PBD Podcast - "Shouldn’t Have Resigned" - Ken Khachigian Reveals Nixon’s Paranoia, Reagan’s Mistakes, Bush’s Secrets | PBD Podcast | Ep. 505
Episode Date: November 8, 2024Ken Khachigian, a legendary political strategist and speechwriter for Nixon and Reagan, reveals untold stories from the White House. From Nixon’s explosive temper to Reagan’s secret influences, th...is deep dive into presidential politics is a must-watch for history buffs. ---- 🇺🇸 PURCHASE THE VT VETERANS DAY COLLECTION: https://bit.ly/40qVbpt 📕 PBD'S BOOK "THE ACADEMY": https://bit.ly/3XC5ftN 📰 VTNEWS.AI: https://bit.ly/3Zn2Moj 👕 PURCHASE THE NEW VT POLO SHIRTS: https://bit.ly/3Y4Npig 🇺🇸 VT USA COLLECTION: https://bit.ly/47zLCWO 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON SPOTIFY: https://bit.ly/3ze3RUM 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ITUNES: https://bit.ly/47iOGGx 🎙️ FOLLOW THE PODCAST ON ALL PLATFORMS: https://bit.ly/4e0FgCe 📱 CONNECT ON MINNECT: https://bit.ly/3MGK5EE 📕 CHOOSE YOUR ENEMIES WISELY: https://bit.ly/3XnEpo0 👔 BET-DAVID CONSULTING: https://bit.ly/4d5nYlU 🎓 VALUETAINMENT UNIVERSITY: https://bit.ly/3XC8L7k 📺 JOIN THE CHANNEL: https://bit.ly/3XjSSRK 💬 TEXT US: Text “PODCAST” to 310-340-1132 to get the latest updates in real-time! ABOUT US: Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal Bestseller “Your Next Five Moves” (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
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30 seconds.
Did you ever think you were making it?
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Valuetainment, giving values contagious.
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I be running homie, look what I become.
I'm the one.
So we were planning on doing this interview today,
all in Armenian.
And I said, most of our audience, they're English speaking,
you know, maybe we'll make a couple comments
about Armenians here in a minute.
But let me tell you why I'm sitting down with a legendary,
Votchinch, yes.
I'm sitting down with a legendary, Votchin, yes. I'm sitting down with a legendary Armenian who has been in many rooms that you
would love to be in while major decisions are being made. Let me unpack it for you. So think
about your name is President Nixon. You're under a lot of scrutiny, Watergate. You're about to go be
doing the interview with Frost, Nixon, everybody's like, oh my
God, you're going to resign, they're going to fire, you've got to impeach, all this stuff's
going to be happening to you, and you're assigned as a chief researcher, and you're there preparing
Kim for the interview with Nixon.
That's my guess today.
And I imagine if you get a phone call from a two-time governor in California who was
one of the sexiest men alive at the time, loved an actor,
married to a beautiful wife, gets into politics, wins as the president of SAG is doing stuff
for GE on the road going up there talking about how America is the greatest country
in the world and this man, this man named President Reagan calls you and says, I want
you to be my chief speechwriter.
And he says, what, you want me to be the chief speechwriter?
I want you to be my chief speechwriter.
I want you to write my inaugural address. I want you to, if some of these things the chief speech I want you to be my chief speech right I want you to write my inaugural address I want
you to if some of these things were working I want you to be there for me
this is the man so imagine those conversations behind closed doors
decisions being made all of this going on at the same time this man has
personally witnessed and he's got a book that just came out called behind closed
doors the the one and only Ken Khachikyan.
I say like that in Armenian, English, Mimei say Ken Khachikyan.
It's great to have you here.
Good to be here, Patrick.
So what a resume.
I mean, what a life you've lived.
It's amazing.
I never thought it could happen.
It has been an amazing life.
From Armenian parents who escaped the genocide, who are from Turkey, Armenians from Turkey, come here,
they raise a son who is from Visalia, which I know Visalia right outside of McFarland,
probably close to Bakersfield, maybe 40 minutes away from Bakersfield, Fresno area, great
area. And then you go to UC Santa Barbara or Cal State Santa Barbara? You go to UC Santa
Barbara and then you go to Columbia, Columbia Law School State Santa Barbara? You go to UC Santa Barbara. UC Santa Barbara.
And you go to Columbia.
Columbia Law School.
Columbia Law School.
And then you come out and at the time,
somehow, someway Nixon gets a hold of you, right?
If you don't mind sharing that story,
how that took place and it will go to
into a bunch of questions I got for you.
Well, I was a second year law student at Columbia.
I loved politics.
I loved it ever since I was in high school. I went to Boyd State, California Boyd State ever since I was in high school.
