tv Anderson Cooper 360 CNN February 28, 2018 9:00pm-10:00pm PST
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a lot of breaking news tonight and that's on top of even more big developments all day long. in just the last hour or so, new reporting on the president and his attorney general, jeff sessions, who he publicly shamed yet again today. according to "the washington post," russia's special counsel mueller is focusing on the first time the president did that, if you remember, back last summer, and whether it was or is part of an attempt to obstruct justice. also the sudden departure of white house communications director hope hicks, and late word on a presidential berating she got in the run-up to it. a source telling cnn that he's furious hicks told the house intelligence committee that she's lied on his behalf, white lies she's called them, whatever that is. in addition tonight in an exclusive conversation with bob woodward and carl bernstein about what they are seeing in this white house and the inevitable comparisons with watergate and the nixon administration. they don't talk about it often. tonight they will in depth. we begin, though, with cnn's jim acosta at the white house. i understand you have some new reporting about hope hicks and mueller's investigation as well. >> reporter: that's right, anderson. a former trump campaign official
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told me earlier today that during this ex-aide's sessions with robert mueller's team over the special counsel's office, that comments made previously by hope hicks, the white house communications director who is now the outgoing communications director, came up during these meetings with mueller's team as well as with investigators in the house and senate intelligence committees. now, anderson, this former trump campaign official says what is at issue here is what hicks told "the new york times" in november of 2016. that was just two days after the election when hope hicks was asked by "the new york times" about trump campaign contacts with the russians. in "the new york times" hope hicks is quoted as saying we are not aware of any campaign representatives that were in touch with any foreign entities before yesterday. when mr. trump spoke with many world leaders, those discussions were congratulatory and forward looking according to this
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official who has spoken with mueller's team, anderson, the investigators with the special counsel's office have asked whether or not hicks' comment was accurate and whether she, in fact, knew whether there were trump cam patiepaign contacts we russians given the fact we have seen many of those contacts have come to light in recent months. now, we should point out this is obviously just one part of the investigation, and according to this former trump campaign official, not only is robert mueller's team interested in all of this, but so is the house and senate intelligence committees. >> do we know why she resigned or if she resigned? was she fired? if the president was berating her, she said the things about telling white lies yesterday on capitol hill. what do we know about what actually happened? >> reporter: according to a white house official i spoke with earlier today, there was nothing nefarious, quote, unquote, about hicks' departure, that there was some movement towards this in recent weeks. according to this white house official, this had nothing to do
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with rob porter. this had nothing to do with the comments she made yesterday to the house intelligence committee. when she said that from time to time she has to tell little white lies on behalf of the president, what this official did not say to me was that this did not have anything to do with the mueller investigation. obviously we'll have to see if that comes to light later on. but according to this white house official, this is something that has been building up for some time. it's something she wanted to do. as you saw, the white house put out glowing statements from the president and the chief of staff praising hope hicks. and the president, in fact, in his statement left the door open to working with hope hicks in the future. keep in mind the president just announced his new campaign manager this week for the 2020 election. he may have a communications director in mind for that campaign. >> it does seem weird, though, that today of all days, suddenly it's the decision to announce she's going to go pursue other opportunities. i mean the president had this big bipartisan meeting on guns, which i assume the white house
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would want to have a lot of focus on. and it was shortly after that meeting the hope hicks news broke and has basically sort of dwarfed that meeting. >> reporter: i think it goes to show the white house needs a new communications director. if you were the communications director, you would not schedule these things in this fashion. you don't want the sudden departure of a key white house official -- and nobody was closer to president trump than hope hicks, and that includes the president's own family. she was frequently -- and she probably still is and will be over the coming weeks frequently in the residence here at the white house with the president early in the morning, late at night, dealing with him on all sorts of issues, in particular dealing with the news media. we know that all too well, dealing with hope behind the scenes. but, anderson, obviously this stepped all over the president's message today on gun control. here we thought the most remarkable thing that happened today would be that gun control meeting at the white house when in fact it was the departure of
