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	<title>Stuart Taylor, Jr.NewsHour Impeachment Coverage: Analysis and Commentary &#8211; Starr&#8217;s Performance &#8211; Stuart Taylor, Jr.</title>
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	<title>NewsHour Impeachment Coverage: Analysis and Commentary &#8211; Starr&#8217;s Performance &#8211; Stuart Taylor, Jr.</title>
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		<title>NewsHour Impeachment Coverage: Analysis and Commentary &#8211; Starr&#8217;s Performance</title>
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		<dc:creator>Stuart Taylor, Jr.</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[PBS News Hour]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Impeachment/President Clinton]]></category>
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				<description><![CDATA[<p>JIM LEHRER: And to some analysis and commentary about this day from    Stuart Taylor, columnist for the <i>National Journal</i> and <i>Newsweek</i>,    and author/journalist Elizabeth Drew.</p>
<p>JIM LEHRER: Elizabeth, what, in your opinion, was the most important    thing that happened today?</p>
<p>ELIZABETH    DREW: I think the most important thing that happened today was that    it was a very large and dramatic example or showing that this is a very    troubling precedent. Now, Zoe Lofgren was talking about the lack of    dignity and sobriety. She was part of - she was on the staff of someone    on the Impeachment Committee in 1974. I covered it. Now, you know, you    don't want to bathe in nostalgia, say those were the great old days    and it should be like that, but this struck me as not particularly thoughtful.    Most people made up their minds, and -</p>
<p>JIM LEHRER: So you would agree with me that it's still 21 to 16?</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.stuarttaylorjr.com/content-newshour-impeachment-coverage-analysis-and-commentary-starrs-performance-2/">NewsHour Impeachment Coverage: Analysis and Commentary &#8211; Starr&#8217;s Performance</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.stuarttaylorjr.com">Stuart Taylor, Jr.</a>.</p>
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					<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>JIM LEHRER: And to some analysis and commentary about this day from    Stuart Taylor, columnist for the <i>National Journal</i> and <i>Newsweek</i>,    and author/journalist Elizabeth Drew.</p>
<p>JIM LEHRER: Elizabeth, what, in your opinion, was the most important    thing that happened today?</p>
<p>ELIZABETH    DREW: I think the most important thing that happened today was that    it was a very large and dramatic example or showing that this is a very    troubling precedent. Now, Zoe Lofgren was talking about the lack of    dignity and sobriety. She was part of &#8211; she was on the staff of someone    on the Impeachment Committee in 1974. I covered it. Now, you know, you    don&#8217;t want to bathe in nostalgia, say those were the great old days    and it should be like that, but this struck me as not particularly thoughtful.    Most people made up their minds, and &#8211;</p>
<p>JIM LEHRER: So you would agree with me that it&#8217;s still 21 to 16?</p>
<p>ELIZABETH DREW: Well, yes, we haven&#8217;t heard everybody yet, but it certainly    looks that way, and I know that Mr. McCollum has been predicting to    people that there be several articles of impeachment voted out of this    committee and I don&#8217;t see anything that&#8217;s going to stop that. Mr. Starr    surprised me in some ways. The idea that the prosecutor was the person    who was the witness and then flatly said perjury is an impeachable offense,    he agreed with Mr. McCollum that perjury is like bribery. He said that    the founding father would have found perjury an impeachable offense.    There&#8217;s no evidence of that. I&#8217;m not saying that these are necessarily    not. But his adamancy about this and the expansion of his role, which    under the law is to report to the Congress of any substantial and credible    evidence of an impeachable offense, so I think this has kind of really    gone off the rails. Now to say all that does not say that President    Clinton behaved well, honorably, or did anything we can respect, and    everybody can decide what form of punishment he should have or, in fact,    some people think he has been punished. He&#8217;s been shamed. This is always    going to be on his historical record. But the idea that this is the    way you go about this truly in the real sense awesome proceeding was    a little worrisome.</p>
<p>JIM LEHRER: Worrisome to you, Stuart?</p>
<p>STUART    TAYLOR: Oh, I think there are a number of worrisome things about that,    but the things that worry me probably aren&#8217;t the same ones that worry    Elizabeth. I worry, frankly, that the Democratic Party has rallied around    the proposition that a little perjury and a little obstruction of justice    isn&#8217;t such a big deal, and let&#8217;s attack the person who&#8217;s telling us    what happened, rather than ascertain whether that, in fact, is what    happened. But the big picture &#8211; I think the large relevance of this    &#8211; was not how it would affect people in the room, because they weren&#8217;t    hearing much that they didn&#8217;t know already if they hadn&#8217;t done their    jobs. It&#8217;s basically polls, television, for better or &#8211; and I don&#8217;t    say that to belittle it. We live in a very poll-driven participatory    democracy. I would sort of prefer it that way. Madison thought it would    work but it&#8217;s changed because television has changed it. The fact of    the matter is 62 percent of the people I think in the exit polls after    the November election said he shouldn&#8217;t be impeached, and as long as    that holds, it&#8217;s going through the motions. Congress will never impeach    him or at least never remove him from office, in the face of those polls.    The question here is will anything that happened today change the polls?    In that regard, Starr had the best chance he will ever have to make    his case to the American people that these were &#8211; this isn&#8217;t just a    little lying about sex, that he&#8217;s not excessive, that this is a serious    succession of premeditated federal crimes, an attack on the integrity    of the judicial process over a period of eight months. I thought he    did very well at that. The Democrats had the best chance they will ever    have to come forth and show what the basis for their charges that this    man is a monster, a Torquemada, a Gestapo, a Salem witch trial person,    and they took their best shot. Frankly, I thought the stuff they threw    at him was pretty weak. And that&#8217;s really &#8211; I thought the answers were    pretty weak too. I did not think he performed well in answering those    questions. I thought there &#8211;</p>
