My book club has men of a certain age, and several are lawyers. As it happens, two of them worked on the Nixon Watergate inquiry, one on the House side and one on the Senate side. They reflected on the current Republican objection to the investigatory process -- you know, the Matt Gaetz led foray into the secure room, first invasion and then 17 pizzas. Here's what Jeff and Bruce had to say:
The
Nixon impeachment inquiry staff conducted private interviews with key
witnesses. Some came voluntarily, like John Dean. Some were under
subpoena, like G. Gordon
Liddy. In my early days on staff, I would sometimes escort these
fellows from the downstairs security checkpoint upstairs. Liddy refused
to tell us anything more than his name, his military ID no., and his
citizenship (United States). He refused to sign
his name in the logbook.
These
interviews were not conducted by members, and they were private. I
believe staff from both parties were present. I don’t recall public
hearings until the Judiciary
Committee members began debating articles of impeachment.
Bruce,
What’s your recollection of how the Senate treated its witnesses in the
Watergate investigation? Public hearings we recall; but were their
interviews first, so
Senators knew what to ask?
Interesting that we have a Book Club with both chambers represented.
Jeff
Interviews first.
As
I recall, most of the interviews, either under subpoena or not, were
conducted by staff who were hired either by Sam Dash, Chief Majority
Counsel or Fred Thompson, Chief Minority Counsel. All interviews were
attended by staff representing both the Democrats and Republicans who
then reported back to the Counsel who relayed the contents to the
respective senators and their staff on both sides of the aisle.
I
did sit in on interviews of members of the Domestic Council within the
White House (John Ehrlichman) as a member of the Majority Staff of the
Committee.
Right
– staff representing both parties would sit in on interviews and then
report to the members. The Trump impeachment inquiry has House members
from both parties
conducting the interviews, no doubt with staff whispering in their ears. So in terms of transparency, this is
a fortiori what we did with Nixon. If this is correct, why the Flash Mob of Republicans yesterday? What’s their complaint?
Budd Shenkin
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