I went to Boyd State, California Boyd State,
when I was in high school.
Actually, I saw Nixon when I was at UC Santa Barbara.
We were on the debate team and I cornered him
when he was running for governor for two minutes.
I read Six Crises and I was bored with law school,
but anyway, I had to finish law school.
Who was he when you saw him? Was he already president?
No, no, he was running for governor. He lost for president, he's running for governor.
What year is this? 1962.
Okay, got it.
And he was campaigning in Santa Barbara, and I was on the debate team, and after he spoke,
we cornered him just for two minutes. Anyway, I just saw him. And anyway, flash forward to 1967.
Was two minutes long enough where you made an impression
that he remembered you?
No, no, no.
Okay, got it, okay.
But he made an impression on me.
The other way around, got it.
Yeah, he gave me some time.
And I liked the man.
Then I read his book, Six Crises.
1967 now, flash forward, I'm in law school,
second year law student.
He's running for president again.
Now he's a has-been.
He lost in 60, he lost in 62.
He was not the front runner for president in 1967.
Nelson Rockefeller was the front runner.
George Romney was the front runner.
And Ronald Reagan had just been elected governor
in California in 66 and everybody thought
he might be president.
So Nixon was below the pack.
But I liked him and I thought, you know, this might be an opportunity to get involved in
a presidential campaign.
So I'm a law student.
So I write and I read an article in the New York Times and says that it's the new Nixon.
And he has a younger crowd around him and he's developing a new personality. So I wrote
a letter to him at his law office. I typed it out on a typewriter. Remember
typewriters? Of course I do. I learned how to type with a typewriter. I wrote a
letter on a typewriter and sent it to his law office in New York. I didn't get
an answer back. I thought that's pretty rude. You did't get an answer back. I thought, that's pretty rude.
You did not get an answer back.
No.
And so I called his office, and they were very polite.
They said, well, maybe it got lost in the mail.
Why don't you send it again?
Well, I kept a carbon copy.
You had to keep carbon copies in those days.
How old are you at this time?
I'm 23 years old.
Second year law student, Columbia.
So I rewrite the letter, type it out all over again.
Now, my wife's working on Wall Street,
two blocks from his law office.
She's at 30 Wall Street. He's at 20 Broad Street.
So I type it. She said she hand delivers it to his law office.
And about three weeks later, I finally get an answer back from Pat Buchanan.
Pat Buchanan's working for him as an aide to Nixon.
And he says, you know what, I'm sorry your letter got mixed up.
Come in for an interview. I still have that letter.
And I have an interview with Pat Buchanan.
He kids me to this day. He says, I thought you were a spy for Rockefeller
because you're at Columbia Law School.
So we have an interview.
It didn't go great, but still he let me come in for.
What does that interview look like?
What do you ask at that point?
Well, he's asking me questions
because I was portraying myself from,
I said I have an expertise in farming
because I grew up on a farm. I have an expertise in farming,
because I grew up on a farm.
Then he starts asking me questions about the Brandon plan
and things like that.
I didn't know about that stuff.
And I said, oh, I acted really stupid.
But basically he saw in me an eager, someone who's eager.
There's a word in Armenian, jarbigh.
Jarbigh, yeah, jarbigh is sharpbigh. Jarbigh is sharp, eager.
Resourceful.
Right, yeah, right.
And clever.
So he saw someone who wanted to move up.
And so he said, come on in and you can volunteer.
Well, there was only about 15 people there
working in the office.
Because people weren't crazy about Nixon back then.
So I said, I'll do whatever you want me to do.
I don't want to start at the top.
So I started answering correspondence.
But every chance I got, I would volunteer to work, do this,
do that.
I provided research.
And Martin Anderson, who was at Hoover Institution at the time,
doing domestic policy advice for Nixon,
saw that I was sort of an eager beaver, New Columbia law
student.
And when Nixon started doing well, and then he won the primaries, and then come that summer,
they offered me a job.
And I got hired to work in the campaign in the summer of 1968, working for, guess who,
Alan Greenspan.
Wow. Working for guess who Alan Greenspan? Wow, and Alan Greenspan was
the domestic policy advisor for
Nixon in the campaign now Alan Greenspan was a economic consultant at the time. Yep
he was sort of a
Odd character. It's who would he have been today?
Who is he today?
Well me today. You know, he was federal, he was
head of the Federal Reserve. No, I totally get that. Meaning, a Alan Greenspan at
that time, if you compare to an Alan Greenspan of today, who is today's Alan
Greenspan? Oh my god. Is there a way to make that comparison or? No, I can't even
think of it. I mean, Alan Greenspan played in the,
he played the clarinet and I think he played the clarinet in Woody Herman's jazz band back
in the 60s or in the 50s along with Nixon's law partner. That's how they knew each other.
