I’ve had a few discouraging words about the Washington Post’s John Solomon, after a series of news-less front-page exposes left me wondering, “What is Solomon thinking?”
Yesterday, we got a much clearer sense of exactly what Solomon is thinking.
The Post’s money and politics reporter did an online Q&A with readers yesterday afternoon and addressed the White House’s stonewalling on the prosecutor purge scandal.
Arlington, Va.: Wouldn’t the best strategy for the Bush administration be to stonewall every single request from the Democrats? They can keep things tied up in courts until well after the Bush presidency ends. Why would they choose to cooperate on even the smallest of matters?
John Solomon: Stonewalling comes with its own political consequences. While the courts might take time to methodically decide issues, the public’s patience with getting answers it might demand from an administration is finite. The Bush administration folks I’ve talked with say they want to pick their battles carefully. They need to cooperate with Congress where they can in hopes of achieving some legislation accomplishments in its final two years. All-out stonewalling would run contrary to that goal. I expect the administration will continue to propose solutions somewhere in the middle _ like the one they offered to allow Congress to interview Karl Rove and Harriett Miers in private with no transcripts. (emphasis added)
I can understand the White House communications team describing the no-oath/no-transcript offers as being “somewhere in the middle,” but for a Washington Post reporter to buy into the spin — and repeat it to readers as fact — is thoroughly disappointing.
Although, given Solomon’s bizarre reporting of late, it might help explain a few things.
The White House’s offer isn’t “in the middle” of anything — it’s on the fringe. Dems want Rove and Miers to testify in an open hearing under oath. The Bush gang wants Rove and Miers to be interviewed privately without an oath and without a transcript that would ensure accountability. Somewhere “in the middle” would include concessions from both sides — but according to Solomon, the Bush position is already a compromise, without having to concede anything.
In other words, as far as this investigative reporter at the Washington Post is concerned, the White House deserves credit for stonewalling, because as he sees it, stonewalling and conciliation are practically the same thing.
As Greg Sargent noted, even Senate Republicans aren’t willing to go this far.
Indeed, even GOP Senator Arlen Specter — who was initially floating the White House’s line but now opposes the no-transcript idea — says that the White House’s no-transcript position isn’t “in the middle” at all, but rather is, well, the White House’s position. Here’s Specter on Larry King (via Nexis):
“I think the president is wrong when he does not want to have a transcript made of what Karl Rove has to say…Look here, Larry, what I think we’ve got to do is stop the bickering and come to terms and find a way to accommodate the various concerns, the president’s executive privilege with the Congressional need to know and get to the facts.”
How could anyone covering this stuff closely possibly characterize the White House’s offer as “somewhere in the middle”?
Solomon strikes again.