to buy a television station license in Pittsburgh. At the time, Paxson's chief executive, Lowell W. "Bud" Paxson, also was a major contributor to McCain's 2000 presidential campaign. McCain did not urge the FCC commissioners to approve the proposal, but he asked for speedy consideration of the deal, which was pending from two years earlier. In an unusual response, then-FCC Chairman William Kennard complained that McCain's request "comes at a sensitive time in the deliberative process" and "could have procedural and substantive impacts on the commission's deliberations and, thus, on the due process rights of the parties."

McCain wrote the letters after he received more than $20,000 in contributions from Paxson executives and lobbyists. Paxson also lent McCain his company's jet at least four times during 1999 for campaign travel.

Basically, in exchange for money and freebies, McCain sought to intervene in a federal regulatory process in favor of a company that had provided him with tens of thousands of dollars in cash and services. He could try to plead naiveté, but in light of the hot water he got into with the Keating Five affair, which had the exactly same structure, he clearly knew what he was doing and knew that it was wrong. Now whether or not some guy gets to buy some TV station in Pittsburgh or not isn't a big deal as such, but it's an example of how dubious McCain's "straight talk" persona is. What's more, I think we can all agree that the subversion of the basic functioning of the federal government (see, e.g., US Attorneys scandal, FEMA, etc.) has been a major problem during the Bush years and we see here that McCain takes a Bush-like attitude to the integrity of these processes.

UPDATE: NB, thinking more clearly past my loathing of John McCain, the Times's effort to substitute innuendo for making a straightforward true or false assertion is seems like a pretty shameful attempt to set up a Kaus-like presumption of guilt. If they have reporting they're willing to stand behind of a McCain-Iseman affair, they should publish it. And if, as seems to be the case, they don't have the reporting, then they shouldn't write the story.

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Comments (67)

Matt, can we stick to the sex aspect please? I told my wife about it last night, and her instant reaction was that it would help put to rest concerns about his age.

Now whether or not some guy gets to buy some TV station in Pittsburgh or not isn't a big deal as such...

Yes, it is a big deal.

If one wants to suggest the actual substance of these charges is irrelevant, one might as well dismiss the foofaraw surrounding them. The problem is that much of Federal policy for the last seven years seems to have been determined by exactly this kind of cash-for-influence deal.

the Times's effort to substitute innuendo for making a straightforward true or false assertion is seems like a pretty shameful attempt to set up a Kaus-like presumption of guilt

This is right. The NYT does seem to do something like this every once in a great while: put out some story that seems, somehow, inappropriate enough that you almost necessarily have to start speculating about "the real agenda." I can't even remember the nature of the story, but I'll probably go to my grave believing that the NYT put a hit out on GWB in Oct., 2004.

"NB, thinking more clearly past my loathing of John McCain, the Times's effort to substitute innuendo for making a straightforward true or false assertion is seems like a pretty shameful attempt to set up a Kaus-like presumption of guilt. If they have reporting they're willing to stand behind of a McCain-Iseman affair, they should publish it. And if, as seems to be the case, they don't have the reporting, then they shouldn't write the story."

Well done, Matt.

"the Times's effort to substitute innuendo for making a straightforward true or false assertion is seems like a pretty shameful attempt to set up a Kaus-like presumption of guilt.

The backstory I heard is that they've been sitting on half a story for months, unable to put something real together. It got leaked, and some other organ was going to write a story about how the Times is sitting on a McCain sex scandal and refusing to publish.

I'm interested to see what TNR has later today on the legal throwdown in December--apparently the NYT's piece was pretty hevily neutered after they tried to go to press the first time, and the old rehash stuff was packed in afterwards to fill it out. If this "becomes a story about the Times" like some have threatened I can't imagine they wouldn't get pretty leaky and oh, that will be fun

From the story: "McCain did not urge the FCC commissioners to approve the proposal"

Matthew: "McCain sought to intervene in a federal regulatory process in favor of a company"

OK, Matthew!