And then he became an economic consultant. He was sort of a nerd economic nerd
Was he a sharp when you met him? Were you was he a sharp like were you like this guy's impressive?
Well, he was he was sharp, but he was he was sort of spacey sort of a space good day
You know what? I mean, he was just out there and never never land. He wanted me to quit law school
He said, you know, you should quit law school
because we're going
to win this election and we'll get you a job in the White House. I said, after all this
time, my four years of undergraduate work, two years of law school, you're going to have
me quit law school after all this? That's crazy. No, I'm not going to quit law school.
He was out in this other world, but he was a genius.
I mean, you could tell that he was very cerebral.
Did he think highly of himself?
Was he arrogant?
No, no, no.
He was not what Grant was.
No, no, not in the least.
Okay.
No, no, no.
He was down to earth.
Okay.
He was very cerebral, very smart.
But I didn't just report to him.
I reported to a lot of others as well,
but he was my direct boss
But so when you're doing this, what is your intention? What are you trying to be? Are you here's a guy that is in debate?
Right, you're in the debate groups and all the stuff they do net at Columbia, right?
You're going through where you're studying politics. You have the interest who do you want to be? Are you in the back of your mind saying,
one day I'm gonna be a congressman,
or are you saying I'm gonna be a speech writer,
am I gonna be a dog president?
Who am I gonna be?
What's the point?
That's an interesting question
because before I got involved in any of that,
when I was in high school,
or let's say when I first got into freshman year of college
I was I thought I was my goals to become a US senator
But by the time I got to this point in my life in the Nixon campaign
I just wanted to get a job in the White House
And I wanted to somehow make a difference. I didn't know where I was gonna end up to be honest with you
I wanted to have a I wanted to be in the was going to end up to be honest with you. I wanted to
have a want to be in the White House and I wanted to I wanted people to see that
I could help them make a difference in some way and I didn't know where I was
going to end up. I wasn't like a lot of my colleagues who were searching for power or looking to move up
to be on the top.
I just wanted people to notice that I was an eager beaver wanting to help out.
I wanted to get noticed, but also I had a family too.
I wanted real life.
What age did you get married? I got married.
I was not quite 20.
I was 19 years old.
You got married at 19.
So do you have kids already or not?
No.
I was between my sophomore and junior year in college.
But we didn't have kids until I was, I think, what, 25.
OK, so you guys waited six years.
Yeah.
We waited till I got out of school.
So now you're you at this point
your
When I'm looking at the history to see what happened in 1962. It says in 1962
Reagan was dropped by GE. Yeah, this is the part where GE didn't like the fact that he was talking too political
And they're just saying sell how great GE is he's selling how great America's right?
You're on a rally and he formally registered as a Republican in 64,
US presidential election Reagan gave a speech
for presidential contender Barry Goldwater.
That was eventually referred to as a time for choosing.
We've seen the speech many, many times.
So is the temperature high in America with politics?
Is that like, I wanna be like him when I grow up one day.
I wanna be on the big stage one day. Or not really.
No, no. At that point I was focused on getting my, just going to college, just trying to
get by. I had to pay for my own education. We got married. My parents gave us $300.
My wife's parents gave us $300 and said, now you're on your own.
So they were loaded.
They give you a lot of money.
That's right.
Very rich, oil family from the Middle East.
Congratulations.
So from that time, we were on our own.
We paid for everything, college loans, working summers,
working jobs, whatever it is.
So we were just trying to get through school,
get through college, get through law school.
No, I didn't have any big grandiose goals in life.
So when you started working as a,
you said 15 people helping out, Pat gave you a job,
he first thought because you're Columbia,
maybe you're on the Rockefeller side
because school affiliation link in there, okay. And then you're like, we'll give you the job you a job, he first started because you're Columbia, maybe you're on the Rockefeller side because school affiliation link in there, okay.
And then you're like, we'll give you the job, you're in, you haven't yet made a name, you're like, let me just get to work and show you what I'm all about.
Exactly. So at what point do you get your opportunity where you're working directly with Nixon? When did you make the impression on him?
I didn't get to work with Nixon directly until after he resigned.
Until after he resigned? Yeah.
You know, the White House is a very structured organization.
You have very few people have direct contact
with the president.
You have a massive organization, but you
have very few people have very direct contact
with the president of the United States.
It's a very insular circle that has real direct contact
with the president. So that's the same with that has real direct contact with the president
So that's the same with the Nixon White House and with the Reagan White House. It doesn't matter
So in the Nixon White House, I never had a one-on-one
Conversation with the president never never never not even after he resigned or no after he resigned
Yes, pre you did not pre I did not and why is Is that because, because I don't think Trump is like that.
