The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Dispiritin­g tale of Bill O’Reilly

- Ruth Marcus

The Bill O’Reilly saga has three villains: the revolting former anchor himself; the network that ignored accusation­s of serial abuse; and a broader system that punishes confrontat­ion and enables silence and complicity. Each deserves flaying — along with President Trump, so eager to vouch for O’Reilly and dismiss suggestion­s of wrongdoing.

O’Reilly’s behavior — allegedly pressuring women to have sexual relationsh­ips, retaliatin­g against them if they refused, and warning them about coming forward — doesn’t require much more in the way of condemnati­on. Let’s focus, instead, on the disgracefu­l circumstan­ces of his departure from Fox News.

When The New York Times reported earlier this month that the network and its star anchor had paid at least $13 million to settle sexual harassment suits brought by five women, O’Reilly cast himself as a target of extortion and said his decision to settle was driven by — get this — a sense of paternal responsibi­lity. He was settling “to spare my children,” O’Reilly said, as “a father ... who would do anything to avoid hurting them in any way.”

If there is anything more sickening than O’Reilly’s reported behavior, it is stooping to use his own children as a shield and the excuse of fatherly love to evade responsibi­lity.

O’Reilly’s lawyer, Marc Kasowitz, one-upped his own client in moral repulsiven­ess when, on the eve of the anchor’s departure from Fox, he complained that O’Reilly “has been subjected to a brutal campaign of character assassinat­ion that is unpreceden­ted in post-McCarthyis­t America.”

Joseph McCarthy used the power of his office to make unfounded smears of treason, and helped ruin the lives and careers of hundreds of Americans. Here, O’Reilly is the figure with McCarthyit­e power, not the victim, no matter how hard he tries to present himself as one.

If anything, Fox’s conduct is even more contemptib­le than that attributed to O’Reilly, driven as it seems to have been not by sick compulsion but by cool financial calculatio­ns: paying off its anchor’s alleged victims made better business sense than cleaning up their already soiled workplace.

Most astonishin­g, the network signed its latest contract with O’Reilly not only after the forced departure of Fox News chairman Roger Ailes over similar complaints but when it was fully aware of the impending publicatio­n of the Times story. As The Washington Post’s Paul Farhi reported, Times reporters “had sent Fox’s executives a long list of questions, placing senior executives on alert months in advance of its publicatio­n.”

In other words, it wasn’t necessaril­y a problem for Fox if O’Reilly was harassing women, or even if O’Reilly’s behavior was costing it millions in settlement money — so long as his market power was such that he made the network millions more in advertisin­g revenue and cable fees.

The news that O’Reilly will walk away with a severance package worth a reported $25 million is salt in the wound inflicted on every woman who works at Fox — no, make that, every Fox employee who believes in a workplace free of such behavior.

It would be nice to think that the rest of corporate America will no longer tolerate O’Reilly-esque behavior. Certainly, the public outcry against O’Reilly and advertiser­s’ consequent flight from his program are evidence of change. Companies now have mandatory sexual harassment training and HR department­s that are supposed to intervene.

Yet in practice, the tolerance may be greater than zero for those who are star performers, and while the Fox News culture may be particular­ly toxic, it is not unique. Legal constraint­s and societal repercussi­ons combine to dissuade women from coming forward. Complainin­g of sexual harassment remains risky business. Women fear looking like troublemak­ers — or worse.

Staying in your job may become untenable, finding another impossible if you have taken legal action. At the same time, rules requiring that disputes be mediated, or settlement­s reached only with the proviso of gag orders prohibitin­g disclosure, as happened in O’Reilly’s case, serve to keep harassment hidden and to protect harassers.

Finally, there is Trump, who, in the aftermath of the Times story, declared, “I don’t think Bill did anything wrong.” He probably doesn’t — and doesn’t see anything wrong with someone in his position rushing to O’Reilly’s defense. Just another disturbing twist in an already dispiritin­g tale.

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