The Great Cases: United States v. Nixon
The View from The Oval Office in 1972
Richard Nixon was not the first President to have his own conversations recorded. That was FDR. LBJ did it too. Nixon initially resisted this practice but after about two years in office found that recordings were the only way he could ensure that conversations were accurately and fully accessible later.
Unlike either Roosevelt or Johnson, only a small number of people knew that there were noise-activated tape recorders in the Oval Office, the Cabinet Room, and a few other places around the White House. It’s thought there were seven people who knew: Nixon himself, chief of staff H.R. Haldeman, deputy chief of staff Alexander Butterfield, Nixon’s personal secretary Rose Mary Woods, and three technicians from the Secret Service who’d installed the them. Many of the phones in those areas were tapped to automatic recorders also. Woods routinely made transcriptions of the tapes, though not all of them.
By 1972, Nixon must have felt his re-election prospects were not certain. He saw a sharply divided and polarized national culture. Perhaps he never really believed in his own personal popularity, or that the economy was actually strong. He had failed to end the Vietnam war as promised (indeed, he’d expanded it into Cambodia and Laos), and inflation had begun to sap the vitality of the economy despite wage and price controls imposed at his urging. Hypothesizing such uneasiness explains what happened later that summer because, as we can see clearly in retrospect, Nixon had fretted over what was actually a very strong political hand to play, against opponents who proved unable to rally against him.
If only he’d played the campaign with more confidence than he did, history would likely be very different.
A Bungled Burglary
On June 17, 1974, a security guard at the Watergate office complex noticed that five nighttime delivery workers who had come in at an oddly late hour, and signed in to go to the eighth floor, were for some reason on the sixth. He summoned the police, who arrived at about 1:30 a.m. They found five men, named Bernard Barker, Virgilio González, Eugenio Martínez, James W. McCord, Jr., and Frank Sturgis, in the offices of the Democratic National Committee, planting devices in the telephones and rifling through filing cabinets. 1
Two days later, McCord was identified by the Washington Post as a Republican Party “security aide.” In fact, he worked for the Republican National Committee and Nixon’s re-election campaign, the Committee to Re-Elect the President, “CRP” or as it was more commonly called, “CREEP”. The other burglars were soon identified with an anti-Castro Cuban liberation movement; three of them had been involved with the unsuccessful Bay of Pigs invasion of 1961. 2
The reports of McCord’s association with CRP also inspired the newly-promoted Associate Director of the FBI, Mark Felt, 3 to begin surreptitiously feeding information to two reporters from the Post, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. The reporters nicknamed him “Deep Throat” to protect his anonymity as a source. Money used to pay the burglars was traced, by both FBI investigators and the Post’s reporters, to CRP.
But before that happened, there was an election.
Democrats Can Always Find A Way to Lose
The 1972 Democratic National Convention was fractious, divisive, and considered politically “disastrous.” Despite getting less than a plurality of votes, George McGovern was nominated, and his platform of an immediate end to Vietnam on any terms available and a universal basic income, were portrayed by the GOP as insanely liberal to the point of being somehow at odds with fundamental elements of American culture.
McGovern’s running mate, Thomas Eagleton, was attacked as being mentally unstable after his history of depression and shock therapy (prescribed according to the medical wisdom of the day) and hounded into resigning the Vice-Presidential nomination. McGovern chose former French Ambassador Sargent Shriver, the late JFK’s brother-in-law and a man who had impressive non-political achievements but had never been elected to anything in his life, as Eagleton’s replacement.
Things never got better for McGovern despite a popular “end the war” platform. In November, Nixon won a landslide re-election. Excluding George Washington’s uncontested elections in 1789 and 1792, Nixon’s re-election was either the most one-sided, or the second-most one-sided, election in American history. 4 Which doesn’t necessarily mean Nixon was wrong to have sensed vulnerability earlier in the year, but it does make the decision to have tried to tap the DNC’s phones and read the files there seem foolish, at least in retrospect.
The guys who’d done that bit of “wet work” had botched the job and got caught, making a lot of people think that Nixon had something to do with it. Nearly everyone at the time recognized that trying to break the law and not succeeding in the enterprise is nevertheless criminal activity; an election result as decisive as Nixon’s was not thought relevant to the pall of illegitimacy cast by committing significant crimes to get back to the White House.
Special Prosecution
The Watergate burglars insisted during their trial that they had acted alone. The judge presiding over their trial, John J. Sirica, didn’t believe them. Sirica was nicknamed “Maximum John” for his tendency to impose the largest sentence allowed by the sentencing guidelines, but through the promise of reduced sentences, Judge Sirica encouraged the Watergate burglars to provide more information to prosecutors.
It turned out that the money to pay for their attempted burglary had come from some good-faith donors to CRP, and from some rather shady businessmen through CRP, to accounts under the control of Barker (one of the burglars), who reported to Hugh Sloan, CRP’s treasurer (the treasurer of a political finance committee is its top officer, responsible only to and usually a surrogate for the candidate). Sloan flipped under threat of prosecution, again with substantial pressure from Judge Sirica. He implicated three more members of Nixon’s political machine, including the infamous G. Gordon Liddy.
Liddy turned out to be the conduit between CRP and the burglars. He had used a different “slush fund,” this one created by then-Attorney General John Mitchell 5 and used to make a variety of surreptitious payments by Nixon’s Chief of Staff, H. R. Haldeman. Which meant that there was evidence that money which was supposed to be untraceably diverted out of a political campaign’s war chest had been illegally used by Nixon’s second-in-command and third-in-command.
