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PROFILE: EDWIN MEESE III: To Preserve and Protect
By Lee Edwards
“If Ed Meese is not a good man,” Ronald Reagan once said, “there are no good men.” A profile of a good man. By Lee Edwards.
When Ronald Reagan was once asked whom he would rely
on if he faced a crisis, he replied, without
hesitation, “Ed Meese.” Reagan’s ready response reveals the special relationship between one of the most
successful presidents in modern history
and his indispensable aide and policy adviser.
Time and again, Reagan would turn to Meese after a
far-ranging discussion among cabinet officers and policy experts. Meese,
who as usual had been taking careful notes on
a yellow legal pad, would present the arguments on all sides so scrupulously that
no one objected. “No one could synthesize policy for the president as Ed
did,” remarks James A. Baker, chief of staff for President Reagan in his first term and a member of the famed
White House “troika” of Baker,
Meese, and Michael K. Deaver. “He was superb.” “Reagan valued Ed’s mind,” says Deaver,
“his ability to sum up and recommend.”
Tending the Prairie Fire
Reagan also valued Meese’s steadfast loyalty,
not simply to himself but to conservative principles such as limited
government, free enterprise, individual freedom, and strong moral values.
“He tended the prairie fire” that Reagan ignited in California,
says Deaver, who served as Meese’s deputy in Sacramento, “and
made sure it didn’t go out.” The president used Meese as
“a sounding board” for issues and ideas, according to William
P. Clark, who preceded Meese as Governor Reagan’s chief of staff and
was later President Reagan’s national security adviser. “Ed had
an unsurpassed knowledge of the president’s thinking.”
From their first days in Sacramento, Governor Reagan
relied on Meese. Drawing on his years as deputy district attorney in
Alameda County, which included the University of California at Berkeley,
Meese helped organize a policy of firm
response to campus and other disorders, a core issue for Reagan in his 1966 gubernatorial campaign. Meese developed a
system for evaluating judicial candidates that removed
“cronyism” from the courts—a frequent criticism of previous administrations—and ensured
that California had highly qualified judges
who “understood and believed in the law.” In 1971, Meese suggested establishing a task force on welfare reform
to isolate the causes of runaway state
spending and design a new welfare system. The new
program transformed public welfare in California: The welfare caseload dropped by several hundred thousand people, and
payments to the truly needy increased significantly.
In Washington, D.C., Presidential Counselor Meese,
knowing Reagan’s preference for cabinet
government, devised an innovative system of “cabinet councils” that grouped members according to their
areas of responsibility. A cabinet council, explained Martin Anderson,
Reagan’s chief domestic and economic policy adviser in his first two
years, was “really a smaller, tailor-made
version of the cabinet” with the “same force and authority in
dealing” with issues that the
entire cabinet had. Anderson estimated that “almost all of the policy
work” during the first years of the Reagan
administration—including the historic Economic Recovery Tax Act of
1981—was funneled through the cabinet councils.
Meese’s responsibilities as principal policy
adviser to President Reagan ran the gamut of issues from abortion to the “zero
option” on intermediate-range nuclear missiles. In mid-September 1981, for example, Meese
hosted a small meeting to discuss the
feasibility of developing an anti-ballistic missile system in keeping
with Reagan’s long-expressed opposition to the U.S. policy of
mutual assured destruction. The group agreed that a system to intercept ballistic missiles in the earth’s
atmosphere and above was possible. After meeting again to explore provisional plans, Meese
arranged a meeting with President Reagan on
January 8, 1982. Reagan directed the National Security Council (NSC) staff
to develop a proposal for a strategic defense program. Meese credits
National Security Adviser William Clark with making sure this happened,
along with the president’s unwavering personal commitment. But it was
Meese’s initiative that set in motion the process that culminated in
Reagan’s March 1983 announcement of the Strategic Defense Initiative and helped convince the Kremlin it could not
win an arms race.
Guarding the Constitution
As presidential counselor and then attorney general,
Meese played an essential role in creating the
system by which jurists committed to judicial restraint and the written Constitution were
selected. Reagan, explained Meese, wanted to
name federal judges who would look at the Constitution and statute law and
“expound their evident meaning,” rather than use loopholes or
convoluted logic to reach some “preconceived [socio-political]
conclusion.” As attorney general, Meese oversaw a team of experts who
scrupulously vetted candidates for the federal bench. Meese sometimes
conducted the final interview before passing on a judicial recommendation
to the president.
Contrary to some reports, Reagan appointees were not
asked about their political beliefs but were questioned about their
understanding of the Constitution and their philosophy of judicial
practice. Over the course of his two terms in office, President Reagan
appointed almost half of the federal judiciary. Observers, liberal and
conservative, have given the Reagan judges high marks for their judicial
performance and integrity.