Is that because he didn't trust people?
When you watched the Nixon movie with Anthony Hopkins,
I don't know if you've seen it or not,
I'm sure you haven't seen it.
Why haven't you seen it?
You've never seen it?
No.
Oh, it's actually a pretty good movie to watch.
I loved it.
I love watching the Nixon,
I'm assuming you've seen Frost, Nixon, Frost the movie.
Yeah, of course I have.
When you watch the movie, you're in it.
I mean, Gabriel plays you in the movie,
but when you watch Nixon and you see the first time,
the role his wife plays and he's almost giving up,
I don't know if I'm gonna pull it off, he comes back,
he runs, he wins, the debate, John F. Kennedy,
the tanning bed, he look good, Shae, four o'clock,
all this stuff that you hear.
And then when he's going through it,
you don't feel like he's a guy that trusts a lot of people.
You feel like he just didn't trust anybody,
that he was typically by himself,
because he didn't know who he could trust
and who he couldn't trust.
Did he give you the vibes of an overly paranoid guy?
No, you know, that's interesting.
People say that.
It's just the way, no, no, you no, he was open to a lot of people.
He was open to ideas.
It's just the way the situation is structured.
I wrote memos to him in the 68 campaign that got to him,
even though I was just 23 years old.
He was always open to ideas and open to,
it's just that you can't have people
always open to ideas and open to, it's just that you can't have people swarming into candidates and swarming into the president, or else you won't have an organization.
I don't know how many people come on to you in your organization. I don't know how many
people have access to you to tell you what to do or to tell you how to run your organization or if you have a
structured organization or when you had your insurance company, if you had junior people
able to come out and talk to you directly.
Maybe you did, maybe you didn't.
But I don't know if Jamie Dimon allows junior people to come and
talk to him. I mean, it's just, and if he doesn't, is he paranoid? I don't know. I don't
think you can call people paranoid just because they have an organizational structure. I didn't
find him to be paranoid when I got to know him. So that's a bad rap on Nixon that I always
feel.
I should think it's a good quality. I don't think it's a bad quality on Nixon that I always feel. I actually think it's a good quality.
I don't think it's a bad quality.
I find it as a, I think, you know, here's schizo, okay?
Here's paranoid, here's naive, okay?
I'm okay with you being here.
You cross this, then you're miserable, right?
But if you're here, everyone's taking advantage of you,
and this, I don't think you're ready to be a president.
I think you need to be a little bit here
to size everybody up and study body language
and look at somebody and know where they're at.
And Nixon gave me a vibe that he was like that.
Well, he studied people very carefully.
And as I say, even paranoids have real enemies.
But he did study people very,
he was very shrewd at studying people and very
good at studying people and knowing their traits. And at the end of the day, it worked
for him really well.
So you got close to him after he resigned.
Yes.
And who made the phone call? Did Buchanan make the introduction to him or did he reach
out to you directly?
What happened was he resigned and left the office on August 9.
Of course, we were all depressed and down.
Okay, who was close to him then was Ron Ziegler, his press secretary, went with him out to
San Clemente after he resigned, along with a handful of other people, Jack Brennan, his
military aide, Diane Sawyer was with him
as one of the aides, press aides.
And after about 10 days, eight or nine, 10 days,
Ziegler called me up and said,
look, we need some help out here, we're short staffed.
And I was still on the White House staff,
now President Ford was president.
And they said they were short staffed.
Can you, you know, Ken, you're loyal to the president.
You showed that during the impeachment process.
Can you come out and help us out?
Because we really have a lot of problems.
So I flew out there on a military plane, and I had my first one-on-one meeting with Richard
Nixon.
I was, you know, I was really unnerving to me because now here's the president of the United States and I'm
having my first one-on-one meeting.
And he was, they were after him for back taxes.
He had no job.
They wanted to disbar him in California.
He had no income.
They wanted to disbar him in California. He had no income. They wanted to disbar him in New York.
There were subpoenas floating all over the place.
I had my law degree.
Of course, they had depended on that.
They had no structure of a budget in San Clemente.
And they wanted me to help put his financial life in order.
And so I sat down with him and I'm depressed because
I'm 29 years old and I didn't know what the hell was going to go on with my life.
And here he was, he had lost the most precious thing he ever wanted to achieve in his life.
And I thought, what is this going to be like? I'm in San Clemente now sitting one on one with him. And you know what, he says to me,
one of the first things he says, Ken, don't get down.
We have to look ahead.
We can't look back.
We have to look forward.
And I thought, oh my gosh, here I am.
