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Theater

March 2001

London & New York

by Mark Steyn

During one of the many adjournments in the 1999 presidential impeachment trial, my colleague David Frum and I corralled a liberal columnist of some prominence and went off to share a decaf latte. Frum wanted to know why no stellar media leftie had as yet turned on the president, as the right did on Nixon. Our companion ummed and ahhed and tried various sophisticated tacks before lamely concluding, “Well, in the end he’s our guy, and we’ll stick with him.”

They stuck with him, but in what sense was he “their” guy? His most prominent critic on the left, Christopher Hitchens, pointed out that Mr. Clinton’s “personal lapses” were all of a piece with his general betrayal of liberal principles—on welfare, gays, the cynical bombing of Third World countries, etc. In other words, aside from more Republicans in Congress, the Governors’ Mansions, and the State Houses, what exactly did the left get in r ...

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Mark Steyn’s most recent book is America Alone: The End of the World As We Know It (Regnery)
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 19 March 2001, on page 38
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