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20 October 13
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The long road to Ted Cruz, Fox News, the Tea Party and right-wing insanity has its roots in the events of 1973.
f
you take the long view of Washington's ungovernability - and when
you're as old as I am and live on the other side of the Atlantic as I
do, the long view is all you've got - you have a particular insight as
to how we got here.
Much of the problem can be traced back to events that
took place exactly 40 years ago (Oct. 20, 1973): the Saturday Night
Massacre, a major turning point of the Watergate scandal.
The next day, banner headlines across the entire front page of The New York Times read:
NIXON DISCHARGES COX FOR DEFIANCE;
ABOLISHES WATERGATE TASK FORCE
RICHARDSON AND RUCKLESHAUS OUT
It took a helluva lot to get that kind of coverage that autumn.
While Americans went about their weekend business,
while the October war in the Middle East rumbled along, a mere 10 days
after his vice president, Spiro Agnew, resigned over charges of tax
evasion, President Richard M. Nixon raised the stakes in his fight to
keep the truth about his involvement in the scandal and its subsequent
cover-up secret.
It's tough to summarize all the events of Watergate,
from burglary to the president's resignation. Woodward and Bernstein's
"All the President's Men" is 349 pages long and I'm sure both of them
still agonize over what they had to leave out. But the narrative's main
turning points were on legal ideas related to executive privilege and
judicial independence in the Constitution and the statutes and case law
that underpin these ideas.
A recap of events for those who have forgotten - or never learned:
In May of 1973, Archibald Cox, a law professor at
Harvard, was appointed "special prosecutor" to independently look into
the Watergate scandal. The appointment was made by Attorney General
Eliot Richardson, himself a Harvard man, who had only just taken up the
attorney general post, following the resignation - because of Watergate -
of Richard Kleindienst, another Harvard law graduate.
Richardson had pledged in his confirmation hearings to
give the special prosecutor complete independence - including subpoena
power - to follow the evidence wherever it led. A few months later it
led to the Oval Office when it was revealed in a Senate hearing on
Watergate that Nixon was recording all conversations there. Cox issued a
subpoena demanding that Nixon turn over the tapes. Claiming executive
privilege, Nixon refused and offered a compromise: a Republican senator
would listen to the tapes and provide a summary. Cox turned down the
offer and stood by his subpoena power.
That was on a Friday. Presidents don't need
high-priced media advisers to tell them that if they're going to do
something unpopular they should do it on the weekend, when interest in
the news is at a low.
Late Saturday afternoon, the president ordered his
attorney general to fire Cox. Richardson refused and resigned. Nixon
then ordered Richardson's deputy, William Ruckleshaus (you guessed it,
another Harvard man), to fire Cox. Ruckleshaus refused and resigned.
The onerous task next fell to the country's solicitor
general, Robert Bork (not a Harvard man). Cox was fired, his offices
sealed, and the FBI sent in to seize papers. All of this took place in
the space of a few hours that Saturday evening.
The outrage was immediate: New York Times columnist
Anthony Lewis reported the incident the next day and took aim at Nixon's
chief of staff, General Alexander Haig. Lewis wrote that Haig told
Ruckelshaus: "Your Commander in chief has given you an order." The
columnist went on, "There it was, naked: the belief that the President
reigns and rules, that loyalty runs to his person rather than to law and
institutions. It is precisely the concept of power against which
Americans rebelled in 1776 and that they designed the Constitution to
bar forever in this country."
And if you think Lewis was just an overwrought
liberal, a more dispassionate observer, Fred Emery, wrote in The Times
of London: "Over this extraordinary weekend, Washington had the smell of
an attempted coup d'etat .... Last night as the FBI men moved in
without warrant to "seal" the Cox files, the whiff of the Gestapo was in
the clear October air. Some of the soberest men in government and out
are now privately expressing anxiety that the military might now
intervene - either to back the President or throw him out."
For the first time since Watergate erupted, a
plurality of Americans thought Nixon should be impeached. The calls for
impeachment came from legislators as well - and not just Democrats; a
fair number of Republicans joined in. They did so to preserve a basic,
nonpartisan precept of our democracy: The president is not above the
law.
Nixon was as good as gone after his Saturday Night
folly. Although it took some time. The law, when every "i" is being
dotted and "t" crossed, can be a slow-moving machine. Ultimately Nixon
ran out of legal maneuvers and had to resign. But the game was over on
the Sunday morning after the Saturday Night Massacre.
But was that the end of the story?
No.
The conservative movement never really liked Nixon. He
initiated detente with the Soviets, visited Mao in China - rather than
bombing both countries. He raised taxes. But conservatives also saw him
as a martyr to "liberals" and their lap-dogs the press. He also flew the
flag for executive-branch power. Conservatives believe in a strong a
executive branch - when a Republican is president.
The wound from one of their party - if not one of
their own - having been driven from office is one that has never stopped
festering for the Republicans.
