By Jonah Goldberg
Monday, October 05, 2015
“Lean on me, when you’re not strong, and I’ll be your
friend, I’ll help you carry on.”
The Bill Withers song has been covered by countless
artists, but the rendition of “Lean on Me” performed in a duet last weekend on
the debut of Saturday Night Live had
novel poignancy. It was sung by Kate McKinnon, the show’s go-to impersonator of
presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and Mrs. Clinton herself. The appearance
was an integral part of the Clinton campaign’s much-touted re-re-re-rebranding
push to make Clinton seem more spontaneous and relatable. And, it was by most
accounts a success.
The headline on the Daily
Beast’s review summed it up well, “'Saturday Night Live’ Premiere Basically
a Hillary Clinton Campaign Ad.” And, as the Daily
Beast’s senior entertainment reporter Kevin Fallon notes, it wasn’t just
the skit with Clinton’s walk-on that was a gift. It was almost the whole show.
The SNL News segment took shots at potential Clinton opponent Joe Biden and New
Hampshire Democratic frontrunner Sen. Bernie Sanders. Even the inevitable
potshots at Donald Trump were aimed, at least in part, at making Hillary
Clinton seem like the only safe choice in the 2016 race.
And that’s fine. The first amendment covers sketch
comedy. And it’s hardly as if Clinton is the first presidential candidate or
politician to take advantage of Saturday
Night Live or some other entertainment show.
In 1968, Richard Nixon had many of the same challenges
Clinton faces today. He was seen, rightly, as stiff, aloof, conspiratorial and
too self-serious. That’s why he went on Rowan and Martin’s Laugh In and said “sock it to me.” Nixon, didn’t win the very close
presidential election because of one five second bit on Laugh In. But he probably wouldn’t have won if he hadn’t followed
the advice of a 28-year-old media consultant wunderkind named Roger Ailes, who helped choreograph Nixon’s image
makeover, and the “sock it to me” moment was arguably the most significant part
of that effort. (Note: Ailes now runs Fox News where I am a contributor).
George Schlatter, the producer of Laugh
In, later apologized for helping Nixon get elected.
If Hillary Clinton is elected president in 2016, I very
much doubt that Lorne Michaels, the executive producer of Saturday Night Live, will express similar regrets.
And that’s fine, too.
Again, Saturday
Night Live, has the same first amendment rights as The New York Times, The
Washington Post and this newspaper. But you know who else has the same free
speech rights as the mainstream media? You and me — and George Soros, Charles
and David Koch, and every other citizen of the United States.
And that’s why the Supreme Court’s decision in Citizens United was correct. In that
decision, the Court held that everyone has the right to get their views and
opinions out into the public conversation.
In the arguments before the court, the Obama
administration took the position that the government could even ban books
during election season if those books amounted to “express advocacy” for a
candidate, even if that advocacy took the form of a single mention of a
candidate.
The court rejected that argument and President Obama,
along with most liberals, have never forgiven the justices. Hillary Clinton is
so opposed to the ruling, she has made amending the First Amendment a
cornerstone of her campaign.
Why do liberals hate Citizens
United so much? No doubt there are many explanations, but one seems
particularly obvious. In a world where only powerful institutions in the
mainstream media have an unfettered right to make their case during elections,
then the conversation is going to go in their favor. Even if Fox News and Rush
Limbaugh were the monsters liberal claim they are, the scales still lean
inarguably leftward when you include the biggest newspapers, the major TV
networks, National Public Radio, and popular programs like The Daily Show and 60 Minutes.
None of these outlets would consider their editorials,
news coverage and comedy sketches to be “in kind donations,” but from the
perspective of political campaigns, that’s a distinction without a difference.
Because Democrats understand that when they’re not strong, they can lean on
their friends to help them carry on.
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