At least this smear should put to rest the idea that the media loves McCain. That meme, which Matthew has been pushing for, well, forever as best I can tell, has always been false. Indeed it was scientifically proven false - not that Matthew cares a whit about actual science when it contradicts his firmly held beliefs (the Reality Based Community at work - ignoring the science in favor of the conventional wisdom!). But now we have an actual media smear - and by the New York Times!

Of course, I'm sure that Matthew will be continuing to push the now obviously false meme that the media love McCain. It's just too good a meme to stop using. No matter how much evidence piles up that it is false.

They have the reporting. But mCCain succeeded in pressuring them into weakening the story.
That's my take on it. The piece is too sloopy. It can't be the original version.

the Times's effort to substitute innuendo for making a straightforward true or false assertion is seems like a pretty shameful attempt to set up a Kaus-like presumption of guilt

Not that the Times deserves any presumtions of good intentions, but I think Josh Marshall probably has the correct take on this - the story has all the good stuff lawyered out of it.

This story is such a joke, and represnts everything that is wrong about this country. I just went and donated $500 to McCain. Thank you NYT for getting me enthused about this election.

Al, McCain urged the commission to move a proposal to the front burner that had been languishing for two years. Even given that he carefully couched his encouragement in nuetral language, that is a favor--pure and simple. He moved it up in the queue, tacitly implying to the committee that the proposal had his backing, and got campagin contributions and free plane rides out of it. All the while, said donor is employing a lobbyist who has grown close enough to Saint John that his own staff members are trying to scare her off. How is that not your typical washington quid pro quo?

I just went and donated $500 to McCain.

Enjoy your war, dude. If one, as an educated voter, lets hatred for the New York Times sway one's vote, all I can say is, one deserves what one gets.

Just like to point out that McCain's communication director Jill Hazelbaker, who we are going to be seeing a lot of in the coming days, has a history of sock-puppetry and lying that was exposed by the NYT back in Sept 2006.

Link...
http://www.mydd.com/story/2006/9/21/174/29062

Al: "From the story: "McCain did not urge the FCC commissioners to approve the proposal"

Matthew: "McCain sought to intervene in a federal regulatory process in favor of a company"

Certainly anyone who has ever worked in a legislative office knows the intention of that letter. If you were writing in opposition to the company, you would state that. If you were truly objective, you probably wouldn't bother writing a letter.

I think a more important angle that destroys the whole straight talker thing could develop.
We have all these assertions that McCain would "never" do anything to hurt his family like have an affair, including one by Cindy McCain this morning.
Well the only reason McCain is married to Cindy McCain is he was cheating on his first wife (and his kids from that marriage might have an opinion on this). If at least a couple mentions of get on the airwaves, I believe it would add an different textural element to the discussion of whether the guy is fundamentally full of shit or not.

This little story -- Otto Preminger, where art thou? -- looks to me like it's going to grow like a Chia pet. It's all about how Washington really works -- planes, train stations, sexy friends and lobbyists, contributions and confusion -- nervous staff people attempting to head off disaster -- and so on and so forth, my friends. My favorite moment is the jazz about having a dialogue with the young woman at Union Station. Priceless. To these ears it all rings true.

Whether or not it is, in fact, accurate Sen. McCain is not made for the TV screen. He looked like he was not telling the truth this morning at the press conference. And Mrs. McCain is something right out of SNL in her demeanor.

I'm always amused when folks state that they would never be capable of affairs and such. Strenuous protestations along the lines of "I'm just not that kind of person." What kind of person is it exactly that engages in extra-marital business? Oh, yeah, I guess that would be a human being.

The matter of McCain writing pressure letters and making an ass of himself vis-a-vis FCC is just another day at the office.

As to being "disappointed" with the NYT -- please, bite me! Disappointed is what millions of us are all over the country after these last miserable 8 years. McCain offers more more more of the same. And, as a woman, I find the Mrs. rather frightening.

For the record, it was the progressive blog Blue Jersey that initially exposed Hazelbaker. The Times just reported on Blue Jersey's story and did some follow-up.

McCain did condiderably more in this instance than Bill Clinton did regarding Whitewater.


