The Daily - Republicans' 'Dead Chicken' Strategy on Impeachment
Episode Date: October 10, 2019The White House response to the impeachment inquiry has been to dismiss the allegations, deflect the facts and discredit the Democrats. It’s the same approach that Republicans used in 2018 to push t...hrough the Supreme Court nomination of Brett M. Kavanaugh.The New York Times reporters Kate Kelly and Robin Pogrebin, the authors of “The Education of Brett Kavanaugh,” talk to the Republican strategist who wrote the political playbook used — then and now.Guest: Kate Kelly, a reporter for The Times covering Wall Street and Robin Pogrebin, a reporter on The Times’s Culture Desk, spoke to Mike Davis, a Republican strategist. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background coverage: The White House’s declaration of war against the House impeachment inquiry this week has set the stage for a constitutional clash with far-reaching consequences.Mr. Davis crafted a “brass knuckles” approach to help confirm conservative Supreme Court justices.Here’s the latest on the impeachment inquiry.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Bavaro.
This is The Daily Watch.
Today.
The White House response to the impeachment inquiry
has been to dismiss the allegations,
deflect the facts,
and discredit the Democrats.
It's the same approach used by Republicans in 2018 to push through the Supreme Court nomination of Brett Kavanaugh.
My colleagues Kate Kelly and Robin Pogrebel, the authors of The Education of Brett Kavanaugh,
talked to the Republican strategist who wrote the political playbook used then and now.
It's Thursday, October 10th.
Robin, Kate, how did you first come to hear the name Mike Davis?
So we were looking back on the events of 2018 that were just so seismic for the country
and trying to really slow down time and figure out very much from a 360-degree perspective
who were the key players in that drama. Obviously, you had then Judge Kavanaugh. You had the women
who had accused him of sexual misconduct and lawyers on both sides. But the political machinery,
who were the important members of the Senate Judiciary Committee? And everyone said we should
talk to this one operative,
that he was at the center of everything.
And that operative's name was Mike Davis.
Hey, is that Robin or is that Kate?
That was Kate just now, but Robin's right here.
Hello.
And everybody told us that he was sort of an unabashed advocate
for Judge Kavanaugh and really sort of the torch carrier politically through this process.
And what he did in terms of not just managing the technicalities
of the Senate investigation and the Senate process,
but also waging this sort of cultural war for conservatives
that was crystallized during the Kavanaugh confirmation process and is now being
deployed as a defense against impeachment. So you knew that you wanted to talk to him? Yes.
And so in talking to him, you know, he actually turns out to be somewhat of an unlikely character.
And would like to start by just asking you, tell us about your career background. How did you decide to become a lawyer?
Ever since I was a little kid, I think my teachers, the priests, the nuns at my Catholic school knew that I was going to be a lawyer just because I was so mouthy as a kid.
He's kind of a spark plug of a guy. He's sort of built compactly. He's very much of a kind of a tough
talker. He takes no prisoners. But he was born and raised in Iowa. So I was raised by two very
liberal Democrats who worked in public schools. And so I was raised very working class. I was
raised Catholic. So I had, you know, the bleeding heart Catholic stuff from my mom.
And he had his own kind of awakening in terms of conservative issues. You know, I've always been kind of a right-wing lunatic, even from a young age.
And even in sixth grade, he won the Alex P. Keaton Award.
Alex P. Keaton, of course, being a reference to the beloved 1980s sitcom Family Ties,
where you have two bleeding heart liberal parents in Ohio with a large family,
and they have this super conservative son, Alex P. Keaton,
who, like, loves Reaganomics and is, like, a total black sheep within that context.
Right, bounds into the kitchen every morning in his tie and his jacket.
Like, raving about Reagan.
Right, right. I saw the effects of these policies that liberals, that Democrats thought were helping people who needed help, and they actually trapped people in intergenerational poverty.
So for me, that was the reason edges of Republican philosophy at the time with the Contract for America.
Which is a very much less government is better approach.
