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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsSLATE: What John Dean Has to Say About the NYT's Blockbuster Don McGahn Story
Isaac Chotiner: What did you think when you read the Times story today?
John W. Dean: I guess the first impression I had was that I was surprised that Dowd and Cobb wanted to send McGahn over so willingly to talk to the special counsel. But I guess that was part of their philosophy. And it makes me wonder: Did they know what was going on? Because I am not sure Trump is the kind of client that is terribly forthcoming and fully forthcoming.
My second reaction is that Don McGahn is doing exactly the right thing, not merely to protect himself, but to protect his client. And his client is not Donald Trump; his client is the office of the president. That is one of the things that was cleared up as a result of Watergate. The American Bar Association reissued a code of ethics and dealt directly with representation of an organization, and who the client is. And the client, in this instance, would not be the man who holds the office, but the office. And that is a huge difference.
When you started your job as White House counsel, who did you think you were representing, and how did you conceive of it by the end of your tenure?
Throughout my tenure, it was totally confused as to who the client was. Nixon thought I was his personal lawyer, and had me doing such things as coordinating two different law firmsone in New York and one in Californiato do his estate plan, which couldnt be anything more personal. [H.R.] Haldeman and [John] Ehrlichman, the chief of staff and top domestic advisor thought they were my clients, too, because I communicated to the president through them.
So did that ever switch in your mind?
By the time I go in to tell the president that there is a cancer on the presidency, I am worried not just about the man, but the office. This was as fuzzy for all organizations as it was for the White House. It was one of the lasting reforms that came out of Watergate. It is why, for example, Bill Clinton had private counsel represent him in the Lewinsky matter. And he also had the White House counsel representing the office. It has been cleaned up and cleared up and McGahn is doing exactly the right thing. He is representing the office.
Do you think he should resign?
Resign? Why?
I was just curious.
No. That hadnt occurred to me. More likely he would be fired than resign. Trump does not like people doing the right thing, like recusing when you have a conflict and you are attorney general, or representing the office when you are White House counsel.
The Times story posits the idea that McGahn was cooperating, in part, because he was worried that Trump would try to blame him for any obstruction Mueller might find. What do you think of that as an explanation for McGahns behavior, which seems slightly less honorable than what you are talking about? And secondly, do you think there is any comparison to your situation?
I think there is good reason for McGahn to believe that Trump would throw him under the bus, since Trump throws almost everyone under the bus. So, I dont think it is a reach to have that in your consciousness. And the article does say that he and his lawyer, once they were told to go talk to the special counsel, indeed did so, and were relieved to be able to do so, to explain McGahns position and involvement in these things.
Self-preservation is a real motive. At times, I felt it. When I first tried to go in and blow up the Watergate cover-up, I was really worried about the president and the office. When it got back through the grapevine that they were planning to have [former Attorney General] John Mitchell take the rap for the break-in, and me take the rap for the cover-up, I wasnt very keen on the idea. The first time I ever talked to the press during my tenure in government was when I dictated a couple sentences for my secretary and had her read it to the AP, the New York Times, and the Washington Post, to communicate to my superiorswho were not sharing this with methat I would not be the scapegoat, and they were making a mistake if they were suiting me up for that.
Is there anything in the story that makes you think McGahn provided Mueller with damning evidence?
You cant really tell. I dont think he was motivated to provide damning evidence. I think he was explaining what he knew. He was a fact witness, and trying to explain the facts as he understood them. I dont think he could even evaluate the importance of some of his testimony that later times and circumstances fit into a bigger pattern. We dont have all that information now. But I saw that occur in Watergate, where people were providing information, not necessarily for any sinister or other motive, that turned out to be very important and damning for Nixon.
MORE:
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2018/08/don-mcgahn-cooperating-with-mueller-john-dean-weighs-in-on-new-york-times-story.html
OxQQme
(2,550 posts)"When you read stories like this that display aspects of the presidents relationship to the investigation swirling around him, what similarities and differences do you see between Trump and Nixon?"
"We wouldnt know the full degree of Nixons similarities to Trump but for the taping system, because Nixon is a very different person behind closed doors than he is in public or on stage. For Trump, there may be some differences, but he is pretty much: What you see is what you get, Im told. He can be charming if he wants to be charming; he can be nasty if he wants to be nasty. You see the same things publicly with him. Nixon had a clear public persona that was much more pleasant than he could be behind closed doors. [Laughs]
The similarities I see, and this is a little bit counterintuitive, because everybody thinks Nixon was extremely competent. There is no question he was. He understood the presidency very well. He had been a member of the House, the Senate, he had been vice president, he had actually been acting president, he was trained as a lawyer and argued cases before the Supreme Court. Unlike Trump, he knew that justices dont sign bills; they write opinions. So there is no question there is a different level of sophistication. But, having said that, I see a lot of similarity in the bungling. Watergate was not a carefully planned crime and cover-up. It was one bungled event after another. I see the same thing happening with Trump."
Cosmocat
(14,564 posts)McGahn appears to be a garden variety scumbag republican.
But, he is an attorney, and got caught in a spot where he had to make a choice to either put his cards on the table, or end up in a world of shit.
He appears to have chosen to tell the truth vs lying and at a minimum have his legal career (and ability to provide for him and his) severely threatened, and possibly MUCH worse.
GoneOffShore
(17,339 posts)Sancho
(9,070 posts)as explained on several shows today.
Even if you think tRump is the client or has executive powers...if McGahn sees obstruction or some felony, he likely has to testify to what he knows.