Nixon’s public response to all of this was to attack the “biased liberal media.” White House staffers all insisted that no one knew about the break-in and all the campaign finance stuff was just ordinary politics being inflated out of proportion by a politicized media. Congress, unimpressed, demanded the appointment of a special prosecutor. 6 After starting with plea bargains wheedled by Judge Sirica from the burglars themselves, the special prosecutor worked his way into Nixon’s hierarchy, from the bottom up and eventually obtained cooperation from by-then resigned deputy chief of staff Butterfield. Eventually, it became a question of, “What did the President know, and when did he know it?” Prompted by pressure from the special prosecutor’s office and published investigations from the Washington Post, Butterfield had testified about the secret tape-recording system to Congress. Once he knew that they existed, the Special Prosecutor issued a subpoena to the White House for the tapes and any transcripts of them.
The White House responded by refusing to give them over, at first stating that there were over 3,000 hours of tapes and it was simply too much to do. The trial court handling the day-to-day filings of the Watergate investigation wasn’t buying that, as courts frequently don’t – “Turn over all the evidence and let the lawyers figure it out from there,” was then as is now the mantra on such matters.
The White House then protested that some of the tapes involved sensitive matters that had to be kept secret, the President said through his lawyers, things like national security and sensitive diplomacy. The Judge then ordered that the White House create an analogue to what is commonly called a “privilege log,” a list describing the tapes over which privilege was claimed, by time of start, time of finish, location, and identity of people participating in the taped conversation.
Upon review of the privilege log, the Special Prosecutor sent a new subpoena, specifying by date, location, and identity of participant, itemizing which tapes he wanted to review for evidence, eliminating some but not most of the tapes on the list.
To this, the White House responded by again refusing to turn over the tapes, this time invoking “Executive Privilege.”
The Privileged Executive
As articulated by Nixon’s attorneys at the time, “Executive Privilege” is the notion that unless the President and his advisors are free to deliberate about a variety of ideas, without fear of political repercussions, they will not be able to candidly assess the options for a wide variety of matters upon which they would be required to act. Without some deference to the need for open and honest deliberation, the Executive branch would lose a great deal of its ability to exercise any kind of discretion at all.
So, the conversations were not classified, as they were not discussing matters of national security, but they were allegedly privileged. The limits of this notion of privilege – a requirement that the President be granted this degree of deference because he was the President – were the core issue put before Judge Sirica. Who promptly ruled against the President.
Who immediately appealed. The Supreme Court agreed to hear the matter on expedited review.
Warren Burger Takes Control of The Opinion
Critics of Nixon would have had some reason to be apprehensive of how the Court would treat the case. Nixon himself had appointed four of the nine Justices.
According to a later profile of the Supreme Court, Chief Justice Warren Burger’s initial reaction to the Watergate affair was to question what, exactly, the President had done that was wrong. Indeed, the rumor – and there was then and is now no way to confirm it – was that Burger’s initial vote was to have been in favor of Nixon, because he saw the entire matter as nothing but partisan politics. But he switched his vote, so he could assign the authorship of the opinion to himself. This was something Burger had done often before, a tactic his colleagues and their law clerks called “conniving.”
It’s worthwhile to note that the most junior of the Nixon-appointed Justices, then-Associate Justice William H. Rehnquist, did not take part in the case. He had only recently worked within the Nixon Administration and believed his association with the case, if he found in favor of Nixon, would create an appearance of impropriety. Rehnquist therefore recused himself.
According to the rumors, as the intellectual leader of the liberal faction, Associate Justice William Brennan, stepped up to do most of the writing, Burger changed his vote to invoke his status as Chief Justice and assume primacy in assigning the drafting of the opinion.
The result is an opinion with many fragmentary steps, many of no interest to any but what lawyers call “procedure junkies.” The core of the opinion initially tried to split the baby between the Executive’s power and the Judiciary’s, suggesting that Executive Privilege could be invoked and left unquestioned by the courts when it addressed a “core function” of the Presidency. Burger’s colleagues persuaded him away from that position. They could not, however, get the Chief to sign on to a punchier, more powerfully-worded rebuke of Nixon’s overreach in claiming privilege to conceal his own involvement in directing criminal activity.
The result was Burger structuring a complex opinion in multiple parts, with nearly every one of the eight participating Justices taking the lead on a different part. And the whole opinion is leaden, dull, and procedural in flavor – as though Burger were consciously trying to subsume his assertion of the Judicial Branch’s prerogatives into the soporific language of a picayune procedural dispute, and trying to ignore, as much as possible, the fact that this was likely to be the coup de gras on Richard Nixon’s Presidency.
What’s an Unindicted Co-Conspirator to Do?
The active prosecution in which the subpoena was issued was against Nixon associates John Mitchell and six other close Nixon associates. Nixon himself was named as their “unindicted co-conspirator”, because the grand jury had been instructed that it lacked power to indict Nixon because Nixon was a sitting President. 7 The Supreme Court noted that this was a questionable proposition but declined to rule on the matter as unnecessary to resolve the issue of the case before it.
A subpoena respondent generally can invoke the Fifth Amendment in response to a subpoena. It’s entirely possible that a public official cannot refuse to produce public records in response to a subpoena on the grounds that those records show that the official committed a crime. It was not necessary to resolve that issue in the Nixon case. Nixon waived any Fifth Amendment rights he might have otherwise had by failing to invoke them, trying to politically survive the scandal by insisting that he was not complicit in any crime. This narrowed the issue before the Court to whether Nixon, as President, was required to produce the tapes. 8
“But I’m The Boss of Him!”
