Hartford Courant

Trump Should Learn From Nixon

The President Has The Right To Replace His Cabinet But Not To Attempt To End Russia Probe

- By JONATHAN BERNSTEIN

President Donald Trump pushed Attorney General Jeff Sessions to resign on Wednesday. Matthew Whitaker, Sessions’ chief of staff, who has expressed hostility to Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s inquiry, will step in as acting attorney general and, according to reports, take over supervisio­n of the investigat­ion.

The president has the right to replace his Cabinet officials. After all, it’s not unusual, as Trump said in his press conference earlier Wednesday, to have some turnover after an election.

But the head of the executive branch does not have the right to attempt to end investigat­ions of himself, his campaign and his administra­tion. Those kinds of actions are called abuse of power and obstructio­n of justice.

For the moment, there’s no sign that Trump is attempting either a rapid or a slow-motion re-enactment of the so-called Saturday Night Massacre of 1973, when Richard Nixon ordered the firing of a special prosecutor, which contribute­d to the chain of events that ultimately led to the president’s downfall.

Nor do we know how the American people in general or Republican­s in

Congress in particular would react to such a move by Trump. Several Republican senators have repeatedly warned him not to try; on the other hand, they have refrained from taking pre-emptive actions to make it impossible.

The appropriat­e action at this point would be for both Trump and the acting attorney general to make clear statements that the investigat­ion will continue without interferen­ce.

It would also be appropriat­e for Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley and other Senate Republican­s to make public declaratio­ns of their respect for the office of the special counsel. They should indicate that they will require any new nominee for attorney general to make the same no-interferen­ce pledge that the committee demanded of Elliot Richardson when he was nominated for the job in 1973. It’s promising that Republican Senators Lamar Alexander and Jeff Flake, and Sen.-elect Mitt Romney all spoke Wednesday about the importance of allowing an investigat­ion to go forward. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, also weighed in.

Whether Senate Republican­s fulfill that responsibi­lity or not, Nixon’s example should make it clear to Trump that any actions he takes to subvert the investigat­ion are likely to backfire.

In 1973, Nixon attempted to fire Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox, and eventually found someone to do so after the attorney general and the deputy attorney general resigned in protest. The reaction was so virulent that Nixon was forced within days to back down entirely. A new special prosecutor was appointed and given at least as much independen­ce as Cox had, and Nixon complied with subpoenas that had been the immediate cause of the conflict. Not only that, the Saturday Night Massacre marked the first time in the Watergate scandal that the impeachmen­t of the president was not only discussed openly, but thought to be a real possibilit­y.

One can never prove these things, but it’s not a stretch to argue that if Nixon had complied with Cox’s demands in the first place, he might well have survived. Nixon was guilty of the underlying crimes, which were surely impeachabl­e. But Congress might not have acted had it not been for Nixon making it clear the rule of law was on the line.

We cannot know whether public opinion in 2018 would echo what happened in 1973. But we do know that Trump got into this mess in the first place in large part because he fired James Comey, the FBI director, presumably to end the investigat­ion into the 2016 election. That episode appears to have damaged Trump’s approval ratings and certainly damaged his standing in Washington, and brought about Mueller’s appointmen­t as special counsel.

We also don’t know what Mueller’s investigat­ion has found. There’s much speculatio­n about additional indictment­s and a final report that could harm the president. It is far from clear that trying to force out Mueller would stop any of that. But it will force people to take sides, and Trump should not count on even previously loyal Republican­s to follow him into blatant disregard of the rule of law. Many of them didn’t endorse his firing of Comey. They probably wouldn’t support him now, when the incentives for sticking with him are the lowest they’ll ever be. Just as with Nixon, even if Trump might be guilty he could still make his situation a lot worse.

If he cares at all about his presidency, Trump should not go down Nixon’s path.

Jonathan Bernstein writes for Bloomberg Opinion, where this first appeared.

 ?? CORBIS VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? THEN-PRESIDENT Richard Nixon and then-Vice President Gerald Ford discuss the transfer of power in 1974. Nixon’s failed attempt to stop probes of his activities is a lesson for President Donald Trump.
CORBIS VIA GETTY IMAGES THEN-PRESIDENT Richard Nixon and then-Vice President Gerald Ford discuss the transfer of power in 1974. Nixon’s failed attempt to stop probes of his activities is a lesson for President Donald Trump.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States