Several months ago, John Solomon wrote a series of odd and misleading articles attacking Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.), accusing him of ethical lapses. The closer one looked at the criticisms, the weaker the charges looked. Months later, Reid was cleared of any wrongdoing, while Solomon was inexplicably rewarded — in December he took over the Washington Post’s investigative unit joined the Washington Post’s national desk, where he’ll head up some sort of investigative “team.”
Today, we see the results of Solomon’s first investigative piece. It’s an inauspicious start for his career at the Post.
When former North Carolina senator and Democratic presidential candidate John Edwards finally succeeded last month in selling his imposing Georgetown mansion for $5.2 million after it had languished on the market, the names of the buyers were not publicly disclosed.
At the time, Edwards’s spokeswoman told reporters that the house had been sold to an unidentified corporation. In reality, the buyers were Paul and Terry Klaassen, according to several sources and confirmed by Edwards’s spokeswoman yesterday.
The wealthy founders of the nation’s largest assisted-living housing chain for seniors, the Klaassens are currently cooperating with a government inquiry in connection with accounting practices and stock options exercised by them and other company insiders. They are also the focus of legal complaints by some of the same labor unions whose support Edwards has been assiduously courting for his presidential bid.
Let’s take a closer look at each of the “revelations” from Solomon’s piece.
The Klaassens bought the house, though an Edwards aide said it had been sold to a corporation. As a technical matter, the aide was right, the buyer was a limited-liability corporation, created by the Klaassens, which as the article notes several paragraphs in, is fairly normal. The Klaassens’ names weren’t on the public forms because they used an LLC. None of this is remotely interesting.
Solomon also notes that the Edwards’ sold the home for $1.4 million more than they paid for it four years earlier. That’s true, but that’s pretty normal for real estate in Georgetown. There’s no appearance of wrongdoing here. Indeed, the Edwards sold the house for less than their asking price.
The thrust of the piece seems to be that the buyers are controversial, because they’re under investigation for alleged business wrongdoing. But what does that have to do with Edwards? The presidential candidate has nothing to do with the Klaassens, except he sold them his house for a fair price.
The Klaassens have come under fire from unions, but again, this has nothing to do with Edwards, who has been a union ally.
For the life of me, I have no idea why this is literally front-page news to the Washington Post. Is there some hint of a quid pro quo? Not even a little. Did Edwards change his position on something as a result of the sale of his house? Nope. Was there anything unusual about the actual transaction? Not a thing.
There aren’t even any quotes from Edwards critics, suggesting something untoward about any of this.
Has the WaPo fired all of its editors? Wouldn’t someone on staff read the article first and ask, “Where’s the news in all of this?” And isn’t there anyone who thought this might not be a story appropriate for the front page of one of the nation’s premier news outlets?
It’s going to be a long presidential campaign, isn’t it.