"Listen to the voooooolves. Children of de nahieeeght. Such byooootiful moooosic."

Like some earlier commenters, I'm kind of surprised to see Matt conclude that what the Times ran with today is the whole (inadequate) story. Other shoes are likely to drop before we know the true shape of things.

And for those who rush to take offense at the notion of airing McCain's dirty, um, linen: You decided a decade ago that you owned the president's penis, so it's a little late in the day for lectures about privacy and propriety.

Turns out that Commerce Committee staff met with both sides in the FCC dispute and both sides expressed frustration that the FCC had not acted after two years (twice as long as it usually takes to review such an application). So Commerce Committee staff drafted a letter from McCain asking for the FCC to finally make a decision, but expressly not taking a side in the dispute.

Funnily enough, the AP story appears not to mention that both sides were interested in resolving the dispute. The AP only mentions the one side.

Smear, smear, smear.

John McCain did not have an affair. The Times has confused him with Juan McCain.

You have a top former staffer saying on the record that the staff was trying to break these guys up. It's hard to imagine that not being a story with any major candidate, beloved by the media or not. Comparing that to Kaus floating rumors is pretty far-fetched.

I'm of two minds about the inclusion of the romantic element in the Iseman story. Assuming that the Times facts of the story are correct, then it is worth knowing that McCain has been spending enough time with Iseman for some people to think there's a romantic relationship going on. Assuming there was no romantic relationship, that closeness with a lobbyist is just inherently creepy and worth knowing about. On the other hand, just stating that there might have been a romantic relationship inherently tars McCain, which is unfair if there's no evidence that the Times feels comfortable putting into the paper to support that. My guess is there's underlying information the Times isn't able to use, but that's not a justification for publishing a story that isn't responsible on the basis of its own evidence.

I'm sure the NYT has more than they printed, but what they printed is pretty appalling. Both the WaPo and (as Matt notes) the AP have a much more straight-forward story on the real problems. But the sex is what is driving all the stories, and the Times just doesn't seem to have it. At least, not enough to come out and say it.

If the media can do this to their side, they can do it to ours. I find it frightening that such a weak, but explosive, story is on the front page of NYT.

Actually, elle, Mr. Clinton willingly put his penis up for examination when he decided to be a supporter of extensive civil discovery rules in sexual harrassment lawsuits. Mr. Clinton and the plaintiffs bar that supported him was just fine with other people suffering through such wide-ranging depositions. It only became a problem when the genius figured out that the cannon could be trained on him, and that was when he decided that the best course of action was to corrupt the deposition. Not only was he an idiot, but quite a hypocritical idiot at that.

I have little regard for McCain, but unless he gets sued for sexual harrassment, and has a track record of supporting wide ranging discovery rules which allows all of the defendent's past sexual history to be asked about, and then decides to corrupt efforts at such discovery, there really is no comparison to the Clinton mess, in terms of a politically powerful guy supporting other people's private sexual history becoming the public's business, while reserving to himself the right to corrupt such legal proceedings when his sexual behavior is the focus.

Well, based on the McCains' appearance this morning, they have a lot to thank the New York Times for. There were plenty of angry denunciations of the "lies" about sexual misconduct, and now the previously tepid conservative establishment can start circling the wagons against the "liberal media" and ignore, e.g., the Washington Post's less salacious take. Hence the more pertinent evidence about John "Keating" McCain still being an unethical sleazebag for big money interests gets blown away in fatuous gusts over sexual innuendo. Presumably the FEC's "Hold on a minute" over McCain's sleazy Machiavellian games with public financing will also be lost in the kerfuffle. Also, I expect a lot of outrage from the Right over such "mean-spirited personal attacks" on McCain's family, if they can spare the time from shrieking about what an America-hating loose cannon that uppity Michelle Obama is.

I find it interesting that some version of the story included acknowledgment from Iseman that she emailed information to his staff for inclusion in the letters. Given that, saying "McCain wrote letters . . ." is inaccurate. I'm sure he signed them and maybe edited them, but there at best he was a co-author.

Given that Obama was getting nailed for riffing off of Deval Patrick, maybe we should get some more information as to whether McCain was acting as a sock-puppet for Paxson.

