“This is somebody who is still employed in the White House, at least so far, and he was able to defy presidential orders and come forward with what he saw and how he interpreted it,” said Woodward. “Imagine that happening in any other country in the world. The lieutenant colonel would not get a hearing, and most certainly would no longer be in the army.”
However, Woodward believes this impeachment process is rushed and the case has weaknesses. He said the consequences of holding up nearly $400 million in military aid to Ukraine are unclear, and the investigation into the Bidens did not ultimately happen.
“Whether it’s an abuse of presidential power, it’s certainly a misuse of presidential power,” said Woodward.
He juxtaposed it with the Nixon and Clinton inquiries.
“Watergate had a clear ending. There was a resignation from the president, and because of the tapes, you could hear Nixon plotting one criminal activity after another, there was clarity,” said Woodward. “There was no ambiguity in the end.”
After Clinton’s Senate trial and acquittal, in which his supporting votes included 10 Republicans, he was apologetic.
“Two hours after being acquitted, Clinton went into the Rose Garden of the White House … and said, I come here to profoundly say I am sorry for what I did and what I said to trigger these events,” recalled Woodward. “He then went on a reconciliation and renewal journey.”
Whatever the outcome of President Trump’s impeachment inquiry, Woodward doesn’t envision resignation or atonement from Trump. But he has greater concerns.
“Overall, in trying to understand the Trump presidency, what I fear and worry about the most is that, in the impeachment inquiry, they’re looking at the wrong problem,” said Woodward. “My work shows that President Trump in his actions in national security has done and said things that really have endangered our nation’s security. Probably the most important responsibility of a president is to keep the country safe.”
Seeking truth, perspective
Woodward shared tales of his clandestine encounters with Deep Throat, the informant later revealed to be FBI Associate Director Mark Felt, and underscored the importance of dogged journalism fueled by sustained face-to-face encounters rather than information gathering from behind a screen. He called it “showing up, getting up,” and recalled the encouragement of Washington Post publisher Katharine Graham when he was a young reporter working to break the Watergate scandal.
Even at 76, Woodward still knocks on doors. He recalled how he finally landed an interview with an official in the Trump administration after repeated emails, phone calls and other attempts at communication, ultimately reaching the official at home at 11 o’clock at night, and then driving to his house a few minutes later.
“People really want the system – democracy, the government, all of the things we’ve got in this country – to work,” said Woodward, whose most recent book, “Fear: Trump in the White House,” was published in 2018. “In my business, I think we’ve sold ourselves short by not being more aggressive – but also being more patient.”
Reflecting on his reporter roots, Woodward said he’s still very close with Bernstein. He recalled the morning that President Gerald Ford pardoned Nixon, when Bernstein called him and said in his classic brief and dramatic manner, “the son-of-a-bitch pardoned the son-of-a-bitch.”
Years later, when Woodward interviewed Ford for his book “Shadow: Five Presidents and the Legacy of Watergate,” Ford explained that he pardoned Nixon so that the country could move on and get Watergate out of the headlines, knowing he would self-sabotage his career for the national interest.
“What Ford did was really quite gutsy,” said Woodward. “What a cold shower. How humbling, how humiliating to have been so wrong, and to have been so sure in 1974 that (the pardon) was corrupt. … Twenty-five years later, through the lens of history and some distance and some opening up of experience, it’s not corruption – it’s courage.”
This quality, he said, is a characteristic of an honest and honorable president.
“The job of the president is to figure out the next stage of good for a majority of people in the country, a real majority – not a base, not one party, not a bunch of interest groups,” said Woodward. “… Then the president should have a strategy and a plan for implementing that.”
See more photos from the event here.