The sad thing about the Shaheen controversy--and even about
Obama’s role as the victim in the whole affair--is that it shows how, after two
decades of candidates tiptoeing towards honesty about personal vices, the
political system still can’t seem to handle it.
In 1987, the first major baby boom presidential candidate,
Al Gore, drew great praise for acknowledging his own youthful marijuana use. Of
course, the candor turned out to have been intricately stage-managed by a
campaign fearful of the fate that befell Supreme Court nominee Douglas
Ginsburg, who withdrew his candidacy after acknowledging adult dope-smoking. In
a
2000 biography of Gore, Bill Turque describes frantic campaign
conversations about how to acknowledging Gore’s drug use while shading the
truth about its extent and how much he had actually liked it. Gore ultimately
called it “infrequent and rare” and added that “when I became a man, I put away
childish things.”
Still, Gore did a lot better than the first two members of
his cohort to actually make it to the White House. Bill Clinton embarrassed
himself by declaring that he had smoked but hadn’t inhaled. (It would actually
be more embarrassing if it were true, as that would imply a guy who picked up
the joint just to impress peers). George W. Bush, with a chemical history that
is probably rockier than any other major politician of his generation, declared
the whole subject verboten in the name of the children.