I'm feeling low and depressed and thinking
my life is shattered because
I'm gonna probably lose my job at the White House and
Everything he's lost is gone. There he's lost his income. He has no he has no job
They're going a millionaire at the time. Huh? Was he a millionaire at the time? Oh, I don't think so No, he he he had he had property, but they were trying to go after him on his property.
He was going to have to get rid of his property because they felt that he had
improperly used federal funds to build up his property in Florida.
And so that...
This reminds me of somebody.
Yeah, that's right.
Except add a couple zeros. Yeah. It just reminds me. Yeah. Yeah, that's right. Except I had a couple zeros.
Yeah.
It just reminds me.
Yeah, no, no, no.
Exactly.
No, no, they were after him.
They wanted to.
But it sounds like they were successful with him though.
Yeah.
Do you think they were successful
with trying to destroy Nixon?
Well, not in the end because he was so resilient.
He was mentally resilient and we can get into that
because this is
how we came back. We started that he was already planning his comeback mentally. He was looking
ahead. That's what is the whole point of that conversation was he was already looking forward
and looking ahead. And in that those dark recesses of his life and at that moment he
was thinking ahead
as how am I gonna rebuild my life?
How am I gonna come back?
And this is August 8th of 74, you're 29, he's 61, okay?
And he's losing the job that he always wanted to have.
This was what he wanted to do for a long, long time.
He wasn't shy about it, His dream was to be the president.
And how much after he gets resigned on August 8th, are you sitting face to face across from
him?
This is 10 days later, and I've got about an hour and a half meeting.
I'm sure I have notes somewhere.
And I'm sitting down with him saying, here's your financial situation,
here's what our options are,
plus I'm trying to organize the staff budget.
We have certain monies that we can get.
There's transition funds,
and here's the staff we can organize.
And it's at that point that he says,
he's been told by Ziegler how loyal I was,
and he knew I was loyal
and I worked on the anti-impeachment
and then he says, look, I'm gonna write a book, a memoir,
and if that happens, I'd like you to come out here
and work with me on my memoirs.
And I said, I'd really love to do that.
And at that time, how are you getting paid?
I'm still on the White House staff working for Jerry Ford.
Got it.
But 10 days later, I return to the White House,
then I get fired.
10 days later, August 18, you go back to the White House
and you get fired.
Roughly in that time frame.
Is it because they found out that you went and had
a meeting with Nixon?
Yeah, of course.
Why?
Because they were like, why are you meeting with Nixon
and you didn't tell us about it?
No, no, no, no.
They knew I was out there, but they were like, why are you meeting with Nixon and you didn't tell us about it? No, no, no, no. They knew I was out there,
but they were eventually going through
the White House staff and deciding,
well now who on the White House staff?
Loyalist to him, they're getting rid of him.
Yeah, they got rid of Pat Buchanan, they got rid of me.
Who's they, is they Ford?
Yeah, Ford's people, yeah.
So they didn't want to surround.
Isn't Ford's people Nixon's people?
Well, of course they have.
Nixon appointed Ford.
That's what I'm saying.
So when you're saying Ford's people are getting rid of Nixon's people, it's another way of
saying Nixon's people who were against him revealed themselves by getting rid of the
people that were fully loyal to Nixon.
That's a better way of saying it.
We were baggage because they didn't want anybody around who supported the anti-impeachment. Was
there friction between Ford and Nixon where Ford didn't like Nixon? I have no
idea what went on between the two of them. I think there was afterwards
there was a little bit of bad blood unfortunately. From Nixon to Ford or Ford
to Nixon? I think Ford to Ford or Ford to Nixon?
I think Ford to Nixon.
Ford to Nixon.
Yeah, because, well, after the pardon,
Ford took a lot of heat, and I think he felt like,
I think Ford felt like he may have lost the presidency
because of the pardon.
Got it. So he kind of blamed it on Nixon.
Even though he got the presidency because of Nixon.
Right.
It's sort of a 50-50 situation.
That makes sense.
So going back to Nixon, so how many total hours would you say you've spent with Nixon,
just the two of you?
Total hours.
You mean in my lifetime?
In your lifetime.
Oh my God.
If you were to put a number to it.
Thousands.
Thousands of hours with him.
Yeah.
Okay.
What are the different situations you've spent the time with?
Dinner, golfing, reading, vacation, business,
what would you say, I mean, thousands is a lot of time.
Thousands would be mostly in the office.
We didn't socialize, we didn't play golf together.
We had dinners, rarely, maybe four or five times, six times.
And that would have been traveling.
When I went with him, I traveled with him to London and Paris
in the post-presidency when he had a speaking engagement
in Paris and in London.
And he asked me to travel with him.
I went with him when his first grandchild was born.
I accompanied him to New York, and we had dinners.
But we didn't socialize in that way.