At least Iseman looks nicer than Paula Jones or Monica Lewinsky. Sly old wolf!

It's interesting this new found obsession for making the Times have, you know, actual facts for tarring a politician. They spun their Whitewater innuendo out for YEARS and knew they had no facts from the git go. And let's not even go with MoDo's attacks on Al Gore.

Facts? What the hell does the Times (or the Right Wing) need with facts?

If the media was not liberal, McCain's adulterous affair with his current wife would have been sufficient to torpedo his political career a long time ago.

Matt said:

... the Times's effort to substitute innuendo for making a straightforward true or false assertion is seems like a pretty shameful attempt to set up a Kaus-like presumption of guilt. If they have reporting they're willing to stand behind ...

The New Republic is now claiming that they were about to scoop the NYT and that that's why the NYT went with a half-baked story.
.

"I've served this nation honorably for more than half a century," said McCain, a four-term Arizona senator and former Navy pilot. "At no time have I ever done anything that would betray the public trust."

Isn't this a clear lie, given McCain's involvement in the Keating 5 Savings and Loan scandal?

McCain was also one of the so-called "Keating 5" Senators who were implicated in the massive savings and loan scandal. The collapse of just the Lincoln Savings and Loan is said to have cost taxpayers $3.4 billion. Lincoln's chairman had given $1.3 million to 5 Senators, including McCain, and they pressured the federal agency that regulates the industry (the FHLBB) to back off its investigation of Lincoln.

Hillary back former Sen. John Glenn (D-OH) was also a member of the Keating 5.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keating_5

So if the New York Times had a top former aide to Barack Obama saying that Obama's staff was so troubled by his close relationship with a female lobbyists that they asked her to stay away from him, we would expect that the Times would not run this story? And if they did run this story, this would be evidence of right-wing, Obama-hating bias on the part of the Times? And leading right-wing bloggers would be wondering why the Times would violate journalistic ethics by running such a thin story?

Is that really what we think?

Fred, concerning that "scientific" study you cited, it was from October, when McCain was in 4th or 5th place in most GOP polls, and his campaign seemed quite dead. So of course all the coverage on McCain was "negative". They were pointing out the sad shape of his campaign.

If you look at the overall coverage that McCain has receieved over the past 10 years or so you would have to be blind not to see that most of it has been overwhelmingly non-critical.

"Isn't this a clear lie, given McCain's involvement in the Keating 5 Savings and Loan scandal?"

In Washington circles, lies are routinely dismissed, ignored or converted into half-truths after 15 years. (I think it's officially documented somewhere, just don't have time to dig up the reference today.) ;-)

"Isn't this a clear lie, given McCain's involvement in the Keating 5 Savings and Loan scandal?"

In Washington circles, lies are routinely dismissed, ignored or converted into half-truths after 15 years. (I think it's officially documented somewhere, just don't have time to dig up the reference today.) ;-)


I just went and donated $500 to McCain.

Enjoy your war, dude. If one, as an educated voter, lets hatred for the New York Times sway one's vote, all I can say is, one deserves what one gets.

So true. The media is a weird beast. They are not some weird monolithic beast. They'll publish negative stories about McCain. It's just that a lot of those guys are strongly biased in his favor. So we get weird stories about how it's okay that he backed off his original no torture position for political reasons b/c at least he has principles that can be compromised.

On the merits of this issue, moving up the queue is a benefit with actual financial value, even if you claim that McCain's influence on the outcome of the case itself should be presumed to be neutral. And sure, this issue itself isn't the biggest deal, but issues like this are important. There's a subtle understanding in what the correct kind of extrapolation is from an issue that doesn't itself severly impact the republic but where corruption on the part of officials does severly impact the republic.

Is the Schmuck Talk Express gonna do a Viagra commercial with Dole?

I'm not a big fan of McCain. But, I have to say that I would like to think that I could get my senator to write a letter or two for me if some beaureaucrat has been sitting on an application for two years. All I can see that McCain did was to ask the FCC to give the company a speedy hearing. After two years, what's wrong with that?

