NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 16, 1998 - 5 Lewinsky scandal boosts G.O.P The Washington Post WASHINGTON - The White House sex scandal has weakened President Clinton's leverage for his end-of-the-session test of wills with Congress, spreading gloom among Democrats and giving Republicans a new edge in negotiating issues rang- ing from taxes and spending to health care, the environment and procedures for the next census. Democrats worry that Clinton may have lost his ability to use the White House bully pulpit to champion their proposals for regulating managed health care. Republicans say he may feel a greater need to compromise with them on funding levels and tax cuts. And neither side is likely to push too hard to expand Clinton's trade- negotiating powers while the House is considering impeaching him, others have observed. "It's clear he's weaker than he was a year or two ago... and people will no longer believe it if he stands up and blames everything on 'extremists' on the Hill who want to do bad things," said Sen. Mitch McConnell, (R-Ky.) According to McConnell, loss of credi- bility arising out of the Monica Lewinsky affair has undermined Clinton's ability to blame Republicans Media holds Clinton to higher n Thec '""ashington Post NASHINGTON - For months now. many media commentators have been saying, in private and on telev ision chat shows, that the public would come to share their outrage about President Clinton soon enough. Once ordinary Americans learned the steamy details of Clinton's conduct, once the indepen- dent counsel's findings became public, the president's poll ratings would surely plummet. Yet less than a week after the release of Kenneth Starr's sexually explicit report. there has been no such public explosion. Sizable majorities still tell pollsters they approve of the president's job performance and oppose impeach- ment or resignation. The contrast with the media's collec- tive sense of betrayal has never been starker. USA Today has joined such newspapers as the Philadelphia Inquirer, Des Moines Register, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, San Jose Mercury News and Detroit Free Press in urging Clinton to resign over the Monica Lewinsky affair. The weekend talk shows were filled with indignant ques- tions and harsh commentary, as were the newsmagazines that came out this week. All this underscores what David Corn, Washington editor of the liberal Nation magazine, calls "the umbrage gap." The Lewinskv saga is, after all. hard to escape. Americans are bombarded daily with what news executives regard as a story of grave consequence - on oral standards AP PHOTO President Clinton's sex scandal may have severly hampered the Democratic's ability to push legislation through Congress. the front pages, on the nightly news, on talk radio, on the Internet. This leaves manv journalists, who gauge public opinion for a living, puz- zled that so many people can give Clinton such low marks for honesty and integrity and yet approve of his perfor- mance as president. "The greatest surprise in this whole story is the ongoing gap between the elites -- who now almost uniformly despise Clinton -- and the people, who have stuck with him so far," writes Newsweek columnist Jonathan Alter. In Corn's view, the story feels per- sonal for the Washington press corps. "There's a yuppie revenge attitude going on here," Corn said. "We in the media class know Bill Clinton or peo- ple who work for Bill Clinton; he's in the same college dorm as we are. ie's the guy raising his hand in the front of the classroom, always getting away with stuff. But the public looks at politi- cians and says, 'We care about whether you care about US. We're the story, not you."' Cokie Roberts, co-host of ABC's "This Week" and the daughter of two members of Congress, described the journalistic view of public officials this way: "We admire them more. We hold politicians in higher regard than the public does and therefore we expect more of them. The notion that 'they're all like that' offends us.... "I'm sure that for some (media) peo- ple there's a sense that we're going to prove ourselves to be right, the people who said early on that he'd never live "Theres a yuppie revenge attitude going on here. " - David Corn Editor of Nation magazine through this. I have more of a sense of sadness." In recent days, many media commen- tators have expressed disgust both with Clinton's behavior and his insistence that he did not commit perjury when he denied under oath jiaving had "sexual relations" with Lewinsky. Fox's Brit Hume: "If this were in a court of law and he tried to make a dis- tinction like that... there'd be a 10- minute recess while they got the jury's laughter to stop. This is absurd." Time's Margaret Carlson: "What I'm struck by in reading the report is it took $40 million to nail this piece of human Jell-O to the wall. He can't slither away from what he did because of this report." Wall Street Journal columnist Al Hunt: "It is sleazy. It is kinky. It is repulsive and I couldn't wait to turn the page." Interviewers questioning the presi- dent's lawyers Sunday struck a tone of disbelief. After White House counsel Charles Ruff insisted on "Meet the Press" that Clinton had not committed perjury, host fim Russert said: "Now, are the American people supposed to believe that?" for any failures, including another gov- ernment shutdown if Clinton and Congress deadlock over funding for federal agencies for next year. In the past, Clinton has been adept at using veto threats to get his way. Only two years ago Clinton had the upper hand as Congress drew to a close and Republicans - who had been blamed by the public for the 1995 shutdowns -cut deals with him on education, health and raisinu the minimum wage in order to get home and campaign for re- election. White House officials insist that Clinton will not retreat from fights with Republicans and that Democrats will remain united behind him on issues they care deeply about, such as health care and increased spending for schools. White House spokesper- son Joe Lockhard said that Clinton has made it clear he will "stand up for his priorities" and veto any bills that violate them. Moreover, Republicans have learned from painful experience that Clinton can be highly resourceful in getting out of tight political corners. I Starr tells *Congress investigation cost millions STARR Continued from Page 1 es; 82,653 for supplies and services. The figures do not include costs that Starr's Washington or Arkansas offices incurred investigating other matters during the same period. The other aspects of the Whitewater investigation already have cost about $40 million over 4 1/2 years - a figure Democrats have used frequently to attack the investigation. The S4.4 million does not include costs other government agencies - the White House, Justice Department and Treasury Department - incurred waging unsuccessful legal battles to stop presidential advisers, lawyers and Secret Service agents from testify- ing before Starr's grand jury. The White House hired an outside lawyer, Neil Eggleston, to make its case for invoking executive privilege and attorney-client privilege to block Ecertain aides' testimony. Even though it already has sent Congress a report detailing I I possi- ble grounds for impeaching Clinton in the Lewinsky matter, Starr's office is likely to incur additional costs in the weeks ahead. It still must fight a Supreme Court battle over the attorney-client and execu- tive privilege issues, which the kNhite House appealed after losing in lower courts. Several figures in the indepen- dent counsel investigation can seek reimbursement under the law for their legal bills if they are not indicted. Several officials involved in the Reagan and Bush era inde- pendent counsel probes have received such restitution, including President Bush, who was awarded $272,000. I0 "Work on the Lewinsky investiga- tion continues today, and many members of our staff are still work- ing on this matter," Deputy Independent Counsel Jackie Bennett Jr, wrote Congress in providing the estimates. v