Nixon’s first line of defense to this was the first major invocation of what has become known as the “Unitary Executive” theory. Briefly, the theory is that there is only one President, who controls everything that happens in the executive branch atop its hierarchy. That hierarchy includes the Department of Justice, which in turn includes the office of the Special Prosecutor, rendering compliance with the subpoena an “intra-Branch dispute.”
Assuming that there is only one executive command structure, can the judiciary intervene within it? The Court said yes, because prosecution of a criminal matter is a judicial activity, not an executive one. Furthermore, the Special Prosecutor had been created pursuant to a set of laws and regulations, which delegated substantial independence and discretion to the Special Prosecutor except for “extraordinary improprieties” beyond the discretion of the President to direct and control.
So either way, the special prosecutor held authority to issue subpoenas on his own authority to develop and pursue evidence even in the event of a disagreement between himself and the Attorney General. 9 Note that this indicates the Court did not need to resolve whether other officials within the Executive Branch might under some legal circumstances not be ultimately responsible to the President, an issue which remains formally unresolved to this day.
Unreasonable Oppression and Undue Burden
Next, Nixon challenged whether the subpoena sought so many records as to be “unreasonable or oppressive,” as he’d attempted to before Judge Sirica.
And to similar result: the Court found that the Oval Office tapes were unique evidence unavailable from any other source, and had been identified with reasonable particularity by the Special Prosecutor. They were likely to contain conversations of relevance to the prosecution of Mitchell and the other political defendants. So, even if there were a lot of tapes, they had to be produced.
Which brings us to the reason U.S. v. Nixon is really legally interesting: we see the limits of the concept of “executive privilege” as one of the inherent powers of the presidency.
Justiciability of Executive Privilege
The first section of the analysis of the executive privilege argument shows signs of some pushback against Burger’s efforts to render the decision as anodyne as possible. There is a callback to Marbury v. Madison and Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, assertions of the importance of judicial independence as the ultimate arbiter of the Constitution’s meaning. But the sneakiest thing is this bit of description of Nixon’s arguments:
Since this Court has consistently exercised the power to construe and delineate claims arising under express powers, it must follow that the Court has authority to interpret claims with respect to powers alleged to derive from enumerated powers.
It’s subtle, to be sure, but this passage points out that executive privilege – the shielding of deliberations within the presidency from public scrutiny – is an implied power, not an enumerated power. For Burger, who had been appointed as a “strict constructionist,” that becomes a logical trap foisted upon him, to deny the existence of executive privilege altogether, and a challenge to supporters of Nixon for hypocrisy in critique of other decisions (e.g., the previous year’s still-controversial Roe v. Wade decision) relying upon the notion of implied powers and penumbral extensions of express powers, which was the motive intellectual force behind the intellectual legal doctrine of “originalism” and the founding of the Federalist Society in 1982 as that school of thought’s principal exponent.
Personally, I can’t believe Burger wrote this with his own pen. There’s no real way to know, but to me this smacks of the political wit of Thurgood Marshall. I’m a little surprised Burger agreed to leave it in, but he may have had no choice but either do that or lose control of the majority.
The Limit to Permissible Executive Deliberation
After all of this jumping around, looking for places to avoid having to make a decision and finding none, Burger then recognizes that yes, there is such a thing as executive privilege: a president can insulate a document from disclosure in judicial process. Burger states several times that internal deliberative documents of the president are “presumptively” privileged. However,
…neither the doctrine of separation of powers nor the need for confidentiality of high-level communications, without more, can sustain an absolute, unqualified Presidential privilege of immunity from judicial process under all circumstances. The President’s need for complete candor and objectivity from advisers calls for great deference from the courts. However, when the privilege depends solely on the broad, undifferentiated claim of public interest in the confidentiality of such conversations, a confrontation with other values arises. Absent a claim of need to protect military, diplomatic, or sensitive national security secrets, we find it difficult to accept the argument that even the very important interest in confidentiality of Presidential communications is significantly diminished by production of such material for in camera inspection with all the protection that a district court will be obliged to provide.
So, the president needs to indicate, truthfully, that the contents of a communication address “military, diplomatic, or sensitive national security secrets” in order to protect it from disclosure. Otherwise, it goes to an in camera review. That means that the president turns over the non-national security protected documents to a judge, and the judge reviews them all. At that point, upon what scale is the judge to decide? Whether the conversation is incriminating.
There is much language about the need of the president to have candid, thorough, and even brusque discussions of political options which might be politically unpopular, and great deference to be afforded to the Executive as the co-equal branch of government.10 But “…we cannot conclude that advisers will be moved to temper the candor of their remarks by the infrequent occasions of disclosure because of the possibility that such conversations will be called for in the context of a criminal prosecution.”
In other words, you can discuss something unpopular but legal, Mr. President, and expect that the judge won’t let that go to the prosecution. But if you discuss something that is potentially legally incriminating, cough it up. “The President’s broad interest in confidentiality of communications will not be vitiated by disclosure of a limited number of conversations preliminarily shown to have some bearing on the pending criminal cases.”
The Oval Office tapes had to be released to Judge Sirica, and he would decide if there was anything incriminating in them or not. It is not for Richard Nixon to decide what evidence could be released in a criminal prosecution implicating himself.
And thus, many tapes and transcripts were released to Judge Sirica. The legal case ended there: Nixon lost.
What Was on Those Tapes Anyway?