Here is a detailed response to the NYT story, apparently from the McCain camp:

http://thepage.time.com/mccain-release-on-new-york-times-story/

Given the amount of the principal's money tied up waiting for the FCC to rule, it seems appropriate to me to give them a nudge if they have spent almost twice the average time (800 days) without issuing a ruling.

Al the fucking hack continues with his 'scientifically proven' canard, I see. And I'll continue to point out that Fucking Hack Al is a fucking hack.

On topic: I'd prefer, in situations like this, for stories to be written with some kind of colour-coding or typographical tagging to distinguish.

This piece wasn't written for the general reader. It was written as a signal to the McCain campaign, and for every other press interest working this story. Sheer Kremlinology.

The New Republic is now claiming that they were about to scoop the NYT and that that's why the NYT went with a half-baked story.

I think they should've said, "fine, then, scoop us." If this is the best they could come up with, then why would TNR have anything better?

"Basically, in exchange for money and freebies, McCain sought to intervene in a federal regulatory process in favor of a company that had provided him with tens of thousands of dollars in cash and services." HOW DOES "INTERVENE ... IN FAVOR OF A COMPANY" FOLLOW FROM WHAT YOU WROTE?

"Basically, in exchange for money and freebies, McCain sought to intervene in a federal regulatory process in favor of a company that had provided him with tens of thousands of dollars in cash and services." HOW DOES "INTERVENE ... IN FAVOR OF A COMPANY" FOLLOW FROM WHAT YOU WROTE?

S Wells said: have to say that I would like to think that I could get my senator to write a letter or two for me if some beaureaucrat has been sitting on an application for two years.

There are some problems with this statement. First, it does not appear that Paxson Communications was a constituent of McCain's. Second, from the facts as they are currently known, McCain wrote the letter only after receiving campaign contributions from Paxson, as well as use of a private plane.

I also would hope that my Senator would intervene on my behalf if necessary and appropriate. That is the definition of constituent services. However, I would have nothing to offer other than my earnestness.

The TNR piece is now up, explaining some questions and not explaining others.

The fact that McCain merely asked for due consideration is impressive, considering what often goes on in Washington (or college admissions offices, for that matter).

Is the Schmuck Talk Express gonna do a Viagra commercial with Dole?

Nah. The that 1996 defeat of Dole led to Viagra, and we got a royal screwing by a Big Dick in 2000 (along with his sidekick, Little Bush) who specializes in face shots to lawyers.

Maybe McCain can be a pitchman of splints for flaccid ethics, though.

Do you want to talk about this story? If you think the story is vague and sexual and will help McCain then don't talk about it.

Reading JBJB's comment that he just donated $500 to the McCain campaign, I'm reminded that anyone who responds to negative news about their candidate by announcing in the comments section that they just donated money to him, is always lying.

Reading JBJB's comment that he just donated $500 to the McCain campaign, I'm reminded that anyone who responds to negative news about their candidate by announcing in the comments section that they just donated money to them, is always lying.

If they were telling the truth, Hillary Clinton would be outpacing Barack's warchest by 3-1, judging by the "outpouring of donations" COMMENTS over at Taylor Marsh.

Will Allen: You seem to think that Bill Clinton was subjected to "extensive civil discovery rules in sexual harrassment lawsuits"...but there was no civil lawsuit...no charge of sexual harassment by Lewinsky or law enforcement. While Clinton was certainly an idiot for his behavior, the obsession of those who sought to impeach him was just as idiotic, and for some, far more hypocritical (insert Newt Gingrich, et al.).

While the relationship with Iseman has much of the general publics' intrigue, the greatest blot on the Straight Talk Express from this NYT article will ultimately be McCain's ethically challenged past (from the Keating Five to Paxson Communications). My fiends, as we can clearly see with the Senator's campaign loan guaranteed by taxpayer money, and his backtracking about limiting CIA interrogation methods, it's not the principle...it's more like what the definition of "is" is.