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his communications director. >> or take your pick. or going after his attorney general yet again. >> any of those things, exactly. >> with me here is jen psaki, david chalian, and gloria borger. it's hard to overstate the importance of hope hicks. people at home, maybe they've seen pictures of her. during the campaign i remember doing interviews with then candidate trump and it seemed like the whole campaign for a while was just trump, corey lewandowski, and hope hicks. >> totally. she's always been around. she's the trump whisperer. she is completely, 100% loyal. she's young, and she is, as one source said to me, is very close to trump. he said, she is his emotional support, period. that's what he has. and he predicted to me with some trepidation that without her there, the president would go iran to what into what he called a tailspin. >> it's not only that she's gone. his former body man, security guard who has been with him forever, keith shilling, he's
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also left. >> when you look at the people he was close to originally, you had corey lewandowski he was close to, hope hicks, keith schiller, and he's got problems with jared now, which means he probably has problems with ivanka. and melania hasn't been happy with him because of the stormy daniels story. so this is a president who is more and more isolated, sort of on the personal side really. kelly, general kelly is cutting off his phone conversations with all of his old friends. so he's kind of alone. >> david, i mean a source told cnn -- a source close to the white house told cnn that the president berated hope hicks about the statement that she had made yesterday. >> yeah. i mean we know that this president responds to the headlines on the news coverage that he consumes, and it was a terrible day of news coverage for hope hicks between her testimony last night and, you know, i mean everywhere this morning it was like hope hicks, white house communications director speaks on behalf of the united states. white lies. it was just everywhere.
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so it does not surprise me that he would have some concern about how bad the news coverage was over that. i'm sure that's not the reason as our reporting indicates, you know, the rob porter situation was obviously not easy for hope hicks to go through as she was in a relationship with him. this has been building. but you were talking about the emotional crutch that she is for the president. i don't know how to convey, but she is so close to the president. no communication staffer in any white house that i know of would spend as much time in the oval office with the president, at the president's side as hope hicks did. she also was so emotionally invested in this, which is why i think we hear of this being a rather sort of emotional, tearful good-bye that she was giving today because she is a pure loyalist to the president. >> jen, i mean you were white house communications director. you know the job. what do you make of this departure? >> well, one, i think there's no question hope, by all accounts, played a very important role in this white house. but it wasn't as the
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communications director. she really was the tamer of the savage beast that is donald trump. that's a very important role because she protected many people on the staff from his whims and his mood swings. but, you know, the communications director and the role of the communications director is not to print off cable coverage or print off tweets. that's not entirely her fault. in large part, i think it's because donald trump is the communications director, and he's not going to allow somebody to serve in that role. so her departure is significant because as we've all touched on in this panel, it leaves a major emotional gap in the white house for trump, but also, i think, for a lot of his staff. and when people like that leave, you can start to see things come apart at the seams. >> you know, you always need somebody with the president, you can go to and say, what's his mood today? what's he feeling like? >> or we need to get this done. >> a lot of people know because they read his tweets in the morning before they get in, and they know his mood. but you need somebody who kind of gets it. and she's that person.
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>> so again, the president publicly shaming his attorney general. i mean this is so bizarre. i mean it's happened before, but it seems like now it's happening again. i mean it's got to be embarrassing for jeff sessions. it's got to be humiliating for jeff sessions, yet he continues to hang in. >> and he issued this statement today that he was defending the constitution. i think he has become sort of the kate mckinnon version on snl of him. i cannot think of a cabinet member or a senior member of an administration to have to suffer this kind of public humiliation for an entire year now, anderson. this is his hand-picked attorney general. jeff sessions was one of the first statewide elected officials who was on board with trump in the primaries and really went out there for him, campaigned all across the country. again i think it's a lesson about the one-way street of loyalty. >> it also comes on a day "the washington post" has been reporting -- and we're going to talk to one of the reporters on that story -- that mueller is actually looking into the past comments, the public shaming
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that president trump did of his attorney general to see if it's part of an obstruction of justice to basically get rid of him and put in somebody more compliant to oversee the russia investigation. >> which you have to imagine there's sort of an emotional switching going on in donald trump's head. do i keep him? i sort of control him. i've made him the incredible shrinking jeff sessions. do i try to get somebody else? if you're jeff sessions, you're at the end of the your career and you're thinking i want to leave on my terms, which is probably what's going on with rex tillerson, jared kushner, a number of people in that white house. but what he has allowed trump to do is minimize him and make him look like a -- >> but he's also, i mean of all the people that the president has around him, in terms of somebody who is actually executing conservative agenda, he's actually doing it. he doesn't get a lot of news coverage, but he's actually doing it. >> but even when he does it, sort of saying we're going to crack down on leaks, people are reporting as if, oh, he's just trying to get in with the president again. he's trying to get on his good side when, in fact, jeff sessions is a real conservative.