We spoke on the phone huge amounts of times
in his post-presidency to talk politics,
to talk about what was going
on with Reagan's presidency, Carter's presidency, what was happening in politics. But mostly
it was during the time working on the memoirs and preparing the Frost-Nixon interviews.
There was just hundreds and hundreds of hours accumulated over those years.
Were they in situations like this, like this picture here?
Yeah.
A lot like that?
Exactly.
So is he...
Just like that.
Is he... is it a conversation?
Are you asking him questions?
He's telling you, are you writing for him many times where you're asking him, what do
you think about this, Mr. President?
What do you think about that?
What's constant processing and asking him questions? Or is he just
having an open conversation with you? Well, now there we're probably talking about the book
and what's the certain parts of the book. I was responsible for his campaigns throughout the book,
and I was responsible for the chapters on probably the Supreme Court appointments and all the
various campaigns.
And so on those various chapters, I'd be going through the sequences of the research
I was doing on the books.
But then, because he would get bored with talking about the book, and this was 1976, and you had the presidential primaries going
between Reagan and Ford in late 75 and then 76 throughout.
Then you had the presidential campaign of 76.
He would get bored working on the book and say, hey, you know, let's talk about the New
Hampshire primary. Let's talk about the primary in Pennsylvania,
or the primary in some other state.
Or he'd get digressing and talking about politics.
Or he loved just talking about what happened in the past,
or about personalities.
You know, one time I remember he talked about the 1960
campaign. And just right out of the blue, he said, you know, one time I remember he talked about the 1960 campaign, and just right out of the
blue he said, you know, instead of putting Henry Cabot Lodge on the ticket, I should
have put Thurston Morton, he was the senator from Kentucky, I should have put Thurston
Morton on the ticket, and I might have won.
What a revelation that was.
Can you imagine that?
I'm giving you a piece of history that I didn't even put in my book.
That's a real piece of history I'm telling you right now.
Unbelievable.
What was he like behind closed doors when you were having a conversation with him?
Oh, he was fascinating.
When Out of the Blues, somebody talks about Winston Churchill or somebody that Dwight Eisenhower said or something
that he learned from Willie Brandt or that he had a conversation with Willie Brandt.
Now that was not always, but he loved talking about domestic politics or things about Jack
Kennedy.
He had stories about Jack Kennedy.
But it was always, and I love talking politics.
What stories did he tell?
Do you remember any stories he told you about Jack Kennedy
that stuck till today?
Yeah, he was friends with Kennedy.
And he said, we talked about Kennedy's women.
He said, you know, he said about Kennedy and women,
he says, it's not women that will do you in.
It's drinking. He felt that's not women that'll do you in, it's drinking.
He felt that it was drinking that would do politicians in back in those days. Then he
went through, I remember him going through a list of politicians that had, there wasn't
this, I don't know, maybe this is a family program, but of politicians that may have had problems with women, but he said
back in those days that it's the drinking that got to him.
Meaning like if you drank too much, you fooled around, you were irresponsible?
No, the drinking affected your judgment, is what he would say.
Got it.
A lot of smart politicians back in the 40s, 50s, and 60s said that drinking
affected their judgment. I thought he drank, no? Was Nixon a drinker? He had a scotch at night,
but I never saw him when he was boozy. I never did that. I think those were a lot of mythologies.
So let me just, the stuff that we see on who we are told Nixon is versus your experience,
how different is the misconceptions we have of Nixon versus you have spent a few thousand
hours with him?
The big misconception is that about Nixon is that he's cold and unapproachable.
That's what people always say about Nixon is that this notion that you said he's cold and unapproachable. That's what people always say about Nixon is that
this notion that you said he's paranoid, that he's cold, he's unapproachable, you can't
have a conversation with him, he're not quite sure what's going
to come of that relationship or contact, especially in this modern age when you can be recorded
on an iPhone or whatever.
But still, once you got your first contact with Nixon, he was more than approachable.
The conversations flowed freely, especially if you started talking about something that
he was comfortable with, about politics or baseball or his family.
So I found him to be very, very approachable.
We had the greatest conversations. I'm going to go back and just flash back just a minute
about these conversations we had.
It was about politics.
This is where I learned about Reagan so much,
is that discussions about the primaries in 76.
Because he educated me about Reagan.
And we would talk about Reagan and Ford, what Ford
was doing wrong, what Reagan was doing right, and what Reagan was doing wrong.
And he made political assessments.
The guy was, I used to say about Nixon, when he wasn't involved with his own campaign,
he could make excruciatingly bright strategic judgments.
When politicians are trying to make judgments
about their own campaigns, they lose their ability
to not be balanced in how they make decisions.
