Brent Bozell
May 31, 2006
There are days when you get up and stare at the front page of the
newspaper and you just have to put the paper back down. May 30 was one
of those days. After escaping for the long Memorial Day weekend, one
returns to the real world Tuesday morning. But those who read The
Washington Post are reminded that some people live forever in the world
of make believe. Witness the front-page headline: "Clinton Is A
Politician Not Easily Defined: Senator's Platform Remains Unclear."
That is to politics what "The DaVinci Code" is to theology.
When you pick up the paper again and read the story, it's just awful.
Political reporter Dan Balz, no babe in the woods, just embarrasses
himself by declaring that Hillary's inner circle has discovered she has
"a curious intellect, the absence of rigid ideology, an instinct for
problem solving and a willingness to seek consensus even across party
lines." In a telephone interview, Hillary told Balz she is in no way a
rigid thinker, that she approaches each problem and tries "combining my
beliefs and ideals with a search for practical solutions."
Balz is not so much reporting a news story as reproducing a sales
pitch. It really ought to have the word "advertisement" above it in
capital letters. It's a misleading commercial. If you bought President
Hillary, you would not be getting the "absence of rigid ideology." You
would get rigid liberal ideology, softened only by Slick Willie
political posturing, with gullible journalists gleefully hooking on
their bait.
This is not the first time The Washington Post has played gullible.
Witness March 28, 2004, when this self-same Dan Balz was touting the
emerging centrism of another presidential candidate, Sen. John Kerry.
He had "one of the most liberal voting records in the Senate," but
"edged" toward centrism on key votes. In the primaries, Kerry's
"rhetoric often tilted to the left, but not his positions." Balz boldly
concluded that Kerry "has emerged from the primaries at the
philosophical center of the party if not the country."
So Hillary is a centrist, just as John Kerry was a centrist. And so
were Al Gore, and Michael Dukakis and Walter Mondale. In which decade
do the liberal media stop peddling these delusions?
Balz made it all the way through his Clinton story without ever
referring to the voting scores kept by ideological groups. In the last
five years, the American Conservative Union has reported that on its
key Senate votes, her annual record was 12 percent conservative, 10
percent, 10 percent, zero percent in 2004, and then 12 percent again
last year. Her career average is a score of 9 percent. How in the world
does that number suggest an "unclear platform," something impossible to
categorize?
Now take the liberal counterpart. Americans for Democratic Action found
her to be 95 percent liberal on its key votes in her first four years,
and she achieved liberal nirvana (100 percent) in 2005. Those "Senate
hero" votes included voting against judicial nominee Janice Rogers
Brown, voting to repeal Ronald Reagan's "Mexico City policy" preventing
federal tax money from going to international abortion providers, and
voting for Chuck Schumer's amendment that would forbid abortion
protesters to declare bankruptcy to avoid fines or court judgments for
their clinic protests. Some absence of a rigid ideology, that.
Balz reported that Hillary is "depicted as seeking the middle ground on
abortion." Yes, she's "depicted" that way by liberal reporters like Dan
Balz, but her voting record is no middle ground. Hillary Clinton has
received a perfect 100 percent score from NARAL Pro-Choice America
every year, and right now she is leading their fight to force the Food
and Drug Administration to make the "Plan B" morning-after pill
available without a prescription.
In the final analysis, Sen. Hillary and New York are perfect for each
other. Political reporter Ryan Lizza recently reported in New York
magazine that one of every 10 abortions in America occurs in New York,
and seven of every 10 abortions in the state are performed in New York
City. There are more abortions performed on minors, more repeat
abortions, and more late abortions (over 21 weeks) in New York City
than anywhere else in the country. In parts of the city, the ratio of
abortions to births is one to one. It's the abortion capital of America.
All of these facts sit on the shelf for discussion when Sen. Hillary
tries to become President Hillary. But if the Dan Balzes of the media
have their way, they will only collect dust. These facts aren't any
less true because the media puts on a blindfold and pretends they don't
exist. Hillary is a liberal, and liberals tend to lose when they run
for president, despite national reporters crying "centrist" from every
street corner.