Dayton Daily News

Comey firing leads to Watergate references

Nixon biographer: White House is hiding something.

- By Jack Torry Washington Bureau

Within hours of President Donald Trump’s firing of FBI Director James Comey the comparison­s began: Just like President Richard Nixon and

the Saturday Night Massacre in 1973.

“Nothing less than Nix- onian,” said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt. Sen. Edward Markey, D-Mass., said it was “disturbing­ly reminiscen­t of

the Saturday Night Massacre,” and John Podesta, campaign chairman for Hillary

Clinton, tweeted to Trump, “Didn’t you know you’re supposed to wait till Satur- day night to massacre people investigat­ing you.”

They all were harking back to that October evening so long ago when Nixon dismissed Watergate Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox, accepted the resignatio­n of U.S. Attorney General Elliott

Richardson and fired Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshau­s.

The parallels are striking. Trump fired the man lead- ing the investigat­ion into whether he and his aides were involved with Russian efforts to defeat Clinton in

the 2016 election, while Nixon dismissed the prose- cutor examining if the White House tried to thwart an FBI investigat­ion into Watergate scandal.

Yet other difference­s are stark. While Nixon’s move that night directly led to his resignatio­n as president in August 1974, Trump’s dismissal of Comey is part of a political play whose ending has yet to be written.

And unlike Cox, who was popular with Democrats, Comey has antagonize­d both political parties. Not only was he probing Russian inter- ference in the election, but he also angered Clinton last year for briefly re-opening an investigat­ion of her e-mails just days before the November election. “If you ask me — as some

one who has studied the Nixon White House — if the Trump White House is hid

ing something, the answer would be yes,” said John A. Farrell, author of the New York Times bestseller, “Richard Nixon – The Life.”

“They are acting like they are hiding something,” Farrell said. “But we don’t know that. The flip side to all that is this could be Trump being Trump. He’s not like any other American president.”

“The guy who a rgues about the size of the crowd at his inaugurati­on is the guy who could fire the FBI director because he doesn’t like the director’s style,” Farrell said.

Reaction to the Comey firing has been intense, fueled by social media and cable TV news shows which did not exist in 1973. But it has yet to approach the turbocharg­ed atmosphere of what should have been a relatively tranquil Saturday evening in Washington in 1973.

Ever since operatives from the Nixon re-election com

mittee tried to wiretap the Democratic National Committee in June 1972, the

FBI and prosecutor­s had probed whether Nixon and his aides knew of the break-in in advance and if they obstructed justice to keep the burglars from talking.

Throughout the summer of 1973, the nation was riveted by the lengthy hearings of the Senate Watergate Committee and an investigat­ion led by Cox, a former solic- itor general and onetime campaign aide to President John F. Kennedy.

When word emerged that Nixon had taped his conversati­ons, Cox demanded he turn over nine of the tapes. Nixon refused and plotted to dismiss Cox. What he didn’t count on was Rich- ardson, picked to head the Justice Department in April 1973, refusing to carry out the order.

“Nixon had been forced to take Elliot Richardson, who was honorable and well regarded,” said Carl Leubsdorf, then a Washington reporter for the Associated Press. “When push came to shove, Elliot showed why he was highly regarded.”

At 8:30 that evening, White House press secretary Ron Ziegler announced the firings. CBS and NBC broadcast specials with NBC’s John Chancellor saying the firings “may be the most serious constituti­onal crisis” in American history.

People outside the White House held signs proclaimin­g “Honk for Impeachmen­t,” and within a week House Democrats had introduced 21 resolution­s of impeach

ment. Nixon backed down, turning over the contested tapes and naming a new special prosecutor.

In his memoirs, Nixon recalled being “taken by surprise by the ferocious intensity” of the aftermath of the firings, writing “for the first time I recognized the depth of the impact Watergate had been having on America.”

By contrast, there has been no organized effort to impeach Trump. Unlike Nixon in 1973, Trump has a Republican House and Senate. Democrats and some Republican­s have contented themselves with calling for an independen­t prosecutor or a special committee to investigat­e Russian involvemen­t in the election.

But in what could be a prophetic warning to Trump, Nixon wrote in his memoirs that “Washington is ruled by Darwinian forces, and if you are in serious political trouble, you cannot expect generosity or magnanimit­y for long.”

 ?? SPENCER PLATT / GETTY IMAGES ?? People congregate in Times Square on Wednesday under news about former FBI Director James Comey. Comey was fired Tuesday.
SPENCER PLATT / GETTY IMAGES People congregate in Times Square on Wednesday under news about former FBI Director James Comey. Comey was fired Tuesday.

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