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There he goes again! Matt Drudge & the GOP smear machine are back in the Democrats' pants. (Conason)
Salon ^ | February 13, 2004 | Joe Conason

Posted on 02/12/2004 9:42:42 PM PST by Timesink

Opinion
There he goes again!
Matt Drudge and the GOP smear machine are back in the Democrats' pants.

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By Joe Conason

Feb. 13, 2004  | Is American politics suddenly returning to the bad old days, when Washington journalism became frenzied with sheet sniffing and keyhole peeping? That seems to be the default program of the right-wing media machine whenever Republican poll numbers sink into the red zone.

Late Thursday morning -- with George W. Bush's credibility damaged on several fronts as reporters demanded answers to questions about his National Guard service that should have been asked years ago -- the Drudge Report defamed his leading Democratic challenger with a "world exclusive" smudge of personal dirt.

Vague and unsourced but hyped to the maximum by Drudge, the brief item sounded disturbingly familiar. The Internet gossip accused John Kerry of "recent alleged infidelity" with "a woman who recently fled the country," adding that a "close friend of the woman recently approached a reporter with fantastic stories." The same item ran an "off the record" comment attributed to retired Gen. Wesley Clark, who was quoted as saying, "Kerry will implode over an intern issue." Major news organizations from ABC News to the Associated Press, warned Drudge, were all over the story.

By evening, however, no major news organization had run with it, though many were chasing it. Perhaps frustrated, Drudge put up an additional item eight hours later, with a few more details about the alleged relationship. "Unlike the Monica Lewinsky drama, which first played out publicly in this space, with audio tapes, cigar and a dress, the Kerry situation has posed a challenge to reporters investigating the claims," his later item explained. Drudge also quoted a "top source" as saying: "There is no lawsuit testimony this time [like Clinton with Paula Jones]. It is hard to prove."

But the kind of proof usually required by national news organizations isn't what Drudge needs in order to put innuendo into circulation.

Somewhat conveniently, Drudge had earlier posted an item that blamed the sudden smudging on a disgruntled Democratic consultant named Chris Lehane, who had been fired by Kerry before going to work for as a communications aide to Clark. That second item was later taken down without explanation. By then, of course, this Drudge-drama was already "rocking" Democrats -- and delighting Republicans -- across the nation, at least according to Drudge.

The template was pure Monica: Intern has affair with married politician, is betrayed by a "close friend," and finally exposed by the pliant Drudge.

So far, however, the mainstream media has yet to touch the Drudge item, despite heavy promotion by Rush Limbaugh and the Wall Street Journal's Opinion Journal Web site. Whoever lit this match must have been disappointed when the story that smoldered in newsrooms during the afternoon failed to blaze into a firestorm by early evening. The only exception, so far, is a daily newspaper in Scotland.

Over the years, Kerry's private life has generated its share of gossip. He was a divorced, socially active single man for several years before he remarried. No woman has so far stepped forward to embarrass him in any way -- and the only published report even remotely hinting at marital infidelity is a 6-year-old unfounded clipping from the Boston Herald. Sources in the Kerry camp insist that the Drudge story has no foundation, although they have been predicting since Bush's numbers began to drop that the White House would soon dump its opposition research on their candidate. It may also be worth noting that the Massachusetts senator underwent surgery and radiation treatment last year for prostate cancer.

Was the Drudge item a late hit by an angry Democrat seeking revenge, or a plant by desperate Republicans hoping to distract attention from the president's problems? Lacking proof, the most pertinent questions are the standards of forensic inquiry: Cui bono (who benefits)? And who had the motive, method and opportunity?

Drudge's allegations set off a chain of speculation. Certainly some Democrats wondered if the evidence-free item came from Lehane, who declined public comment this afternoon. Lehane has a reputation as an often rough operator, and that may provide a pretext for Drudge to smear him, too. Following Lehane's dismissal from the Kerry campaign some months ago, the tone of his remarks about his former employer occasionally sounded vengeful. If Clark actually uttered the nasty remark as quoted by Drudge, the general might have heard such rumors from his sharp-edged consultant. But then if Clark believed Kerry was about to "implode," he might not have dropped out of the primary race -- or decided to endorse the Massachusetts senator, as he is expected to do on Friday.

A source close to Lehane vehemently denied to me that Lehane had peddled any rumors about Kerry -- and turned attention back toward the White House as Drudge's likely source. "My assessment is that this is not merely a serendipitous event," he said.