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but i'll tell you what. today jeff sessions did, for the first time, come out punching a little bit. i mean i'm not sure it's going to do him that much good, but he did defend the department of justice. he did release a statement saying, we're doing the right thing by sending this to the -- you know, to the inspector general. the inspector general can clearly refer things for criminal prosecution, and he publicly said something, which he hasn't done in the past. >> that's true. >> so maybe he's making progress. >> all right. as i said, we're going to talk to "the washington post" reporter, one of them who broke this story coming up. our breaking coverage continues from washington tonight. hope hicks rise to a key position in the trump campaign and the administration. later, my exclusive conversation were two individuals who have seen and reported on so many pivotal stories here. perspective on all of this from bob woodward and carl bernstein. slow down for. put the phone away, and use a knife and fork for.
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ago. an show of solidarity between jeff sessions and deputy attorney general rod rosenstein. this is video of them leaving the department of justice together. axios is reporting they dined together again as a show of solidarity. hope hicks joining a long lift of former people who have done the job or been named to it, is just the latest chapter in a story we've never seen in washington before. she's never held a job like this before, never worked in the white house before, never worked in washington, never been questioned by a special counsel nor a congressional committee. she's at the center of a scandal over security clearances that led to the departure of a top white house staffer whom she was dating at the time. all in all, her story is quite a story and it's not over yet. more now from randi kaye. >> i'm 28 years old, and i am the press secretary for the donald j. trump for president campaign. >> reporter: it was a swift rise for hope hicks, who went from modelling and acting early on to handling p.r. for ivanka trump's fashion line after college. by 2014, hicks was managing communications for the trump organization, and soon her job
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would change again. >> she used to be in my real estate company. i said, what do you know about politics? she said, absolutely nothing. i say, congratulations. you're into the world of politics, right? >> reporter: hicks told new york magazine, mr. trump looked at me and said, i'm thinking about running for president, and you're going to be my press secretary. during the campaign, hicks reportedly had a note from candidate trump above her desk that read simply, hopie, you're the greatest. >> hope, get up here. she's always on the phone talking to the reporters, trying to get the reporters to straighten out their dishonest stories. >> reporter: hicks had zero political experience, yet she was almost always by donald trump's side. through it all, her voice rarely heard in public. she didn't even release a statement after a very public screaming match with former campaign manager corey lewandowski. and at this campaign event in alabama, she seemed hesitant even to just say a few words. >> hi. merry christmas, everyone.
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and thank you, donald trump. >> reporter: with her position in the white house, hicks gained access to the world stage, taking part in this intimate gathering with the pope and also the japanese prime minister's state banquet where hicks stole the spotlight in her black tuxedo. her access to the president put her at the center of several key investigations too. on russia, she's been interviewed by special prosecutor robert mueller's team multiple times. just yesterday, she was in front of the house intelligence committee answering questions for about eight hours, admitting that sometimes she was required to tell white lies in the trump administration, but insisting she never lied about substantive matters. >> so much stuff goes through her as the conduit between outsiders and the president that she really sits in a particularly important seat for mueller. >> reporter: and hicks was also involved in the aftermath of don junior's meeting with a russian lawyer at trump tower last year. onboard air force one, helping craft the now infamous press
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release, claiming the meeting was about adoption. we've since learned it was really about dirt on hillary clinton. hope hicks also helped craft the initial white house response to allegations of domestic abuse by now former top aide rob porter, with whom she was romantically involved. porter denied the allegations and resigned. now the woman who rarely says a word in public will be taking her silence with her as she departs the white house. randi kaye, cnn, new york. >> more now on her departure which follows her testimony to the house intelligence committee. joining us now, a democratic member of that committee, congressman joaquin castro of texas. thanks so much for being with us. cnn is reporting tonight that hope hicks said that the kind of white lies she was talking about were things like telling people that trump was in a meeting when he wasn't or spinning news favorably for her boss. can you say anything more about what she meant by white lies? >> no, and the indication was basically it was small stuff,
