Confession Is Good For The Soul
In anticipation of tomorrows Press The Meat, I think that guests should be required to read Swopa and Fishbowl DC. Maybe Ashleigh Blitzer ought to see if he can get Monsignor Tim on his show.
It turns out, contrary to my post below, that NBC was a little bit, shall we say … lawyerly, with its statement of Russert’s involvement:
Mr. Russert told the Special Prosecutor that, at the time of that conversation, he did not know Ms. Plame’s name or that she was a CIA operative and that he did not provide that information to Mr. Libby. Mr. Russert said that he first learned Ms. Plame’s name and her role at the CIA when he read a column written by Robert Novak later that month.
What that statement very cleverly leaves open is that Russert did tell Libby that “Joseph Wilson’s wife” was a CIA “employee.”
Look, this is getting stupid. There is no reason on earth that Tim Russert should not be required to say right out if he repeated gossip to Lewis Libby about Joe Wilson and his wife. It means that he’s a dirt-dishing little scumbag but it has no bearing on his legal culpability. One could easily understand why he would think that repeating this tidbit to a man who had the highest security clearance wouldn’t exactly mean he was spilling state secrets.
I would have thought that since all this has been hashed over in great detail these last few weeks that the “professionals” in the mainstream press would have thought it was worthwhile to pursue — even if it meant that the leader of the kewl kids was confronted with his own words and asked to explain. After all, that is what he does every single Sunday morning to whichever poor schmuck submits him or herself to his grilling.
As Atrios eloquently points out this morning, this absurd idea that celebrity journalists aren’t public figures is laughable in itself. But the idea reaches total absurdity when you consider that these celebrity journalists are players in the biggest scandal of the last five years. When you have these journalists being called before Grand Juries, making deals with special prosecutors and distributing carefully worded lawyerly statements — they are just like any other citizen in that situation; they are witnesses to a possible crime. I wish that the press were so solicitous of private citizens who don’t have their own TV shows when they camp out on their doorsteps screaming for comment.
Tim Russert gave a very lawyerly statement about what he told the special prosecutor. He has never been asked to expand on it or clarify it, to my knowledge. That is journalistic malpractice.
Here’s what they should do, it’s really quite simple.
Mr Russert, did you ever tell Scooter Libby in any way shape or form that Joseph Wilson’s wife worked at the CIA?
Oh, and then guys,if he tries to answer by saying that he didn’t know her name or what her role was at the CIA, follow up. Be reporters and persist. Ask him if he mentioned Joe Wilson’s wife to Libby at all. If he says yes, then ask if he mentioned where she worked. It’s not hard.
Update: I see Arianna beat me to this.
…frankly, this week, instead of coming up with questions for Tim, I’d like to hear him give some long-overdue answers about his still ill-defined involvement in Plamegate.
And I’m not the only one feeling this way. Earlier this week, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Sydney Schanberg called on Russert and all the other reporters involved in the story (yes, that includes you Bob Novak) to “tell us everything”: “Tim Russert cuts a large figure in Washington,” wrote Shanberg. “He should be a big man now and give us some details; why not agree to be interviewed by someone as probing as he?”
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So what do you say, Tim? Why not put Roberts’ faith on hold for a week and restore the public’s faith in you by putting yourself in the Meet the Press hot seat? As Schanberg said of his fellow reporters: “We have no rational explanation for calling regularly on government and corporate giants to release all possible information to the public if we ourselves decline to release the details about our roles and our processes when they are germane to the story.… The public has a right to know; isn’t that our mantra?”
Considering how well Bob Novak has responded to being on the receiving end of the cattle prod, I suspect that The Padre will not take to well to being “probed” with his own petard. But it is worthwhile to put pressure on these guys to start leveling with the public. I know that it’s too much to ask that this clubby little world be exposed, but we have to try.
I’ll agree with Kevin on this to the extent that the press may be better than it used to be in many respects, but that’s not really the problem. With the rise of public relations, the cacophany of information and the overwhelming power of marketing we need an independent press more than we used to to help us filter through the bullshit so that we can maintain our democracy. Instead, they seem to be drifting toward entertainment values which are by definition controlled by the very forces that are making it difficult for the public to see their world clearly. The last fifteen years of political coverage have been dominated by tabloid circuses or jingoistic parades. They need to try harder.
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