When Isikoff told the Bag Lady that
Newsweek
wasn't running the story, she called Matt Drudge. The siren went off at his Web site:
NEWSWEEK
KILLS STORY ON WHITE HOUSE INTERNâBLOCKBUSTER REPORT: 23-YEAR-OLD, FORMER WHITE HOUSE INTERN, SEX RELATIONSHIP WITH PRESIDENTâ*WORLD EXCLUSIVEâ*MUST CREDIT THE
DRUDGE REPORT.
His story said, “At the last minute, at six p.m. on Saturday evening,
Newsweek
killed a story that was destined to shake official Washington to its foundation: A White House intern carried on a sexual affair with the President of the United States! The
Drudge Report
has learned that reporter Michael Isikoff developed the story of his career, only to have it spiked by top
Newsweek
suits hours before publication. A young woman, 23, sexually involved with the love of her life, the President of the United States, since she was a 21-year-old intern at the White House. She was a frequent visitor to a small study just off the Oval Office where she claims to have indulged the President's sexual preference. Reports of the relations spread in White House quarters and she was moved to a job at the Pentagon, where she worked until last month . . . . The
Drudge Report
has learned that tapes of intimate phone conversations exist
 . . . . Newsweek
and Isikoff were planning to name the woman . . . .” Within days, the
Washington Post
published its own bannered front-page account. And within days,
Newsweek
ran Isikoff's storyânot in the magazine, but on Drudge's turf, the Internet.
Lucianne Goldberg's ploy had worked perfectly again in precisely the same way. Isikoff had been screwed again. He had been turned loose,
Newsweek
had refused to publish his story, and Drudge had written a story about
Newsweek
's refusal. Then
Newsweek
followed Drudge's story with its own account . . . which had been stolen by Drudge. It was the story that rocked the world and the presidency, and the Scavenger, thanks to the Bag Lady and the Ratwoman, had gotten it.
First Willey and then Lewinsky, and as fevered weeks went by, Drudge exclusively ran new details, ones that only Linda Tripp and Kenneth W. Starr's prosecutors knew. Drudge's siren sounded about the blow jobs, the semen-stained dress, and the cigar. All of America was checking out the
Drudge Report
now. A million clicks a dayâas many scrollers as the
New York Times
had readers.
Thanks to Drudge, Goldberg and Tripp hadn't just
forced
the media into running their toxic brew; they had taken the media over. The media was
following
their hungry Scavenger,
covering
him. Matt Drudge was an event. There was an additional benefit Goldberg and Tripp hadn't expected. Jay Leno and Don Imus were taking Drudge's most salacious items . . . and joking about the blow jobs, the cigar, and the blue dress day after day. Goldberg and Tripp were reaching not just a million Internet scrollers but also tens of millions of television viewers. They were doing what Victor Lasky had tried and failed to do with JFK: going for Bill Clinton's jugular.
The Scavenger, once dismissed as a sleazeball, was being hailed as “the town crier for a new age.” He did a
Playboy
interview. He became a regular on
Politically Incorrect. Time
picked him as one of the most intriguing people of 1998. Drudge was on magazine covers. Drudge was a highly sought-after lecturer. Drudge did a radio show on New York's WABC. Drudge got a complimentary suite from Washington's Mayflower Hotel. And certainly most painfully for Michael Isikoff, Drudge was picked by
NewsweekâNewsweek!â
as one of the magazine's “new media stars.”
One after another, meanwhile, the stories he kept breaking on his siren-blasting Web site were proved to be bogus. Drudge said Hillary would be imminently indicted. Drudge said Paula Jones saw an American eagle tattooed on Willard. Drudge said Kenneth W. Starr had seventy-five compromising photos of Bill and Monica. Drudge broke three straight false items about NBC political reporter Tim Russert. Drudge said Clinton aide Sidney Blumenthal was a wife-beater. Then Drudge pulled the item. Then Drudge apologized. Blumenthal sued him for $30 million anyway.
His biggest goof
âthe rock on the playground that came back and hit him in the faceâ
was, ironically, also a tip from the Bag Lady of Sleaze. One of Lucianne Goldberg's few admirers was the
Star
tabloid's political pooper-scooper Richard Gooding, who thought Lucianne “a delightful person.” When the
Star
financed a DNA hunt, led by Gooding, trying to match Bill Clinton's DNA with that of a black teenager named Danny Williams, who was allegedly his illegitimate child, Drudge was all over it.