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that it wasn't substantive stuff. actually because i heard congressman rooney about 30 minutes ago describe the question. the question was, has the president ever asked you to lie? it was not whether you've ever lied for the president. what we're trying to get at, is is the president's actions and behavior in that question. >> her resignation does come a day after testifying before the committee you're on. do you think the two are related? >> quite possibly. also that the president may have berated her for being honest. i told a few people yesterday because they asked me what was your impression of her in and there was a point there when she was going through that series of questions that her face almost looked as if she was saying, you know, why did i ever get involved with these people, with donald trump? >> that was the sense you got. >> that was my sense when i was looking at her as she was struggling to answer these questions. why did i ever get involved in this? remember, she was not involved in politics before the president asked her to become part of the
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biggest campaign you can join, a presidential campaign. >> as the president said, she said she knew nothing about politics before he decided to make her -- do you believe the committee should subpoena her? i mean because she basically did not answer, as many people have before this committee, she refused to answer questions basically citing executive privilege, as i understand. >> yeah, she did cite executive privilege, but it went beyond that. even when there was a question that it was clear that the answer would not be covered by executive privilege, i saw something yesterday that i hadn't seen before, which is for her lawyer to say, we'll take that under advisement, or we're just not going to answer that question. that was the first time that somebody came in, an attorney, and was that arrogant about flouting the jurisdiction of the committee. >> the only way to actually subpoena her is if the republicans on the committee agreed to it. >> that's right. >> and that seems unlikely. they don't seem to show any willingness. >> i think if we're doing a fair job and a thorough job, we ought to subpoena her. if she comes in on subpoena and doesn't answer those questions
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still, then you would hold her in contempt. then at that point you go in front of a court, and a judge decides what happens. >> in a white house where -- i mean i don't think the departure of a communications, you know, director like this or somebody as close as this to the president would be such a big story if this white house wasn't organized in the disorganized way that it is, where there aren't necessarily clear lanes -- at least initially there weren't. >> and she admitted as much. she mentioned when you work for donald trump, you work for donald trump, that he has the final say about the campaign manager, above the chief of staff. above everybody else. >> congressman castro, thank you very much. when we continue, breaking news from "the washington post." robert mueller looking into the circumstances last summer when president trump seemed determined to fire attorney general jeff sessions. also later, a special conversation with bob woodward and carl bernstein of watergate renown. their reporting played a key role in the unraveling of a president. we'll get their take on what's happening now.
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that grow with your business. at&t, not so much. get internet on our gig-speed network and add voice and tv for $34.90 more per month. call 1-800-501-6000. well it's another one of those nights. more breaking news. "the washington post" reporting that special counsel robert mueller is taking a look at the time last summer when president trump seemed to determine to fire attorney general jeff sessions, publicly humiliating him as he did today. did that amount to a potential obstruction of justice? i've spoken to a washington post-reporter josh dossey right before we went on air. what can you tell us about
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mueller's interest regarding attorney general sessions and president trump? >> right. so special counsel mueller has shown intense interest in a period this summer in late july where president trump was publicly shaming jeff sessions, saying that he was disappointing him. he was calling him beleaguered on twitter, and behind the scenes he was frequently fuming about the russia investigation and the attorney general. what special counsel mueller's investigation is trying to discern is whether in those conversations he was trying to fire jeff sessions or push jeff sessions out so he could exert more control over the investigation. as we've reported and others have countless times, the president is very upset that jeff sessions recused himself. he wanted an attorney general who was more loyal, to not think he should have recuses himself. and in these efforts, the special counsel wants to know was he trying to fire jeff sessions so he could put someone in who would handle the investigation differently. >> so essentially mueller is looking at was this part of an attempt to obstruct justice, to