Right, hands off. And he kind of becomes really sort of evangelized in a way. And he wants to be a soldier. My first job in Washington, D.C. was back in 1998
as an undergraduate intern working in the office of House Speaker Newt Gingrich.
And while he works for Newt Gingrich, the Clinton impeachment is going on. So Mike Davis has a
front row seat on that strategy, and it makes a strong impression on him.
I remember watching this up close and personally. My last day of my internship
was the same day that the House of Representatives voted to impeach President Clinton.
And he's watching all of this going on. He's very intrigued by it. And he's
taking notes as to how these processes are unfolding and how the parties are reshaping
themselves in the early to mid-90s.
So the impeachment of Bill Clinton
would have been Mike Davis's first culture war,
so to speak.
And it sounds like he was very closely
paying attention to it.
Absolutely.
I mean, he's becoming a keen observer of politics.
He has worked a stint for Iowa Senator Chuck Grassley
opening mail.
That was in May of 2000. I was 22 years old right out of school.
He works in the Justice Department for a spell.
He goes to law school, becomes a lawyer,
and he decides he wants to engage with all of these issues,
and he's going to do it from various angles.
And at some point he meets Neil Gorsuch.
He was in private practice, and I helped him find his way into the Justice Department
and then his way onto the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver, Colorado.
Gorsuch is named to the Tenth Circuit Court in Colorado.
Then when Neil Gorsuch got confirmed as Judge Gorsuch,
he asked me to go out to Colorado to clerk for him.
So I went out to Colorado for a year.
Davis clerks for him.
And I liked it so much that I stayed out there. I was in the private out to Colorado for a year. Davis clerks for him. And I liked it so
much that I stayed out there. I was in the private practice of law for 10 years. Davis, very early on,
sees a lot of potential in Gorsuch, sees him as someone, you know, he would like to align himself
with and maybe help promote from behind the scenes. And he remains close to Judge Gorsuch
for a long period of time. And what do you think that Davis sees in Gorsuch?
Why is he latching onto him?
So what Mike Davis sees in Neil Gorsuch
is kind of the embodiment of these values
that Mike Davis has come to care about
and be committed to.
And Neil Gorsuch is kind of the perfect candidate
right out of central casting.
He not only has hard and strong conservative values,
but he's kind of unapologetic about them in a way that Mike Davis feels enables him to go the distance.
And Mike Davis realizes that changing the judiciary is the strongest avenue towards making lasting change in this country.
How so? Because those are judges who are many of these appointments are for life.
And this is the time when you're making laws that are very difficult to change once you've made them as opposed to political administrations that can come and go.
So this becomes the strategy, which is to confirm as many judges as possible as quickly as you can within kind of an ideological framework that fits with his values.
So it's kind of Alex P. Keaton woven into the law through judges like Neil Gorsuch.
Exactly.
So when the Trump administration begins, there's this historic opportunity to fill the seat vacated
by the conservative Justice Scalia, who has died the year prior and whose seat has
not been filled. Gorsuch is someone that Davis regards as an ideal choice to add to the court.
So Davis is instrumental in helping Gorsuch sort of get on the map in terms of a potential nominee.
Gorsuch is nominated. Davis then takes on the role of assisting Gorsuch from the outside through the
nomination process as a former clerk, a friend, a sort of colleague in legal circles for a number
of years with shared government experience. Gorsuch is confirmed. And in fact, Davis is asked
at age 39 to clerk for Gorsuch on the Supreme Court for the sort of stub term that Gorsuch
enters into. I was a pretty old ball clerk, 39 years old, walking around with my walker around the Supreme
Court.
So he has that experience.
And then there's this opening to be the chief nominations counsel working for Grassley on
the Senate Judiciary Committee.
And Davis's reputation by now is cemented as sort of a dogged advocate and a skilled
political operator. And now he's
poised to work on potential Supreme Court nominations that will aid the conservative
majority from the inside. So take us back, Mike, to June 2018. Justice Kennedy surprisingly
announces his resignation. What is your reaction at the time? And then what is your next move?
his resignation. What is your reaction at the time? And then what is your next move?
