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May 19th, 2024

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Dems' second coming of Watergate sure looks like tedious squabbling

Karen Tumulty

By Karen Tumulty The Washington Post

Published June 13, 2019

Dems' second coming of Watergate sure looks like tedious squabbling
The Democrats of the House Judiciary Committee would like you to think of their work as a second coming of the Watergate investigation. But what we've seen so far looks more like those tedious panels of squabbling pundits you can catch on cable television pretty much any night of the week.

Whether all of this leads to impeachment proceedings against President Donald Trump, Americans deserve a better caliber of oversight than the performance we saw this week.

The Judiciary Committee's hearing, ostensibly into lessons learned from the report of special counsel Robert Mueller, featured as its star witness John Dean, who first gained fame nearly a half-century ago as President Richard Nixon's whistleblowing White House counsel. Dean warned: "History is repeating itself, and with a vengeance."

That he would say as much was not exactly new information. Dean has made that point with some regularity in his current gig as a paid commentator on CNN. And as he himself acknowledged, he was not a "fact witness" with any particular inside knowledge to offer about Trump's doings.

Nor did anyone else who testified on Monday. Two of the other witnesses, former prosecutors Joyce White Vance and Barbara McQuade, reprised some of the points they have been making in their roles as MSNBC contributors. There to make an equally unsurprising argument for the other side was legal scholar John Malcolm of the conservative Heritage Foundation.

So, having no real new information to talk about, the proceedings quickly disintegrated into a familiar partisan firefight among the Democratic and Republican members of the committee. With the exception of C-SPAN3, all the cable-news channels turned to breaking coverage of a helicopter crash in Manhattan.

Perhaps the best thing that could be said about the hearing was that no one repeated a stunt quite like the one that Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., pulled last month in that same room, when he ate from a bucket of chicken to mock the fact that Attorney General William Barr had not shown up to testify as the committee had asked.

Really, is this the best they can do?

The first day of the Senate Watergate Committee hearings on May 17, 1973, was not exactly must-see television either. As columnist Jules Witcover wrote in The Washington Post: "If you like to watch grass grow, you would have loved the opening yesterday of the Senate select committee's hearings on the Watergate and related campaign misdeeds."

But the methodical way in which that panel operated should be instructive to today's lawmakers.

The senators built their case from the bottom up. The leadoff witness that first day was Robert Odle - the 29-year-old office manager at the Committee to Re-Elect the President - who was there to outline the structure of the Nixon campaign's 1972 fundraising operation.

More importantly, committee members kept the showboating to a minimum. The introductory questioning was handled not by the senators, but by chief counsel Samuel Dash, a Georgetown University law professor, and minority counsel Fred Thompson, a Tennessee prosecutor who would himself become a senator two decades later.

It is more difficult today to put together that kind of congressional fact-finding mission, given the intense partisanship - and the fact that nearly every Republican on Capitol Hill seems determined to defend the president, no matter where the evidence leads.

And House Democrats are right to be frustrated by the president's stonewalling of their efforts to perform anything that resembles oversight. He has refused to turn over his tax returns, as well as information on how his administration issues security clearances.

But Congress does have powers it can use without resorting to pointless exercises such as the hearing on Monday. The administration tentatively agreed to give the Judiciary Committee access to underlying documentation of the Mueller inquiry after the panel threatened the attorney general with criminal contempt. And Hope Hicks, a former top aide to Trump, has now struck a deal to testify.

Meanwhile, a new battlefront opened on Wednesday, when the president asserted executive privilege to prevent the House Oversight Committee from obtaining subpoenaed documents that might illuminate the real reasons behind the administration's decision to add a citizenship question to the 2020 census. The committee then voted to hold Barr and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross in contempt over the census matter.

We still have a court system in which all of these issues can be sorted out in the months to come. This is a critical exercise in a deeply divided country - where a majority of people still say more evidence is needed to justify setting impeachment proceedings in motion.

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Previously:
06/05/19 Why Dem hopeful Hickenlooper relished being booed before thousands
04/12/19 The true running mates of 2020 deserve a better script
02/07/19 NOW WHAT? As with Kavanaugh's accuser, I keep coming back to the question: Why would she make it up?
01/30/19 To fix the border, put Washington in time-out
11/05/18 Watch these races for governor
08/02/18 How left will Democrats go? Watch Michigan
07/05/18 Left's rallying cry to 'Abolish ICE' will fail --- just ask Gingrich
02/08/18 Dems are hoping for an election wave, but they shouldn't be too confident
05/03/17 Pelosi: Let's say we welcome pro-lifers in order to win
03/31/17 Trump struggles against some of the forces that helped get him elected
01/19/17 How Donald Trump came up with 'Make America Great Again'
11/17/16 Giddy governors gloat at gathering
09/26/16 What Clinton and Trump must worry about in the first debate
07/18/16 Dennis Kucinich's sister and her husband are among former Dems jumping on the Trump train --- how many more will follow?
05/10/16 Many Republicans are eating their nasty words about Trump
04/06/16 GOP has chosen candidate who has flouted a litany of its once-sacred conservative principles
04/06/16 GOP front-runner's loss may be no ordinary setback
03/17/16 Delegates are GOP's ultimate wild card: Making sense of the process
03/14/16 Trump has lit a fire ---- can it be contained?
02/24/16 Sanders has the resources and a plan to go the distance. Will it matter?
02/09/16 Why the feminist appeal isn't working for Hillary in New Hampshire
02/03/16 The photo finish on caucus night showed that Democratic voters are looking for qualities beyond experience and electability

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