The Drudge item blaming Lehane quoted Craig Crawford, a former Democratic operative who now works as a consultant and columnist for MSNBC. Within 10 minutes after Drudge posted the Kerry intern item, Crawford sent a memo to his superiors that said the story was "something Chris Lehane (clark press secy) has shopped around for a long time." According to Crawford, someone at MSNBC promptly leaked his memo to Drudge. But when Lehane called Crawford with a loudly indignant denial, the MSNBC columnist quickly issued a public retraction. He said:

"The comments attributed to me are from a private email to television news associates based on conversations with Democratic campaign operatives. I did not consider any of it confirmed enough to report or publish. I can only verify that Chris Lehane's rivals in other Democratic campaigns made these claims and I have found no independent source to confirm it. Which is why we did not go with the story. But then someone sent my email to others, which is the only reason it got into the public domain." In other words, there is no proof that Lehane circulated the rumor, let alone that the rumor has any basis in reality.

Once again, Drudge has raised questions -- but they may not be the ones he seeks to raise. The first is about journalistic standards. The second is the identity of his anonymous sources.

Journalists must ask themselves why the rumor of a private peccadillo deserves their attention and resources in the 2004 campaign. The press faces a more important issue: learning from its own failure to report the false rationale and abused intelligence that drove the nation to war.

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About the writer
Joe Conason writes a twice weekly column for Salon. He also writes a weekly column for the New York Observer. His new book, "Big Lies: The Right-Wing Propaganda Machine and How It Distorts the Truth," is now available.



TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2004; bimboeruption; conason; drudge; joeconason; johnkerry; kerry
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To: Prodigal Son
Here's the link to that thread:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1077234/posts
21 posted on 02/12/2004 11:02:58 PM PST by Prodigal Son
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To: franklog
So Conason thinks Clark - who leaked the story - is part of the vast right-wing conspiracy?

Now there's a whole can of worms! Remember that before Clark called the dims he supposedly called Rove to run as a republican. The tinfoil hat leftists just may decide that Clark was a Rove plant into the dimocrat candidate race. They pretty much assume Rove is and has done everything from global warming to orchestrating the succession to Genghis Khan.

22 posted on 02/12/2004 11:40:59 PM PST by highlander_UW
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To: Timesink
To me this PROVES there is a fire.

But .. I'm sure we'll get the full Clintonesqe treatment. These people are like little children who have chocolate smeared all over their face while they're standing there telling you they didn't eat any of the chocolate cake.

ROTFLOL!!
23 posted on 02/13/2004 12:58:02 AM PST by CyberAnt (The 2004 Election is for the SOUL of AMERICA)
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To: All
-Liars-- and Sleaze, Incorporated... ( my files on the clintons and friends )--
24 posted on 02/13/2004 1:13:12 AM PST by backhoe (The 1990's? The Decade of Fraud(s)... the 00's? The Decade of Lunatics...)
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To: davidtalker
Hey David. Wonderful to *see* you. I sure want to hear you in San Diego. Tell me how to help facilitate it and I will.
25 posted on 02/13/2004 1:18:11 AM PST by onyx (Your secrets are safe with me and all my friends.)
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To: Timesink
Two words for Joe the maggott: Chris Lehane
26 posted on 02/13/2004 5:07:04 AM PST by Grampa Dave (John F' Kerry may be closer to being a John F' Kennedy than we thought.)
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To: Timesink
Joe Conason radiates all the grace of someone releasing gas in Church!
27 posted on 02/13/2004 6:35:46 AM PST by leprechaun9 (Beware of little expenses because a small leak will sink a great ship!)
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To: Timesink
I can only verify that Chris Lehane's rivals in other Democratic campaigns made these claims and I have found no independent source to confirm it. Which is why we did not go with the story.

And from this we conclude the story is a RNC/Rove plant? Wow. Conason has quite a lot of chutzpah, and faith in the public's lack of investigative prowess.

28 posted on 02/13/2004 6:46:44 AM PST by Cboldt
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To: onyx
Onyx
Love that. Don't forget you can listen online. Sat & Sun. 1-4 PM Pacific. ksfo.com

Best,
DG
29 posted on 02/13/2004 10:16:51 PM PST by davidtalker
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To: davidtalker; sinkspur
Will do! Thanks David.

Hey, sink, look who's here. :)
30 posted on 02/13/2004 10:46:37 PM PST by onyx (Your secrets are safe with me and all my friends.)
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