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get somebody who is more pliable, more an ally of the president in that position. >> right. i think that's an accurate distillation. our reporting indicates that, you know, over many months, there are a number of instances, occasions, the firing of james comey being one, the statement on air force one that aides crafted that was misleading about a meeting at trump tower, where the special counsel wants to know was there an effort to obstruct justice or obstruct this probe. as was reported last month, there was even an effort at one point the president was thinking about firing mueller. so there are a number of instances, including this attempt to oust jeff sessions or to shame jeff sessions in the summer that fit into a broader narrative of was there any obstruction here by the president or his people. >> of course the story comes on a day when the president is continuing to publicly go after his attorney general in rather extraordinary ways. the period of time that mueller
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is looking at, there was a remarkable amount of public vitriol coming from the president and aimed at sessions. >> right. there were several days of relentless tweets, public comments. trump's aides in the media anonymously asking for jeff sessions to essentially quit. one of the things we reported tonight in our story, anderson, is that the pressure has been so hot on jeff sessions and the criticism so sharp that his aides actually last month pitched in and bought him a bulletproof vest and put his name on it because of the first year he's had with president trump and jokingly suggested he might should wear it to work. >> you're also learning about the kinds of things that the president says to others about the attorney general. >> right. he's very derisive about attorney general sessions. one of the comments he likes to make is referring to him as mr. magoo the comic character that was short sighted and bumbling and was not seen as
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particularly intelligent. he likes to refer to him as mr. magoo. and that's caught several advisers of his by surprise. you know, to have conversations with him where he's referring to his attorney general as mr mr. magoo. >> i always thought mr. magoo was kind of sweet. anyway, that's just my personal remembrance of him. >> i don't think president trump thinks jeff sessions is very sweet. >> i guess he doesn't like mr. magoo either. thanks very much. >> thanks for having me. >> when it comes to political investigative reporting, bob woodward and carl bernstein set the standard. their work for "the washington post" during the watergate scandal played a huge role in the downfall of president nixon. their reporting worn the pulitzer prize and their landmark book became a landmark movie. on this night of a great deal of breaking news, i'm very happy to have both of them with me in washington. thanks for being with us. first of all, what do you make of the "washington post" report that the special counsel is now
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looking at -- or asking questions at least about president trump's beratement of his own attorney general last summer? >> well, it would be logical that they would. and if you talk to people who go and they're interviewed by mueller's people, lots of fbi agents, sometimes the interviews run 10, 12 hours. so they're going to ask every question. i don't think you can draw a conclusion from it. >> i mean it would be remiss if they didn't ask. >> yes, and somebody may -- you know, because they're in a position where they have to tell the truth, that they're going to be, you know, careful, or they may be forthcoming with some leads. so i think it's part of the puzzle and the matrix we're seeing in all of this. >> again, on a day normally that would probably be the lead story on this day.
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we've also had this meeting on gun control, hope hicks stepping down. when you both look at this white house, just in terms of the way it's organized, the way it is run, have you ever seen a white house like this? >> no. and i think what's going on now -- there are two stories that are coming together. there's the mueller investigation. there's the russian story and the possibility of collusion and the possibility of obstruction of justice. but there is now a subtext that people in the white house will say to you, it is unclear to them whether donald trump can effectively govern, whether he's capable of it in terms of his own abilities, conduct, and whether or not things have gotten to the point where the wheels are coming off of this presidency. we don't know that. but certainly people in the white house are openly, with each other and with journalists, raising those kinds of questions.
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>> it's not clear who has authority or what authority. >> and it's been that way from the beginning. >> indeed. but, you know, as people disappear, like hope hicks was, you know, one of the sidekicks, and i remember talking to her about what job she was going to take after the election. and she said, i just don't want to be involved in the hand to hand combat of the daily coverage, and she did step back from that. and now, you know, off she goes. so lots of people are going or have gone or may go. >> i've just been rereading the final days of an amazing book you guys wrote about the last year of the nixon administration. obviously we've been very careful about comparisons to watergate as both of you have. just in terms of did president nixon have anybody who was as close to him as hope hicks, as jared kushner, as ivanka trump, i mean, in that sort of inner circle?
