Worse than Watergate — in the way it’s being handled
WASHINGTON >> Pull up your bell bottoms, and turn up the Roberta Flack: Today, we’re gonna testify like it’s the 1970s.
There at the House Judiciary Committee witness table sat John Dean, White House counsel to President Richard Nixon during Watergate, who did prison time and lost his law license for his role in the cover-up.
Forty-six summers ago, Dean broke with Nixon in testimony before Sam Ervin’s Senate Watergate committee, propelling Nixon down the path toward impeachment. Now a cablenews pundit and scold of misbehavior by (Republican) presidents, Dean returned to Capitol Hill on Monday to draw parallels between Nixon and President Trump.
“The last time I appeared before your committee was July 11, 1974, during the impeachment inquiry of President Richard Nixon,” he said. Now 80, Dean connected the dots from the Watergate Hotel to Trump Tower.
Dean drew parallels between the falsehoods told by Trump officials and those told by John Mitchell, H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman; between the firing of James Comey and the firing of Archibald Cox; between efforts by both Trump and Nixon to shut down FBI probes; between the pardons dangled by both men; between attempts by Trump to get Donald McGahn to lie and Nixon’s attempts to get Dean to lie; and between the refusal by McGahn and the refusal by Elliot Richardson and William
Ruckelshaus to fire prosecutors.
“The Mueller report, like the Watergate road map, conveys findings, with supporting evidence, of potential criminal activity,” Dean testified, later adding that “It’s quite striking and startling to me that history is repeating itself, and with a vengeance.”
Watergate remains the gold standard of presidential scandals. “Was it worse than Watergate? Yes,” declares Rep. Adam Schiff, DCalif., the chairman of the Intelligence Committee, continuing a tradition of politicians likening political scandals to Nixon’s downfall, including the Chappaquiddick incident, the Clintons’ Whitewater scandals, George W. Bush’s warrantless wiretapping and Barack Obama’s Solyndra and Benghazi imbroglios.
Trump repeatedly declared Hillary Clinton’s email flap to be “many times worse than Watergate.” Now, he’s saying that investigators’ surveillance of his campaign is “worse than Watergate.”
The current situation is worse than Watergate — not necessarily in the illegality (history will judge that), but in the way the political system handles the investigation.
During Dean’s first goround, serious legislators put country before party and launched honest and sober investigations of Nixon’s misbehavior. But now, Republican lawmakers reflexively defend Trump’s impropriety and support his refusal to allow aides to testify before congressional inquiries.
Meanwhile, many Democrats, rather than following the Watergate model of lengthy investigation before impeachment, are clamoring for immediate impeachment proceedings.
At Monday’s hearing, the chairman, Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y., pleaded with colleagues to treat the session with the “seriousness it deserves.”
As if.
Rep. Doug Collins of Georgia, the committee’s ranking Republican, needled: “This committee is now hearing from the ’70s, and they want their star witness back.”
Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., asked, “Do you believe if we turned the lights off here and maybe lit some candles, got out a Ouija board, we could potentially raise the specter of Richard Nixon?”
“I doubt that,” Dean replied dryly.
At this, Gaetz lost control of his metaphors: You’re hearing “the ghost of Christmas past . ... We’re here reopening the impeachment inquiry potentially into Richard Nixon . ... [We’re] sort of playing out our own version of ‘That ’70s’ Show.’ ”
Maybe so. But does the sequel have the same ending?