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- <text id=93TT2395>
- <link 93TO0094>
- <title>
- Feb. 01, 1993: How it Happened
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 01, 1993 Clinton's First Blunder
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 31
- How it Happened
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The Baird debacle grew out of a selection process in which
- Clinton aides acted hastily and cavalierly in brushing aside an
- early warning
- </p>
- <p>By JILL SMOLOWE - With reporting by Margaret Carlson, Julie
- Johnson and Elaine Shannon/Washington
- </p>
- <p> In the end, Zoe Baird did not need President Clinton or
- anyone else to tell her that her career as the nation's chief
- law officer was over before it ever got started. When her
- grilling before the Senate Judiciary Committee ended last
- Thursday at 9:30 p.m., she retired to the Washington law office
- of her friend and mentor, Lloyd Cutler, at 24th and M streets.
- Over coffee and sandwiches, an exhausted but clear-headed Baird
- rehashed her day with a group that would include her husband
- Paul Gewirtz, Cutler, fellow fortysome thing lawyer Terrence
- Adamson and Secretary of State Warren Christopher. By 10:45,
- Baird concluded that she must withdraw her nomination. "She
- said, `Look, this is so controversial it would be crippling for
- the President and the department even if we won,' " said
- Adamson. Soon after, Christopher phoned White House chief of
- staff Thomas ("Mack") McLarty and pulled her name.
- </p>
- <p> Her decision climaxed a 29-day ordeal that secured Baird's
- place in the history books as the Clinton Administration's first
- major setback. As hard a comedown as it was for the talented
- Connecticut lawyer who stood to become America's first female
- Attorney General, it was a greater embarrassment for Clinton.
- The episode showed Clinton and his aides acting hastily, naively
- and cavalierly in brushing aside Baird's early warning that she
- had employed two undocumented Peruvians in her home. When the
- pieces of the shattered nomination are fitted together, Baird's
- civil infraction appears less careless than her handling by a
- transition team that seemed more bent on completing its
- headhunting mission than applying its standards.
- </p>
- <p> In some ways, the Baird nomination was troubled from the
- start. The first indications from Bill and Hillary Clinton were
- that they wanted to appoint Vernon Jordan to the Attorney
- General's post. A flurry of press articles questioning Jordan's
- ties to a tobacco company, capped by a searing editorial in the
- New York Times, persuaded Jordan to remove his name from
- consideration. Aides then leaked word that Clinton sought a
- female appointee--a move that in effect devalued the post to
- affirmative-action status.
- </p>
- <p> That may help explain the series of rejections that
- followed. Clinton's first choice, Federal Appeals Court Judge
- Patricia Wald, declined the nomination, citing her age and
- reluctance to lose her pension benefits. The name of former
- Federal Judge Shirley Hufstedler was floated next. National
- Public Radio then reported that Washington lawyer Brooksley Born
- had been tapped. Baird and her husband first met the Clintons
- at an annual New Year's Renaissance Week at Hilton Head, South
- Carolina, some years earlier. But it wasn't until she was
- summoned late last year to Little Rock, initially to be vetted
- for the post of White House counsel, that she struck a fast
- rapport with the President-elect. "Clinton likes people who he
- likes," explains a presidential aide. Baird also boasted an
- impressive connection to the Clintons' alma mater, Yale Law
- School: her husband is a constitutional scholar on the school's
- faculty.
- </p>
- <p> While in Little Rock, Baird told Warren Christopher, who
- was then co-chief of the transition team and later became
- Secretary of State, that she employed illegal immigrants as a
- driver for herself and a nanny from 1990 through 1992.
- Christopher, a long-standing mentor of Baird's, passed the
- information on to Clinton. Last week, after much confusion about
- what Clinton knew and when he knew it, the President set the
- record straight. "Just before she was announced but after I had
- discussed the appointment with her, I was told that this matter
- had come up," he said. Clinton added that he had been told "in
- a very cursory way" about the hirings. He said he felt confident
- because Baird had consulted an attorney "who was an expert in
- this area."
