Authors:
Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)
Historic Theme:
Subject:
December 2000 | Volume 51, Issue 8
Authors:
Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)
Historic Theme:
Subject:
December 2000 | Volume 51, Issue 8
As he counts down the last days of his second term, we can be assured that President Clinton is now focusing his thoughts exclusively on the one subject that has preoccupied him since he first took the oath of office: his place in history. Apparently, even back in his first term, Clinton asked his Faustian media adviser Dick Morris, “Where do I fit in?”
The story has it that Morris, displaying the same chutzpah that keeps him politically alive today, told the president, “Borderline third tier.”
As he counts down the last days of his second term, we can be assured that President Clinton is now focusing his thoughts exclusively on the one subject that has preoccupied him since he first took the oath of office: his place in history. Apparently, even back in his first term, Clinton asked his Faustian media adviser Dick Morris, “Where do I fit in?”
The story has it that Morris, displaying the same chutzpah that keeps him politically alive today, told the president, “Borderline third tier.”
Clinton glumly agreed.
What Morris had in mind was no doubt those rankings of the presidents, based originally on Arthur Schlesinger, Sr.’s pollings of his fellow historians in the 1950s, that used to adorn American history classrooms.
Those framed charts were always diamond-shaped, with pictures of Washington, Lincoln, and Franklin Roosevelt up in the “Great” category; Truman, Jackson, Theodore Roosevelt, and maybe a few others in the “Near Greats”; a whole bunch in the middle, “Average” group; and finally, all the way down, a grimfaced Grant and Harding at the sad “Failure” level.
The more recent presidents would not be ranked, as scrupulous historians decreed that not enough time had passed for a fair, impartial judgment to be made.
Fortunately most journalists have no such scruples. No doubt you’ve already happened on several assessments of Bill Clinton’s ranking in the presidential pantheon, all likely determined by the commentators’ own politics. Since about the beginning of his first Inaugural Address, Republicans have been repeating, in truly admirable near-unison, that the Clinton administration is the “most corrupt in history.”
Sorry. But barring any new revelations—always a possibility—the Clinton administration does not even qualify as the most scandalous presidency of the past 30 years.
If it’s a matter of subverting the Constitution to political ends, no scandal in American history quite sinks to the depths of Watergate, with Richard Nixon using the CIA to thwart an FBI investigation and suggesting that his aides burgle the Brookings Institution.
Even when it comes to personal peccadilloes, Clinton doesn’t hold a candle to Warren Harding, who, during the 1920 campaign, juggled not one but two mistresses, one of whom supposedly became the target of a piano stool launched by Mrs. Harding.
So if he dodges the “Failure” level, whom should Clinton be compared to? The yardstick for most presidents in the second half