John Dean was in town at National Archives to talk about the upcoming CNN series Watergate: Blueprint for a Scandal beginning Sunday night, June 5, at 9 p.m. and CNN's Jim Acosta was there with him to ask a few questions.
John Dean, left, and Jim Acosta at National Archives, June 1, 2022/Photo by Patricia Leslie
He said he had saved lots of his papers and goods which he pitched to CNN a while back as the 50th anniversary of the Watergate break-in on June 17, 1972 nears, and CNN took the idea and ran with it.
If the first show is an indication of the quality, it'll be an excellent series!
National Archives, June 1, 2022/Photo by Patricia Leslie
Not Dean.
Not anybody!
Nixon knew he was breaking the law, but that didn't stop him from breaking the law, Dean said, and Nixon sicced the IRS on various "enemies" which his team thought was “great stuff [to use], but I thought it was awful,” Dean says.
At times in the show, Dean's heroics make him seem grander than he was. He did spend four months in prison and was disbarred in Virginia and the District of Columbia (which go unmentioned, at least in the first show).
Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the Washington Post reporters who broke the Watergate story, lead the show, aided by memories from CBS's Lesley Stahl who describes Nixon's henchmen John Ehrlichman (1925-1999) as personable and likeable, but, Haldeman, his partner in crime, was "dark" and "humorless." (No surprise to anyone who lived during the era.)
During the evening, laughter, moans, and/or groans often greeted the name of Donald Trump whenever it came up, which was probably more often than any other contemporary's.
At the conclusion of the film, Acosta asked Dean, “why is this story so relevant now?” and the audience sighed loudly.
Dean: “It's impossible to look at Watergate now" and ignore comparisons to the Trump administration. In “an understatement,” Trump does or did not want to follow the law, and the audience laughed again.
He spent 4.5 years with graduate students transcribing the Watergate tapes, and Archives has much of the material.
Acosta: “Did this country learn its lesson from Watergate?” and the audience, with mixed ages, groaned again.
Dean thinks Washington was sensitized to Watergate’s lessons for the first ten years after the scandal, "but since then….My hope is that they [the January 6 Committee] have witnesses who quietly come forward.”
Acosta: What will happen to our democracy?
Dean: “I worry much more about it now. During Watergate, I never worried about a constitutional crisis,” but things are different now with the Republicans carrying Trump’s water.
The interview lasted about 15 minutes and no questions from the audience were taken.
This is also the 50th anniversary of the founding of CNN.