WHITE HOUSE HIT WITH DNA TERROR; TEEN TESTED FOR CLINTON PATERNITY.
At a conservative conference in Arizona, filling in as a late substitute for Henry Hyde, Drudge said, “It's a huge story if it comes together. It's a story of worldwide impact. People have been moved into safe houses today awaiting medical results. Stay tuned to the
Drudge Report.
” Rupert Murdoch's newspapers in America and abroad splashed the story all over front pages, quoting Drudge, who then quoted their stories about him in his Internet follow-ups. When the rock hit him in the faceâwhen the DNA didn't matchâall the Scavenger said was that it had been “a cruel hoax” perpetrated by the boy's mother.
By then even tabloid journalists were criticizing him as “an informational sucker fish on the body of journalism,” claiming that Drudge had somehow acquired passwords that got him access into computerized files, where he scavenged for stories they were still working on. Steve Coz, the editor of the
National Enquirer,
said, “He rips off our advances! He's so quick he can have things up in five minutes.” Many journalists said he was a plain and simple thief, gathering headlines from what they were still in the process of writing or researching . . . stealing as surely as the Bag Lady of Sleaze had stolen Kitty Kelley's foreign advances.
It didn't seem to matter, though, somehow. Drudge was quite the celebrity seen about Washington, where he was described as “the man with the Dickensian name.” There was talk that he was about to market his own T-shirt line, that Wall Street investors said an Internet public company featuring Drudge would be valued at $4.5 billion. Dustin Hoffman, professional liberal, went up to him at a party and said he'd like to play him in a movie. Drudge took Paula Jones to a dinner for White House correspondents. He was seen with chic conservative writer Ann Coulter, who described him as “larger than life and sort of childish. It's hard to find anyone who knows the whole Matt, there may not be one.” Coulter described Drudge driving around in his battered Geo, which he now called the “Drudgemobile,” and listening to tapes of himself on his radio talk show. Drudge, she said, laughed uproariously as he listened. He was now making $400,000 a year, handing Coulter hundred-dollar bills “for the cab” and telling her to keep the change.
The Scavenger was a TV star, “the mod muckraker, the citizen journalist,” speaking in a Joe Friday voice, fedora on his head, Fox Television's biggest Saturday draw, reaching over 250,000 households a show. At the same time, he was photographed in an alley near his Hollywood apartment, wearing boxer shorts, his pants down around his ankles, holding a laptop. He was quoted as saying things like “Those Supreme Journalism types seem to think the news has to be terribly boring. I don't.” And declaring, “I got the president of the United States saying on videotape in front of the grand jury that I gave him anxiety. Me! Five times!”
One of the frequent guests on his new TV show was Lucianne Goldberg, who sat there smoking, cackling, and sipping vodka. She called herself a “facilitator” in the investigation now. “I wanted to keep the Beast alive,” she said. She was critical of the fact that the Ratwoman had taken her tapes to Kenneth W. Starr. “Â âHere's the deal,' I said to her. I had offers of sixty million dollarsâup!âfor those tapes. I could have sold them. But Linda would have gone to jail for about three months for illegal taping and contempt. âOkay,' I told her. âSixty million for three months! Do it!' It wouldn't be so bad. With that kind of money, she could buy off any lesbian who made an advance, could order in food from the best restaurant in town. What's the problem? But she didn't have the strength for it.” Goldberg said she'd been spat on in the street on Manhattan's Upper West Side, cursed, and manhandled. “Actually,” she said, “both times I was pushed by gay guys and I flipped them over and left them on the floor.” She cackled when she said it. She thought it was funny.
As Lucianne Goldberg cackled away, planning her own radio talk show, Michael Isikoff wrote a book and described how he felt. “As a general rule, we don't give our sources moral litmus testsânor should we. Sometimes the best stuff comes from the most unpleasant people.”
The Scavenger enjoyed the increased exposure that his new TV show was giving him. His boss was Roger Ailes, the head of Fox News, who had once masterminded Richard Nixon's campaigns. And when a camera crew tried to shoot into his apartment from across the street, Matt Drudge put on . . . a Nixon mask.
