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Editorials | Opinions | January 2006  
Newspapers Urge President to Quit
Greg Mitchell - t r u t h o u t
 Outrageous, out of the question? Of course. Then again, here's what happened in the summer of 1998 when the president was named Clinton. Dozens of editorial pages clamored for him to quit (see this list). "He should resign," the Philadelphia Inquirer declared, "because his repeated, reckless deceits have dishonored his presidency beyond repair."
 What did "I" do? On Dec. 21, I wrote a little news story for this site about the sudden appearance of the "I" word - impeachment, that is - in reputable publications. The outrage over revelations about President Bush's approval of spying on Americans without a warrant was then at its height, before subsiding to its current level of what-will-they-think-of-next cynicism.
 We got a lot of negative mail about that article, even though we didn't take a position on the matter, but simply pointed out that the "I" word was now being uttered in some surprising places (Barron's magazine?). Certainly, it's no "slam dunk" - to coin a phrase - that the president should be impeached, and most Democrats don't even want it to happen, either because they think they can make hay in the November elections with Bush still in office, and/or they fear a short but perhaps brutal reign of our own King Richard I.
 Still, it amazes me when people make fun of the very notion that a president under a dark cloud might be asked to leave office, or given a push, in light of the very recent experience involving one William Jefferson Clinton. This seems especially poignant, in light of President Clinton leaving office with an approval rating over 60%, while the current occupant of the White House sits at around 40%. Then there's the perennial debate over the relative demerits of fooling around with an intern vs. fooling an entire country into going to war based on false evidence (and anything else you'd care to add on top of that).
 In any case, while still not taking a position on impeachment, I thought it would be interesting to look back at how the press reacted to the Clinton Crisis of 1998. Did newspaper editorials condemn Clinton for his screwing around, and lying about it, and leave it at that, or did they come out squarely for his exit from office?
 What follows, from an Associated Press rundown on September 15, 1998, is a long list of newspapers that "called for President Clinton's resignation." AP added that some of those listed "did so before the release of Kenneth Starr's report on Sept. 11."
 Indeed, the Philadelphia Inquirer responded to the coming of the Starr report this way: "Bill Clinton should resign. He should resign because his repeated, reckless deceits have dishonored his presidency beyond repair."
 The Los Angeles Times pointed out: "The picture of Clinton that now emerges is that of a middle-aged man with a pathetic inability to control his sexual fancies."
 The New York Times, on its Howell Raines-led editorial page, thundered that until the Starr turn, "no citizen ... could have grasped the completeness of President Clinton's mendacity or the magnitude of his recklessness." Yet a Washington Post poll that month showed that while a majority of Americans wanted Congress to censure Clinton, they did not want it to boot him out of office.
 Here is that AP partial list of newspapers calling for Clinton to quit (other papers no doubt joined in later):
 National: USA Today
 Alabama: The Mobile Register Montgomery Advertiser
 Arizona: Tucson Citizen
 California: San Jose Mercury News The Orange County Register The North (San Diego) County Times The Record, Stockton
 Colorado: The Denver Post
 Connecticut: The Day of New London Norwich Bulletin
 District of Columbia: The Washington Times
 Flordia: The Orlando Sentinel The Tampa Tribune
 Georgia: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution The Augusta Chronicle
 Illinois: Chicago Tribune
 Indiana: The Indianapolis Star Chronicle-Tribune of Marion South Bend Tribune The Times of Northwest Indiana
 Iowa: The Des Moines Register
 Kansas: The Topeka Capital-Journal
 Louisiana: The Times-Picayune of New Orleans The News-Star, Monroe
 Michigan: The Grand Rapids Press Detroit Free Press
 Minnesto: Post-Bulletin of Rochester
 Mississippi: Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, Tupelo
 Missouri: Jefferson City News-Tribune
 Nebraska: Lincoln Journal Star
 Nevada: Reno Gazette-Journal
 New Jersey The Trentonian, Trenton
 New Mexico: Albuquerque Journal The Santa Fe New Mexican
 New York: Sunday Freeman of Kingston Utica Observer-Dispatch
 North Carolina: The Herald-Sun of Durham Winston-Salem Journal
 Ohio: The Repository, Canton The Cincinnati Enquirer The Cincinnati Post
 Oklahoma: The Daily Oklahoman, Oklahoma City Tulsa World
 Oregon: Statesman Journal, Salem
 Pennsylvania: The Philadelphia Inquirer The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
 South Carolina: The State, Columbia
 South Dakota: Argus Leader, Sioux Falls
 Texas: San Antonio Express-News El Paso Times
 Utah: Standard-Examiner, Ogden The Spectrum, St. George The Salt Lake Tribune, Salt Lake City Deseret News, Salt Lake City
 Virginia: Daily Press of Newport News
 Washington: The Seattle Times
 Wisconsin: The Post-Crescent, Appleton The Journal Times, Racine
 Greg Mitchell is editor of E&P and author of numerous books on politics and history, including Tricky Dick and the Pink Lady. | 
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