Two Democrats in the last 30 years have made it to the
White House: Bill Clinton and Barack Obama. Special prosecutors and
impeachment for real or as a threat hovered around them almost from the
beginning of their terms of office. Republican payback?
There were other ways the Saturday Night massacre continued to play out.
In 1987, Robert Bork, the man who ultimately carried
out Nixon's orders that autumn afternoon, was nominated by Ronald Reagan
to the Supreme Court. Bork later claimed Nixon had promised to nominate
him to the Court as the quid pro quo for firing Archibald Cox. Bork was
rejected, in part, because of his willingness to fire the special
prosecutor.
As Bork was being, well, "Borked," in another part of
the Capitol Building hearings into the Iran-Contra scandal were going
on. This affair was arguably much worse than Watergate. It involved the
illegal sale of weapons to Iran with the proceeds secretly going to fund
the contra rebels in Nicaragua - both of which had been expressly
legislated against by Congress. On the hearings panel, making the
argument for unrestrained executive-branch power, was a congressman from
Wyoming who had served in the Nixon White House, Dick Cheney.
Later, as George W. Bush's vice president, Cheney,
given a helping hand by al-Qaeda's 9/11 attacks, took the position to
its logical extreme. "When the president does it, that means it's not
illegal" Nixon told David Frost at one point in their famous interviews.
Cheney brought that philosophy with him to the Bush White House.
So how did this disgraced idea of unchecked executive
power survive the Saturday Night Massacre and how did it lead to the
current impasse in Washington? Here's an unprovable theory - at least to
professional historians - but it makes sense to me. Five days after the
Saturday Night Massacre, Nixon held a press conference. Deference had
long since exited the relationship between the president and the
reporters who covered him. Toward the end of the session the following
interchange took place. A reporter asked: "What is it about the
television coverage of you in these past weeks and months that has so
aroused your anger?" Nixon answered, "Don't get the impression that you
arouse my anger ... You see, one can only be angry with those he
respects." He came back to the theme a few minutes later. "When a
commentator takes a bit of news and then with knowledge of what the
facts are distorts it viciously, I have no respect for that individual."
A four-decade-long war on the press's legitimacy had
begun. The idea that it was a biased liberal press that made the
molehill of Watergate into a mountain of Constitutional crisis took
root.
A month later, an article in the New York Times quoted
a letter to the editor written by one Lerline Westmoreland published in
a Southern newspaper, the Memphis Commercial Appeal: "It seems to me
that the greatest threat to this country is not so much a dictatorial
Supreme Court or an imperfect President, it is a vicious, slanted news
media on the minds of the masses of Americans who are either too lazy or
too indifferent to think for themselves."
Under Reagan, Republican appointees on the FCC
abolished the fairness doctrine, the obligation for broadcasters to air
both sides of controversial issues. This led to an explosion of
opinionated propagandists on the air waves relentlessly attacking
"liberal" media. It continues to this day, degrading American public
discourse.
A Nixon media operative, Roger Ailes, discussed
starting a Republican-slanted news program with the president
pre-Watergate. Later, Ailes invented Fox News for Rupert Murdoch. Fox is
one of the prime shapers of the hyper-partisan political culture that
has made the U.S. practically ungovernable.
As I said, at the top, I take a long view from this
side of the Atlantic. Over here, even Conservatives find themselves
taken aback by the Tea Party and other extremist know-nothings who have
been given the oxygen of publicity on Fox.
Only one of the principals of that evening in 1973 is
still alive: William Ruckelshaus. Now in his 80s, he runs a foundation
in Seattle and is still active in national life. He was then, and still
is, a moderate Republican. I wrote to him and asked, "If you knew, that
ultimately, President Nixon would be forced to resign and that future
generations of Republican legislators would spend so much time trying to
even the score, would you have taken a long view and done what was
necessary to protect the president and keep him in office?" I didn't
really expect an answer - but within two days an email came back: "The
answer is no." Mr. Ruckelshaus added, "I felt what he was asking me to
do (fire Archibald Cox) was fundamentally wrong and unconscionable."
In Autumn 1973, it was still possible for Republicans
and Democrats to come together and agree on a basic principle of
government - like the limits on presidential power. It is hard to
imagine that happening today because of those events precisely 40 years
ago.
1 comment:
Whether or not the "facts" laid out about 40 years ago are true or not does not matter to me now. Even if all he wrote was 100% accurate about Nixon, it is a major leap to blame that event for the political impasse we now have. Being a conservative, I know it has nothing to do with how I feel, what I believe, and what I would like to see happen to save the country.
The author seems to think that the only logical reason conservatives would have for being against BHO would be revenge over Nixon. Of course, that is nonsense! Conservatives are against Executive over-reach regardless of which party in in the White House.
The Constitution, to BHO, is either ignored when it restricts his agenda or used as a club when it fits his agenda.
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