- </p>
- <p> Back in Little Rock, however, Clinton and his aides had
- perceived no danger. A transition aide recalls that the attitude
- about Baird's legal infraction was "Everybody does it." As for
- Baird, "she deferred to a political judgment that it was not
- something that should deter them from nominating her," says a
- lawyer who was involved in the process. The nomination went
- forward, and Clinton introduced Baird to the world, hailing her
- as a "dynamic, talented and innovative lawyer."
- </p>
- <p> The press treated the unknown Baird gently, with
- adjectives like brilliant, hard-working and ambitious sprinkled
- throughout the stories. Her resume--short stints in the Carter
- Justice Department and White House, private practice, head of
- General Electric's legal department, chief counsel of Aetna Life
- and Casualty--was trotted out as the very model of the modern
- manager. It was noted that the woman now destined to restore
- order and morale to the 90,000-strong Justice Department had
- spearheaded a restructuring of Aetna's 120-member legal
- department.
- </p>
- <p> In the wings, however, public-interest advocates quietly
- voiced their reservations. Critics complained about Baird's
- big-company orientation and her lack of experience in civil
- rights and criminal matters. "A lot of people in the
- public-interest community were saying, `Zoe who?' " says a
- Washington lawyer involved with Clinton's transition team.
- Broadly, they worried about Baird's stance on tort reform;
- specifically, they questioned her role in Aetna's campaign to
- restrict the number of civil suits brought against corporations.
- Critics also pointed to Baird's work at GE that led to
- implementation of a program aimed at dodging federal prosecution
- and blunting whistle blowing on waste and contract fraud.
- </p>
- <p> With the notable exception of consumer watchdog Ralph
- Nader, most of the carping was done anonymously. A
- public-interest activist explained the general reluctance to
- openly criticize Clinton's nominee: "The Washington civil rights
- lobby groups have a symbiotic relationship with the Democratic
- Party and are unwilling to rock the boat. They are desperate to
- preserve their access."
- </p>
- <p> There was quiet concern at the Justice Department. After
- the scandals that plagued previous Attorneys General--Edwin
- Meese (Iran-contra and Wedtech), Dick Thornburgh (B.C.C.I.) and
- William Barr (the Iraqi-loan affair)--the department badly
- needs to salvage its reputation. At a moment when strong
- leadership is needed, employees were worried about working for
- an Attorney General who largely owed her job to Christopher.
- Justice and State often spar when criminal investigations turn
- up evidence of misdeeds by foreign officials of friendly
- countries.
- </p>
- <p> None of these issues, however, threatened to derail the
- Baird nomination. For that, a far more potent explosive was
- required. It came, in classic Washington fashion, in the form
- of a leak, one that Baird supporters think dripped from the FBI,
- though they can't prove it. On Jan. 14, the public awoke to a
- Page One New York Times headline: CLINTON'S CHOICE FOR JUSTICE
- DEPT. HIRED ILLEGAL ALIENS FOR HOUSEHOLD. By this time, Baird
- and Gewirtz had remedied their delinquent-tax situation by
- paying nearly $16,000 in taxes, penalties and interest. It was
- made known that they had hired the Peruvians only after failing
- to find an American baby-sitter and that they had relied on the
- advice of an immigration lawyer, Thomas Belote of Ridgefield,
- Connecticut. The Clinton camp released a letter from Belote,
- dated Jan. 5, 1993, and written at Gewirtz's request,
- confirming that he had provided counsel and had advised that the
- Peruvians' lack of Social Security numbers would complicate tax
- payments.
- </p>
- <p> Immediately, questions arose about the propriety of
- Baird's presiding over a department that oversees the
- enforcement of immigration laws. Yet the Clinton camp remained
- unfazed, dismissing Baird's transgression as a "technical
- violation." By the weekend, with editorials denouncing Baird's
- nomination, the Clinton people had shifted to a "Baird deeply
- regrets" mode. But they still did not grasp that a
- recession-pressed public would have little sympathy for the
- nanny problems of a couple who jointly earned more than $600,000
- annually and evaded taxes.