The critical tape was the one with eighteen minutes missing, ostensibly erased on accident by Woods. The surviving portions of the ninety-minute conversation between Nixon and Haldeman have been transcribed and can be read today courtesy of the Richard M. Nixon Presidential Library.
Reading this “smoking gun” transcript may seem a little dense. Keep in mind a few things as you work your way through the confusing discussion of Cubans, Mexican banks, and bussing that the key part comes on page five:
HALDEMAN: Well, if they will. But then we’re relying on more and more people all the time. That’s the problem. And ah, they’ll stop if we could, if we take this other step.
PRESIDENT: All right. Fine.
HALDEMAN: And, and they seem to feel the thing to do is get them to stop?
PRESIDENT: Right, fine.
HALDEMAN: They say the only way to do that is from White House instructions. And it’s got to be to [Director of the CIA Richard] Helms and, ah, what’s his name…? [Deputy Director of the CIA Vernon] Walters.
PRESIDENT: Walters.
HALDEMAN: And the proposal would be that Ehrlichman [coughs] and I call them in.
PRESIDENT: All right, fine.(Emphases added.)
The thing Nixon and Haldeman want stopped is the investigation into the Watergate break-in, which had happened five and a half days beforehand. Because – as the remainder of the conversation makes clear – Nixon knows full well that if they continue investigating it, they’re going to find that the burglary was paid for with CRP money that had been hap-handedly laundered through a Mexican bank.
Nixon says that Haldeman should instruct the director of the CIA to falsely tell the FBI that it’s a national security issue and demand that the FBI stop investigating the burglary.
That’s why they called it the “smoking gun”: reduced into simpler words, it means “Haldeman, you and Erlichman go use my authority as President and stop the FBI from further investigating the Watergate break-in.”
Read It for The Articles
In compliance with the Court’s ruling, this and sixty-three other tapes were released in response to the Supreme Court’s ruling on August 5, 1974. Nixon initially claimed that in prior public statements denying any wrongdoing or obstruction of the investigation, he had suffered a “lapse of memory,” and indicated that he would fight against impeachment proceedings.
By then, three articles of impeachment had been passed by the House Judiciary Committee, on July 27, 1974. The first of these read:
On June 17, 1972, and prior thereto, agents of the Committee for the Re-election of the President committed unlawful entry of the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee in Washington, District of Columbia, for the purpose of securing political intelligence. Subsequent thereto, Richard M. Nixon, using the powers of his high office, engaged personally and through his close subordinates and agents, in a course of conduct or plan designed to delay, impede, and obstruct the investigation of such illegal entry; to cover up, conceal and protect those responsible; and to conceal the existence and scope of other unlawful covert activities.
Six Republicans joined twenty-one Democrats on that article. A separate article of impeachment passed by an even wider margin for not complying with Congress’ subpoena on the theory that Nixon had improperly withheld the tapes until the Supreme Court had ordered their release to the Special Prosecutor’s office.
Before the ”smoking gun” tape was released, there was a good chance that more than one-third of the Senate would have acquitted Nixon of any article of impeachment; though Democrats controlled the Senate, they didn’t have enough of a super majority to remove Nixon from office without help from their Republican colleagues. But after the tape was released, the political landscape began to change. Quickly.
The Endgame
On August 7, a day and a half after the tapes were released, Senate Minority Leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania met with Nixon in the White House. It’s easy to imagine Scott taking his trademark pipe out of his mouth and waving it about in his hand while he delivered the bad news. Words to the effect of, “Mr. President, you don’t have the votes.” Nixon withdrew to his private chambers early that night.
At nine p.m. (eastern time) on August 8, Nixon summoned a television camera to the Oval Office, and all three networks and most radio stations broke into regularly-scheduled programming to broadcast his remarks. Nixon announced on live T.V. that he would resign, effective at noon the next day. 11
A month later, President Ford issued a “full, free, and unconditional pardon” to Nixon for any crime against the United States Nixon had committed while serving as president. Nixon briefly hesitated, but then accepted the pardon. The very active talk of indicting now-private-citizen Nixon immediately ceased, and Ford’s popularity rating immediately dropped from 71% to 50%. Ford lost his bid for election in 1976, insisting until his dying day that it was runaway inflation, not the pardon, that was responsible for Jimmy Carter unseating him.
Nixon kept a low public profile for about ten years, and then began writing books and giving lectures about foreign policy, presenting himself as an “elder statesman” able to opine about the pending issues facing the world from “above the fray.” He died in 1994.
A National Excision
Chief Justice Burger’s opinion was not a clarion call for the moral right in the manner of Brown v. Board of Education, but it did attempt to make a legal ruling rather than a political one. Burger had to be persuaded and perhaps cajoled and manipulated by his colleagues to getting there, or perhaps he had to compromise his preferences and vote against his own patron, but however he did get there, he got there.
It would overstate the case to say that the Supreme Court unmade a President with its decision in U.S. v. Nixon. Nixon was already in a great deal of political trouble, before the Court made its decision. But had this case been decided differently, it is within the realm of imagination that at least 34 Republican Senators would have stood by their party’s president and called him the victim of malfeasance by his overeager advisors, or at least insisted that there was a “reasonable doubt” that Nixon knew what was going on. The “smoking gun” conversation, where Nixon authorized Haldeman to tell the CIA Director to lie and stop the FBI investigation of the burglary, denied them the ability to make such a claim, leading to Senator Scott’s no doubt awkward conversation with Nixon (which was not recorded; Nixon had ordered the recorders turned off the day after Butterfield testified about them.)
