So, Hilary Clinton is not getting indicted. The media presents this
as a surprise. But it is pretty obvious that no major political actors
are surprised. The press has talked for a year as if Clinton could
possibly be indicted. The players (the national Democrats, the
Republicans, the White House, the donors) have acted as if they knew she
would not. Even politicians who publicly said that she was in danger of
indictment acted as if she would not. The simplest answer here is that
this story has not been covered honestly.
Before we get into the bottomless-pit argument about the details of
various reports and the phrasing of various clauses in those reports, I
am not arguing about whether or not she should be indicted or whether she could
be indicted in some hypothetical scenario. If you want to build a
hypothetical case that she could be indicted, you surely can, because
that is how hypotheticals work. What I am saying is that various movers
and shakers have visibly acted on the belief that she would not
be. It is clear that the various party actors have taken as given that
Clinton would not be indicted, and they have acted on that presumption
in ways that we can see, even from the cheap seats.
How do I know this? I know this because Joe Biden is not running for President.
If the Democratic or Republican presidential nominee were actually
indicted on criminal charges, that would be a disaster for the
nominating party. It would be throwing a national election away. No
party would just let that happen. If there were even a tiny risk, a 1 or
2% chance, of that happening, there would be a concerted effort to find
someone else. That effort might fail, as the effort to stop Trump did.
But someone would make it.
Would Barack Obama gamble his legacy on a Democrat who might be on
criminal trial during the election? No. If Obama thought that there
were even a slim possibility that Hillary Clinton might be indicted, he
would have made sure that another strong contender from the Democratic
mainstream was running. But Obama's behavior indicates someone who has
not worried about that possibility at all.
Would the DNC and the big Democratic donors be willing to risk a
nominee who might face a criminal trial? Of course not. They would have
made sure someone else ran: if not Joe Biden, then someone like Andrew
Cuomo or Cory Booker, someone with business-friendly policies and a
reputation as a solid campaigner.
Would those party decision-makers and donors be willing to have
Bernie Sanders be the understudy in case Hillary Clinton was indicted?
Of course not. Would they be willing to entertain the risk that HRC
would get indicted and thus lose the nomination to Bernie Sanders? Of
course not. The primaries weren't rigged in any paranoid way, but it is
true that the Democratic establishment genuinely doesn't want Bernie as
their nominee, and if they thought HRC were vulnerable, they would have
rounded someone else up. Didn't happen, because no one was worried.
"Ah!" you say, "The fix was in! Obama didn't act worried because he
knew he could quash any prosecution." Actually, I didn't say that. If
there had been a conspiracy -- if this had been a situation where a
conspiracy were necessary -- what you would have seen would be a large
number of party actors behaving as if they were very nervous and a small
number of individuals, the actual parties to the hypothetical
conspiracy, either seeming unusually calm or (more likely) pretending to
act nervous rather than tipping their hand. Conspiracies are, by their
nature, small and secretive. If the entire Democratic Party
establishment is in on something it isn't a conspiracy. It's a campaign
strategy.
If this had been a situation where someone needed to obstruct
justice, you would still have seen lots of pressure on Biden to run, and
if he refused pressure on someone else. The party as a whole would have
been running scared. But in fact, none of them acted especially
worried. They weren't worried precisely because they didn't think anyone
needed to obstruct justice. Everyone clearly acted on the belief that
HRC would be cleared of criminal charges. They didn't deny that her
e-mail arrangement wasn't a huge mistake. They just all took for granted
that it wasn't a criminal mistake.
But it's not just the Democrats. The Republicans have also acted,
every step of the way, as if they did not expect HRC to be indicted. The
endless Republican primary debates all harped on the e-mails, because
it was good campaign material, but the whole teeming horde of
candidates in those debates spoke matter-of-factly about Clinton as the
eventual nominee. All the Republicans have planned, all along, for
Clinton to be nominated. They haven't planned for the chance that a
criminal indictment might derail her nomination. They didn't plan to
face Bernie instead. They did not expect an indictment. And I think we
can all agree that no Democratic cover-up would include the various
Republican candidates for President.
If there's no conspiracy, and there isn't, why the mismatch between
the way Clinton's indictment chances were discussed and the way people
seemed to act on those chances? If both party establishments were acting
on the premise that there was no realistic risk of indictment, why was
it played a s a big question mark in the press?
You don't need a conspiracy to explain it. The motives of various
actors are right there to see. For the Republicans, obviously, the idea
that HRC might get put on trial was beneficial. Making the e-mails a
campaign issue is a no-brainer: this is something that Clinton messed
up, and it fits the existing narrative about her that has already been
established in the public minds. The idea that Clinton's mistake wasn't
just a bad mistake but maybe a crime only helps their campaign pitch. I
mean, these are the people who held a seventh Benghazi investigation.
And the media obviously benefited from the idea that criminal charges
might be coming, because that's a better story. You don't even have to
be slanted against Clinton to want a juicier story. Campaign reporters
sell the possibility of unlikely scenarios all the time. Look at how
slow the press was to let go of the idea of a brokered Republican
convention, long after it became clear that it wouldn't happen. To be
fair, mainstream coverage of Clinton never outright said that she would be indicted. But it was very reluctant to leave out the suggestion that she might.
That coverage was not accurate. The story was always dog-bites-man:
former Secretary of State goofs on e-mails security, is publicly
embarrassed, but is never in any real danger of criminal charges. That
story was dull, so they hinted at the cooler story instead. The truth
didn't bring the media any value this time: what's the point of telling a
story everyone already knows?
cross-posted from, and all comments welcome at, Dagblog
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