New York Post

A Pathetic Hit

Times slimes Reagan via one Dem’s story

- DANIEL McCARTHY

WHEN is a single-source story good enough for The New York Times? When it appears to confirm a 40-year-old Democratic conspiracy theory.

Peter Baker, the Times’ chief White House correspond­ent, published Saturday a bombshell report, “A Four-Decade Secret: One Man’s Story of Sabotaging Carter’s Re-Election.”

It was indeed merely one man’s story. An 85-year-old Democrat, Ben Barnes, claims to have personal knowledge of efforts by Ronald Reagan allies to delay the release of US hostages from Iran until after the 1980 election.

A reader has to plough through 10 paragraphs of this sensationa­l story before encounteri­ng a concession that “Confirming Mr. Barnes’s account is problemati­c.” But not to fear — Baker assures us Barnes “has no obvious reason to make up the story.”

Suppose an octogenari­an Republican from Arkansas comes forward tomorrow to provide a personal account of Bill Clinton’s involvemen­t in drug traffickin­g in the 1980s, a notion long promoted in certain GOP circles. No corroborat­ion, just his word for it.

In all the worlds of the widest cinematic multiverse imaginable, is there any in which the Times would publish such a piece? The new standard for “news that’s fit to print” is when a source “has no obvious reason to make up the story.” As long as that source is from the right party.

People less sophistica­ted than a Times White House correspond­ent might classify partisansh­ip as an obvious motive. Yet Baker tells readers Barnes was afraid of how his fellow Democrats would react to his claims.

Come again? Nothing in Baker’s report explains this counterint­uitive assertion. The myth that Jimmy Carter lost the 1980 election because Reagan committed a misdeed tantamount to treason is in fact an enduringly popular conspiracy theory among liberals.

As Baker recounts, a Democratic-controlled Congress investigat­ed the story in the 1980s but was unable to prove it. A former Carter administra­tion official published a book “advancing the theory” (as Baker writes) in 1991, promoting it with a “guest essay” in — where else? — The New York Times.

Baker, in a remarkable line, bolster’s Barnes’ credibilit­y by telling us what he is not: “Barnes is no shady foreign arms dealer with questionab­le credibilit­y” like earlier proponents of the “October surprise” story.

Instead Barnes is a career Democrat who was once the protégé of Texas Gov. John Connally. By 1980 Connally had become a Republican; he sought the GOP presidenti­al nomination but lost to Reagan. Yet Barnes remained close to Connally, and accompanie­d him on trips around the Mideast that summer.

Barnes says Connally told Arab leaders to send a message to Iran urging the Shi’ite revolution­aries to keep their American hostages until after the election. This would prolong a crisis that weakened Carter, and a newly elected President Reagan would look kindly on Tehran in return.

Barnes has waited until anyone who might contradict his story is dead. Connally died in 1993, and William Casey, the Reagan campaign manager to whom Connally supposedly reported on return from his Middle East excursions, died in 1987.

In the absence of testimony from anyone who could authentica­te Barnes’ account, Baker pads the narrative by citing four men who have no direct knowledge about Barnes’ claims but who did hear the tale from Barnes himself over the years. Although none is identified as a Democrat, three of the four have ties to Lyndon Johnson and his legacy.

Carter lost the 1980 election resounding­ly. He carried only six states and DC. He finished 9.8 points behind Ronald Reagan in the popular vote.

With numbers like that, a partisan denial of election results has to go beyond questionin­g returns from individual districts or states. To discredit Reagan’s victory, and excuse Carter for the multitude of failures that led to his defeat, requires a different kind of conspiracy theory.

One that projects the taint of Iran-Contra back to Reagan before he even became president, and redeems Carter for the greatest shame of his presidency, is irresistib­ly seductive to liberals.

Even if the whole thing comes down to one politician’s word.

Journalist­s write the first draft of history and in this case perhaps the second or third as well. As a profession, academic historians are hardly less biased than the legacy media in their preference for one of our major parties.

When liberals boast of being on the right side of history, it does not mean time has proved them right. It means their conspiracy theories and inadequate­ly sourced stories have passed for truth in the textbooks and paper of record.

 ?? ?? History liberals hate: Reagan beat Carter by nearly 10 points but the Times for decades has pushed a conspiracy theory to “explain” it away.
History liberals hate: Reagan beat Carter by nearly 10 points but the Times for decades has pushed a conspiracy theory to “explain” it away.
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