[15]
Hillary Loves Eleanor
W
hy couldn't her asshole husband pay more attention to her
that
wayâmore than twice a year?
Even the Trumans, Ma and Pa Kettle in the White House, had broken the slats of their White House bed. Even JFK, busy with so many other women, including his nympho secretaries, Fiddle and Faddle, had visited Jackie every afternoon in her boudoir while the kids were napping. Jackie had even had leopard-skin rugs in her bedroom, like Gennifer's zebra-skin bedspread, but Hillary knew that wasn't
her
style. Her style was to eat fried chicken in the backseat of the limo with Bill when he was governor and to leave the chewed bones on the limo floor.
All she could do was yell at him when she heard about somebody new. “Come back here, you asshole!” she yelled, so loudly the Secret Service heard her. “Where the fuck do you think you're going?”
Hillary knew his behavior was not uncommon for a president in the White House. She knew there was no intimate relationship between Franklin and Eleanor or Nixon and Pat or LBJ and Lady Bird . . . . She knew Nixon once walked a nine-hole golf course with Pale Pat and his daughters without saying one word to them, knew that LBJ would lock himself into his stateroom on
Air Force One
with a nearly illiterate secretary while Lady Bird sat outside. But that didn't make Hillary feel any better. She got so angry at her asshole husband, she threw a briefing book at himânot a lamp, as the press reported itâa briefing book, the policy wonk's weapon. Her old friend Brooke Shearer, who'd been a private eye before joining her staff, filled her in on what Hillary occasionally didn't know.
And Hillary knew most everything. She knew her husband had his own White House staffers for his own intimate use, in addition to celebrity guests like Markie Post, photographed bouncing up and down on Lincoln's bed; Eleanor Mondale,
such
a good and loyal Democrat; or Barbra, with her libidinous social conscience, so committed, with her hundreds of millions, to talking to Bill about improving the lives of the poor.
Hillary was the First Lady of the United States, but she didn't see herself that way. Hillary ran her husband's life for him is what she did . . . what she had
always
done . . . and if he happened to be the president of the United States and if she told
him
what to do, that meant Hillary was . . . “Vote for one, you get two,” he had said in New Hampshire, but Hillary wondered sometimes where he got “two” from. He knew how to smileâshe'd give him that. He was sensational at a fund-raiser.
She hated it, trapped here in this place Truman had called a “jail” and FDR had said was “a goldfish bowl made out of magnifying glass.” Eleanor Roosevelt had called the White House “a splendid prison” and her own asshole husband had said it was “the crown jewel of the federal prison system.” The only time she really had fun, Hillary sometimes thought, was on Saturday, when she stayed in bed until noon with Earth, Wind, and Fire blasting.
She felt her privacy violated on the most intimate level: One of the maids told her that while she and her husband were out of town, butlers and staff aides sneaked their girlfriends into the family quarters and had sex on the floor and in their beds, then went downstairs to the mess to swill champagne and gobble caviar.
She understood now what Eleanor Roosevelt had meant when she said that the Secret Service had looked at her as if she “was about to hatch anarchists.” They hated her, Hillary felt, because she was an intelligent and independent woman, unlike any First Lady they had ever seen.
What did the staff
expect
her to do? Introduce them to heads of state like Bess Truman had? Bring them back jade from China like Pale Pat had? She wasn't like them, wasn't like other First Ladies . . . not like Ida McKinley, whose husband would put a handkerchief over her face at state dinners because she'd nodded off and was snoring loudly; nor Nancy Reagan, shopping Rodeo Drive and staying in the Steve McQueen suite at the Beverly Wilshire; nor Margaret Taylor, wife of Zachary, who rarely left the second floor and smoked a pipe; nor Barbara Bush, cooking her own spaghetti and serving it on paper plates.
Some staff members, Hillary knew, compared her to Nancy, who once told an usher, “Don't you ever point your finger at my dog!” after the dog had bitten him. But they were wrong, as were those sarcastic guttersnipes who pointed out that Martha Washington had liked to be called “the Presidentess” or “Lady President.” Hillary wasn't like Jackie Kennedy, either, although she had the greatest respect for her and although their husbands had some obvious things in common. All Jackie had done was to redecorate the White Houseâa wifely,
wifey
functionâbut Hillary did agree with Jackie's feeling that “the only thing I do not want to be called is First Lady. It sounds like a saddle horse.”