- </p>
- <p> Among the top players in the unfolding drama, only Senate
- Judiciary Committee chairman Joseph Biden seemed to anticipate
- the fire storm ahead. He first learned from Baird on Jan. 5 of
- her transgressions. Biden was shocked when a Clinton transition
- aide dismissed Baird's offense as a "parking ticket." To his
- mind, a worried Biden told his staff, "It's a freeway crash."
- "Putting aside the legal question, this is a big political
- problem," Biden told Baird, who appeared surprised by his
- vehemence. Biden told her that she had to inform ranking
- minority member Orrin Hatch and Senators Edward Kennedy and Alan
- Simpson, who sit on an immigration subcommittee. Baird had two
- more meetings with Biden, each time leaving his office in tears.
- On the day the Times story broke, Biden stated, "I do not
- believe this matter will prevent her confirmation." Meanwhile,
- the increasingly public discussion was making the Clinton camp
- angry with the panel's Democratic Senators for stirring up the
- issue. "The White House gave us a lot of heat," says an aide to
- one Senator. "They said, `Why aren't you being as helpful as
- Senator Hatch?' "
- </p>
- <p> The support of Hatch and other conservative Republicans
- had an easy explanation: her strong probusiness credentials.
- And if they could push through her nomination, the
- conservatives would have a large chit to call in from the new
- Administration. The Democrats on the committee, however, were
- caught in a painful bind. After the Anita Hill debacle, they
- desperately wanted the Baird confirmation to go smoothly. They
- also did not want to embarrass the new President. But after so
- many tainted Attorneys General, they were determined to confirm
- someone with an unblemished record.
- </p>
- <p> The confirmation hearing opened last Tuesday with not a
- single member of the committee on record against Baird. But the
- illegal-alien issue was front and center--and growing fast.
- "There were phone calls to offices, local editorials," says a
- top Senate official. "The people were just way ahead of us."
- Biden more than hinted at the ground swell with his pointed, if
- rambling, questions. "Do you understand that the vast majority
- of the American people have similar needs?" he lectured.
- </p>
- <p> Baird allowed that she had made a "mistake," but stressed
- that she had been open about the infraction from the start. She
- blamed her husband for having failed to file Labor Department
- papers in a timely fashion, saying, "I would have pushed to make
- it more expeditious." She assumed responsibility for the lapse
- in judgment but blamed it on the pressures of motherhood.
- </p>
- <p> It was an appeal designed to tug heartstrings. But Baird's
- apologia did not play well in Peoria--or the rest of America.
- Irate callers jammed the phone lines of radio and cable stations
- across the country, denouncing her tax dodging and calling on
- her to withdraw. The switchboard on Capitol Hill lit up as
- constituents weighed in with their representatives. In a single
- day, Senator Paul Simon's Washington office logged 1,000 calls.
- "In 18 years in the Senate," said Senator Patrick Leahy, "I had
- never seen so many telephone calls, spontaneously, in such a
- short period." Senator Nancy Kassebaum and Representative Marge
- Roukema lobbied Republican colleagues on the Judiciary Committee
- to quash the nomination.
- </p>
- <p> As Clinton was feted, two transition-team lawyers flew to
- Connecticut to interview Baird's immigration lawyer, Belote.
- They emerged disturbed by what one lawyer called "substantial
- discrepancies" between Baird's testimony and Belote's logs and
- diaries. Upset by his depiction in the media as an inept
- attorney, Belote provided documentation that some Senators
- believe contradicts Baird's testimony. While Baird testified
- that her husband contacted Belote upon hiring the Peruvians in
- July 1990, Belote's documents indicate that Gewirtz did not
- contact Belote's firm until four months later. Moreover,
- according to a lawyer familiar with the session, Belote's
- records indicate that he had no further contact with the couple
- until April 12, 1991, when he told them that the Peruvians were
- not authorized to work until they had documentation, that their
- employment was illegal and that there were tax obligations.
