Posted on 01/09/2006 5:33:31 AM PST by LS
How Should Textbooks Treat the Clinton Scandal?
by Larry Schweikart, University of Dayton
Almost any student who has ever sat through a history class in high school or college will nod with familiarity when I discuss how many teachers cover the last 20 years of history: well, of course, you know what happened next. For me, the history that inevitably was left out was the late 1950s or the Kennedy/Nixon years. As I entered the history profession, I found most students had never gotten up to the Vietnam War. If the past is any guide, the likelihood of survey classes in the early years of the 21st century discussing the Clinton administration and the impeachment of William Jefferson Clinton is remote.
In the past two weeks, however, a spate of news stories about textbook coverage of the Clinton impeachment/Clinton scandals have appeared, most of them concerned more with the question of how salacious should history be rather than the more serious question of why Bill Clinton was the first elected president ever impeached. As usual, textbook coverage extends across the spectrum from liberal writers who argue that the impeachment process hurt both sides to the nuts-and-bolts treatment of Clintons impeachment and acquittal, usually without the details of the sexual issues underlying the perjury. Certainly the nature of textbook writing prohibits extensive investigation into any scandal, whether in Ulysses Grants time or our own. Still, the Clinton impeachment saga demands more than just a cursory mention, with, say, the same space one would give to the Whiskey Ring or Grover Clevelands alleged love child.
The most important characteristic of a good textbook discussion of the Clinton impeachmentobviously, next to accuracyis balance. How much space, or how many words, does the author give to Clinton versus, say, the impeachment of Andrew Johnson. Michael Allen, my co-author on A Patriots History of the United States, conducted a cursory examination of a few texts on this issue, and found that an older version of John Blums popular text, the National Experience, dedicated about 750 words to the Johnson impeachment, and a recent edition of Bernard Bailyns text, The Great Republic, has almost exactly the same word count. What one includes in the overall subject of impeachment, however, can be somewhat open. Does one include Johnsons prior battles with the Radical Republicans over Reconstruction? If so, which ones? At any rate, Michael Allen and I consider Clintons impeachmentbecause he was elected president, whereas Johnson was only elected vice president and only became president through Lincolns assassinationto be at least as deserving of serious discussion as Johnsons. Our Patriots History gives each impeachment almost equal treatment as measured by word countalthough again, whether Whitewater, Travelgate, and the early Clinton sex scandals in his campaign all fall under the aegis impeachment is open to debate.
How one teaches the impeachment will also depend largely on the grade level of the students. It is probably not necessary to discuss what Clinton lied about with 7th and 8th graders, but the issue will almost certainly come up with high schoolers, who will want to know, Yeah, but what did he lie about? (usually knowing full well already what he lied about). Indeed, surveys showing that large numbers of American teenagers think oral sex is not sexand who often cite Clinton as their source that its oksuggest that the students are far more mature than we suspect.
For college students, however, the historical issues posed by the Clinton impeachment, and its contrasts with the Johnson impeachment, provide a rich field for exploring Constitutional history, political shifts, and political history. For example, one textbook claimed that the impeachment damaged both political parties, which is plainly false. Although the short-lived Speaker of the House, Bob Livingston (R-LA) resigned his speakership as a result of exposes by Clintons cronies, no major Republican figure was politically damaged at all in the impeachment process. The Republican Party went on to win three straight elections, including two presidential elections, one of which should have been a gimme for Clintons vice president, Al Gore, whose campaign was clearly damaged by Clintons sleaze factor and who was unable to position himself as being of the Clinton administration by the need to distance himself from the taint of impeachment. As late as 2006, Democrats find it extremely difficult to gain any traction on issues of corruption due to the lingering memories of Clinton, Chinese money-laundering, John Huang, and other unethical practices for which formal charges were never filed. (The Barrett Report, however, still hovers and, according to sources, contains serious charges that the Clinton administration routinely illegally used the IRS to attack political enemies).
When contrasted with the Johnson impeachment, one sees a hard-headed, unpopular president who is opposed by virtually all of Congress, fighting a battle of principle over proper powers of the legislative and executive branches. While Johnson clearly could have taken a safer route through the courts, his purpose in violating the Tenure of Office Act was to, in the words of Mel Gibsons Braveheart, to pack a fight. Ultimately, the Senate decided that the harm done to the Executive Branchs powers by a conviction would surpass the temporary gain of getting Johnson out of the Senators rapidly-diminishing hair, and they acquitted him.