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>> well, i think one of the realities of all presidents is they have the disease of isolation, that there is not that kind of where people come in and actually tell the full story. and so presidents become protected and disconnected. and i think that's happening in this white house. >> one of the other things that is similar -- there are many similarities with watergate, and there are also a truckload of things that are very different. but one of the similarities are people around the president of the united states who try to restrain the worst instincts of the president in both nixon's case and in trump's case, although it's more egregious, i think, even in trump's case. but we now have in the white house kelly, over at the defense department mattis. we have a group of people around the president of the united states whose almost primary function is to keep him in line, to keep him from doing things
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that might be dangerous in their eyes. it's an extraordinary -- and you go to the final days where in the last year of the nixon presidency, there were concerns along those lines. but it's awful early in the game in a new administration for this to be happening now. >> one forgets, he had a chief of staff who was a general who was relatively new. >> general hague. >> relatively new in the administration. was hague's role similar to the role that kelly's been playing? >> well, we're seeing that. i remember the month after nixon resigned, carl and i went to hague's house, and the old knocking on the door at night trick. >> we just showed up, and his son let us in. >> his son let us in. then hague came back from the british embassy in his tuxedo. >> i'm sure he was thrilled that his son -- >> he was a happy guy. >> his son lost four weeks of allowance or something. but then hague told us -- it was astonishing. he said he was so worried about
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nixon that nixon might take his life, that he took away nixon's pills, that at one point nixon said, in your business, al -- meaning the army -- they leave a revolver -- >> in the drawer. >> so it got to -- now, i don't think we would suggest at all, in any way -- but the emotional distress and toll that a president under investigation, where there are continuous stories, i think by and large the stories are really well done. but how do you think trump looks at this? it's unfair. >> it's a witch hunt. >> how come they're doing this? it's a witch hunt by mueller. it's a witch hunt by the press. so we've got to be careful about being as accurate and adopting a
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tone that's reportial rather than adversarial. >> it's interesting, though. you talk about the emotional toll it takes on a president and the isolation. in some ways -- well, let me ask. comparing the stress that nixon was under and the complexity of the watergate investigation with this investigation, which actually potentially involves his children, you know, his closest friends, his finances, his past business deals, is this almost more complex for this president and perhaps even closer to home? >> well, they're both very emotional events for each president of the united states. and one reacts one way, and the other -- nixon reacted, he was presiding over a criminal cover-up. >> but trish nixon was involved in front of -- >> that's what most of his efforts, i think, went into whereas trump, we see trump's reactions every day. and, yes, he is under siege, and he thinks and feels and believes he is unfairly under siege.
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>> do you wish that nixon had twitter back then because in terms of a realtime rorschach test of what is happening in the president's mind, i mean twitter allows -- >> if that's really a full picture of what's going on in trump's mind, i don't think it is. thank god nixon didn't have twitter. >> but he had the tapes. >> yeah, he had the tapes, which he thought would always be secret, and then there are thousands of hours. and if you listen to these things and carl and i do this, you know, somewhat obsessively for the historical lesson in it, it's appalling. nixon used the presidency as an instrument of personal -- as carl says, the criminality was staggering. we don't know where this investigation goes. in the final days, we wrote about the firing of archibald cox, who was the special
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prosecutor. >> i want to ask you about that next. i got to get a quick break in. we'll have more from bob woodward and carl bernstein. 30,000 precision parts. abn or it isn't. it's inspected by mercedes-benz factory-trained technicians. or it isn't. it's backed by an unlimited mileage warranty, or it isn't. for those who never settle, it's either mercedes-benz certified pre-owned, or it isn't. the mercedes-benz certified pre-owned sales event. now through february 28th. only at your authorized mercedes-benz dealer. go. yes! go. yes! nice play. still buffering. mine too. what happened? hey, joy, you should let your new pals know that according to a leading independent study, the most awarded network is now best in streaming. i think you just did. you both can get a much better view of the game on the iphone on verizon unlimited. thanks. thanks. hey, thomas, when's your flight? (gasps) someone stole my watch. hey! (avo) unlimited is only as good as the network it's on. so get the best unlimited on the most awarded network.