In the discussion about whether the NYT should have published, or not; or been scooped by TNR (or not); I'm reminded me of a line out of 'All The President's Men': In the parking garage, Hal Holbrook (Throat) is angry with Robert Redford (Woodward) over having mistakenly named Haldeman as the director of the CREEP/Plumbers slush fund.

"You let Haldeman slip away," Throat growls. "You've done worse than let Haldeman slip away -- you've got people feeling sorry for him... If you shoot too high and miss, everybody feels more secure."

If there's more than anecdotal evidence that McCain had sex with Iseman -- whenever that story is fully revealed, please put a fork in his candidacy; it's done.

But the real story isn't whether or not he used a perscription for Cialis outside his marriage. It's the same, tired Beltway tale -- Maverick St. McCain Fluffs Paxon; FCC Favor Makes Millons For McCain's Bud; Campaign Cash Follows.

Same Old, Same Old. Only, McCain has been the one to point out how clean and unspoiled he is, so Hoisted By Own Petard is also a good story subtitle.

(@ JBJB: I just went and donated $500 to McCain. Good for you. Gonna get that back in your free check from Mister 19% though, huh? So it's all just a wash to you.)


I just went and donated $500 to McCain

So McCain must have, like, $1000 by now.

I disagree somewhat with the general drift here. A lobbyist's presence around McCain was so pervasive and constant that some of his staff members thought the relationship could be sexual. Those are the facts as reported here (and in the WaPo), nothing more. Any innuendo here is only in the eyes of the....innuendo-er in my opinion. To me, the main point of the article is this: "But to his advisers, even the appearance of a close bond with a lobbyist whose clients often had business before the Senate committee Mr. McCain led threatened the story of redemption and rectitude that defined his political identity."

It reads to me as a piece on McCain's conflicts of interests and possible hypocrisy, and little else.

I think this was a dumb thing for the New York Times to run if they're trying to help ensure that a Democrat gets elected.

John McCain - despite what the national polls say now - is I believe not a strong candidate (even if he might have been in 1992 or 1996 [he may even have run back then were it not for the Keating thing]) and anything that might lead to his stepping aside and the possibility that GOP elites get to hand pick a much stronger nominee is bad if you're a Democrat.

Maybe I should've bought those Giuliani shares after all.

"Basically, in exchange for money and freebies, McCain sought to intervene in a federal regulatory process in favor of a company that had provided him with tens of thousands of dollars in cash and services."

That's your opinion - but it cannot be proven.
I find that's a pretty harsh conclusion to draw.

I agree it LOOKS inappropriate.

Is this really the best they have on McCain after how many years in Washington? Pretty impressive by D.C.'s standards.

You could write a much worse ethics/lobbyist expose about almost every member of congress. My God - take a look at Hillary and all the ethics problems she (and her hsband) have. The list is endless.

Tens of thousands? Peanuts.

You'd have to search long and hard to find a more upstanding member of congress. Ditto for Lieberman.

And isn't it "precious" to see Dems so upset about alleged infidelity. Or ethics.

Complaining about the sex angle of the story is incorrect. The NYT piece didn't really emphasize it. They merely reported that the McCain aides thought there was something going on, and that in any event, the aides thought it was compromising McCain's position on lobbying.

Clearly there was "something there" there in one context or the other.

And if it the aides were right, then clearly the story is even more significant than just "Straight Talk falls off the rails".

As Hans B mentioned in another thread on this topic, if you take out all the sex innuendo, you still have McCain hanging out with lobbyists big time.

I can't agree with Matt's assessment that the section of the AP article that he quotes has less "innuendo" than the Times story.

The AP story tells us that Paxton executives gave money to the McCain campaign. The implication seems to be that McCain wrote to the FCC as a favor to a campaign contributor, rather than because McCain was concerned about the problem of the FCC being slow to process applications. The New York Times story makes the same point with facts rather than innuendo. According to the Times, Paxton hired Iseman as a lobbyist, Iseman asked McCain to send the letters, and McCain did so.