I was very excited. I thought it was a historic opportunity to solidify a conservative majority on the court. I was thinking that day, this is the reason that Republicans, that independents,
even some right-thinking Democrats voted for President Trump because of how important this vacancy would be.
And it's the ultimate victory because once you have a 5-4 majority on the court
and you're replacing Anthony Kennedy, who was a swing vote,
you will now have cemented this conservative shift, which is the ultimate goal for the Republicans.
Justice Kavanaugh, then Judge Kavanaugh, was on that list.
So when Brett Kavanaugh is nominated, Chuck Grassley enlists Mike Davis as his kind of brass knuckles to make sure to close this deal, bring this guy over the finish line,
and cement the conservative majority on the high court.
There was no way I was going to let this good man, Justice Kavanaugh,
get smeared with these bogus allegations and lies
because some people are fearful that he's going to rule a certain way on Roe v. Wade.
Right, because Mike Davis saw this as an extension of the culture wars
that he's been fighting for years.
Exactly.
The Democrats brought the perfect storm here,
was the Me Too cultural clash with a judicial fight,
and it was just a fight that I was not going to back down from.
So for Davis, this is a historic moment,
and he's ready to pull out all the stops.
We'll be right back.
So, Robin, Kate,
what does the Mike Davis playbook look like
when he actually tries to protect Brett Kavanaugh? So there are sort of four
key tenets to it. The first one is after a quick assessment of the facts and a feeling of confidence
that the issue can be overcome, that's when you message to your entire support network that you
are going to stay the course. On September 20th, Kavanaugh was on life support and Republicans
were running for the hills. And what I wanted to do was send out a message that there was someone
inside that Senate Judiciary Committee fighting. It was a bad signal. So that's where you see
something like a September 20th tweet from Mike Davis saying, unfazed and determined,
we will confirm Judge Kavanaugh. That's days after
Christine Blasey Ford has come public, and Kavanaugh is very much in doubt in terms of
whether his candidacy can move forward. So almost immediately, Davis is rushing to his rhetorical
defense. It was to say that these allegations are not adding up, the lawyers are playing games, and we do not have a presumption of guilt in this country.
Number two is to turn the accused into the victim.
In the case of Kavanaugh, that was to make the argument that Kavanaugh has already been evaluated by the FBI.
He was a judge on the D.C. Circuit for 12 years,
the second highest court in the land.
He had six, now seven, FBI full-field,
single-scope background investigations.
They talked to 160 people who knew him best.
This guy has already passed the test.
Look what you're putting him through again.
You're potentially ruining his family and his career.
There was not a whiff of impropriety related to alcoholism or sexual abuse.
You're dragging his name through the mud.
You haven't given this guy a fair trial, and you're already convicting him.
In the Me Too era, we're just supposed to say, you know what?
Let's just throw due process out the door.
Let's just throw the presumption of innocence out the door.
Let's do this un-American presumption of guilt because we're the Me Too era.
That is garbage.
And we were not going to let that happen to a good man like Justice Kavanaugh.
Rather than trying to flesh out and understand better the accusations themselves. The third tenet deals with casting doubt upon the facts and also
tarnishing or perhaps politicizing the accuser. Listen, I don't believe Dr. Ford's allegations.
I don't think she's telling the truth. Tell us why.
truth. Tell us why. There's just so many holes in her story and, you know, little fibs here and there. And when people make little fibs on things that are smaller, well, they also fib about bigger
things. I just don't know. You saw that with Dr. Ford with some of the issues about fear of flying.
with some of the issues about fear of flying.
She said that she had a Kavanaugh-induced fear of flying, so she couldn't come out to the hearing on a certain date.
The CV that she submitted to the committee shows, as one of her interests,
international surf travel to places like Hawaii and Australia and all over the world.
And I'm thinking, hmm, if she has this Kavanaugh-induced fear of flying, how did she get to Australia?
Did she surf there?
Raising doubts about all those sorts of things, as well as pointing to a lack of evidence or evidence that might suggest that the story is inaccurate.
