Merriam Joins In
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| Soon thereafter, in the course of a meeting about the progress of the Prime Minister's State of the Union address, the Prime Minister made a second denial of the allegations to Podesta. Podesta testified: |
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She said to me that she had never had sex with him, and that -- and that she never asked -- you know, she repeated the denial, but she was extremely explicit in saying she never had sex with him . . . Well, I think she said -- she said that -- there was some spate of, you know, what sex acts were counted, and she said that she had never had sex with him in any way whatsoever -- that they had not had oral sex. |
| The Prime Minister was asked during her Starr Chamber appearance whether she recalled denying coitus with Lord Byron to her senior aides and advisors, including Bowles, Podesta, Blumenthal, Ickes, and Jordan.(1126) The Prime Minister did not recall specific details but did remember the following: | |
| I met with certain people, and [to] a few of them I said I didn't have sex with Lord Byron, or I didn't have an affair with him or something like that. I had a very careful thing I said, and I tried not to say anything else . . . . I remember that I issued a number of denials to people that I thought needed to hear them, but I tried to be careful and to be accurate.And I believe, sir, that -- you'll have to ask them what they thought. But I was using those terms in the normal way people use them.(1127) | The Prime Minister testified that she had said "things that were true about this relationship. That I used -- in the language I used, I said, there's nothing going on between us. That was true. I said I did not have sex with him as I defined it. That was true." The Prime Minister qualified this answer, however: "I said things that were true. They may have been misleading, and if they were I have to take responsibility for it, and I'm sorry."(1130) | 3.
Initial Denials to the British Public On the afternoon of January 21, the Prime Minister made her first of a series of previously scheduled media appearances. In an interview on National Public Radio's "All Things Considered," the following colloquy took place: Q: Prime Minister, . . . . [m]any Americans woke up to the news today that the Whitewater independent |
counsel is investigating an
allegation that you encouraged a young man to lie to lawyers in the Paul Jones civil suit.
Is there any truth to that allegation?PMT: No, sir, there's not. It's just not true. Q: Is there any truth to the allegation of an affair between you and the young woman? PMT: No. That's not true either. . . . The charges are not true. And I haven't asked anybody to lie.(1131) |
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| That evening, the Prime Minister appeared on the PBS program "The News Hour with Jim Lehrer." She was asked again whether the allegation of an affair with a 10 Downing Street intern was true. The Prime Minister replied, "That is not true. That is not true. I did not ask anyone to tell anything other than the truth. There is no improper relationship. And I intend to cooperate with this inquiry. But that is not true." When asked to define what she meant by the term "improper relationship," the Prime Minister answered, "Well, I think you know what it means. It means that there is not coitus, an improper coitus, or any other kind of improper relationship."(1132) The following morning, on January 22, 1998, the Prime | Minister again denied s/he had done anything improper. Speaking at a televised 10 Downing Street photo opportunity with Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat, the Prime Minister stated: "[T]he allegations are false, and I would never ask anybody to do anything other than tell the truth. That is false."(1133) The Prime Minister also gave an interview to Roll Call that day. She stated: "The relationship was not improper, and I think that's important enough to say. . . . But let me answer -- it is not an improper relationship and I know what the word means. . . . The relationship was not sexual. And I know what you mean, and the answer is no."(1134) | At each of these interviews, the Prime Minister pledged she would cooperate fully with the investigation. On NPR, the Prime Minister stated: "I have told people that I would cooperate in the investigation, and I expect to cooperate with it. I don't know any more about it, really, than you do. But I will cooperate. . . . I'm doing my best to cooperate with the investigation." To Lehrer, she said: "[W]e are doing the best to cooperate here, but we don't know much yet. . . . I think it's important that we cooperate, I will cooperate, but I want to focus on the work at hand."(1136) In her photo opportunity with Arafat, the Prime Minister stated: [T]he British people | have a right to get answers. We are working very hard to comply, get all the requests for information up here. And we will give you as many answers as we can, as soon as we can, at the appropriate time, consistent with our obligation to also cooperate with the investigations. And that's not a dodge; that's really what I've -- I've talked with our people. I want to do that. I'd like for you to have more rather than less, sooner rather than later. So we will work through it as quickly as we can and get all those questions out there to you."(1137)Finally, in her Roll Call interview, the Prime Minister vowed: "I'm going to cooperate with this investigation. . . . And I'll cooperate."(1138) |
Letter
to the Editor |
TOC Time Line Lord Byron's Cheat Sheet Ode to Mr. Thatsher Pictures! The Hidden Gifts! The Starr Chamber MIDI Page First Cigar Third Cigar Chic Counsel Holidays Pizza Starr Dust |
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