- </p>
- <p> As the second round of hearings opened Thursday, it was
- plain that Baird was a woman without a constituency. She had no
- track record with women's groups, Washington insiders or
- public-interest groups. Not even professional women with
- children rushed to her defense.
- </p>
- <p> Through a second round of questioning, Baird remained
- calm. At noon, Senator Herb Kohl brusquely inquired, "Have you
- asked yourself whether or not you might serve...best by
- withdrawing your nomination?" Baird replied, "I don't believe
- that would be appropriate," leaving tea-leaf readers to divine
- that Clinton's support remained intact. During the lunch break,
- White House aides Bernie Nussbaum and Howard Paster sprinted to
- the Hill to take Baird's pulse. The result: full-speed ahead,
- Baird told them. But during that same break, Senators of both
- parties caucused, and the mood perceptibly began to shift
- against Baird. Five Southern Democrats told majority leader
- George Mitchell that they could not support the nominee. Five
- Republicans, including two committee members, soon announced
- their opposition.
- </p>
- <p> Over the next several hours, the Clinton Administration
- seemed to vacillate in its support for Baird. Even as Baird
- soldiered on, heartened by her lunchtime visit from Clinton
- aides, White House spokesman George Stephanopoulos was cutting
- her loose. During a press conference, he said the Administration
- continued to support her "right now" and that details of her tax
- and hired-help situation were "murky." Clinton, who was kept
- informed of developments in multiple briefings, was determined
- to let Baird play out her cards and make her own decision.
- "Remember, he stated his case on 60 Minutes," said a Clinton
- associate, recalling how Clinton and his wife had gone on TV
- last January to address questions about his marital fidelity.
- "He believes in that."
- </p>
- <p> While the Clinton people made no effort to warn Baird of
- the shifting mood, Biden did. More than once he invited her to
- bring the proceedings to a halt. In each instance, she declined.
- At 7:30 p.m., as more Democratic Senators said they would vote
- against Baird, Biden joined Senate majority leader George
- Mitchell in a blunt call to Clinton, telling him that the
- nomination was doomed. When Biden could not get through to the
- President, he resorted to a final message: If his call was not
- returned immediately, he would state his opposition to Baird's
- nomination publicly. The tactic worked: Clinton called back and
- Biden told him the bad news. Baird meanwhile kept going with
- considerable poise and grit. "We kept telling her that she had
- to smile," a White House aide recalled. Two hours later, the
- hearings closed. At 10, Baird reached Cutler's office downtown,
- where Christopher and White House aide Paster informed her that
- there was no hope left. Biden called to echo the point. After
- some hesitation, Baird relented. Phone calls were made; letters
- were exchanged by fax, and, at 1:22 a.m., released to the press.
- </p>
- <p> If Clinton moves quickly to name a successor, it is likely
- that the furor will die out. Chief of staff McLarty and
- counselor Bruce Lindsey will oversee the new selection process.
- To his credit, Clinton assumed full responsibility for the
- blunder. Moreover, once the nomination began to crumble, he
- retreated swiftly, recovering with some grace from a nasty
- stumble.
- </p>
- <p> While the headache is ending for Clinton, it may be just
- beginning for the Peruvian couple hired by Baird. Immigration
- officials have ordered Victor and Lillian Cordero to appear for
- questioning next week in Hartford. Deportation proceedings could
- follow. Victor's current employer says the former driver has
- disappeared, leaving a note that he was returning to Peru;
- Lillian has not yet been located.
- </p>
- <p> Things should go better for Baird. Aetna has put out word
- that it "very much looks forward" to her continuing in her job.
- Clinton, in his letter to Baird, left a door open to other
- possibilities, stating, "I hope that you will be available for
- other assignments for your country in my Administration." It is
- not known what the two discussed when they met at the White
- House on Friday. Since sending her withdrawal letter, Baird has
- disappeared from public view. What is known is that after her
- exhausting ordeal, she and Gewirtz returned to their hotel where
- their three-year-old son was sleeping soundly under the care of
- a baby-sitter--a U.S. citizen.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-