But when they're not involved with their own campaigns,
they can be very open and neutral. When you're spending time with them who did you know
and by the way I mean there's two things when interviews like this has happened
either you're only gonna tell the good which makes for boring conversation and
the audience is gonna walk away we're gonna lose them okay and they're gonna
say oh he's just gonna say all the good and we're not gonna walk away and we're gonna lose them, okay? And they're gonna say, oh, he's just gonna say all the good.
And we're not gonna hear anything.
I watched a documentary the other day.
I was falling asleep.
I'm like, please give me something.
Like, if they ever make a documentary about me,
please don't make it just all good.
Tell some of the horror stories, man.
Like, no one walks on water.
There's gotta be some shit that they're dealing with that people wanna know.
So when it comes down to Nixon,
what were some, like who were the people
that really pissed him off?
Who were the people that really agitated him
or got under his skin?
Or what were some areas, like you read rumors
about someone, was he a womanizer?
Did he like the girls?
Was he good with the ladies?
Did the ladies like him? Was he a guy who did he like the girls was he good with the ladies that the ladies like him was he a
You know guy who would curse a lot behind closer. Was he a smoker? What was attractive about him?
Was he a sports guy? What what were some of those things about nixon that?
wasn't you know
Coming from a standpoint of somebody that loves him. You're obviously a fan of his and by the way
of somebody that loves him, you're obviously a fan of his. And by the way, many people now that Nixon's no longer with us
say Nixon was one of the better presidents that we ever had.
Nixon should have never resigned.
Nixon should have never caved.
Nixon should have stood up and took the things that
were coming after him.
There's a lot of people agree with a lot of good
that he did for the economy, a lot of good
that he did for the economy.
But no one walks on water. What were some of those?
I actually talk about it in the
My book during the frost interviews
He was quick to anger
during the frost interviews when
His staff let him down
Especially
he His staff let him down, especially he was very angry.
There was a scene in there where he
felt that we had not provided him the information.
He got very upset with, he exploded in anger at Diane
Sawyer.
It was sort of unfair in a lot of ways.
I think he was, I have to say, it was sort of, it was not childish, but it was explosive
anger that he shouldn't have done, because she had made an honest mistake and didn't provide him this
information. And I said, you know, there was this piece of information that we had that
could have helped you in the interview that you just did, and she didn't provide it. And
then he just exploded all of a sudden, and he cursed. I'll say this about him,
his cursing was moderate.
He never used foul words.
Really?
No, he never.
So no F words, no B words, no shit, no stuff like that?
No, shit, yes, but no F.
Would he say he's such an asshole?
Would he say stuff like that? No, he'd say that, but no F. Would he say he's such an asshole? Would he say stuff like that?
No, he'd say that, but no.
Get the F out of your mother.
No, never that.
Never heard him use F words.
Really?
Ever.
Ever.
Wow.
No.
He would have been a bad rapper if he got into hip hop.
But he would say somebody's an asshole,
or he doesn't give a shit, or something like that.
But never, never use the effort, not once.
I've heard pastors use those words.
Not a single time.
Okay, respect.
The entire time I knew him.
But he had a temper, so he got upset at that.
No, no.
So you were there when he was.
I was there, and I calmed him down.
And you know, he would...
Look, in front of those of us who were, I think, he felt comfortable with, he would
rise to anger.
And I understand that.
I think you probably do that from time to time
with your own staff.
Walk on water, I never lose my cool, I'm very calm.
Rob, you know.
Yeah, there's people in the booth behind here howling now.
They're not laughing, actually, they better not be laughing.
I swear to God, if you're laughing, we're gonna have a problem.
See, this is the part though, this is the part
where people see that the person doesn't
walk, you have the biggest chop in the world, you are the number one story
around the world, you're getting fired. How many movies and, Rob, how many, can you
type in how many movies and documentaries and books have been
written about Nixon? I mean if you were to talk about the number of times he's been referenced
in a movie, I mean this is a powerful name, right? So you're under pressure. Some of the guys that
you gave a job to have turned against you, they're causing you to lose your job. You're like, you
would have never had a job without me. I chose you. I gave you this opportunity. Now you're flipping
on me. These are tough situations to be in in but that instance with Diane Sawyer and Nixon
What was the specific thing that well?
there was a piece of information that
He could have used in the interview with that would have helped them. What would have helped with frost
Yeah, and you remember what it was or it had to do with
the six June 23rd tape
That there was something
his former deputy director of the CIA could have provided.
And again, I describe it in the book,
that who had warned him that he didn't want the FBI
to get a foul of CIA operations.
And he thought that would have been beneficial to him
in the interview with Frost.
And she had neglected to provide it.
And I had remembered it.
Now, look, she had done such a stupendous job in preparing him for those interviews.