The AP story also tells us that the head of the FCC responded to McCain by asserting, in effect, that the FCC was proceeding as fast as it could without taking procedural shortcuts, which would be improper. The implication seems to be that McCain asked the FCC to do something improper. But the reporter didn't investigate whether the the head of the FCC was telling the truth. Even if he was telling the truth, there is no evidence that McCain thought that the delay was due to anything other than laxity on the part of the FCC.

To say that the AP or the New York Times engaged in "inuendo" is a loaded way of putting it. A more neutral way of putting it would be to say that the reporters involved did not know (or claim to know) certain things that were rather central to the stories they were writing.

Only in Washington is it considered normal for a regulatory decision affecting businesses to take two years. Would you think it was reasonable to make a bid on a business and be told you won't find out if you can complete the sale for two years? If it takes two years to read the law and then read the purchase proposal to see if it conforms with the law, the laws in question are obviously too complex. It's not a lot to ask that one have a clear idea whether or not a proposed action is legal.

McCain's "intervention" wasn't much more than a request that the FCC wrap it up. I would've written that letter on general principles even if Paxson communications never gave me a dime.

I doubt this is the worst thing McCain has ever done, but if it is, jeez, run him for Pope.

Here we go again: innuendo, weak sources, bizarre timing, feeble rebuttals, a disgrace to journalism, blah, blah, blah, blah. Bad Times, bad Times; Times drop evil-smelling mess on floor. Bad, bad bad.

But why is it bad? Is it actually any different from what the Times (or any other big daily) does on a regular basis? Innuendo, weak sources, bizarre timing is what political journalism is all about--remember the takeout on the Clinton's bedroom practices? On Obama's drug history? On Kitty Dukakis' depression? On Judy Dean's sleeping habits? Or, going further back, on Betty Ford's tippling (or Mamie Eisenhower's). All those pieces appeared in the Times. Some of them even stirred folks to say, bad, bad. But not like this. No, this is bad (I'm chagrined to say) because the subject is the sainted (if all-too-human, sniffle, sniffle) John MCain.

If I might review...

The Times (and then the Washington Post) reported that the staff of a presidential candidate, a U.S. senator, warned a female lobbyist to stop coming around because it might tarnish the senator's reputation for probity, both political and personal.

The Times did not say there was an affair--it quoted denials by both parties; it did not say there were any legislative quid-pro-quos. It did say the staff was nervous enough about the looks of things to chase the lobbyist away.

Legitimate? Worth Page One? In the light of John McCain's history as a corporate whore (i.e., Keating, telcom donors) and as a callous philanderer--recall, he began cheating on his first wife while she was hospitalized for an incapacitating auto accident--you bet it's legitimate. You bet in the middle of a presidential campaign it's worth Page One. The Times is the New York Times, not the Vatican City Times, or the Qom Times. Whatever it's pretensions, it doesn't do purity.

My guess is there would barely be a complaining peep out of anybody on TV or on most "liberal" blogs if this story were about Hillary Clinton and a male lobbyist.

On the contrary, Chris Matthews and his gang of eunuchs would outdo one another in gags about what it's like for a 60-year-old woman to have sex with a 40-year-old stud muffin. Matthews undoubtedly would joke about her "fat ankles" undulating in the air. There would be no limits on the calumny, none, and the folks at Kos, or TPM, or HuffPo would sigh hypocrtically, and murmur, well, what can you expect...

The press (and its so-called scrutinizers) have been fluffing McCain for years. Lizza's piece in the The New Yorker (and Kristof's column a few days ago) are the latest examples: Lizza demonstrates that McCain is a liar, a panderer, a lockstep right-winger, an adulterer, and a petty, dangerous hothead. And none of it matters. Because the boys on the bus love John McCain, love him, love him, love him.

Unsurprisingly, the Right has made this about the Times (just as the Right made the CBS Bush National Guard story about Dan Rather). In unison, the thugs on the Right sing...'nothing here, folks, move along,'...or 'a smear job by the Liberal Media,' or...'the Times hates the military,' or 'Keller should be hanged,' or....quote the version of your choice.

