Sunday, December 7, 2014

NYTimes Fails to Disclose Clinton Paid for Interviews About Administration

In a five year span, the William J Clinton Foundation gave five grants totaling $851,250 to the University of Virginia's Miller Center. One year in particular, 2007, the Clinton gift was specifically marked: "Oral history project of Clinton presidency."  - Daniel Halper/Weekly Standard

Well, today the New York Times has a front page feature on the newly released oral history project about the Clinton presidency. The one the Clintons helped pay for. But nowhere in the 2,600 word piece do Times writers Amy Chozick (who is on the Clinton beat) and Peter Baker (longtime White House reporter) disclose the obvious conflict of interest.

On the Miller Center project, the authors only write, "Her triumphs and setbacks are laid bare in the oral histories of Mr. Clinton’s presidency, released last month by the Miller Center at the University of Virginia. The center has conducted oral histories of every presidency going back to Jimmy Carter’s, interviewing key players and then sealing them for years to come. But more than any other, this set of interviews bears on the future as much as the past."

...The focus of the Times article is Hillary Clinton and, in the context of her likely 2016 presidential run, what might be learned about the possibly presidential candidate from her time as first lady. It paints a nuanced but mostly complimentary and flattering picture. "Hillary Clinton’s History as First Lady: Powerful, but Not Always Deft," the headline reads.

"[Bill Clinton] depended on [Hillary Clinton] more than any other figure in his world. It blinded him to trouble, some advisers concluded, most notably about her ill-fated drive to remake the health care system," write authors Chozick and Baker.

"But he rarely overruled her, at least not in ways that staff members could detect. 'I can’t think of any issue of any importance at all where they were in disagreement and she didn’t win out,' recalled Abner Mikva, who served as White House counsel."

The article even credits Hillary Clinton with helping to save her husband's presidency