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hundred times. it became a catch phrase for investigators worldwide. take a look. >> you tell me what you know, and i'll confirm. i'll keep you in the right direction if i can, but that's all. >> just follow the money. >> hal holbrook, i think, playing the character. >> this is deep throat. >> from the fbi. this is kind of a dumb question, but do you miss the days when you were talking to sources in dark garages, or maybe you still do. >> he still does. we both do. of course. >> i go out and move a flower pot in our backyard periodically hoping that -- >> and the gardener shows up. >> in all the president's men, you write extensively about rat effing, which was a term that the nixon team had for basically messing around with election campaigns. it is amazing when you think about that compared to the russians' efforts, which is rat
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effing on a major scale. >> both of these events, watergate was about richard nixon's attempt to undermine the electoral system of the united states, the most basic element of american democracy. >> and he succeeded. >> because what the object of all that political espionage and sabotage was, was nixon wanted to run against george mcgovern, the weakest candidate the democrats could put up. he did not want to run against the strongest candidate, edwin muskie. and he and his aides set out to devise this vast campaign of political espionage and sabotage to undercut and destroy the muskie campaign, and they succeeded. and of course the allegations of, quote, collusion and what the russians tried to do was to determine the outcome of an american election, to affect an american election. so in both cases, ironically
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enough you're dealing with the same allegation -- >> well, nixon succeeded as carl pointed out, but we don't know the impact of the russian meddling, and that's a big issue, and maybe we'll never know. and we don't know -- there's so much noise out there, and there's so much, you know, oh, they determined the election. no, they didn't. oh, half these ads that are being questioned actually ran after the election and so could not affect the election. so there's a lot of work, and i think one of the points we agree on is that there's a lot of work that mueller and the house and the senate investigations need to do. but so does the media. >> mm-hmm. >> and not the just reaction to the daily event, but doing the four-hour interviews, going out and knocking on the door at
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night, meeting people and really establishing a relationship of trust so you can find out what they really know. >> one other aspect, though, of this story that's very different, and that is whatever the russians did -- and we might never find out what the effect was in terms of the election itself. >> right. >> they have destabilized us and continue to by this whole investigation and the fact that we are in this paroxysm of trying to deal with what they have done and the president's reaction to it, that the destabilization that has taken place through russia's efforts is extraordinary. >> did watergate -- you know, i've talked to people in the clinton white house who said that president clinton was able to compartmentalize the investigations that were going on into him and governing. i guess it's an arguable point. was nixon able to do that because the criticism that's
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been made against president trump is that essentially there's been reporting, i think from "the washington post" and "the new york times" that briefers are loathe to bring up russia to him because he takes it personally as an attempted to delegitimize his election. >> to your point, it takes a toll. particularly when you've got emotional people like nixon was, like trump is, and the idea that you can kind of shut your -- shut it down and then say, oh, yeah, now let's talk about the budget, let's do this. i mean some of that's going on. you know, you really wonder, and it's something that everyone needs to think about. what is the governing impact? are we being governed amid all this discussion? oh, we'll do this legislation. oh, we can't do that. i mean maybe they're going to do none. >> well, i also want to put up a headline, one of your headlines from july 1973.
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nixon sees witch hunt, insiders say, which is just -- i mean is the exact term. >> how did you find that? >> you know, hard work and producers. >> thank you. >> but i mean clearly that pushback was not effective for nixon. >> he also tried to make the conduct of the press the issue in watergate at the beginning, but not to the extent that -- >> in fact, i also want to play a clip of nixon talking to his press secretary ron ziegler on the phone. this is from december of '72. let's quickly play that. >> i want it clearly understood that from now on, ever, no reporter from "the washington post" is ever to be in the white house. is that clear? >> absolutely. >> unless it's a press conference. >> yes, sir. >> but never in the white house. no church service. nothing with mrs. nixon. you tell connie don't tell mrs. nixon because she'll approve it. no reporter from "the washington post" is ever to be in the white house again.
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and no photographer either. no photographer. is that clear? >> yes, sir. >> none ever to be in. now, that is a total order, and if necessary, i'll fire you. you understand? >> i -- i do understand. >> okay. >> it's about the wedding. >> yes, but it's also about a mind set. >> right. >> and that is this shows again that nixon didn't understand the press. the answers to watergate questions weren't in the white house. you're not going to walk in and talk to those people. you have to go see them at night, and you have to develop a method and technique of just saying, you know, we're not going to stop. we had editors and owners at the post who said, don't stop. >> so much of the language used by that -- ron ziegler in october of '72 said of your reporting, quote, i personally feel this is shabby journalism by "the washington post" based on hearsay and innuendo. we hear this time and time again
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about unnamed sources from this administration attacking -- >> but richard nixon always had an adversarial relationship with the press going back to when he was a congressman, going back to when he was a senator and vice president. what you have with trump, though, trump's career was built on manipulating the press, on having a great relationship with "the new york post" and "the new york daily news." and even to the point where we know that donald trump impersonating someone who called himself john barron, would call in gossip stories about the beautiful blondes that he was going out with to studio 54. he has been accustomed to having a fawning press, and now he has come to washington. he has gotten caught up in his own conduct, which is there for all to see. the question of whether it's criminal or not, we'll find out. but the question about his stability, the republicans in congress have asked.