Clinton, however, had no such lofty ideals in his self-made scandal. He brought sex into the arena by first lying to the public during the campaign over Jennifer Flowers; then again by attempting to hush Paula Jones in her civil suit; then finally by giving false testimony to a Grand Jury. In the process, he managed to become the only president ever to be disbarred by allowing his attorney to submit a false statement to a federal judge. (There must be a standing joke here to the effect that if you arent moral enough to be a lawyer . . . .) Clintons Lewinsky scandal was also worthy of historians treatment because it possibly marked the demise of the mainstream media as a journalistic monolith. The key stories were broken by Matt Drudge on his Internet site, and indeed, the mainstream media sought to contain the story that would damage the Democratic Party. Talk radio, the Internet, and Fox News all took center stage for bringing new information to the attention of the public. Teachers might examine the rise of these alternative news sources with the rapid and steady decline of the circulation of so-called mainstream papers and the incredible drop in viewership of the Big Three nightly news shows.
In light of the revelations by the 9/11 Commission that Clinton, with almost wanton disregard for the evidence, dismissed warnings about al-Qaeda, Osama bin Laden, and terrorism; that he turned down three offers by the Sudanese government to hand over bin Laden; and that his Justice Department, courtesy of Jamie Gorelick, erected the wall between the CIA and the FBI that later had to be torn down after the horror of 9/11, the central question that many students will have about the Clinton impeachment is, Why was lying under oath all that the prosecutors could indict Clinton for? It will take good teaching, indeed, to explain why laundering campaign money through sources of a hostile Chinese government, or why insisting on a law enforcement model of pursuing terrorists as opposed to a wartime model, were not themselves impeachable offenses. When these issues are addressed in detail, it might well be concluded that, in fact, the Clinton years not only included impeachment, but that the impeachment of William Jefferson Clinton was, in the big picture, the most important thing that occurred in his two terms.
it should be view as it is....as a 'stain' on the country.
What I would like to see is the administration pressure the schools to change textbooks.
Sad chapter in the history of the United States should be eliminated from history textbooks altogether or glossed over. Put Clinton in the sex education textbooks instead.
Should probably treat Xlinton with a set of latex gloves. A tyvek suit and a respirator might not be bad either.
The textbooks should be honest... while a mountain of evidence existed to impeach Clinton of bribery, illegal campaign contributions, the sale of secret missile technology to China, and the abuse of FBI records and the IRS, Republicans instead decided to go after Clinton on a hyped-up sex scandal and embarassed themselves and the country in the process.
I disagree with you here. I think that our children should know the truth about the Clinton Kleptocracy.
I think that they should stick the pages together.
I afraid public education history textbooks may not be a reliable source of truth.
With the appropriate XXX rating.
If you think public high school textbooks are biased, you should pick up a college textbook. I'm a 33 year old college student at University of North Texas and I sometimes feel I need a shot of Pepto to finish my reading assignments.
..Slick Willy should have also be given the title of being a sex offender too. Text books should state that because he was a member of the political class he escaped being given that label by law enforcement.
He is a disbarred Arkansas lawyer who couldn't represent you if you got a traffic ticket in Little Rock, censured by a Federal District Judge for perjury. Why bother to say more?
To my thinking, all curriculum for public education should be written or approved by Alamo Girl and Mia T.
When it comes time to teach this section of history in my homeschool, I've got an entire crate filled with krinton's "legacy" that will be used as teaching aids (AIDS, too, for that matter).
"The textbooks should be honest... while a mountain of evidence existed to impeach Clinton of bribery, illegal campaign contributions, the sale of secret missile technology to China, and the abuse of FBI records and the IRS, Republicans instead decided to go after Clinton on a hyped-up sex scandal and embarassed themselves and the country in the process."
agreed. The only benefit of the impeachment was that he lied under oath and it is good that he got busted for that...and of course the Schadenfreude we all enjoyed at watchting Mr. Left Leaning Peyronie, under the spotlights.......
I think teaching materials should be like reportage: verifiable, repeatable, and factual. THAT Bill Clinton was impeached is undeniable, even by his sycophants. The Articles of Impeachment are public record, as is the Senate vote exonerating him on both charges. I don't think it is the place of history texts to elaborate on the MOTIVES for the Clinton impeachment, since those are subject to partisan speculation. If students want to know more about the background, it's an excellent opportunity for them to explore the issue through outside reading.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.