Political Scandals | The Lewinsky Scandal Is Not Comparable to Watergate

I feel like a character in a novel,” Bill Clinton told an aide on the day the Lewinsky scandal broke. With equal parts self-pity and deceit, the President cast himself as the protagonist in Darkness at Noon, Arthur Koestler’s 1941 classic about the victim of a totalitarian witch-hunt. Eight months later, in the pages of Kenneth Starr’s report to Congress, Clinton finds himself the villain in a much trashier tale, a fetid blend of libido and legalese that reads like Jackie Collins by way of the Congressional Quarterly. . . .

As numbing and repetitive as any...

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