This article was published in the Wilson Times Oct.
16, 2019.
The first day of public
hearings in the U.S. House impeachment inquiry took place in a far different
political atmosphere from the 1973-74 Watergate hearings and subsequent House
Judiciary Committee impeachment hearings.
Wednesday’s hearings showed
that partisan rancor would play a much larger role this year than it did in the
Nixon hearings. Some Republican members and staff saw fit to attack witnesses’
integrity and engage in speechmaking rather than asking witnesses for
information. The minority counsel seemed lost and confused as he tried to put
words into the mouths of witnesses. Rep. Jim Jordan, an Ohio Republican, used
his question time to blurt so many accusatory questions so fast that the
witnesses had little opportunity to respond, which was fine because his
questions were not really questions anyway.
Ambassador William Taylor
and the State Department’s George Kent handled themselves and the situation
admirably. These two career diplomats who had served under Democratic and
Republican presidents respectfully responded to some loaded questions by saying
they could not answer because they had no knowledge of the matter. When asked
about his view on impeachment, Taylor responded that he had no view; he was a
career professional who served the president, whoever the president might be.
The impeachment question is one the Constitution leaves to members of the
House, he told the questioner.
Taylor and Kent were in many
ways as impressive as John Dean was in 1973. Dean had a seemingly encyclopedic
recall of facts and incidents he observed as White House Counsel. Taylor had
notes about episodes he had observed, a lengthy, thorough opening statement and
detailed responses to questions. Kent was unperturbed by disrespectful, even
angry questions.
In 1973, Dean’s testimony
was dismissed by Nixon supporters, but when the White House tapes were released
over Nixon’s objections, Dean’s recollections proved amazingly accurate and
complete.
In 2019, there is not likely
to be a “smoking gun” like the White House tapes, but there will be additional
witnesses, most of whom are expected to support Wednesday’s witnesses’
testimony and previous reporting.
Thus far, no celebrities
have been created by the 2019 impeachment hearings in the like of Sen. Sam
Ervin or Sen. Howard Baker, the majority and minority leaders of the Watergate committee.
The 2019 committee chair, Adam Schiff, was unemotional and fair Wednesday,
despite scurrilous personal attacks by Trump and others. But he lacks Sam Ervin’s
colorful stories and personality. The seven-member Watergate committee
ultimately found Richard Nixon had used the powers of the presidency to cover
up his approval of the Watergate break-in.
The biggest difference
between 1973-74 and today is the existence of highly partisan organizations
that are willing to distort facts, deny obvious truths and make up whole
scenarios contradicting plainly seen incidents. The result has been a nation
more divided than it ever was during the Watergate inquiry, even though the two
sides in the Watergate scandal were ferocious in their criticisms. Nixon and
his minions did all they could to excuse Nixon’s actions but they did not have
the lobbying groups, highly partisan news sources and “alternative facts” of
today.
While most news sources and
individuals saw impeachment inquiry witnesses forthrightly reporting
potentially impeachable actions of the president, Fox News, the largest and
most successful Trump defender, proclaimed the hearings boring and a disaster
for Democrats. Recent polling shows the electorate divided between those who
get all their news on the Fox News channel and those who don’t.
Impeachment by a vote of the
full House will not settle the matter. To remove a president from office, impeachment
charges must be tried in the Senate, where Republicans hold a majority.
If the impeachment hearings
convince the public that Trump abused his office, but loyal Republicans prevent
his conviction, the party could lose national support. If an impeachment resolution
fails to pass in the Democrat-led House, the party could face long-term damage.
Two presidents have been
impeached (Nixon would have been had he not resigned to save face), but none
has ever been convicted in a Senate trial. If impeached, Trump is determined to
continue that streak.
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