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Article
Trick or Treat?: Ann Coulter
would never work for this "West Wing"
http://www.jewishworldreview.com It’s nearly Halloween, and everyone’s getting carried away with the costume thing. AL GORE’S cross-dressing as a Republican, desperately claiming that,
if elected,
Then, there’s NBC’s, “The West Wing.”
But now, “The West Wing,” is doing the same cross-dressing act as the man its creator, Aaron Sorkin, is voting for. The show’s trying to appear balanced. Balanced by adding former Reagan/Bush staffers, Peggy Noonan (a former Reagan and Bush speechwriter), and Marlin Fitzwater (a former Reagan and Bush spokesman) as consultants. And in the last episode by adding a character who’s wearing the costume of conservative political commentator, best-selling author, columnist, and fellow JWR contributor Ann Coulter. Only it’s not the real Ann Coulter at all. You’re just supposed to think it is. Sure, the new character, Ainsley Hayes (actress Emily Procter) is a bright, leggy, blonde with long straight hair. Just like . . . Ann Coulter. Sure, she’s a lawyer and an articulate conservative Republican TV political commentator and columnist. And she appears on “Geraldo.” Just like . . . Ann Coulter. But, to paraphrase Senator Lloyd Bentsen, I’ve met Ann Coulter, I’ve heard Ann Coulter, I’ve read Ann Coulter, and Ainsley Hayes, you’re no Ann Coulter. Coulter would never stoop to taking a job with the Clinton or Gore administration. As if they’d offer it to her after she soundly beat a newly attractive George Stephanopolous – I mean, Rob Lowe – on a national political TV show. But, of course, that’s real life. On “The West Wing,” conservatives are malleable simpletons, and worse. Heck, by the end of the show, Hayes is defending the Clinton –oops, Bartlet — administration to her vicious, evil Republican friends (is there any other kind of Republican on TV?). Her Republican chums snidely describe the innocent, caring White House Democrats, thusly: “I hate these people.” And, “Did you meet anyone in there who isn’t worthless?” Sorry, Mr. Sorkin, but that’s not what Coulter and her Republican buddies talk about. I’ve talked with her. And she’s got friends of all ideological persuasions, too. If you made the smallest effort at researching reality and read The Washington Post’s Howie Kurtz, you’d know that from his profile of her. Ann Coulter would never say Clinton administration personnel are “extraordinarily qualified. Their intent is true. They are righteous, and they are patriots. And I’m their lawyer.” She couldn’t lie like that. And Coulter would duly laugh at the job offer. But, in reality, the Clinton administration would never have the guts to offer the job of Associate White House Counsel to someone principled like Coulter, who has the courage and chutzpah to take on the Clinton White House’s cornucopia of sordidness. No, they offered the job to a spineless someone, Cheryl Mills, who then used her race on the floor of the Senate to defend Bill Clinton’s despicable behavior in the Lewinsky scandal. She said Clinton shouldn’t be removed from office because his grandfather was the first to sell to Blacks at his Arkansas store. As if that makes it all okay. No, Coulter has more respect than to take a job like that, than to defend such scoundrels. (But it must have worked for Mills. She’s now Senior Vice President of Oprah’s Oxygen, the fast-sinking cable network.) “Extraordinarily qualified”? No, Coulter would never describe Clinton personnel that way. Instead, she’d probably point out how utterly unqualified they were. A First Lady, trying to co-opt health care, whose only credentials are her abilities to suddenly discover billing records in her residence and to utter “I do not recall,” or, “It’s not in my recollection.” A guy name Craig Livingstone, hired by the same First Lady, to illegally obtain and examine FBI files of about a thousand Americans. Livingstone was eminently qualified for Clinton White House duty, having previously served as a bar bouncer. And that’s about the only similarity between the real world and “The
West Wing,”
on the first Ainsley/Ann episode. When summoned to the White House
by the Chief
of Staff, he tells her that he’s already inspected her FBI file. But
she never gave permission.
No, the real Ann Coulter is nothing like the phony “West Wing” model.
That one’s set up to be a straw man, so don’t expect fairness and balance
on the show.
Sorkin is quick to point out, in November’s George Magazine, that Noonan and Fitzwater weren’t hired for balance. “They were hired not so much for their Republicanness as much as for their wisdom.” Actually, they’re being used. If the new Ainsley/Coulter character is any indication, they were hired in name only. And anyway, Republicans who take prominent jobs in liberal Democrat
administrations
are guys who go both ways, wimpy, non-ideological moderates like David
Gergen and
Bill Cohen. Not principled conservatives like Coulter.
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