Debategate

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Debategate or briefing-gate was a political scandal affecting the administration of Ronald Reagan; it took place in the final days of the 1980 presidential election. Reagan's team had somehow acquired President Jimmy Carter's briefing papers he used in preparation for the October 28, 1980 debate with Reagan. The briefing papers were never specified to be vital strategy memos or just routine position papers. This leak of campaign papers was not divulged to the public until late June 1983, after Laurence Barrett published Gambling With History: Reagan in the White House, an in-depth account of the Reagan administration's first two years.

1980 presidential debate

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The only debate of the 1980 U.S. presidential election to feature both President Jimmy Carter and Republican challenger Ronald Reagan took place on 28 October 1980. Key aides involved in the Reagan debate preparation were James Baker, David Gergen and David Stockman. They had access to briefing papers from the Carter campaign.[1] The importance of these documents is still in question. At the time this debate took place, Reagan was ahead in the polls 43 to 37 with 11 percent undecided. The stakes were high for this debate especially since Carter had the possibility of an October surprise, such as the release of the hostages in Iran.

House Speaker Tip O'Neill said that the debate ultimately did not affect the outcome of the election, arguing that an unpopular Carter would have lost even if he had been seen to "win" the debate.[2]

Investigation

The leak of the campaign papers first came to public attention in June 1983, with the publication of Laurence Barrett's Gambling With History: Reagan in the White House, an in-depth account of the Reagan administration's first two years. Comments on the matter by David Stockman at a Michigan Optimist Club lunch on the day of the debate, noting that in assisting with Reagan's preparations he had had access to a "pilfered" copy of Carter's briefing book, had been reported only in local newspapers.[3][4] The publication of Barrett's book saw efforts by Jody Powell and Patrick Caddell to push the issue onto the press agenda,[1] ultimately leading to Reagan asking the Justice Department to "monitor" the issue. The president denied having any knowledge about briefing papers his campaign was thought to have attained.[2]

An investigation was then launched by the U.S. House Committee on Post Office and Civil Service's Subcommittee on Human Resources under the chairmanship of Donald J. Albosta. This produced a 2,400-page report in May 1984.[5]

James Baker swore under oath that he had received the briefing book from William Casey, Reagan's campaign manager, but Casey, then campaign manager, now CIA director, vehemently denied this. David Stockman, the head of the Office of Management and Budget, admitted using the Carter material while helping Reagan prepare for the debate. Stockman said the documents obtained were just position papers, not in question-and-answer format. Frank Hodsoll, also a member of the debate team, said that they were in Q&A form. The investigation turned up hundreds of pages of documents from the Carter campaign in Stockman's files as well as in Reagan's campaign archives at Stanford University's Hoover Institute. One document, an itinerary for Carter during the week prior to Election Day, had "report from White House mole" written on it. This seemed to confirm author Laurence Barrett's conclusion in his book that the material had been stolen. But U.S. News & World Report indicated that the document in question had been volunteered by someone working for Carter. Other papers were turned in to the Washington Post by a collector of political memorabilia who, in October 1980, had exhumed them from a dumpster behind Reagan headquarters in Arlington, Virginia. The press speculated that the Reaganauts had been concerned that Carter would pull an October surprise during the campaign—cutting a deal with the Ayatollah Khomeini for the release of the 52 hostages held for over a year by Iran, a bombshell that some believed might have sent Carter back to the White House for four more years. Newsweek wondered whether a clandestine operation involving ex-CIA agents had been undertaken by the Reagan team to keep close tabs on the Carter campaign. This was confirmed by Time in its July 25, 1983 issue. According to that report, William Casey brought in former agents of both the CIA and the FBI to gather information from colleagues who were still with that agency. Jimmy Carter complained that the pilfered documents revealed the "essence" of his campaign, implying that his reelection bid had been done great harm when they fell into Republican hands.[6]

The matter was never resolved as both the FBI and a congressional subcommittee reporting in May 1984 failed to determine how or through whom the briefing book came to the Reagan campaign.[7] The Justice Department, in closing its investigation, cited "the professed lack of memory or knowledge on the part of those in possession of the documents". Still, it said the contradictions between Reagan aides like Baker and Casey "could be explained by differences in recollection or interpretation".[8] In a case brought by John F. Banzhaf III, an order by a federal judge that the Justice Department appoint a special prosecutor was overturned on appeal in July 1984.[9][10]

Aftermath

In 2004 and again in 2005, Carter accused columnist George Will of giving the briefing book to the Reagan campaign.[11] In a 2005 syndicated column, Will called his role in Reagan's debate preparation "inappropriate", given his position as a columnist, but denied any role in stealing the briefing book. As he had done to Carter privately, Will wrote, "My cursory glance at it convinced me that it was a crashing bore and next to useless—for you [Carter], or for anyone else".[12] In response to Will's column, Carter wrote a letter to the Washington Post retracting his accusations. Carter apologized to Will for "any incorrect statement that I have ever made about his role in the use of my briefing book...I have never thought Mr. Will took my book, that the outcome of the debate was damaging to my campaign or that Mr. Will apologized to me".[13]

In his 2009 campaign examination Rendezvous with Destiny, Reagan biographer and historian Craig Shirley writes that the briefing papers were passed to Casey by Paul Corbin, an aide from Ted Kennedy's failed primary campaign. According to the book, the Kennedy family and campaign workers were embittered by Carter's treatment of Kennedy's challenge in the brutal 1980 Democratic primary, and Corbin used connections in the White House and stole the papers in revenge. Furthermore, Shirley states that the contents of the briefing book were a compilation of Reagan's earlier speeches, and therefore contends that the theft had no effect on the race. Carter, however, continues to blame his defeat on the stolen papers.[14][15]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Morton Kondracke, The New Republic, 18 July 1983, Debategate
  2. 2.0 2.1 Godfrey Sperling, Christian Science Monitor, 30 June 1980, President's disclaimers may not clear air on debate-book ethics
  3. Steven F. Hayward (2009), The Age of Reagan: The Fall of the Old Liberal Order: 1964-1980, Random House,
  4. John Eby, 6 February 2011, John Eby: Talking like trying to corral soap bubbles
  5. Julia Malone, Christian Science Monitor, 24 May 1984, New 'Debategate' report sharpens focus on Casey links
  6. Manning, Jason. "Eighties Club: Debategate" http://eightiesclub.tripod.com/id293.htm
  7. "Reagan Assures Casey He Can Stay as CIA Chief in New Term?", Washington Post, September 11, 1984.
  8. "Campaign Papers Remain a Mystery", New York Times, June 18, 1984.
  9. Time, 9 July 1984, Decision: The Debategate Probe Fizzles
  10. Banzhaf v. Smith, 588 F. Supp. 1489 & 1498, rev'd on other grounds, 737 F.2d 1167 (DC Cir. 1984). - PROF. JOHN BANZHAF'S BACKGROUND IN ANTISMOKING
  11. Fresh Air, October 21, 2004; The Alabama Plainsman, July 28, 2005.
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  15. Craig Shirley, Politico, 15 October 2009, "New Book Pins 'debategate' on Democrat

External links