Contributors
Hugh Hewitt - Principal Contributor
Mr.
Hewitt is senior member of the CaliforniaRepublic.org editorial
board. [go to Hewitt index]
John
Kerry And His Harvey the Rabbit Leaders
The
candidate says he hears international whispers of support...
[Hugh Hewitt] 3/17/04
John
Kerry is caught in a lie. And it is an obvious lie, and it is hurting
him.
Kerry and his allies have made credibility a central issue in
the presidential campaign, repeatedly accusing George W. Bush
of lying in order to push the country into war. Of course, the
president did no such thing, and no serious analyst argues that
the WMD data was fabricated by the Bush team because every Western
intelligence service believed that Saddam possessed stockpiles
of WMD.
So too did Bill Clinton,
and so did John Kerry. The effort to shred the president's
credibility on the "yellowcake" paragraph
in the 2003 State of the Union address is simple propaganda,
and not very effective propaganda at that, especially when the
very real and now dismantled WMD programs of Libya are added
to the mix.
But Kerry put the
credibility ball in play, and now the issue is coming back
to haunt him. Last week, Kerry unequivocally asserted
that he had "met" with foreign leaders and that they
had told him they were hoping for his triumph in the fall. As
recorded by the pool reporters traveling with him, here's what
Kerry said at a fund-raiser in Florida last week:
I've met foreign leaders
who can't go out and say this publicly, but boy, they look
at you and say, "You've got to win; you've
got to beat this guy. We need a new policy." Things like
that.
CNN quickly
discovered that Kerry hadn't met with any foreign leaders
since declaring
for the presidency, but elite media seem
prepared to issue Kerry yet another pass (after the ones he got
for proclaiming his desire to be the country's "second black
president," and the one bestowed after branding Bush as "crooked" and "lying.")
But Joe Citizen stood up at a forum at which Kerry appeared
this weekend and demanded answers as to whom Kerry had met with.
Kerry doubled down on his lie, first by snarling that it wasn't
any of the questioner's business, and then by denying he said
he'd met with any leaders. This last bit was the clear attempt
to maneuver away from the lie Kerry told last week, and lawyers
recognized it immediately as a damaging admission that the first
proclamation was a lie.
George Stephanopoulos
summarized the threat to Kerry on "This
Week": "This could be a problem for Kerry ... When
you go through the records, it turns out he hasn't traveled abroad
since 2002, and he's only been in the same city as a leader of
a foreign government once in the past year and he's had to equivocate
what he's meant on that." Equivocate? He's lying about it.
Secretary of State
Powell raised the stakes on Fox News Sunday: "But
if [Kerry] thinks it is that important an assertion to make,
he ought to list some names." And the White House added
to the challenge today. White House spokesman Scott McClellan
said today Kerry was "making it up," with reference
to Kerry's Harvey the Rabbit leaders: "Either he is straightforward
and states who they are," McClellan said, "or the only
conclusion one can draw is that his is making it up to attack
the president."
Kerry and his team have made credibility an issue in the campaign,
but now they are exposed as liars, and on a major issue of whether
there are foreign leaders confiding in Kerry that they hope Kerry
wins in November. Joe Citizen, who was booed down by Kerry loyalists
and interrogated by Kerry about his voting record in 2000 in
response to a completely appropriate question about an on-the-record
statement Kerry made, acted where the elite media wouldn't. Joe
Citizen's name is Cedric Brown, a signmaker from Pennsylvania,
and he's not going to let the media lie down for Kerry. Good
for Cedric.
One of John Kerry's
dodges with regard to his lie about meeting with foreign leaders
is that he can't betray confidences. A humble
suggestion: Select two respected journalists, one from the center-left
and one from the center-right – say, Safire and Friedman
of the New York Times op-ed stable – and disclose to them
the names of the leaders involved on the condition that they
will confirm the conversations took place without disclosing
the names of the specific leaders. Both would be free to write
generally about the seriousness of the Foreign Leaders for Kerry
movement, but not to name names.
Sound familiar? It
is a variation of the "modified, limited
hangout" proposed by Nixon during Watergate's unfolding.
One example of the modified limited hang-out: Nixon's proposal
to allow then-Sen. John Stennis to listen to the White House
tapes when the public and the courts were clamoring for their
release. The Stennis offer came too late to satisfy the demand
for full disclosure, but Kerry still has time to get ahead of
that curve if he comes up with any sort of transparency on his
claim.
The trouble is that Kerry flat-out lied. If he had back-up,
he'd find a way to get it out there, as with a Safire-Friedman
gambit. But he doesn't have back-up. He's Al Gore without the
charisma; Nixon without the charm.
Kerry's stonewalling on this lie might be the first big blogosphere-meets-the-2004
campaign story. Instapundit is leading the charge to keep Kerry
accountable with posts here and here. Perhaps others will follow
in demanding of Kerry the same sort of accountability as was
demanded of Trent Lott when that unfortunate senator put his
foot in his mouth in late 2002. CRO
§
CaliforniaRepublic.org
Principal Contributor Hugh Hewitt is an author, television
commentator
and syndicated talk-show host of the Salem Radio Network's Hugh
Hewitt Show, heard in over 40 markets around the country.
He blogs regularly at HughHewitt.com and he frequently contributes opinion pieces to the Weekly
Standard.

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