The All-In-The-Family Approach To Political Attacks Has A Long History
In the closing days of the 2020 election, allies of President Donald Trump tried to reenact the 2016 version of the election, right down to the suspiciously derived emails and dark suggestions of corrupt dealings that never entirely made sense. This time around, instead of targeting President Trump's opponent, his allies and surrogates moved all in on a set of stories about Joe Biden's son, Hunter. They allegedly first peddled the story to The Wall Street Journal, but when reporters needed time to authenticate the evidence and verify the details, Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani gave it to the New York Post instead.
Rather than celebrating a repeat performance of the Hillary Clinton email distraction, some Republicans in recent days have lamented that the Hunter Biden story has failed to catch on outside of conservative circles. They've attributed that failure to changes in journalism (more outlets are opting to verify before choosing to amplify) and in social media (Facebook and Twitter throttled the spread of the dubious New York Post story published last week, though Twitter later apologized for blocking links to the Post's story). Both actions led to widespread outrage on the right, with accusations of bias and election interference, and even Republicans essentially re-purposing a congressional hearing as a grilling of executives about the social media companies' actions.
But those explanations overlook a more fundamental flaw that hampered the would-be scandal: it focuses on a Biden family member, not Biden himself.
That is by design: The Trump allies' gambit is more than a partial rerun of itself -- it's the latest iteration of a historical pattern. Attacking family members as a way of generating scandal-by-proxy has a lengthy history in American politics, and especially in modern conservative politics. Sometimes those attacks are ancillary. During Lyndon Johnson's 1964 reelection bid, for instance, an anti-Johnson book dedicated a chapter to his wife, suggesting she was involved in nefarious business deals and shared "Lady Macbeth's consuming ambition for the growth of her husband's power." And, of course, there were the attacks on Hillary Clinton when she was first lady in the 1990s, subject to endless investigations in right-wing media and Congress.
When Clinton ran for president, the conspiracies about her once again had an all-in-the-family feel, focusing on both her and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, blurring the distinctions between the two. Nowhere was this truer than in the bestselling book Clinton Cash by Peter Schweizer. The book, written with help from the think tank he co-founded with then-Breitbart chief executive Steve Bannon (later chief strategist and senior counselor to President Trump), argued that Bill and Hillary Clinton had enriched themselves by trading favors with foreign governments, laundering their ill-gotten gains through the Clinton Foundation. Mainstream sources picked up the story, writing their own versions of the "Crooked Hillary" storyline that would dominate the campaign.
The Clinton story broke out of the conservative media ecosystem in part because right-wing media had been churning out conspiracies about Bill and Hillary Clinton since the early 1990s, conspiracies regularly amplified in mainstream newspapers. The Wall Street Journal editorial page gave oxygen to the conspiracy that Clinton staffer Vince Foster had been murdered (he died by suicide) and The New York Times treated a book promoting the conspiracy to a serious look in its book review section. In concocting a new story that played into all of those firmly held beliefs about the Clintons, Schweizer found a ready audience for his attacks.