Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
Alice in Watergate
7
8
Washington, like, I suppose,
9
the rest of the country, is alive with echoes of Watergate these days--for
10
obvious reasons. How do President Clinton's offenses compare with President
11
Nixon's? What light does the Nixon case throw on the definition of "high crimes
12
and misdemeanors"? What precedent does Congress' procedure in the Watergate
13
case establish for the procedure in the Lewinsky case?
14
15
I do not
16
propose to add to the volume of punditry on such questions. But I can add a
17
footnote on the question of what it was like being an innocent in the White
18
House during the Watergate affair. I use the word "innocent," of course, to
19
mean not just "not guilty" but also "unaware" or "naive."
20
21
Iwas chairman of Nixon's Council of Economic Advisers
22
during the whole business. I was at the Homestead, in Hot Springs, Va., Sunday
23
morning, June 18, 1972, when I read, in the Washington Post , of the
24
break-in at the Watergate Office Building. The previous evening I had given a
25
speech to the Virginia Bankers Association about the wonders of the economic
26
situation. Only a little before that I had held a press conference announcing
27
that the economic statistics of the first quarter were the best in recorded
28
history--or, I cautiously added, "at least in the Christian era." We seemed to
29
be on our way to an orderly dismantling of price and wage controls. Nixon's
30
re-election in November seemed assured, the only question being which
31
Democratic candidate would be defeated most decisively. The Watergate break-in
32
did not look like a cloud on our, or my, horizon.
33
34
For the
35
next two years, up almost to the last days, I could see the cloud getting
36
darker and darker but did not believe the Nixon presidency would come to a
37
premature end. For one thing, I had my own experience with the extent of bias
38
and animosity in the press against anything having to do with Nixon. During
39
many years in Washington, before I entered the Nixon administration, I had had
40
friendly relations with many reporters. I was then associated with the
41
Committee for Economic Development, the least conservative of the business
42
organizations, and we were the "good guys" to the liberal press. But these same
43
reporters became my enemies and, I felt, misrepresented me as soon as it became
44
apparent I was devoted to Nixon. As it happened, one of the president's chief
45
pursuers in the press, Carl Bernstein, of the Washington Post , had been
46
my neighbor in Silver Spring, Md., and a friend of my children's. He had been a
47
likable boy, but I put no great stock in his professionalism or objectivity. So
48
I did not believe the press was giving an accurate account of what had
49
happened.
50
51
52
At 8 a.m. each day I participated in a meeting
53
of the White House staff, presided over by the chief of staff--first Bob
54
Haldeman and later Al Haig. Almost every morning in 1973 and 1974, we were
55
given a status report on the Watergate case, the constant refrain of which was
56
that everything was going to come out all right. I don't believe anyone was
57
lying to us. But no one told us--and perhaps didn't know--how the legal and
58
political process was going to unfold.
59
60
Still, I
61
don't underestimate the importance of my own unwillingness to believe. Nixon
62
had honored me by making me member and then chairman of his Council of Economic
63
Advisers. He had treated me with respect and offered me his friendship. I was
64
unwilling to believe that he had behaved in a way that a committee of Congress,
65
even one composed mainly of his political enemies, would consider deserving of
66
impeachment.
67
68
Ican think of only one economic policy decision that was
69
probably influenced by the president's concern with Watergate. By the beginning
70
of 1973, after the election, the wage-price control system began to come
71
unglued. The world food supply had fallen because of bad weather in Russia and
72
El Niño in the Pacific, food prices were rising beyond our control, and with
73
food prices rising it was hard to restrain wages. When I spoke with Leonard
74
Garment, then the president's counsel, he said the president was in trouble and
75
asked whether we couldn't have some kind of economic spectacular to help
76
bolster his public support. Perhaps because I didn't have enough imagination, I
77
had no comfort to give him.
78
79
In March
80
the president suggested to me that we might have another wage-price freeze,
81
like the one we had imposed in August 1971 that had been so popular. I replied,
82
smart-alecky, that you can't step in the same river twice. He came back with
83
the wittiest words I ever heard from him: "Yes, you can, if it's frozen."
84
85
86
That was not the end of the matter. The
87
economic situation continued to deteriorate and, as I now see, so did the
88
political one. Nixon brought back as counselor John Connally, who, in 1971 and
89
1972, as secretary of the Treasury, had been his specialist in long-ball
90
economic policy. The president wanted his economic team, thus fortified, to
91
produce a dramatic economic policy that would improve the nation's economy and
92
his political standing. A new wage-price freeze was one of the options to be
93
considered. But none of us, not even Connally, wanted that. The president
94
repeatedly asked us to reconsider. After several uncomfortable weeks he
95
decided, without the benefit of his economists, to impose the freeze anyway. It
96
was an immediate flop and did not last long. Then we reverted to unspectacular,
97
even painful, economics.
98
99
As I look
100
back at those days I am impressed by the way in which President Nixon continued
101
to perform his duties in what was surely a time of great stress for him. Of
102
course, I was not an intimate, and I did not see him in his private moments.
103
But still, I had many meetings with him, and he showed no signs of distraction
104
or impatience. He would take notes on his yellow pad and sum up the sense of
105
our meetings in an orderly manner, as he had always done.
106
107
Near the end, in July 1974, I went out to San Clemente to
108
draft what was to be, although we didn't know it at the time, Nixon's last
109
address as president before his resignation message. The speech was long and, I
110
can now see, rather platitudinous. But Nixon read all the drafts. He discussed
111
them with me and Roy Ash, who was then the budget director, and he delivered
112
the final speech with vigor on July 25 in Los Angeles.
113
114
It was on the plane flying
115
back to Washington that we got news of votes in the House committee that made
116
impeachment extremely likely. Two weeks later my wife, my son, and I were in
117
the East Room of the White House, tears streaming down our cheeks as Richard
118
Nixon said farewell to his staff.
119
120
121
122
123
124