Ever loyal to the written Constitution, Attorney
General Meese delivered major addresses
that provoked a great debate about the most important document of our
Republic. Speaking to the American Bar Association in July 1985 (and later
that year to the Federalist Society), Meese argued that the Constitution
must be interpreted in light of its original meaning and the common
understanding of the Founding Fathers who ratified it. He called for a
“jurisprudence of original intention” consistent with the
admonition of Chief Justice John Marshall that “the Constitution is a
limitation on judicial power as well as executive and
legislative.”
Defenders of the notion that the Constitution is what
judges say it is vehemently disagreed. Among them was Supreme Court
associate justice William J. Brennan Jr., who insisted that the
Constitution should be continuously adapted “to cope with the
problems of a developing America.” Meese, however, stood with the
prudential legal philosophy of Justice Felix Frankfurter,
who, although a political liberal, said, “As a member of this court, I am not justified in writing
my private notions of policy into the Constitution.” “Ed Meese was the founding father of original
understanding,” says Douglas Kmiec, professor of law at Pepperdine
University and former dean of Catholic University of America’s law
school. “Everyone on the Supreme Court
today is an originalist,” Kmiec argues. “That was not the
case,” he says, “prior to Ed
Meese.”
As the nation’s top legal officer, and
consistent with what he knew to be the views of the president, Meese spoke
out forcefully for those whose rights had long been overlooked or shunted
aside. He argued that the Roe v. Wade decision on abortion should be reversed. He cited the
discriminatory nature of affirmative action and other civil rights
proposals such as school busing. He described the American Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU) as a “criminals’ lobby” and called Miranda v. Arizona an
“infamous decision.” He fought drug abuse as chairman of the
National Drug Policy Board—reinforcing First Lady Nancy
Reagan’s successful “Just Say No” campaign—and
reacted against the prevalence of obscene materials and child pornography
in communities by establishing the Obscenity Enforcement Unit in the
Justice Department’s Criminal Division.
Iran-Contra
Some say that Meese’s finest hour came on the
“four-day weekend” of November 21–24, 1986, when he and
three of his top aides conducted an investigation of a hitherto secret
administration initiative toward Iran. Concerned about conflicting stories
within the administration, Meese suggested to Reagan that someone needed to
review “all aspects” of the Iran initiative so that the
administration could present “a comprehensive and accurate
account.” The president asked Meese to take on the assignment.
To their surprise and dismay, Meese and his
assistants discovered a memo in the files of NSC staffer Lt. Col. Oliver
North describing a plan to direct profits derived from arms transactions
with Iran to support the Contras—the Nicaraguan freedom fighters.
Support for the Nicaraguan resistance was one of the most hotly debated
issues of the day. Iran was also a sensitive subject—Americans had
not forgotten that the Iranian government had held 52 Americans hostage in
the U.S. embassy in Tehran for over a year. The combination of Iran and the
Contras was an explosive and potentially highly damaging issue to the
administration. “We had to find out exactly what had happened,”
Meese later wrote. And they did.
Based on interviews with Oliver North, National
Security Adviser John Poindexter, former
National Security Adviser Robert McFarlane, and others, the Meese team discovered that there had been a
“diversion” of Iranian arms money to the Contras. Only three
people in the U.S. government had apparently known about the
scheme—North, Poindexter, and McFarlane. When a shocked President
Reagan was told on November 24 what had been
uncovered, he ordered an immediate and complete disclosure, resulting in a full-scale press
conference the following day. The Iran-Contra affair produced official investigations by the Tower Commission
appointed by the president, by Congress, and by independent counsel
Lawrence E. Walsh. Although these inquiries did unearth some new data,
Meese pointed out that “in major respects they confirmed the story
that my staff and I had been able to piece together in less than
seventy-six hours.”
Meese never doubted the potential gravity of
Iran-Contra, characterizing it as “a
serious mistake by men who, in their zeal to advance legitimate national
interests, took steps that were both unauthorized and unwise.” Their
extreme actions, he said, “damaged the administration” and
“agitated the country.” But he denied the charge by liberal
Democrats and others that Iran-Contra had brought about a
“constitutional crisis” or that the actions of a few members of
the administration constituted a “threat to democratic
government.” The administration’s handling of Iran-Contra
demonstrated that the system of checks and balances instituted by the
founders of the Republic still worked. Still, one can speculate about the course of events if Meese—at President Reagan’s
direction—had not acted as promptly and as thoroughly as he did. Any attempt at a
cover-up would have prompted the media to
suggest a parallel with Watergate and encouraged congressional calls for
the president’s impeachment.
