By David Harsanyi
Tuesday, May 29, 2018
At a Las Vegas tech conference last week, former
president Barack Obama told an audience that his presidency had been
scandal-free. “I didn’t have scandals, which seems like it shouldn’t be
something you brag about,” Obama joked, according to Newsweek. We hear this talking point quite often from Democrats.
Now, perhaps the president didn’t experience the fallout
from a scandal, which is very different from never having been involved in one.
For this confusion, Obama can thank the political media.
Why does it matter now? For one thing, historical
revisionism shouldn’t go unchallenged. Democrats are running to retake power,
and many of them were participants or accomplices in numerous corrosive
scandals that have been airbrushed.
The other reason, of course, is that when we start to
juxtapose the mythically idyllic Obama presidency with the tumultuous reign of
Trump, we’re reminded that many journalists largely abdicated their
responsibilities for eight years — which has a lot to do with the situation we
find ourselves in today.
It’s not about Obama’s brazen lying about Obamacare or
even recurrent abuse
of power. I’m talking about supposed non-scandals like “Operation Fast and
Furious,” a program devised by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and
Explosives (ATF) that put around 2,000 weapons into the hands of
narco-traffickers (and an Islamic terrorist), leading to the murder of hundreds
of Mexicans and at least one American, border agent Brian Terry.
The body count could have been higher when a homegrown
extremist who, with another assailant, attempted to murder the audience at a
“Draw Muhammad” contest in Garland, Texas with one of the Fast and Furious
weapons. An off-duty police officer killed both of the attackers.
Despite the incompetence, absurdity, recklessness, and
fatalities of the program, the entire affair never really received scandal-like
attention. No one lost his job. There will almost certainly be a tweet from
Trump this week that political media will afford more attention than a story in
which an American border agent was murdered with the gun Obama’s ATF provided.
Not even when the administration refused to cooperate
with congressional investigators was it handled like a scandal. Not even when a
federal judge rejected Obama’s assertion of executive privilege in efforts to
deny Congress files relating to the gun-walking operation was it treated as a
scandal. Not even when we learned that Obama attorney general Eric Holder
misled Congress about when he was made aware of the program did it rise to the
importance of a Trump tweet. Holder became the first sitting attorney general
in American history to be held in contempt of Congress — a vote that included
17 Democrats — and Obama still never paid a political price.
As it was, the Obama administration persistently ignored
courts and oversight, breaking norms because it was allowed to do so. The
president was articulate, friendly, and progressive. He might have executed an
American citizen without a trial (not a scandal!), but his contempt for the
process could be forgiven.
It’s why Obama could secretly send planes filled with
cash to pay a ransom to a terror state (using money earmarked for terror
victims) and most reporters and analysts would regurgitate the justification
they heard in the echo chamber. One Politico
reporter might drop a 14,000-word
heavily sourced investigative piece (two officials involved in the program went
on the record) detailing how the Obama administration undermined law
enforcement efforts to shut down an international drug-trafficking ring run by
the terror group Hezbollah operating in the United States, and most major news
organizations never even mentioned the piece.
When they did, it was usually to give space to former
Obama officials to smear the reporter.
It needn’t be said, but if the names were changed to
Trump and Russia, the president would be accused of sedition. But by any
conceivable journalistic standard, it’s a scandal that should have triggered
widespread coverage. So when we see mass indignation over every single
hyperbolic statement from the current president, it’s a bit difficult to buy
the outrage.
An Obama official famously bragged to The New York Times Magazine that he
could rely on the ignorance, inexperience, and partisan dispositions of
reporters to convey administration talking points to help push through
preferred policy. Rather than being hurt or embarrassed by this kind of
accusation of unprofessionalism, many reporters are more reliant on the same
people than ever before.
Yet many professionals who supposedly deplore the
authoritarian nature of an administration that doesn’t answer CNN’s questions
were generally quiet when Obama spied on reporters. The Obama DOJ spied on the
Associated Press in an attempt to crack down on internal leaks. The DOJ tapped
around 20 different phone lines—including cell phone and home lines—that snared
at least 100 staffers who worked for the outlet. The Justice Department spied
on Fox News reporter James Rosen in 2010, collecting his telephone records,
looking at his personal emails and tracking his movements.
Color me skeptical, but somehow I doubt similar Trump
efforts would be framed as a “rare peek into a Justice Department leak probe,”
as if we were pulling the curtains back on a fashion show. It would be,
rightly, depicted as an assault on democracy.
Then again, spying was also never really given the scandal
treatment during the Obama years. As Obama’s CIA director, John Brennan became
aware of an operation of illegal spying of a legislative branch staffer over
torture files and misled the media about it. Did the president know? Shrug. The
story hardly made a dent. Likewise, Obama’s director of national intelligence,
James Clapper, admitted he misled Congress about spying on American citizens.
No scandal.
Today both these people are on TV chumming around with
serious journalists who allow them to continue to make reckless,
unsubstantiated political statements all the time. It isn’t Chuck Todd on “Meet
the Press” who asks Clapper tough questions, it’s Meghan McCain on “The View.”
There was unprecedented politicization of the government
under Obama — most of it, I imagine, excused for being part of a good cause.
The NLRB. The Justice Department. The IRS. The Office of Special Counsel, which
reviews whistleblower allegations, found that IRS employees urged callers to
vote for Obama, wore pro-Obama swag, and campaigned for Democrats in
conversations with taxpayers — all of it illegal.
But far more seriously, IRS leadership, specifically Lois
Lerner, aggressively targeted conservative groups before elections. The IRS
admitted as much in an apology letter. Lerner was held in contempt by Congress
for refusing to comply with investigators’ demands. She never answered
questions for this genuine attack on democracy.
What difference does it make, right? While the extent of
the incompetence and negligence during the Benghazi terror attack on September
11, 2012 is still unknown, what we do know is that Obama and a number of
high-ranking officials in his administration lied about what happened for
partisan reasons. Susan Rice went on a number of national television shows and
claimed that Benghazi was a “spontaneous reaction” to “hateful and offensive
video,” even when she knew it was a sophisticated and pre-planned terror
attack. (Rice is now on the Netflix board, and Obama is a very rich man. At
some point you’ve made enough money, but that time is not yet.)
Although they knew it was a complex terror attack, Obama
and Hillary Clinton cut television ads to placate radicals in Islamic nations
by repeating the claim that a video perpetuated the attack, and apologizing for
American free speech — a scandal in itself.
Worse, however, the administration detained the man who
produced the offensively amateurish “Innocence of Muslims,” and initially
charged him with lying about his role in the production of the video. This was
a blatant attack on free expression. Yet most of the mainstream press continued
to take the administration’s word for it and report that the video was the
cause of the “protests.”
Democrats in general just kept pretending that every
accusation was merely a partisan, racist plot to undermine the president.
Whether it was bypassing process and oversight to fund cronyistic green
projects that enriched political and ideological allies with tax dollars, or
the Secret Service’s embarrassing debauchery or Hillary Clinton’s attempts to
circumvent transparency or, perhaps the most immoral, the Veterans Affairs’
negligence regarding veterans, they would never admit they faced a scandal.
This double standard in coverage makes today’s often
sanctimonious reactions to Trump a bit difficult to take. Many reporters will
snarkily point out that most of the stories critics latch onto have been
reported on or broken by mainstream journalists. It’s true. There are plenty of
good journalists out there. But it’s the intensity of the coverage and the
framing of the events that is evidence of ideologically motivated
coverage. And every time Obama or his
allies claim that they were scandal-free, millions of Americans are reminded of
the obsequiousness of most media coverage.
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