Even if the issue that's being disputed is way off to the side. Right.
She has no memory of key details of the night in question. She doesn't remember who invited her to
the party or how she heard about it. She doesn't remember how she got to the party. She doesn't
remember what house. And that is simply a way to put a seed of doubt in an already skeptical person's mind about this account.
And number four is to frame this all in the context of a partisan battle.
It's the whole way this process was handled.
It was the gamesmanship.
It was Dianne Feinstein sitting on this letter for six weeks.
It was this partisan hack lawyer who is, you know,
representing Christine Blasey Ford using her.
That this is a conspiracy, that it's a witch hunt.
And some of the language around this speaks to that.
This real hyperbolic, huge sweeping statements like a calculated, orchestrated political hit, which were the words of Brett Kavanaugh.
I think this whole process was disgusting.
And it was transparently
political to me.
What that does is
it removes us from the facts
on the ground
in terms of whether
these allegations
have any legitimacy
and should be explored
in any real way.
And it takes it to the level of
this is all just politics.
And Mike Davis has an analogy for what they're doing here.
You know, what I did with Kavanaugh's confirmation,
I called it the dead chicken strategy.
What on earth does that mean?
What is the dead chicken strategy?
So remember that Davis, for a brief period,
was a clerk for the newly installed Justice Gorsuch.
And during that clerkship,
the clerks would get together for lunch
with individual justices.
Davis had a lunch with Justice Clarence Thomas.
And during that lunch,
Thomas told this story about growing up on a farm in Georgia.
It really resonated.
He said when dogs killed chickens,
they would take those chickens
and wrap it around those dogs' necks. And as those
chickens rot it around those dogs' necks, those dogs lost the taste for chicken. And I think
that's what Republicans need to start doing with the left. Davis sees this as an analogy
to what needs to be done to the liberals to punish them for their tactics.
So who exactly are the characters in this colorful metaphor?
So in this case, the chicken is essentially the smears and lies
that Davis believes that liberals have told about their political opponents,
whether it was Judge Kavanaugh, whether it is President Trump
or any others who are part of the conservative objectives that Davis espouses. And they need
to be punished and given a taste of their own medicine and have those smears pushed back in
their face in order for them to lose the taste for that kind of political
war making.
So because the Kavanaugh strategy worked so effectively, we wanted to ask Mike Davis the
question, how is that playbook working for the Trump administration now as the conservatives
are facing a very real threat to President Trump in the form of impeachment?
And what does he say?
real threat to President Trump in the form of impeachment. And what does he say? He says we're seeing it unfold before our very eyes as it comes to handling the impeachment inquiry and defending
an embattled President Trump. So you start with forceful denials and assertions that there was
no wrongdoing on the part of the president. Impeachment should be a last resort. It is for
high crimes and misdemeanors and nothing that has been alleged against President
Trump even comes close to those even if even if these allegations are true, which they're
not it doesn't even come close.
You then go to a discrediting of political opponents of whistleblowers or even the people
that leaked to the original whistleblower.
Were they politically motivated? Did they do the right thing? Then there's an attack on the facts and whether or
not they're legitimate. With their outrageous lies and smears and impeachment mobs and MeToo mobs,
we need to fight back as conservatives, as Republicans, because the left has a glass jaw.
And if you fight back, you'll break their glass jaw.
And then finally, there's an invocation of this sort of the witch hunt,
the persecution of the president, how un-American this is,
and how inherently and disgustingly political it has become.
This is a president of the United States.