It was painful for the nation to live through the consequence of the decision – painful but necessary, such that even his most fervid supporters had no choice but to see Richard Nixon for who he truly was. The “smoking gun” tape alone demonstrates the extent to which Nixon tried to subvert the rule of law, so that he personally could hold on to political power.
Two generations’ worth of perspective allows us to see with some clarity that removal of such a man from the government’s highest office, from the position of trust and honor inherent in the presidency, was necessary.
U.S. v. Nixon was, beyond doubt, the most consequential decision Burger ever wrote and probably the most politically consequential decision between Brown v. Board of Education and Bush v. Gore. However inelegantly he did it, Warren Burger may well have been the man who held the United States of America together as a lawful nation for the next two generations, contrary to the political pressures that had propelled him into that position.
Would You Like to Know More?
If you’re interested in reading further, the full text of the case can be found at U.S. v. Nixon (1974) 418 U.S. 683. Perhaps more interesting than Warren Burger’s leaden prose in the opinion proper would be Woodward & Armstrong’s The Brethren (1979) which includes much spilt tea about the making of this decision as well as the general internal dysfunction of collegiality and depressing operational cynicism that characterized the Burger Court. Numerous books have been written about Watergate and Richard Nixon’s disgrace.
- In fact, they had previously entered, but had improperly installed the wiretaps. The 1:30 a.m. entry was an attempt to correct their mistakes from the previous break-in, and their entry was delayed for several hours because a 21-year-old DNC intern decided to work late that night.
- Martínez’s post-conviction account of the burglary, if credited, indicates that at least three of the burglars believed they were engaged in CIA-sponsored anti-Castro activity being directed by Republican operatives G. Gordon Liddy and E. Howard Hunt, searching for Cuban money being funneled into McGovern’s campaign.
- There was tumult at the FBI as well – longtime director J. Edgar Hoover had died on May 4 of 1972, 12 days before the Watergate arrests; rather than promote Hoover’s lieutenant Clyde Tolson, Nixon instead promoted L. Patrick Gray, a Nixon loyalist. Gray recommended Felt for the #2 position, whereupon Tolson resigned. Gray would become seriously implicated in the events that followed.
- It is only rivalled by Ronald Reagan defeating Walter Mondale in 1984.
- President Nixon had caused the FBI to waive a background investigation of Mitchell before his appointment to Attorney General in early 1969, and then in 1972, Mitchell resigned to manage Nixon’s re-election campaign full-time.
- For brevity’s purposes, I elide the also-fascinating story of how three different men filled that position and how wrestling with the special prosecutor brought people like Richard Cheney, Robert Bork, Donald Rumsfeld, Antonin Scalia, and Roger Stone to national prominence, at least within the conservative movement.
- This was pursuant to a policy of the Justice Department, written by John Mitchell himself, after the Watergate burglary, which remains DoJ policy to this day.
- I skip herein Burger’s discussion of whether the case was properly “in” the Court of Appeal, which indeed involved spilling over 1,100 words interpreting the word “in” before concluding that, the parties having stipulated and the case being of obvious importance, the Supreme Court could indeed review the matter in the first place.
- This law has since been repealed; its contemporary successor allows for a “Special Counsel,” who is functionally a U.S. Attorney working on a subject matter rather than geographical delegation of power from the Attorney General.
- Again, I see Burger calling for the more liberal and more conservative Nixon-appointed Justices to join forces produces a bland reference to “the Executive” rather than to “the President,” sidestepping any embrace of the “Unitary Executive” theory discussed above.
- My favorite bit of Watergate trivia is that Nixon’s last meal in the White House was a bowl of cottage cheese and a few slices of grayish, disappointing-looking pineapple, served to him at the Challenger desk on White House flatware, with a glass of milk. I imagine he also washed it down with black coffee. To this day, when I enjoy a meal of cottage cheese and pineapple, I call it a “Nixon salad,” although I’m probably in my own private Idaho for doing this.
Terrific post, Burt. Its good to see the timeline laid out in a condensed narrative this way.
I remember, as a precocious 12 year old, reading and watching it as it developed, and the main overriding theme was how sprawling and complex it was, like some epic novel with dozens of characters and side plots and backstories and irrelevant asides.
Watergate hovered over everything, from Johnny Carson’s nighttime monologue to Laugh In routines to sitcoms. When the Arab Oil Embargo hit in 1973, a common folk wisdom was that it was all a conspiracy to take the public’s mind off of Watergate.
And like today, it inevitably got tangled up in every partisan and culture war battle. But underneath all the circus and sideshows and carnival barkers outside the tent, there was as you note here, very real and historic things working themselves out.Report
I graduated from high school two months before Nixon resigned. I sort of became a junkie, reading several books about it and written by former defendants.
One small footnote. While the Democrats may not have needed a lot of help to make a mess of their primary, they got it anyway. There was a lot of ratfscking of early frontrunner Edmund Muskie’s campaign. I remember a big spread in Time magazine about this that showed an insulting letter sent on Muskie’s letterhead to many prominent Democrats. It was fake. There was also a photograph of Roger Stone, and an account of his shenanigans with the College Republicans and a description of the word “ratfscking”. Yeah, that Roger Stone. These days I wonder if he wasn’t just promoting himself and grifting.Report
In researching the post, I spent some time going down the rabbit hole of the 1972 Democratic primary, and “ratfscking” is a really good way to describe what got done to Muskie. It’s worth noting that Muskie and then Humphrey were the preferred candidates of most mainstream Democrats; through the smears on Muskie and what may have been chicanery in the California primary, Nixon got his choice of opponent in McGovern.