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it's all out there, and he cannot believe that the press, which he once so controlled, will go with these stories, and he just goes and says, they're the enemy of the people because he can't do anything about it. >> but he takes them seriously, and he believes lots of those stories that are critical because they're coming from people who work with him. >> we got to take another quick break. more with bob woodward and carl bernstein. the trump presidency surprised some people, not to president nixon. he and his wife saw it coming decades ago. president trump has the letter to prove it. more from both men next. to sit. slow down for. put the phone away, and use a knife and fork for. and with panera catering, it's food worth sharing. panera. food as it should be. dial your binge-watching up to eleven. and with panera catering, it's food worth sharing. join the un-carrier right now, and get four unlimited lines for only thirty-five bucks each. woah. plus, netflix for the whole family. on us. prrrrrrr...
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back now with bob woodward and carl bernstein. you wrote in a piece in "the washington post" a couple weeks ago about the conflict, the growing conflict between president trump and the department of justice. you said -- your article began with, we're here again, and it's interesting because president nixon thought that his attorney general, elliott richardson, who was sort of from the eastern waspy establishment, which nixon didn't necessarily like, but he needed richardson, but he sort of thought richard southern was going to be an ally of his. >> we tried to make him one, and also this is an interesting contrast. nixon wanted to bring richardson in, kind of mr. straight arrow, because he could redeem the justice department as attorney general, and of course that was all part of trying to suck richardson into the cover-up,
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which he wouldn't -- >> but nixon, when he brought richardson to camp david, if my memory serves me correct, he had this talk with richardson in which he said, a, don't take the job unless you think i'm innocent. but you have to protect the presidency from the president. so on the one hand, he gave richardson hope that this investigation would be legit and independent, and at the same time, he was sort of asking for a loyalty test, it seems. >> yes. but it really was part of the cover-up. >> yes. >> it was to bring richardson in, and we know from the tapes and the things during this period, it was all a front. >> from the beginning? >> well, i -- yes. from the beginning of nixon's presidency. and this is the point that -- you know, we've written about this. there were all kinds of wiretaps on reporters. >> break-ins. >> break-ins. >> ordered by nixon. >> ordered by nixon and this
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kind of whole idea of, ah, i won. democrats, you get the irs, the fbi, the cia. it was an assault on democracy in a fundamental way. >> it's hard to imagine even in this day the criminality that was involved. >> it is, but what's so interesting to watch the trump situation is another president assert that he has these extraordinary powers and has an authoritarian bent, certainly in his words, that are suggestive of being willing to do all kinds of things. he might pull back from an illegal act, but the words are really dangerous in terms of what he advocates and what he -- >> but he does have that authority. i mean presidents -- >> yes. he can fire -- >> all these people. >> sessions in a minute. that's his --
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>> and you see this buildup of hostility toward his own justice department, his own attorney general. you know, at some point that's going to stop. that's going to -- >> do you think that's because sessions was one of his earliest supporters out on the campaign trail, that he believed sessions would be more of an ally just as nixon hoped richardson would? >> in part, but he has said aloud, and he says through the white house, walking the halls and complaining to people about sessions, that sessions will not do his bidding. and sessions appointed rosenstein, who appointed mueller simply because he fired the -- the president fired comey. >> it's an explosive situation, and at the same time, part of the remedy, if we can talk about remedy, some transparency. i mean let's kind of come clean and answer some questions about that. yeah, probably it won't happen,
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but i think we have to be there asking those questions. >> we could talk for hours. it's really fascinating. thank you so much for being here. up next, a new bombshell exit from the white house. hope hicks stepping down as one of the president's closest, longest serving advisers. reporting a possible connection to her admission she told white lies on behalf of the president and what the president's response was to that admission coming up. to its roots.
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