He was elected by the American people, whether the left likes it or not. And just to stay with your chicken metaphor and clarify it, what's the dead chicken and around
whose neck in this case? Well, I mean, I think right now you're looking at Joe Biden. The
Democrats are going to hurt the one Democrat who has a shot at beating Trump by bringing in this whole Ukraine corruption mess, because Joe Biden has his
own problems with this Ukraine corruption mess. So be careful, Democrats, what you,
this impeachment can of worms. So if the dead chicken strategy succeeds in the case of impeachment,
the way it sounds like he thinks it succeeded in the case
of kavanaugh then democrats will stop pursuing impeachment because they will see the flaws
in their arguments about why he should be impeached i think it's even deeper than that i think it's
that but it's also perhaps his belief that Democrats need to check their own motives
and realize that this person has been elected and he's here at least until 2021
and that they need to just be governed by this president
and focus on legislation and other issues,
but drop the political animus and the tools he believes they are using to achieve
political ends, which in his mind are smears and lies, among other things. I wonder, though, if
Mike Davis is right that the same strategy that Republicans used successfully to confirm Brett
Kavanaugh can work to fend off impeachment for President Trump because the situations are quite different.
One was a debate over what happened decades ago
when people were in high school
and memories were hazier
and witnesses not available to corroborate something.
Here, in the case of the Ukraine phone call,
there is a transcript.
There are people who listened in on the call.
And there were whistleblowers to something that happened just about a month ago.
So are these fundamentally different?
I think actually the template can still be applied to a very different set of circumstances because the ultimate goal is to win.
And so what you do is you remove this from the facts and you take it
out of the substance. And it's all about this sweeping general statement that this is a political
hit job and that's all you need to know. And keep focused on the fact that we have to defend this
guy against a broad-based effort to take him down. And don't lose sight of the thing that undergirds this whole effort,
which is the conservative culture war.
Mike Davis, President Trump, and others have a vision for how the courts should look,
how the country should look, and they are trying their level best
to get to that through whatever means necessary.
Right. And so efforts to stop it may take many forms, but they are in this telling and
through this playbook all a part of the same effort to just stymie this.
Exactly.
The interesting hitch in this kind of well-developed strategy, is that if the person in question looks to be on the ropes,
if it looks as if this battle is not going to be won,
there is a kind of an exit strategy, an escape hatch, if you will.
And in the case of President Trump,
that might mean that if it feels as if there is not enough political will
to survive this battle, there is a scenario in which you could imagine a guy like Mike Davis walking away.
Really? Why?
Because ultimately the most important thing is this larger culture war, not the individuals you're fighting for.
country does support not just impeachment, but removing the president from office or not reelecting him, you could foresee a day where the great warriors in this battle, the Mike Davises,
might just wash their hands of it. That's right. Because the important thing is to have the big
picture in mind. And the big picture is they want to transform this country and they're going to do
whatever it takes to do that. And if there are casualties along the way,
including the president, so be it.
Thank you both very much.
Thank you.
Thank you.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
We witnessed the beginning of this offensive at around about 4 o'clock local time this afternoon.
A series of loud explosions.
You can probably hear more of them now, and it's been pretty constant.
On Wednesday, Turkey began a military assault on northeast Syria,
launching airstrikes and firing artillery against American-backed Kurdish forces there.
Volleys of artillery from our location in southern Turkey
are being fired across the border onto Kurdish
positions in northern Syria.
The attack only began after President Trump approved it during a telephone call over the
weekend with Turkey's president.
But on Wednesday, Trump seemed to regret that decision, saying in a statement that the U.S., quote,
does not endorse this attack and thinks it's a bad idea.
And...
Batteries, extra lighting, flashlights.
I have extra flashlights at home.
Bought some ceiling lights.
And then I'm going to try to preserve as much of my food as I can with the ice.
In an unusual move, the largest utility in California is deliberately cutting off power to at least 2 million residents
to avoid the possibility of wildfires over the next few days.
Forecasts for hot, dry air and winds of up to 70 miles per, have created a high risk of fires started by downed power lines,
the cause of several previous wildfires across California.
We very much understand the inconvenience and difficulties
such a power outage would cause,
and we do not take or make this decision lightly.
The power outages have disrupted life across the state, with schools canceling classes,
stores closing their doors, and drivers navigating streets without working traffic lights,
angering residents and prompting the utility, PG&E, to defend its decision.
We implement a public safety power shutoff as a last resort.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Bavaro.
See you tomorrow.