Brevity’s relentless pressures keeping this post below book length impelled me to dramatically abbreviate all that fascinating stuff. But if there’s one thing I kept saying to myself as I did research and review, it was “This sounds SO familiar.”Report
Fair enough. Nixon has cast a very long shadow over our politics. So many key players in Republican conservativedom got their start with him, from Roger Ailes to Roger Stone, to Dick Cheney, to Phyllis Schlafly.
To be fair, he was the president, and any young R with ambition would try to hook up. But far from repudiating his style, they embraced it.Report
Oh good lord. I did not know this:
Referring to the policy that a sitting president cannot be indicted.
Talk about the fruit of a poisoned tree. Yikes.
Thanks for writing this, Burt. I’m loving it.Report
Epic post is epic. Really interesting stuff. Thanks. It was a little before my time so i don’t have any direct memories of it. The amount of aggrieved pain some R’s had about it and how they carried it forward is amazing given what happened.Report
Holy cow. This is a tour de force. Amazing!Report
Yeah, I read *all* the words… which [cough] might not always happen.Report
I’m pleased to say that it comports with what I read in Mad Magazines from the era.Report
Excellent Intellectual (/Legal) History post… my highest compliments.
If I can stay on brand, my counter-intuitive thought for the day is that the Nixon experience has sort of “ruined” impeachment for us… we all now have a bizarre extremely Legalistic understanding of the process; that it requires a broken law, procedural type discovery/evidence; and, ultimately, a smoking gun (used 6 times in your article) to move to impeach. (I’d argue the same for impeaching Clinton for Perjury).
And, while I’m generally conservative when it comes to impeaching in principle; when impeaching in fact, I think Watergate and everything I mention above serves us poorly.
If I can go further and make my point, or lose my audience, this was the great failure of Russiagate. And, it is the biggest developing mistake I see in the approach to Ukraine. Stop talking about smoking guns and illegal actions. Frame the action as an abuse of (legitimate) power, hold hearings on how the US Congress will not tolerate such Presidential actions (by either party)… further frame it as Congress reasserting its role as co-equal branch… and give Republicans cover to impeach on Republican principles. If the goal is to remove the President, that is.Report
High praise indeed, and I humbly thank you for it.
In drafting this piece, I intentionally tried to avoid an overt reference to the contemporary situation. In my opinion, the comparison is obvious enough that even the causal reader, not to mention the above-baseline commentariat of which Ordinary Times may brag, can see the parallels readily.
The only other impeachment preceding Nixon’s was Andrew Johnson’s. This, too, was framed legalistically, principally as an intentional violation of the Tenure of Office Act. To the credit of your point, other framing of the proceedings addressed the political friction between the Unionist Democratic President and the Radical Republican controlled Congress and was in reality that Congress attempting to bring the President under heel. (As it happens, Johnson was ultimately vindicated in his assertion that the Tenure of Office Act was not Constitutional.) But the basic answer to the question “Why should we take the extraordinary step of removing the President from office?” was “Because he used the powers of his office to break the law.”Report
Yes, I appreciated the fact that it wasn’t simply an allegorical tale of two presidents.
What if we frame Johnson thus:
Congress impeaches President for breaking unconstitutional law passed by said Congress to hamstring same President.
It would be true to say they impeached for violation of the law, but truer to say it was for thwarting the will of Congress… which, it so happens, had overstepped it’s constitutional authority… and therefore might have been counter-impeached could such a thing happen.
So a dual cautionary tale of 1) Careful with our impeaching tendencies, and 2) Overly legal impeachments aren’t the best politics.Report
The debate over the tenure of office act seems to be very similar to the debate over the unitary executive.Report
Where the current situation utterly fails as an argument about abuse of power is that Adam Schiff himself was asking Ukraine for dirt on Trump, and three Democratic Senators threatened Ukraine if Ukraine shut down any ongoing investigations into their side of the 2016 election. It’s pretty hard to maintain the argument that Trump was wrong to do what Congressional Democrats were already doing quite publicly and loudly.
The argument that Trump was trying to use our military aid as some kind of blackmail also collapses because he did so to get Germany and the EU to kick in more military aid, and he discussed that in his call to Zelensky. It’s a brilliant negotiating tactic with the Europeans, completely in line with his public pressure to get them to contribute more to European security. Blackmailers don’t try to give you more stuff than you were expecting.
It’s also absolutely normal to withhold US military aid unless the intended recipient changes their behavior or does something they don’t want to do. Congress was screaming that we should without new weapons sales from Saudi Arabia if they didn’t perform a long list of actions regarding the brutal murder of Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi Embassy in Turkey. So Trump didn’t do something that, if he did do it, would be in line with normal US actions that Congress itself frequently demands, pushing foreign countries to investigate, and even pushing Ukraine to investigate a political opponent, just as the Democrats did for the past two years.
The Democrats decided to impeach based on what they’d find behind door #3, and it turned out to be a box of Rice-a-Roni, the San Francisco treat.Report
The impeachment standard is high: it requires (i) action of both legislative chambers; (ii) a super-majority of the Senate; and (iii) the subjects of impeachment to be solely treason, bribery, and high crimes and misdemeanors (which is subject of eternal debate, but highly suggestive of an existing legal standard).