Undeserving Target
Because of Meese’s unwavering fidelity to
President Reagan and a conservative agenda, he became a prime target of
those who were adamantly opposed to what the
president was trying to accomplish at home and abroad. Unable to block what they perceived
as wrong and even dangerous policies, partisans
vented their mounting frustration and anger on the president’s
right-hand man, leaking ugly rumors about his supposed incompetence as
presidential adviser. Often quoted was Reagan campaign aide John
Sears’s wisecrack that Meese’s briefcase resembled “a
black hole”—anything that went into it never came out.
Critics held up his Senate confirmation to be
attorney general for over a year while an
independent counsel picked and probed into alleged misdeeds such as a gift of “standard-issue” cuff
links from the government of South Korea; whether Meese had been given
preferential treatment in his promotion from lieutenant colonel to colonel
in the Army Reserve; and the fact, admitted by Meese, that he had failed to
list a $15,000 loan to his wife, Ursula, by a former associate on his
financial disclosure statement. In his 385-page report, independent counsel
Jake Stein said of every allegation that there was either “no basis
for any criminal charge” or “no evidence of special
treatment.” President Reagan publicly declared that “it’s
always gratifying when the honor of a just man is vindicated.”
With characteristic grace, Meese said he was
“not bitter at all” about the lengthy investigation or the
mudslinging, although some had dug deep for their mud. But Meese’s
forbearance seemed to enrage his critics. In May 1987 congressional
Democrats urged an investigation of whether Meese, while in the White
House, had received anything of value in exchange for asking that the Army
consider the application of a company whose legal counsel was a longtime friend of his. Such referrals, of course,
occur frequently in
the federal government, especially in Congress. A year later, independent counsel James McKay announced that no “evidence
[was] discovered that Mr. Meese, at any time, knowingly received any amount
or thing of value from anyone in return for or on account of any official
act he performed which benefited the
company.” Regarding other allegations, including “lost” stocks and late tax payments, McKay reported:
“The financial records of Mr. and Mrs. Meese did not evidence any
unexplained income or expenditure, unusual asset, concealed transaction or
any other unexplained improvement in their financial condition since
1980.”
That should have ended the matter, but when Meese
resigned as attorney general in August 1988,
his ideological enemies and those of the president rushed to condemn him
and his record. According to Norman Dorsen, president of the ACLU, Meese
had “presided over the Reagan administration’s efforts to
restrict the individual liberties of millions of Americans.” Meese
“has never been more than two steps ahead of the law,” said
Arthur J. Kropp, president of the liberal lobbying group People for the
American Way. “He leaves a record of
shame.” When polled by the Wall Street
Journal, Harvard
professor Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., leftist Victor Navasky, and liberal
columnist Hodding Carter III placed Meese among the “worst”
Reagan appointees. Carter called Meese
“consistently wrong” in his advice and of “dubious”
ethics.
The Perfect Public Servant
And yet those who had worked with Meese over a
lifetime of public service showered him
with encomiums that would make a mother blush. Former secretary of defense
Caspar Weinberger said that Meese was “always one of the most
effective and believable spokesmen” during “the eight great
years of Ronald Reagan’s presidency.”
Whether they had known him for 40 years or 4, the
tributes of Meese’s colleagues were remarkably similar. “You
could always depend upon Ed,” remarks
Reagan aide and speechwriter Peter Hannaford, “for a well-reasoned conservative response to almost any issue.”
“Ed loved ideas,” says Charles Cooper, former head of the
Office of Legal Counsel, who helped organize a series of Justice Department
conferences on everything from the First Amendment to federalism at
Meese’s instruction. “He wanted to explore them to their
deepest level.”
“Ed’s first and only interest was in
serving the president,” asserts Richard Wirthlin, Reagan’s
pollster and political strategist. “When he left the White House for
Justice there was a hole that was never completely filled.” “He
never seemed to be thrown off balance by stress or by things going the
wrong way,” says Theodore Olson, who served as head of the Office of
Legal Counsel in Reagan’s first term and Solicitor General for
President George W. Bush. “He created an environment,” says
John Richardson, who served as Meese’s
chief of staff at Justice, “where everyone felt free to propose and advocate new ideas. He had convictions of iron, but an
open mind.” “What was extraordinary
about Ed,” says Mark Levin, head of the Landmark Legal Foundation, who also served as his chief of staff at
Justice, “was how he functioned so efficiently despite the vicious
efforts of the left to destroy him.”
One reason he did was the president’s steadfast
support. During the McKay inquiry, when questions were raised by political
opponents and the media about the integrity of his attorney general, Ronald
Reagan responded, “If Ed Meese is not a good man, there are no good
men.”
Excerpted from To Preserve and Protect: The Life of Edwin Meese III, by Lee Edwards, published by the Heritage Foundation.
Available from the Hoover Press is Revolution: The Reagan Legacy, by Martin Anderson. Also available is The Collapse of Communism, by Lee Edwards. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit www.hooverpress.org.
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