The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Bill Clinton’s misdeeds cleared a path for Donald Trump

- Dana Milbank

We didn’t know it at the time, of course. But in Bill Clinton were the seeds of Donald Trump. With 20 years of hindsight, it is clear. To see the former president — now promoting a mystery he cowrote with novelist James Patterson — sit down with NBC’s Craig Melvin was to see how Clinton’s handling of the Monica Lewinsky affair was a precursor of the monstrosit­y we now have in the White House: dismissing unpleasant facts as “fake news,” self-righteousl­y claiming victimhood, attacking the press and cloaking personal misbehavio­r in claims to be upholding the Constituti­on.

During the interview broadcast on Monday morning, Melvin asked Clinton whether, with the hindsight of #MeToo, he would have done things differentl­y if he were president today.

Clinton’s answer: “Well, I don’t think it would be an issue because people would be using the facts instead of the imagined facts. If the facts were the same today, I wouldn’t (do things differentl­y). … You, typically, have ignored gaping facts in describing this, and I bet you don’t even know them.”

“Imagined facts”? Sounds a lot like “fake news” or “alternativ­e facts.”

Clinton was Trumpian, too, in portraying himself as the victim. When asked whether he has apologized to Lewinsky, he replied that “nobody believes that I got out of that for free. I left the White House $16 million in debt.”

Are we to feel bad for Clinton, who, according to Forbes, made $189 million in the 15 years after leaving the White House?

Melvin noted that Lewinsky had taken responsibi­lity for her part, and he asked Clinton whether, in retrospect, he takes more responsibi­lity.

Clinton, arms folded on chest, was unbending. “This was litigated 20 years ago. Two-thirds of the American people sided with me.”

No, they didn’t “side” with him. He’s presumably referring to job-approval numbers; the economy was booming then, and many Americans liked his policies. But a large majority found Clinton untrustwor­thy.

Clinton, like Trump has done, proposed a conspiracy theory to deflect questions, saying people “convenient­ly omitted” facts about the Lewinsky affair “partly because they’re frustrated that they got all these serious allegation­s against” Trump “and his voters don’t seem to care.”

Clinton hid his behavior behind high principle (“I think I did the right thing. I defended the Constituti­on”) on the same day the current president complained about the “unconstitu­tional” investigat­ion of him and his campaign.

Unlike Trump, Clinton publicly apologized — when caught. But he responded angrily when asked why he didn’t apologize privately to Lewinsky — prompting Patterson to jump in: “It’s 20 years ago — come on!” he said, suggesting Melvin might as well be asking about John F. Kennedy’s affairs.

Clinton eagerly pursued this non sequitur: “You think President Kennedy should have resigned?” he asked Melvin.

Why does Clinton, 20 years later, still struggle with admitting fault? Perhaps he feels his behavior with Lewinsky is being unfairly equated to that of Harvey Weinstein or Trump. But #MeToo isn’t just about assault. Clinton did just fine after his fling with the intern. She never escaped it.

Melvin said that, off-camera, Clinton acknowledg­ed standards had rightly changed since 1998. Why can’t he say so publicly?

If a Democrat behaved today as Clinton did then, it wouldn’t be dismissed as “bimbo eruptions.” He’d be drummed out of office, as former senator Al Franken was for his behavior.

But this is larger than #MeToo. Back then, when Clinton disgraced the office with personal misconduct and lies, we didn’t pause to think what might happen if an utterly unscrupulo­us man were to attain that position someday.

Now we know.

 ??  ?? Dana Milbank Columnist
Dana Milbank Columnist

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