One aspect somewhat lost to time was that the Senate was supposed to introduce a non-partisan balance to the passions of the demos. As Hamilton put it, the Senate was like a House of Lords, whose role was crucial because impeachment “will seldom fail to agitate the passions of the whole community, and to divide it into parties more or less friendly or inimical to the accused. In many cases it will connect itself with the pre-existing factions, and will enlist all their animosities, partialities, influence, and interest on one side or on the other; and in such cases there will always be the greatest danger that the decision will be regulated more by the comparative strength of parties, than by the real demonstrations of innocence or guilt.”
I think legalism in the impeachment process is to be expected. It’s a high standard and the treason et al. are legal concepts. If someone were to declare a President to have committed treason, wouldn’t one expect people to consult their dictionary which offers a legal definition of treason? And if it’s not technically treason how does one communicate a common sense of purpose in a fractious society?Report
I don’t disagree, and note that I specified above that I’m conservative with regards the use of Impeachment powers… and I’m particularly sensitive to the fact that we have to have room for incompetent, weak, and poor presidents (all of which apply to Trump) before we resort to impeachment. Though I suppose one could make an argument that someone so incompetent, so weak, and so poorly suited for the office might rise to the level of the vaguely defined “high crime and misdemeanor” and I’d not rule it out of bounds on principle. But, to be clear, that would be the actual charge… not some sort of “legalism” that substitutes for the actual charge.
Undoubtedly a certain amount of “legalism” is unavoidable, even required. My primary point, however, is that a crime is not a necessary pre-condition of impeachment.
I think we’d all agree that a President could be impeached for (ab)using a legitimate power granted to him; let’s say the Power of Pardon. There are some imaginable instances where granting a Pardon would be (arguably) impeachable: 1) Self-Pardon and/or 2) Pardoning a directed act, etc. The Pardons, IMO, would still be valid, but the promulgation would be a legitimate occasion for impeachment.
In this sense, the articles of impeachment need no… or very limited… “inquiry” other than to establish the powers abused and the proper form for hearing in the Senate.
It’s also relatively clear that the President would be impeached first, then tried if the impeachment was criminally related. In the case of the abuse above, I’d see no further action other than removal from office. That is, there’s no criminal act at all.
On the other hand, if the President were, say, to stand in the middle of 5th Avenue and shoot someone, it would be well within Congress’s power to impeach without first determining guilt. Once removed from office, guilt or innocence of that particular crime is determined according not to “legalisms” but actual Juridical code.
So, circling to the top and my original comment, its the Watergate “fantasy” of Clear Criminal Activity, Sexy Informant, Intrepid Investigation, Smoking Gun Tapes, and Impeachment as the only (semi-)successful impeachment we’ve ever had that is overly prescriptive and shapes our imagination as to what impeachment *must* be that I raise a yellow caution flag – in my usual contrarian spirit.Report
If Trump was “incompetent, weak, and poor” they wouldn’t be wasting their time trying to impeach him, they’d just be voting him out of office in the upcoming election.
They’re impeaching him because he’s beaten them time and again, uses executive actions and Tweets like Zeus hurls lightning bolts, and they’re terrified that he’s a shoe-in for re-election.Report
To borrow from your analogy below; we’ve had 200 years with this machine, and perhaps the crank simply doesn’t work the way you wish it. And it’s not just the POTUS, but federal judges and state official seem to gravitate to rule of law concerns. We’ve had two impeachment proceedings in my state; Blago would not have been impeached absent the FBI doing the heavy lifting, and the state supreme court justice was not impeached because the House, controlled by the opposing party, found the “high crimes and misdemeanors” language to vague in situations where a clear law has not been violated.Report
Given that our actual alternative to Trump was HRC and the Dems still haven’t made any effort to deal with her ethical adventures? I see no evidence of the “by either party”. My expectation is if she’d won we’d be having this discussion just with the players flipped. Bill would be being handed money and we’d all have to pretend that HRC being President had nothing to do with it.
This is “because Trump” and not “because ethics” territory.
Now MAYBE Trump-under-the-spotlight-of-impeachment is enough to make his glory fade and his base turns against him enough that the GOP will throw him out. But the spotlight is his territory and his base knew well what they were electing.Report
That might be a reason to vote for Trump rather than Hillary; but after Jan 2016, our actual alternative isn’t Hilary but Pence.
If you mean to raise two (or more) meta points such that 1) Russiagate was primarily motivated by an only partially sublimated desire for a do-over… sure, I’ll grant the premise as a contributing, but not dispositive factor; and/or 2) That the Clintons are corrupt in perfectly legal fashion? Sure. But how does that impact Trump being corrupt in much less elegant fashion? Are we suggesting that I’d be thrilled to see the legal wealth of the Clinton empire expand commensurate with their ability to deliver the goods? Would I not also be in favor of impeaching without specific requirement to find an actuarial “smoking gun” – then you’re misreading my position.
My response to BSDI is impeach BS.
Impeach Obama for Assassinating US Citizens
Assuming, of course, that Congress first attempted to navigate these waters by warning that the War Powers act and/or the AUMF of 2001/2 does not grant those powers. The silence of Congress, however, is implied consent. So Congress is most assuredly part of the problem.
And that’s maybe the biggest problem with impeachment… Congress isn’t fit for its role as a legislative branch… so both sides want an Imperial Presidency. They just want their imperium.
That’s why civil war looms, it will come when the good-guys announce it is for the good of the country. We’re all the good guys.Report
The Libertarians got 3% last time (3 and a quarter!). The Greens got 1%. McMuffin got half a percent. “Other” got .75%.
That’s 5.5%.
This may be me projecting but somewhere around half of that 5.5% strikes me as eminently stealable by the real parties and the fact that neither is willing to run hard for it at this point strikes me as really, really odd.Report
It is easier to turn the existing crank harder than build another crank to turn.
