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- <text id=89TT0649>
- <title>
- Mar. 06, 1989: From The Publisher
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Mar. 06, 1989 The Tower Fiasco
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 4
- </hdr><body>
- <p> Stories like John Tower's come along with uncomfortable
- regularity on Capitol Hill. Hays Gorey knows that. TIME's chief
- congressional correspondent can't stay away from the beat he
- first covered more than 20 years ago. Back then, Gorey watched
- the Senate agonize over passing judgment on another of its own:
- in the dock in 1967 was Connecticut's Thomas Dodd, eventually
- censured for a misuse of campaign funds. Now happily back on
- the Hill after a two-decade hiatus reporting on national
- politics, Gorey finds Congress is still just as loath to bring
- down a colleague.
- </p>
- <p> Last Thursday evening Gorey watched it happen again. A
- Senate aide told him that the Senate Armed Services Committee
- was about to hold its momentous vote on whether John Tower, the
- former G.O.P. Senator from Texas, should be the nation's next
- Secretary of Defense. Gorey hustled over to Room 608 of the
- Senate Dirksen Office Building. But he knew the outcome even
- before the vote was taken. "After I got there, two Senators,
- Republicans John McCain and Pete Wilson, arrived," Gorey
- recalls. "I could see by their glum expressions that they knew
- Tower did not have the votes."
- </p>
- <p> That kind of prescience comes with the territory. Gorey is,
- after all, no stranger to Capitol controversies involving
- senatorial indiscretions. Since he last covered Congress, he has
- kept TIME's readers abreast of a number of national scandals,
- from Chappaquiddick to Watergate to Iran-contra. Although last
- week's vote against Tower ran strictly along party lines, Gorey
- hastens to point out that the flap is not as partisan as it may
- seem. "Senators are co-workers who see one another daily, travel
- together and become friends," Gorey explains. "Senators do not
- exult in the fall of a colleague." Nor, contrary to popular
- opinion, do journalists such as Gorey. "No one finds joy in the
- misfortune of politicians. Members of Congress are pretty much
- like the rest of us," he says, "but less fortunate in one
- respect. Most of us are not compelled to read about our
- indiscretions on the front page or hear them recited on the
- nightly news."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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