The First Lady whose example Hillary loathed, whom she ridiculed when she was with her friends, was Mamie Eisenhower, who did nothing much except lie around in bed smoking and playing the organ in duet with her mother, who played the harmonica. Mamie dressed in pink and decorated as much of the White House as she could in pinkâpink headboards and pink curtains and a king-size pink bedspread and upholstered pink chairs. She spent much of the day smoking and watching
As The World Turns
and other soaps as she sat on a pink couch. She bragged that the only exercise she needed was her daily massage, and she always wore a jingly gold charm bracelet with “Ike charms” on itâa tank, five stars, a map of Africa, and a helmet.
Hillary's role model was Eleanor Roosevelt, a First Lady of many firstsâfirst to drive her own car, first to board a plane, first to make official trips by herself, first to hold press conferences. Eleanor had been shy as a child, “always afraid of something . . . an ugly duckling,” whose mother told her, “You have no looks, so see to it that you have manners.” As an adult, Eleanor was tall, gawky, and athletic. Martha Gellhorn, a strong, independent woman herself, who had the brains to dump Ernest Hemingway, said, “Eleanor gave off light. I cannot describe it better.”
Eleanor Roosevelt was an inspiration for Hillary Rodham Clinton, who thought that they had many things in common. Like Hillary, Eleanor was militantly outspoken in her efforts to better the lot of the poor, the disadvantaged, and the black. Like Hillary, Eleanor did not shy from controversy. When the army wanted to paint the White House black during the war, it was Eleanor who stopped it. When Winston Churchill paraded around naked in the White House residence, it was Eleanor who told him to put something on.
Like Hillary, Eleanor was a campaign trooperâas Will Rogers described her, “out at every stop, standing for photographers by the hour, being interviewed, talking over the radio, no sleep. And yet they say she shows no sign of weakness or annoyance of any kind.” Like Hillary, Eleanor wrote a newspaper column. Like Hillary, Eleanor had a close black educator friend, Mary McLeod Bethune. Like Hillary, Eleanor disliked the Secret Service and sometimes refused its protection. Like Hillary, Eleanor drove off by herself sometimes without the Secret Service knowing.
Maybe most importantly, like Hillary, Eleanor was in a marriage that was not the usual marriage. “We never saw Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt in the same room alone together,” wrote White House chief usher J. B. West in
Upstairs at the White House
. “They had the most separate relationship I've ever seen between man and wife and the most equal.” Like Hillary, Eleanor was married to a charismatic, charming man who cheated on her. Like Hillary's husband, Eleanor's husband saw his mistresses when she was out of town. Like Hillary, Eleanor had her own Vince Foster, Joe Lash, a future historian, who lived in a room near her at the White House. Like Hillary, Eleanor had close friendships with other women . . . like the fan dancer, Mayris Chaney, her frequent White House visitor . . . and Lorena Hickok, her mannish former-reporter lover.
Hillary understood Eleanor's loneliness and pain. Franklin was off with Lucy Mercer, formerly
Eleanor
's social secretary, and with his own secretary, Missy LeHand, and Eleanor, before she found her beloved Hick, threw herself into her public activities and into raising her kids. Hillary envied the joy Eleanor must have felt when she finally found Hick, driving through the New England countryside with Hick, giving her lacy underwear, writing Hick love letters: “I love you deeply and tenderly. My arms feel very empty. I love you beyond words and long for you . . . it was a lovely weekend, I shall have to think about it for a long, long time. Each time we have together
that
wayâbrings us closer, doesn't it?” Hick was pensive, explosive, a big, skittish catâ“I wonder what is happening with you tonight. I feel restless, unable to settle down to anything.” Eleanor to Hick: “Oh how I wanted to put my arms around you in reality instead of in spirit. I went and kissed your photograph instead and there were tears in my eyes . . . . Darling, I feel very happy because every day brings you nearer.” Hick wrote to Eleanor: “I've been trying today to bring back your faceâto remember just
how
you look. Funny how even the dearest face will fade away in time. Most clearly I remember your eyes, with a kind of teasing smile in them, and the feeling of that soft spot northeast of the corner of your mouth against my lips . . . . I want to put my arms around you and kiss you at the corner of your mouth. And in a little more than a week now, I shall.”
