By Donald H. Harrison
SAN DIEGO, Calif. — Back in the early 1970s, I split my time
between covering politics in San Diego and state government in Sacramento for The
San Diego Union. San Diegan Jim Schmidt served under Gov. Ronald
Reagan as an assistant secretary of business and transportation. Later,
he returned to San Diego and rose through the savings and loan industry to
become a well-known executive.
At one point, I covered a meeting in San Diego at which the humorous Schmidt
was the featured speaker, and he suddenly pointed to me, telling his audience:
"Do you see that reporter back there? He's the S.O.B. who wrote a
story about me and quoted me—ACCURATELY."
I won't be surprised if Congressman Robert Wexler (D-Fla.) and members of his
Capitol Hill staff have a similar reaction to the six-part series.
"The Hill," premiering on the Sundance Channel at 9 p.m.
tomorrow night. However, if they are tempted to denounce the
reporter, even in mock fury, they will have to change the gender
reference.
The producer/ director of the series is Ivy Meeropol, a documentary
film maker who toured festivals around the country two years ago with Heir
to an Execution, a personal exploration of the legacy of her grandparents,
Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, who were executed over a half century ago
following their convictions on charges of espionage.
In six weekly installments, Meeropol follows Wexler and his Chief of Staff
Eric Johnson, Communications Director (Press Secretary) Lale Mamaux,
Legislative Director Jonathan Katz, and Legislative Assistant Halie Soifer.
At times the pacing and camera work is like that of "The West Wing,"
but "The Hill" has none of the issues explication, drama, or
story resolution for which the fictional "The West Wing" shall be
gratefully remembered.
If the Wexler office had gambled that this series would cause the congressman
and his staff to be seen by the public as a smoothly-functioning team, worthy
of more important assignments, I'm afraid they will be disappointed. The
first three episodes that I had the opportunity to watch depict the staff as
an ambitious, foul-mouthed, highly partisan, emotional, and arrogant group of
youngsters whose advice to the congressman, more often than not, seems based
more on narrow political considerations than on any aspiration to thoughtfully
shape public policy.
This is an office where putting out a press release before 3 p.m. is a
crisis. Why? Because in the super-competitive atmosphere of the
Capitol, where members of Congress want to "make the news," often
saying something first substitutes for saying something substantive.
For the most part, Wexler appears in these episodes to be the captive of his
frenetic staff, depending on them to brief him on issues, keep his name before
the public, and handle constituent matters while he runs from meeting to
interview to floor session.
Occasionally, he does insert a little old-fashioned common sense into a
discussion, as for example when he advised his staff that criticizing
President Bush for planning to name a Supreme Court nominee would be
tantamount to criticizing the man for doing his constitutionally-assigned job.
Wexler is Jewish, and of interest to jewishsightseeing.com readers will be the
passing references to the Middle East situation and the concerns of his
constituents throughout the series.
In my many years of covering politics, I've come to the conclusion that
legislative staff members and campaign staff members essentially are the same
kinds of personality types, regardless of whether they are Republicans
or Democrats. Had Meeropol been granted access to a Republican staff,
she would have seen counterparts engaging in the same kind of over-reaching
and the same kind of sanctimoniousness that we see culled from many, many
hours of filming the Wexler staff.
We may never know whether Meeropol ignored scenes that might have reflected
more favorably on the staff's commitment to serving broad public interests, in
order to show us those in which their motives were more narrowly
focused. Can you imagine inviting someone to your home or work place, to
run the camera at all times, and then allowing that person to choose only that
footage that she considers to be important or interesting? How many of
us, in unguarded moments, would say things that we too might later regret?
I have a suspicion that Meeropol went into this production knowing that the
zealousness of Capitol staffers would be one end product. According to
press materials, she had once worked on "the Hill" herself,
thrilling over the fact that, barely out of college, she was able to exert
some influence on national policy.
More importantly, the tragic experience of her grandparents may have
influenced what she was looking for. Going into the assignment, she knew, and
probably wanted us to understand that the political zealotry that is common
among Capitol Hill staffs can be fanned into national hysteria by evil but
charismatic figures like the Communist-witch-hunting Senator Joseph
McCarthy. From this portrayal, you can be assured that Congressman
Wexler is neither evil nor charismatic.