Plus, if I were to build another crank, I wouldn’t go for the 2.5% of voters that react like cats; I’d go for large chunks of the other side that are disaffected dogs not feeling the love of their handlers.
Either way, new cranks are hard, cost lots of money and disrupt the machine in unpredictable ways.Report
In that case, all we have to do is hope that people don’t move from “who do I want to win?” to “who do I most want to ensure loses?”Report
Your other post has the example of pardons as a power that can be abused, and I’d add to that list exchanging pardons for money. The problem is even that level of abuse of power is apparently only an issue if Trump does it. In the real world, the Press has no interest in looking into the antics of the VP’s son because they’re in love with the Great One and not only can you sell Pardons, but you can do so and then almost be President again.
It seems like a problem if we have one set of rules for Democrats and another for their political opponents. The implication is it’s the “political opponents” part that is viewed as a problem here and that’s why we’ve been hearing about impeachment since before he took office.
Where did Obama do this? If it’s inside US borders, then great, do it. If it’s anywhere where arrest is an alternative, then great, do it. If it’s on a battlefield in the context of a declared war against people who are actively engaged in war against the US, then any soldier can shoot any enemy combatant. Drones are effectively flying soldiers.
The core problem is the situation. If you don’t want US citizens who have taken up arms against the US in an active war to be killed on a battlefield, then you need to present a reasonable alternative. Pointing to some aspect of the war and saying “that’s illegal by non-war rules” is correct, but not useful.
Civilian law assumes law enforcement has control over the crime scene. We’re not giving trials to the US citizens who have taken up arms because they’ve made it impossible. If you’re making it impossible for civilian law to apply to you by hiding in a cave in a battlefield in a lawless land where we’d need an army to “arrest” you, then you don’t get to complain if the army shoots you.
Further after burning lots of money we’ve had close to zero success dealing with battlefield captured terrorists in a courtroom so this is a way to stop.Report
“It’s pretty hard to maintain the argument that Trump was wrong to do what Congressional Democrats were already doing quite publicly and loudly”
No, it isn’t hard at all.
I hate to keep playing Thomas More to your William Roper, but this is exactly why you impeach the President… so that you might also remove Congressional Democrats (where appropriate).
Finally with regards quid-pro-quo in diplomacy, no one disagrees that all aid is contingent and manipulative for something that we – as a nation – determine to be in our interests; we could even insist upon certain anti-corruption or human-rights type changes… so long as they aren’t thinly disguised gifts of personal benefit.
I’m not 100% sure the Ukraine situation is “the very best example” out of many that we could use to impeach a reckless imbecile like Trump… but if it’s the one people are going to use, my points above stand… don’t make it hinge on the definition if “is”. Big Picture, people, big picture.Report
But he was withholding aid to get Germany and the EU to contribute more aid, because if we moved first they wouldn’t see a need to contribute anything. Trump was using Ukraine’s unfilled need for military equipment as the inducement to get Europe to do more to help Ukraine. He discussed their foot dragging, with Zelensky, right in the phone call. So they’re impeaching him for doing the opposite what they’re claiming he did wrong. The Ukrainians also didn’t find out the US military aid was held up until a month after it had been held up, which destroys any claim that Trump was using it to try and pressure them, because you can’t pressure someone with something they don’t even know about.
Don’t get me wrong. I fully support impeachment because I think it will destroy Democrats in 2020. I want more impeachment! Heck, I’d love it if the Senate removed him from office because then he’d win 2020 in a landslide of Reagan proportions and get to be on two US Presidential coins for serving non-consecutive terms. 🙂Report
“Stop talking about smoking guns and illegal actions. Frame the action as an abuse of (legitimate) power, hold hearings on how the US Congress will not tolerate such Presidential actions (by either party)… further frame it as Congress reasserting its role as co-equal branch… and give Republicans cover to impeach on Republican principles.”Report
Why not frame it as an abuse of the impeachment power and remove House Democrats?
Trump was just conducting normal business that all Presidents do on a weekly basis. Obama himself kicked off a lot of foreign investigations of political opponents, which is what started the whole sordid Comey investigations and the Mueller probe. Should Obama be impeached for that while we’re at it?
The trouble is that Democrats, including Democrat voters, are going to have to hold up their end of this impeachment argument around office water coolers, and there’s no way they’ll be able to hang in that conversation for more than a couple of minutes before all their points get shot down in flames.
It would be like Republicans trying to impeach Obama for not taking a proper drop on the 13th hole at The Oaks, and then trying to argue that the impeachment wasn’t politically motivated and that upholding the rules of golf is paramount for the republic to survive. They could try that argument once, but after that they’d have to spend their break times hiding in the broom closet.Report
Just want to echo above and say great job Burt. And I also agree with Marchmane’s take, with the added facet that the Clinton impeachment, which was overtly political, but also had a legitimate basis in an illegal act by a sitting President (perjury) also warps the dynamics of any impeachment proceeding that would occur in the next generation.Report
Thank you for this article. You always have tremendous posts. I still occasionally reread the Three Classes one from 10? years ago.Report
Those incredibly incompetent buglers getting caught was so contingent on the details of how they screwed up, and history would be so different if they hadn’t been.Report
Excellent post, Burt. Thank you for taking the time to write it.Report
This post met or exceeded the quality of posts we have come to expect of you, Burt. Well Done! This will be reflected in your annual review, but may or may not impact any raises or bonuses awarded.
Sorry, it’s that time of the year in corporate America…Report