Even as Hillary contemplated the sadness of what happened at the end to Franklin and Eleanorâhe died with Lucy Mercer at his bedside, summoned there by Eleanor's daughter, AnnaâHillary Rodham Clinton knew how much she had grown to love Eleanor Rooseveltâher voice shrill and falsetto, her hair back in a bun . . . Eleanor in jodhpurs and boots and with a riding crop . . . Eleanor moist, sweaty, smelling of horse.
Some people thought Hillary's love for Eleanor was tied to her love of Chelseaâgawky and tall like Eleanor, a child cruel classmates teased about her looks. Hillary was proud of Chelsea. She knew she had been away from her maybe too muchâ“Mommy went to give a peach,” the little girl told friendsâhelping Chelsea with her homework by fax, maybe not the best way to do it. And she knew that her husband wasn't all that focused sometimes on Chelsea when she wasn't there. She'd heard Gennifer's story of Bill interrupting phone sex because Chelsea had fallen out of her bed.
Hillary was proud of Chelsea. She wasn't a brat like Amy Carter, breaking crackers on
Air Force One
so she could watch the help pick the pieces up. She wasn't smoking dope with the marines at Camp David like Chip Carter had. No Secret Service agent had accused her, as they'd accused Michael Reagan, of shoplifting. Chelsea wasn't catting around Georgetown bars with a fake ID or sneaking around the parking lot with Secret Service agents like Susan Ford had.
When they got to the White House, Hillary knew what the deal would be. Her husband had gotten them there with all of his glitzy, glib, seductive, telegenic talents. Now it was time to buckle down to the serious business of governing.
Vote for one, get two!
It was going to be no different from the way it had been in Arkansas. As John Robert Starr, the editor of the
Arkansas Gazette
put it, “The indications are that she was Bill Clinton's number one advisor throughout the time he was governor. He kept saying, âWell, Hillary thinks . . .' ”
Her husband's first order of business was to change the White House phone system so he wouldn't have to go through the operator to make a personal (top secret) phone call. Hillary's first order of business was to provide Americans with a decent health plan. Hillary told a reporter, “I suppose I could have stayed home, baked cookies and had teas, but what I decided was to fulfill my profession, which I entered before my husband was in public life.”
All White House employees had to be approved by Hillary. She wanted all incoming and outgoing mail from the office of his chief of staff routed through her office. She oversaw his schedule.
She
hand-picked Zoe Baird, Kimba Wood, and finally Janet Renoâwhose specialty was child abuseâas attorney general.
She
hired Donna Shalala as secretary of Health and Human Services.
She
hired her former Watergate boss, Bernie Nussbaum, as White House counsel.
She
hired her Rose Law Firm senior partner, Vince Foster, as deputy White House counsel.
She
made her personal aide in Little Rock, Carol Rasco, chief domestic policy adviser.
She
made Maggie Williams, her chief of staff, also a special assistant to the presidentâa post that would ensure that Williams (and Rasco) would attend all high-level meetings and see key memos.
She
attended White House staff meetings and acted as the summarizer of all positions.
She
said her Health Care Task Force would cost $100,000âand it wound up costing $13.4 million.
She
had an affirmative-action agenda that guaranteed the hiring of as many minority and lesbian women and minority and gay men as possible.
She
made sure that
her
portrait and not Al Gore's went up all over the White House.
Those who'd worked with her in Arkansas or on the campaign trail weren't surprised by how the First Lady took charge.
She
had always handled the family finances.
She
had turned to George Stephanopoulos during a bimbo eruption and said, “We've got to destroy her.” Her husband, meanwhile, had gotten the phone system redesigned and was busily dialing away without any operator possibly overhearing any phone sex. (It was the biggest White House telephone crisis since Caroline Kennedy had wanted to call Santa Claus directly.)
In the year of Bill Clinton's impeachment crisis, many Americansâespecially womenâhad come to the conclusion that Hillary was ventriloquist Edgar Bergen and her asshole husband the smiling wooden dummy Charlie McCarthy . . . the same wooden dummy who had changed Jean Houston's life.