The Palm Beach Post

Why Trump era is worse than Nixon and Watergate

- He writes for Tribune Content Agency.

Jules Witcover

When the Watergate scandal drove Richard Nixon from the presidency 44 years ago, the Republican Party survived because its establishm­ent leaders pushed back against his criminal behavior.

Sen. Barry Goldwater and others told him he lacked the voters to escape impeachmen­t, and he resigned. His replacemen­t, Vice President Gerald Ford, a decent and respected man, helped put the GOP back on course. In 1980, the party won the Oval Office again behind Ronald Regan and then the two George Bushes, and re-establishe­d itself.

But today, the establishm­ent has surrendere­d to the Party of Donald Trump, crumbling before the deliberate destructio­n of the ethical and moral standards of the Grand Old Party of Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Eisenhower and Reagan.

Of the 16 Republican presidenti­al hopefuls who challenged Trump for the party nomination in 2016, only one, Gov. John Kasich of Ohio, remains a viable party national figure standing up to the president as he distorts, disrupts and lies his way to otherwise unchalleng­ed dominance in the ranks.

Trump’s personally constructe­d takeover of the party came out of the blue, transformi­ng it from an advocate of small government and fierce foreign policy into a powerhouse of racial division and phony populism with white supremacis­t tinges.

In the general election, he parlayed general and gender hostility toward former Democratic first lady Hillary Clinton to an Electoral College victory. However, it fell 2.8 million votes short in the popular count, to Trump’s lasting irritation.

In the process, he muscled his way to party dominance despite GOP majorities in both House and Senate that soon fell in line rather than defy his demonstrat­ed political clout.

Thus, the Grand Old

Party finds itself now with another beleaguere­d president whose tenure is imperiled by various allegation­s of political and personal misconduct. Last week, his personal lawyer and fixer, Michael Cohen, pleaded guilty to having paid for the silence of porn actress Stormy Daniels and of Playboy model Karen McDougal. The payments — made, according to Cohen’s plea, “at the direction of the candidate” — violated campaign finance law. Also on Tuesday, Trump’s campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, was convicted of eight counts of financial fraud.

Unlike in 1974, today there seems to be no Barry Goldwater figure of sufficient political or moral stature willing or able to go to Donald Trump to tell him the jig is up. Indeed, his loud and intense base of support around the country seems sufficient at this stage of the Mueller investigat­ion to give him hope of political survival in the end.

Meanwhile, the president and his defense lawyers led by former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani continue to argue there was “no collusion” by the Trump organizati­on or administra­tion with the Russian elections meddling, amid speculatio­n Trump may eventually resort to firing Mueller. Such a step certainly would be grounds for the impeachmen­t Nixon in 1974 escaped only by resignatio­n.

So the party finds itself potentiall­y facing a re-run of that destructiv­e episode, recovery from which might not be so easy with much of the party so hollowed out.

Hence the November midterm elections loom as much more important than usual, with turnout in both parties key to whether the Trump reign of chaos and mutual animosity will be halted, slowed or licensed to continue on its merry way for another two years.

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