<p>JIM LEHRER: He laid his case out well you think against the President    but he didn&#8217;t respond well to the &#8211;</p>
<p>STUART TAYLOR: Yes. And I&#8217;m talking more style and substance. He sort    of meandered around and talked about deliberative process and there    were questions that he should have had quick, crisp answers to that    he sort of said, I&#8217;ll have to think about that. I thought that was not    very satisfactory. Bottom line &#8211; but you get back to the Democrats said    nothing that I heard, nothing all day long that suggested any doubt    whatsoever about Starr&#8217;s evidence. They said, oh, you don&#8217;t have personal    knowledge, we haven&#8217;t got the witnesses here &#8211; they didn&#8217;t &#8211; they didn&#8217;t    get to the point. The question is: Will they ever do that, and will    the polls force them to come to grips with that, or will it just be    it&#8217;s over, finit?</p>
<p>JIM LEHRER: How do you read that, Elizabeth, the idea that the Democrats    didn&#8217;t even attempt to try to disprove anything that Starr said in terms    of from a factual standpoint?</p>
<p>ELIZABETH    DREW: Well, the whole thing was very curious, because none of them wanted    to talk about the elephant in the room. In other words, this does begin    with perjury &#8211; perjury &#8211; alleged perjury, real perjury about sex, which    gets to questions that they know the public doesn&#8217;t want to hear any    more about and so they didn&#8217;t &#8211; didn&#8217;t talk about on what grounds are    you saying the President perjured himself. It was very odd. They were    just all around the thing. I agree with Stuart, that the Democrats didn&#8217;t    &#8211; most of them &#8211; didn&#8217;t raise themselves to a particularly high level    either. Their role was to try to hit Starr with sticks and raise some    real questions about his investigation. Now, his investigation &#8211; if    it&#8217;s flawed, does that mean the President didn&#8217;t do the things he did?    Of course not. Well, I was surprised, frankly, that &#8211; well, maybe not    surprised. The famous tin ear that people have said that Starr had came    out, oh, it wasn&#8217;t so bad that Monica Lewinsky was detained for hours    at the Ritz Carlton in Virginia, because it&#8217;s really a comfortable and    luxurious place. It was consensual that she stayed there, even though    they said if you leave, you&#8217;re going to get 27 years in jail. He kept    referring to a taped conversation between Linda Tripp and Monica Lewinsky    as a consensual taping &#8211; well, no, I mean, nobody &#8211;</p>
<p>JIM LEHRER: Consensual on what end? Explain that, Stuart. That means    &#8211; legally consensual means one party, right?</p>
<p>STUART TAYLOR: It&#8217;s boiler plate, prosecutorial rhetoric, at least    under federal law, that if &#8211; if I have a bunch of cops listening in    on my end of the phone while I&#8217;m taping you &#8211;</p>
<p>JIM LEHRER: And I don&#8217;t know about it &#8211;</p>
<p>STUART TAYLOR: That&#8217;s consensual because I consented, it&#8217;s sort of    silly for him to use that word, but I&#8217;d say in fairness to him, prosecutors    and other lawyers develop silly habits after a while. I don&#8217;t think    he was trying to mislead anybody. In the end, I think Congressman Schumer,    a Democrat, who    was on the attack against Starr, puts a very interesting point to this.    He says, and he said it before, I have no doubt, says Congressman Schumer,    to the &#8211; Senator-Elect Schumer of New York &#8211; no doubt that the President    perjured himself in the grand jury or lied to the grand jury, I guess    he said, but I don&#8217;t think it&#8217;s impeachable. Sen. Moynihan, also a Democrat,    who will be his fellow Senator from New York, has said before, and I    assume still believes, perjury is an impeachable offense. The question    ultimately will be which of those views prevails.</p>
<p>JIM LEHRER: And that&#8217;s where it&#8217;s all going to come down to, isn&#8217;t    it?</p>
<p>ELIZABETH DREW: Yes. Chairman Hyde accepts the reality, I&#8217;m told, that    the President&#8217;s not going to be removed from office. So the question    becomes at what point does this process end and how. Now some rather    prominent Republicans actually were so concerned &#8211; are so concerned    about the effect of proceeding with this &#8211; the future effect on the    party, that they actually started &#8211; well, Ralph Reed, the former head    of the Conservative Coalition, now a Republican consultant &#8211; wrote to    the Republicans and said, drop the idea of impeachment, go to censure.    Now people have raised a lot of problems about censure. I know another    prominent Republican.</p>
<p>JIM LEHRER: But we&#8217;re a long way from that yet.</p>
<p>ELIZABETH DREW: Well, not so far. Another prominent Republican went    to the members and said, even accepting that they may be impeachable    offenses, think, is it really in the interest of the country to remove    the President, but nobody&#8217;s figured out how to stop it.</p>
<p>JIM LEHRER: We&#8217;ve got a lot of time to talk about that. Thank you both    very much.</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.stuarttaylorjr.com/content-newshour-impeachment-coverage-analysis-and-commentary-starrs-performance-2/">NewsHour Impeachment Coverage: Analysis and Commentary &#8211; Starr&#8217;s Performance</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.stuarttaylorjr.com">Stuart Taylor, Jr.</a>.</p>
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