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- <text id=92TT0211>
- <title>
- Jan. 27, 1992: Private Lives: How Relevant?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Jan. 27, 1992 Is Bill Clinton For Real?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 68
- Private Lives: How Relevant?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Michael Kinsley
- </p>
- <p> Here we go again. Last week two New York City tabloids,
- the Post and the Daily News, suddenly front-paged some old
- allegations about past extramarital activities by Arkansas
- Governor Bill Clinton, the media-crowned Democratic front
- runner. And thus, with a heartfelt squeamishness that outsiders
- will find hard to credit, the American press takes up some
- unfinished business from four years ago: deciding what to
- publish about presidential candidates' private lives.
- </p>
- <p> The Gary Hart follies of the 1987-88 campaign left the
- issue unresolved. But the particulars of that episode
- established a standard few future candidate sex scandals could
- hope to match: the misbehavior was current. The perpetrator was
- virtually caught with his pants down. He had specifically
- invited scrutiny of his private life: "Follow me around, I don't
- care." And the behavior was deemed to be specifically relevant
- to pre-existing questions about the candidate's "character."
- Since Hart was widely suspected of philandering, evidence that
- he actually did philander was admissible to the public debate.
- Evidence of philandering by a candidate not previously suspected
- of it presumably would fail this odd test.
- </p>
- <p> Many journalists hoped the Gary Hart standard would stick
- and thereby excuse them from further contemplation of this
- distressing subject. They hoped especially for an unwritten rule
- that only ongoing goings-on count. But it's probably not going
- to be that easy. Nor should it be.
- </p>
- <p> Musings on this ripe topic often muddle three distinct
- questions: First, what level of proof is required of stories
- about marital infidelity? Second, should such stories be
- suppressed, even if provably true, out of respect for the
- candidate's privacy? And third, are past extramarital affairs
- (to take the meat-and-potatoes issue here) relevant to a
- candidate's qualifications for office?
- </p>
- <p> Question One is simple, in theory. Sexual allegations
- should meet the same standard of proof as allegations on any
- other subject. By their nature, sexual allegations are often
- furtive and hard to prove. That is a perfectly good reason not
- to publish them.
- </p>
- <p> But there is a genuine dilemma. Rumors can become so thick
- and widespread that not to report their existence--even if
- they cannot be proved--becomes a kind of dishonesty. The
- Washington Post once got in trouble for publishing a rumor
- without proof it was true, and defended itself editorially on
- grounds that, well, it's true there was a rumor. Much chortling
- and indignation at that. But it's not a worthless point. Past
- profiles of Clinton, in TIME and elsewhere, have reported vague
- rumors about marital infidelity as exactly that, and rightly so.
- </p>
- <p> The specific accusations published last week have been
- peddled for more than a year by a disgruntled former state
- employee Clinton had fired. The purveyor has zero evidence, and
- Clinton and the women allegedly involved all deny it. But the
- stories were published in the Star, a supermarket tabloid,
- picked up by the two New York papers, and thus became fair game
- for everyone else.
- </p>
- <p> It is easy to sneer at this process whereby the daintier
- elements of the press can enjoy sex while still claiming to have
- preserved their virginity: they simply wait for their less
- fastidious brethren to report something, then report--with
- distaste--that it has been reported. But it's harder to know
- how to avoid the problem. The fact that a story claiming that
- Bill Clinton has had six mistresses appeared on the front page
- of the New York Post is of legitimate news value to the readers
- of the New York Times. At some point the Times must have faith
- that its readers, if offered the same evidence, are as capable
- as its editors of dismissing such stories as unreliable.
- </p>
- <p> But why should such stories be published even if they are
- true? The question here is not whether past sexual adventures
- are relevant to a candidate's fitness for office. That's
- Question Three. Question Two is who gets to decide Question
- Three. And the answer is: the voters, not journalists, should
- decide. I may think that a candidate's past or even present
- sexual activities are completely irrelevant compared with his
- views on the federal deficit (which the Star has chosen to
- ignore). In fact, that's pretty close to what I do think. But
- what right do I have, as a journalist in a democracy, to decide
- that for others?
- </p>
- <p> Obviously, if there was general agreement among the voters
- that a candidate's sexual history is politically irrelevant, it
- would not matter much to candidates what the New York Post chose
- to publish about their sexual histories, or even whether or not
- what the Post published was true. What makes this subject so
- thorny for politicians and journalists alike is precisely that
- they fear it is political dynamite and will indeed affect how
- people vote. And if people wish to vote against a candidate
- because he has cheated on his wife (even if his wife doesn't
- care and is, in fact, part of the conspiracy of silence), the
- press should not be in the business of playing censor and
- denying them information for fear they'll misuse it.
- </p>
- <p> So the proper test for the journalist is not whether he
- thinks the information is politically relevant, but whether he
- thinks it would be politically relevant to a significant number
- of voters. Obviously this isn't an exact science. My own sense
- is that the current line is somewhere between a dalliance or two
- many years ago and more energetic misbehavior recently. More
- forthright testing of that line might produce some pleasant
- surprises for those journalists who fear that their fellow
- citizens are too prudish for the country's good. At the least,
- it would force the citizenry to decide how much they really care
- about a candidate's sexual history, and might thereby hasten the
- day when journalists could, with a clean conscience, stop
- reporting such matters.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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