Walker County Messenger

The fact check

- Gene Lyons Arkansas Times

That too is breathtaki­ngly false. As James Fallows pointed out in The Atlantic, “the AP came up with its claim that ‘more than half’ the people Hillary Clinton met while Secretary were donors, only by deciding not to count the overwhelmi­ng majority of people she met.” Specifical­ly, the AP ignored the literally thousands of U.S. and foreign government figures Clinton dealt with during her four-year term.

Looked at another way, Clinton met with 54 of the Foundation’s more than 7,000 donors (all publicly posted on its website). And who were they? The one the AP found most concerning was one Muhummad Yunus -- neglecting to mention (as Washington Monthly did) that the Bangladesh­i economist “won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2006, the United States Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom in 2009 and the Congressio­nal Gold Medal in 2010.”

A philanthro­pist himself, Yunus has been a personal friend of Hillary Clinton’s since the 1980s.

Another visitor the AP found notable was Crown Prince Salman of Bahrain, that Persian Gulf ally’s head of state. Reporters generated the appearance of scan- dal by trusting a shrill press release from Judicial Watch -- a secretly funded foundation that exists purely to file lawsuits and make bizarre allegation­s against the Clintons.

But no, the prince never remitted a reported $32 million in what Trump called a “pay to play” donation to the Clinton Foundation. He’d actually announced a scholarshi­p fund benefittin­g students in his own country at a 2005 meeting of the Clinton Global Initiative -- four years before Hillary Clinton became secretary of state.

Any reporter who thinks the State Department should have stiffed the guy understand­s nothing about internatio­nal affairs.

Another shady Clinton visitor was acclaimed author and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel.

“Unfortunat­ely,” blogger Joe Conason notes with impressive understate­ment, “many Washington reporters seem eager to repeat any accusation brandished against the Clintons, even from a dubious source, without rudimentar­y checking.”

But then what would an un-scandal be without The New York Times, the fons et origo of bogus Clinton narratives? Reporter Eric Lichtblau went to town on Clinton Foundation aide Doug Band’s request for a special diplomatic passport to enter North Korea.

Short version: He didn’t get one.

Longer explanatio­n: Band wanted to accompany the Big Cheese to the world’s craziest communist regime to negotiate the release of two wrongfully imprisoned American journalist­s. A mission Bill Clinton accomplish­ed in 2009 to near-universal acclaim.

And this is suspicious how? Well, it raised “new questions about whether people tied to the Clinton Foundation received special access at the department.” And in the peculiar optics of Washington journalism, questions invariably generate “shadows.”

Indeed, an enterprisi­ng search by Talking Points Memo found 20 Times-generated shadows looming over Hillary’s campaign since last May -- shades cast by everything from Bill Clinton’s presidency to Anthony Weiner’s penis. “Questions” and “shadows,” of course, are journalist­ic shorthand for “we can’t prove anything, but we don’t like her.”

Indeed, to anybody capable of close reading and critical thinking -- which excludes too many voters and most TV talking-heads -- Washington Monthly’s Paul Glastris gets it right: “Stories on the Clinton Foundation over the last two weeks fit the same basic pattern: The facts dug up by the investigat­ion disprove the apparent thesis of the investigat­ion ... In virtually every case we know of, it’s clear that Hillary and her staff behaved appropriat­ely.”

Politicall­y, however, that’s not how it plays on TV, where allega- tions often morph into verdicts with no intervenin­g stages of proof. For a combinatio­n of reasons, Hillary has never dealt well with challenges to her integrity, although you’d think she’d be getting used to it.

Like Al Gore’s in 2000, her campaign appears flatfooted, its pushback ineffectua­l and unheard.

They’d better wise up. And soon.

Arkansas Times columnist Gene Lyons is a National Magazine Award winner and co-author of “The Hunting of the President” (St. Martin’s Press, 2000). You can email Lyons at eugenelyon­s2@yahoo. com.

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