It’s Not the Crime, It’s the Cover-Up

BY RICH GALEN
Reprinted from Mullings.com

The three scandals currently on the table are: Benghazi, the IRS targeting conservative taxpayers, and the Department of Justice looking at the phone records of Associated Press reporters.

There is an old saying in Washington: “It’s not the crime, it’s the cover up” that does the damage.

The Nixon Administration attempted to dismiss the June 17, 1972 break-in of Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate complex as “a third rate burglary” which it more-or-less was.

1972 was an election year and despite the wailing of Democrats about the seriousness of the campaign probably having ordered the break-in, Nixon beat Democratic Senator George McGovern 49 states to one that Fall.

I only point that out to show that the public wasn’t particularly interested in the break-ins at the time, but as the scandal marinated, it got worse and worse for the Nixon team.

By the time the smoke cleared over 38 members of the Nixon Administration, or his re-election campaign, plead guilty or were indicted for their participation in the cover-up.

President Richard Nixon chose to resign rather than face impeachment.

So, the Obama Administration should take little to no solace in this weekend’s CNN poll showing his job approval is about level at 53-45.

Whether the President knew it or not, the fact that the IRS was being used as a political tool is seen as a big deal. That same poll shows 85 percent of those surveyed thought the IRS targeting conservative groups for “greater scrutiny of their applications for tax-exempt status.”

Similarly, a question about the “inaccurate statements made by the Obama administration” after the attacks on the compound in Benghazi – not the attacks themselves – are seen as important by 84 percent of respondents.

Finally, the poll asked about whether the issue of the “Justice Department secretly collecting phone records for reporters and editors” of the Associated Press. 87 percent thought that was important.

If the CNN asked that question in the White House briefing room it would have exceeded 100 percent.

The reaction of the Obama White House has pretty much followed the established pattern in modern history. Senior WH advisor Dan Pfeiffer called the scandals, “partisan fishing expeditions.”

Sort of rhymes with “third rate burglary,” a little.

The President is out and about doing what Presidents do – especially when they feel like they’re in trouble in Washington – they get out of Washington. This week the President will be in Atlanta, Georgia and Annapolis, Maryland; but look for additional out-of-town trips to be added to the schedule.

The interesting thing about these scandals is there is something for everyone to be concerned about. Benghazi attracts the attention of the national security group. The IRS gets noticed by conservative and good government groups. And, of course, the DoJ getting private phone records of reporters gets under the skin of one of Obama’s strongest support groups – reporters.

Another typical behavior is to attempt to wall the President off from any complicity in a scandal.

In these cases we have to believe that no one in the White House thought it was necessary or desirable to tell Mr. Obama

  • About what was really going on in Benghazi – that it was an organized attack and not just a street demonstration gone bad;
  • That his Treasury Department’s Internal Revenue Service had a rogue unit operating out of Cincinnati; or,
  • That his Department of Justice was putting his entire legacy at risk by demanding records of home, cell, and business phone calls of Associated Press reporters.

All those are possible, of course. Maybe even probable. But if so, then we are looking at a President who is totally detached from the activities of the Departments of Treasury, Justice, State, Defense, and the CIA.

Maybe he’s been spending quality time with the Departments of Interior and Commerce.

What we may be looking at is an entire Executive Branch operating independently of the White House.

If that’s the case, then there will be more scandals to come and not enough fog on the planet to cover them all up.

Editor’s Note: Rich Galen is former communications director for House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Senator Dan Quayle. In 2003-2004he did a six-month tour of duty in Iraq at the request of the White House engaging in public affairs with the Department of DefenseHe also served as executive director of GOPAC and served in the private sector with Electronic Data Systems. Rich is a frequent lecturer and appears often as a political expert on ABC, CNN, Fox and other news outlets.