Please don't join their choir. The Times is not the story. John McCain, our very own Tartuffe, is.

camorrista etc.- the reason why some are calling it a hatchet job is because of the source - the NYT. If say, the Wall Street Journal had as their big breaking story the same thing about Hillary, or had a inuendo infused drug bit about Obama without any real guts to the story yeah, i would think people would unite behind their candidate and attack the media source.

I suppose another way to ask this is - if this story was about Hillary or Obama, would the NYT have run it so prominently or so poorly sourced?

camorrista etc.- the reason why some are calling it a hatchet job is because of the source - the NYT. If say, the Wall Street Journal had as their big breaking story the same thing about Hillary, or had a inuendo infused drug bit about Obama without any real guts to the story yeah, i would think people would unite behind their candidate and attack the media source.

I suppose another way to ask this is - if this story was about Hillary or Obama, would the NYT have run it so prominently or so poorly sourced?

TokyoExpat,

The New York Times did run a story about Obama's drug use, and it was part of the same series so I assume it was run equally prominently. It was similar to the McCain story in that the contents of the story were not exactly explosive. The Times interviewed several dozen people about Obama's past drug use and reported that these people said that Obama had used drugs, but not to the extent described in Obama's book.

The Obama campaign responded by giving a statement to the New York Times noting saying that it was unsurprising that different people would have somewhat different recollections of events long past, and left it at that. The Obama campaign could have accused the Times of engaging in a smear campaign and playing to racial stereotypes by writing an article about Obama's drug use, but it didn't. Would the Obama campaign have responded differently if the article had appeared in the Wall Street Journal rather than the New York Times? Based on what I've seen of the Obama campaign, I don't think so. His candidacy is based on the premise that he can bring people together, and making baseless attacks on the news media would hardly fit with that message.

Like the Obama story, the McCain story is not particularly explosive when you come right down to it. McCain had a relationship with a lobbyist who worked for people who were interested in various pieces of legislation handled by the Senate committee that McCain chaired. While this relationship may be strictly platonic, even some of McCain's own staff get the impression that the two may have a romantic relationship. Based on this and other examples which appear in the story, it seems to me that the Times is justified in concluding that McCain's "confidence in his own integrity has sometimes seemed to blind him to potentially embarrassing conflicts of interest." The Times doesn't say that McCain ever decided to support a bill because the lobbyist asked him to. He may have decided to support bills which her clients favored for reasons that had nothing to do with her. But I think that McCain's failure to consider how this situation might look to an outsider does raise a question about his judgement.

Rather than deal with the substance of the article, the McCain campaign decided to attack the New York Times, calling the article a "smear campaign" and claiming that the Times was accusing McCain of having an affair with the lobbyist. This then became fodder for commentators on CNN, none of whom gave any indication that they had actually read the New York Times article they were commenting on. As a result, the notion that the Times accused McCain of having an affair with a lobbyist has become accepted wisdom.

The notion that the story is "poorly sourced" is another myth. The Times had three sources verifying that McCain staffers were concerned about the relationship between McCain and the lobbyist, including one source who was willing to speak for attribution. That's better sourcing than you see in the majority of news stories.

This is an example of the media environment that Democrats will face in the fall. The McCain campaign has decided to take on the New York Times, allegedly the most influential news outlet in America, and seems to have won. As someone who thinks that facts should play a role in our national discourse, I find that discouraging.

Looks like the NYT editor needs his own story. The great buzz over the web is that Bill Keller, the NYT editor, who gave the go-ahead for this trash, was himself in an improper relationship. He got his trophy mistress pregnant before dumping his wife. Did the editorial board investigate any improprieties here? was Keller fooling around during the paper's time? were there any conflicts of interest> For example, did the NYT endorse John Kerry because the mistress (Emma Gilbey) was Kerry's ex-girlfriend? Hey, we have a right to know too. Great details on this site, AND they publish their sources names!!
http://deceiver.com/2008/02/21/quick-which-one-had-an-affair/

Mr Y
I read a quotation of you on Oxblog - you wrote of your "loathing for ...McCaine..."?
You loathe him? 'Disagree ' of course - but what is there about the man that inspires your loathing?
Just curious...


Comments closed March 06, 2008.

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