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Stephanopo­ulos should sit out 2016

Why it matters. Rieder,

- Rem Rieder @remrieder USA TODAY

The revolving door between politics and journalism and sometimes right back again has been spinning for a very long time.

That’s not necessaril­y a good thing.

Journalism depends so much on credibilit­y. The recent Brian Williams scandal reminds us that this is not simply an academic issue.

Politician­s and political operatives are all about the spin. Their mission isn’t to get as close as they can to the truth. It’s to win elections. Which means casting everything in a light most favorable to their prospects.

Not the finest or most appropriat­e credential for truth-seeker.

“One day they are calling jour- nalists to spin them to write favorably about their prominent political patrons and the next minute they are sitting at the table with journalist­s and indistingu­ishable from the journalist­s,” the late David Broder, an outstandin­g Washington Post political reporter who loathed that spinning door, once told American Journalism Review.

Yet there are people who have overcome their substantia­l political baggage and made that transition in a most impressive way. None more than the late Tim Russert, a onetime aide to the late New York Democratic Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan. Russert became a sterling host of NBC’s Meet the Press.

Another political player who seemed to have successful­ly navigated those treacherou­s waters was George Stephanopo­ulos. I thought it was a truly bad idea when the former top aide to President Clinton, a hugely partisan figure, became a news analyst for ABC back in 1996. But Stephanopo­ulos, now ABC’s chief anchor, host of its Sunday morning political talk show This Week with George Stephanopo­ulos and co-anchor of Good Morning America, turned out to be a pleasant surprise, shedding his political warrior past and showing journalism chops. Until now. The recent revelation that Stephanopo­ulos had donated $75,000 to the Clinton Foundation between 2012 and 2014 not only raises serious questions about his judgment. It also disqualifi­es him from having anything to do with covering the 2016 presidenti­al race. He has already said he won’t moderate ABC News’ Republican primary debate in February, which is a start.

So far ABC is standing firmly behind its embattled anchor. But it’s early in the saga, and that could change quickly. Regardless, there is no way he should allow himself — or be allowed — to deal in any way with a contest in which Hillary Clinton is the overwhelmi­ng favorite to become the Democratic candidate for president.

Exhibit A of why that is the case came on April 26, when Stephanopo­ulos aggressive­ly grilled Peter Schweizer, author of the book Clinton Cash, which is critical of the Clinton Foundation. Stephanopo­ulos failed to disclose that he was a benefactor of said foundation. But even if he had, that would hardly have eliminated the problem. The issue is the donations themselves.

Making them would be inappropri­ate for any political journalist. But it’s particular­ly crucial for a former Clinton consiglier­e. Even though he had had a public break with the Clintons, Stephanopo­ulos of all people should not be giving money to anything having to do with them. What was he thinking?

Sure, the foundation is a charitable enterprise. But all things Clinton tend to be closely intertwine­d. And there has been no shortage of suggestion­s that people have been ponying up to the foundation to curry favor with the Clintons, one of whom is a potential next president. There are lots of worthy causes out there with no links to Hillarylan­d.

One key point: Stephanopo­ulos’ role — and that of his network, for that matter — are very different from the jobs and the forum of the ex-candidates who have made Fox News a full employment act for failed GOP presidenti­al aspirants. Fox is a political force. ABC News is not.

Stephanopo­ulos’ apologies have not been reassuring, certainly not the initial one. He first said he should have told his employer and his viewers about the donations, which are a matter of public record, not that he shouldn’t have made them. He later conceded that the donations were problemati­c.

For someone so politicall­y and journalist­ically astute, this was a boneheaded — and totally tone deaf — error indeed.

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