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Contributors
Carol Platt Liebau - Columnist
Carol
Platt Liebau is editorial director and a senior member of
the CaliforniaRepublic.org editorial
board. She is an attorney, political analyst and commentator
based in San Marino, CA, and has appeared on the Fox News
Channel,
MSNBC, CNN, Orange County News Channel, Cox Cable and a variety
of radio programs throughout the United States. A graduate
of
Princeton
University
and Harvard Law School, Carol Platt Liebau also served as the
first female managing editor of the Harvard Law Review.
[go to Liebau index]
The
Party of Standards
In Praise of Republican Moral Accountability
[Carol
Platt Liebau] 6/28/04
Last week,
it could almost have been the ‘90’s all
over again. There he was – President Clinton discussing
once again what he did and didn’t do with Monica Lewinsky
in the Oval Office, how he felt afterwards, what his wife said
to him, on and on ad nauseam.
But that wasn’t
all. The whiff of a new sexual scandal was in the air, as it
was reported that Jack Ryan, Republican
candidate for the U.S. Senate in Illinois, had taken his ex-wife
to sex clubs during their marriage, and purportedly urged her
to engage in various acts with him there.
Not much remains to
be discussed about the whole sordid Clinton-Lewinsky, Clinton-Flowers,
Clinton-Jones, Clinton-Willey, Clinton-Broaddrick
saga. Heaven knows that we are as tired of it as Ken Starr must
have been (recall that he didn’t even want to investigate
the Lewinsky matter, having attempted to turn it over to another
independent counsel – a request that Janet Reno refused).
Nor is there much to say about the now-defunct campaign of a
seemingly promising candidate from Illinois with an alleged personal
taste for exhibitionism.
No, the most illuminating
part of juxtaposing the Democratic sex scandals of Bill Clinton
with the Republican one of Jack
Ryan is the contrasting reactions of the politicians’ partisans.
Clinton had an excellent
week. Once again he was lionized, idolized and admired by Democrats
and the mainstream press alike – beginning
with Dan Rather on Sunday, ending with Larry King on Friday,
with a stop in at Oprah on Tuesday. Challenges to the former
president’s assertions, and even pointed questioning about
some of the statements in his autobiography, were virtually nonexistent.
Crowds formed to purchase the book, perhaps more as an expression
of personal solidarity with Clinton than from a burning desire
to devour all 957 pages of the voluminous tome. And with his
wife and daughter, Clinton arrived in a blaze of celebrity to
preside over a glitzy Manhattan party attended by the left-of-center
glitterati.
Jack Ryan’s week was infinitely less pleasant. Even as
he reeled from the disclosures about his personal sexual proclivities,
former Illinois governor Jim Edgar and state Republican Party
chairman Judy Baar Topinka were letting it be known that they
had been deceived by him. Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert,
likewise from Illinois, cancelled the D.C. fundraiser that he
had planned for Ryan. Despite Ryan’s initial determination
to stay in the race, by week’s end, it was over. And when
the news of Ryan’s departure was announced, Dennis Hastert
forthrightly stated, “Jack Ryan made the right decision.”
What a stark contrast
to the Democrats’ reaction when
Bill Clinton’s perjury about his sexual escapades led to
his impeachment! Democrats organized a post-impeachment rally
for Clinton on the White House lawn, where Vice President Al
Gore opined that Clinton would “go down in the history
books as one of our greatest presidents.” Virtually every
Democrat, with the exception of Joe Lieberman, minimized and
excused Clinton’s conduct, reserving their real wrath for
the Republicans who objected to it. This despite the fact that
Clinton not only had been orally serviced by an intern in the
Oval Office (at least once while on the phone with a congressman
discussing foreign policy), but had lied, first under oath, and
then to his entire Cabinet and the nation about it.
That history certainly
places Jack Ryan’s alleged interest
in public sex with his then-wife in context. If Republicans had
wanted to wage a defense of Ryan, there were grounds upon which
to do so. He was, after all, not engaging in any extramarital
affair; he and his ex-wife had wanted this damaging information
to remain sealed for the sake of their son; and the entire matter
was revealed only as a result of the insistent efforts of the
Chicago media to gain access to the material in a private divorce
file about activities that occurred well before Ryan was in public
life.
But Republicans were right to insist that Ryan step down, even
though it means that they are effectively conceding the race
for the U.S. Senate seat. They were right to be embarrassed when
it was revealed that Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich had been
having an affair with an Agriculture Committee staffer (whom
he later married), or when Speaker-designate Bob Livingstone
admitted to extramarital affairs before resigning from the House
of Representatives. And they were right to ask Bill Clinton to
resign back in 1998.
The reason is simple.
It’s not too much to ask that our
elected officials – whom we pay with our tax dollars, and
whom we trust to have the prudence and good judgment to make
wise decisions on our behalf – have clear moral standards
that will guide their personal, as well as professional, behavior.
Nor is it too much to expect that those standards will be the
fairly traditional, monogamous ones to which millions of normal,
hardworking Americans adhere, through an informal social consensus
derived from our common religious heritage.
After all, our rulers
are not overlords. The Founding Fathers didn’t create
a system with a ruling class free to set and then live by its
own elite rules, brazenly resorting to deceit
when they disregard community standards. They envisioned our
leaders as ordinary men and women who would reflect the views
and morals of the citizenry they represented. And living by these
standards is just part of what public officials give in exchange
for the power and prestige that their public offices offer them.
While Americans are entitled to privacy in the conduct of their
sexual lives, the same politicians who voluntarily surrender
a large measure of privacy in their financial affairs and personal
lives likewise must recognize that their sexual secrets may become
part of the record upon which voters judge them.
In the Clinton era
and thereafter, Democrats have seemed to greet the news of
Republican sex scandals with glee. Apparently,
they believe that it constitutes hypocrisy for Republicans to
hold any views on proper sexual behavior while any Republicans
exist who flout these standards. But it’s worth remembering
the maxim of French philosopher Francois de la Rouchefoucauld: “Hypocrisy
is the tribute that vice pays to virtue.”
No, the Republican
Party isn’t perfect, and its members
don’t always live up to the highest standards of conduct.
But at least they recognize that there are – or should
be –standards of conduct that are worthy of aspiration.
And that’s just one more reason that, despite its manifold
shortcomings, the Republican Party is not only “old” – it’s “grand,” too. CRO
Columnist
Carol Platt Liebau is a political analyst, commentator and
CaliforniaRepublic.org editorial director based in San Marino,
CA.
copyright
2004
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