"Senator John McCain of Arizona is the only Republican who promises to end
the George Bush style of governing from and on behalf of a small, angry
fringe. With a record of working across the aisle to develop sound
bipartisan legislation, he would offer a choice to a broader range of
Americans than the rest of the Republican field."
That's the New York Times endorsing McCain for the Republican nomination. It
was written on January 25th.
A month earlier, it was reported that the Times was working on a story about
an allegedly inappropriate relationship between the senator and a young
female lobbyist. The information in the story, which the Times ran this
week, seems no different than what was rumored to be in the piece when the
Drudge Report learned of it two months earlier and the Washington Post
investigated the Times' decision not to run it.
The "female" adjective is the supposed heart of the matter - the suggestion
being that McCain traded political favors for non-political ones. Wink,
wink.
McCain denies any wrongdoing, though for a man famous for his
intemperateness, he was quite tempered in his denials.
Still, I'm inclined to believe McCain. The anonymous staffers used as
sources in the piece, portrayed as disgruntled (is anyone ever merely
"gruntled"?), offer no proof beyond their suspicions. The woman herself has
neither confirmed any inappropriate relationship nor alleged any other
improper behavior. But, I think it should be said that if the story were
true, it wouldn't be trivial. McCain is arguably the premier "good
government" Republican of the last 20 years. If he's pulling strings for
lobbyists in exchange for a little after-hours baron-and-the-milkmaid
action, he should be held accountable. And, as unfashionable as it is to say
these days, adultery is wrong.
But, again, I'm willing to give McCain the benefit of the doubt.
What I'm confused about is why the New York Times splashed this story on
page one as if it were of blockbuster importance. First of all, the Times
is not known for its Comstockish disapproval of marital infidelity. Second,
the Times would never have credited allegations of favoritism like this if
the lobbyist in question were, say, the son of an old Navy buddy.
Really. Imagine if some fired former campaign aides came to the Times and
said that McCain's poker buddy cajoled the senator into writing a routine
letter to a regulator about something or other. Would that have risen to the
level of a front-page story worthy of capsizing the presumptive nominee's
presidential bid and ruining his reputation? Would it have even been a story
at all?
Of course not. Ah, but sex sells, some will say. Sex is different. Sex gets
people all worked up.
That's true, of course, but that's not how the Times claims to operate.
There are, alas, no British-tabloid topless "page three girls" in the New
York Times.
Continued... |