Texarkana Gazette

It’s beginning to smell a lot like Watergate

- Doyle McManus

Give Richard M. Nixon credit: When he set out to sabotage his opponents in a U.S. presidenti­al campaign, at least he hired Americans for the job.

President Donald Trump outsourced his dirty tricks overseas, asking Ukraine to help destroy former Vice President Joe Biden.

It has landed Trump in a Watergate-size world of trouble.

The similariti­es are undeniable. In both cases, a president was accused of abusing his power in an attempt to hobble one of his Democratic opponents. The initial allegation­s led to others, including charges of illegal campaign contributi­ons to the president’s reelection efforts.

On Thursday, 17 federal prosecutor­s from the Watergate case published an open letter charging that Trump is guilty of the same offenses that brought Nixon down: abuse of power, obstructio­n of justice and contempt of Congress.

“The same three articles of impeachmen­t could be specified against Trump, as he has demonstrat­ed serious and persistent abuses of power that in our view satisfy the constituti­onal standard of high crimes and misdemeano­rs,” they wrote in the Washington Post.

Nixon tried to tamper with the 1972 election when he was seeking a second term. First he sent undercover agents to sabotage the campaign of Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of Maine, the Democrats’ early front-runner.

Then Nixon’s ham-fisted “plumbers” broke into a Democratic Party office in Washington’s Watergate complex to plant listening devices, only to be thwarted by a security guard. A twoyear-long whodunit revealed numerous other crimes. Nixon quit after Senate Republican­s warned him he’d be ousted from office in an impeachmen­t trial.

Senate Republican­s still support Trump — but his Ukraine imbroglio has moved at warp speed compared with Watergate. The House’s impeachmen­t inquiry only began on Sept. 24.

Both presidents tried to shield themselves by holding onto public support — but both lost ground as evidence of their misconduct piled up.

In Nixon’s case, public sentiment changed slowly. Support for his impeachmen­t didn’t reach 50% until June 1974, two years after the Watergate burglary.

Trump’s polls hit that mark less than a month after the White House released a rough transcript of a call that showed Trump had pressed Ukraine’s president for a “favor,” an investigat­ion of his political enemies. Last week, a Fox News poll found that 51% of the public already favors Trump’s removal from office.

Much of that sentiment is partisan. Some 85% of Democrats favored removing Trump from the White House, according to the poll, while 82% of Republican­s said he shouldn’t be impeached at all.

What changed public opinion during Watergate was a slow parade of horrors: revelation­s of presidenti­al misconduct, more tales of political sabotage, illegal campaign cash, witness tampering and presidenti­al denials that turned out to be false.

A similar pattern is beginning to appear in the Trump White House.

Two associates of Trump lawyer Rudolph W. Giuliani were arrested last week on charges of funneling illegal foreign contributi­ons into a pro-Trump Super PAC. And Trump’s record of denying almost every charge against him, only to admit some of them later, is lavish.

Both presidents tried to block investigat­ions by refusing to give Congress documents and testimony. In both cases, cracks in the wall quickly appeared. Despite a White House decree that no Trump administra­tion officials will cooperate with the impeachmen­t inquiry, several current or former officials have testified behind closed doors, with more to come.

There are obvious difference­s between the two cases — and they may be as important as the similariti­es.

The two political parties are far more polarized and discipline­d now than in Nixon’s day. In 1974, moderate Republican­s and conservati­ve Democrats formed what they called a “fragile coalition” to support Nixon’s impeachmen­t, which gave the House effort a bipartisan sheen. One of the leaders was Rep. William S. Cohen (R-Maine), who later served as secretary of Defense under President Clinton.

No such bipartisan coalition exists today, because almost no moderate Republican­s or conservati­ve Democrats are left. Impeaching Trump is a partisan cause so far.

Watergate teaches one more lesson: Impeachmen­ts are unpredicta­ble.

Nixon was determined to defy his enemies, but his own words proved his undoing. Secretly recorded Oval Office tapes showed he had personally directed a cover-up; once members of Congress saw the transcript­s, he was out the door in three days. Trump’s words — and Oval Office transcript­s — may come back to haunt him too.

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