Stupendous is a good word. She had done a great job.
Like 99% of everything that she had done.
Some people in Armenia listen to this. Their English may be their fourth language.
I just want to say complementary of the answer. You're being complementary of the answer.
Yeah. She had a work ethic better than just about anybody.
And she had done so much.
And she had overlooked this one little thing.
And I almost felt bad that I had brought this up.
Did it bother her?
When she was crying in tears?
No, she almost brought her to tears, yes.
But it didn't?
That it didn't.
But I have to say this he calmed down
Right away if it was telling the story if Diane's list it was an outburst if Diane's listening to this would she remember this moment?
She might have I don't know
I gave her I sent her a copy of the book and she may or may not have remembered you guys still talk or no
we've
Talked a few months back,
but we're not in constant communication.
Got it.
And obviously Diane Solier.
She's a private person.
She's a private person.
Got it.
She lived a pretty public life.
Going on TV, doing interviews.
She did some of the biggest interviews of all time.
If you type in the biggest interviews ever done,
she's on the list of many of those interviews.
That's a different,
there's public persons and private persons though.
Public persons also have a private life.
For sure, but for sure.
But you're saying she didn't want her personal life
to be out there.
She kind of didn't want the fame.
She was good at the job.
Right, yeah.
But when she was gone, she was gone.
Exactly.
Got it, okay.
What else with Nixon?
What else did you see where moments where,
you know, something bothered him?
He could be, look, I think there's times when he could be, say something snarky about
another politician that maybe sounded petty. But I think't, I think that's a quality
that's not above anybody.
It's, or maybe would be, let's say gossipy.
He was not above political gossip, let's put it that way.
He was not.
No.
Got it.
So if you're talking about me trying to say,
yes, he didn't walk on water.
But that's not a horrible trait, in my judgment.
That's something people do all the time.
But I can't give you anything.
He didn't drink to excess in front of me.
He was not a womanizer,
he was a very generous man, he did good things with me.
Would he ever talk to you like, for example, would he ever sit there behind closed doors
and you're not an economy background but you had some stuff you did with Greenspan, so
you have an economy where you're coming and saying here's the budget, here's how much money we got, we're gonna deal with this.
So you understand money well.
Would he say to you ever any questions behind closed door second guess and saying, you know
what, when I said we're gonna, this going off of gold standard is gonna be temporary,
I should have never done it.
You know, when it came down to this, I should have never resigned.
Did he ever tell you, I should have never resigned?
Did he ever say you I should have never resigned?
Did he ever say any of that stuff?
Well, he did talk about he shouldn't have fired
Haldeman and Ehrlichman, that's for sure.
That he felt that, he mentioned that more than once.
He felt that was a bad decision that he made.
Why?
that was a bad decision that he made. Why?
Because it didn't change anything.
He said that they were loyal to him.
They were his, he said it was like cutting off his right arm and his left arm. and that he felt that that was a mistake that he made, that it didn't make any difference
in his presidency, it didn't help him out any, and it just hurt them and I think in the end probably worked
his disadvantage in a lot of ways. It turned Ehrlichman against him. It hurt
Haldeman a lot although Haldeman didn't turn against him but I think he got
nothing out of it is what he meant. And he said that any number of times that.
But who's the one that turned against him?
Not Halderman?
Who turned against him?
Well, Erlich, we got, in the end,
was more bitter about it.
But did either one of them come back and destroy him?
No.
And become any of them?
No.
So why was he second guessing that decision there?
Is it because he liked them and he misread them?
No, because they were the most important people in his staff.
So why did he fire them initially?
Because there was a lot of pressure on them.
At the time, the Washington Post and all the...
They had been testifying for the Senate Watergate Committee and the grand jury was after them.
There was a lot of public attention put on them that they had participated in the instruction
of justice.
The Ehrlich Committee had participated in this plumbers operation and everything.
And that they were at the center of a lot of the illegal, allegedly at the center of a lot of the illegal
activities in the White House.
And that so they were anchors around Nixon's neck.
And so there was, I can't remember who all was saying, he was probably getting some internal
advice that, look, this is just negative to you, Mr. President, you've got to get rid of these two guys
and because it's just negative to your president.
So it was a scapegoat, he needed to fire somebody to say,
it's like a football team's got a bad record,
they fired a coach.
So it's like, let's fire these guys to make it seem like,
well, it wasn't me, it was really them that did it.
Yeah, and sometimes. That mess with them well, it wasn't me. It was really them that did it. Yeah. And some mess with them.
And it doesn't help.
Yeah.
So let's, OK, so the baseball team is not doing any good.
So you fire the general manager, and it
doesn't make any difference.
Right?
Instead, what should he have done?
When he tells you that and it goes down,
what does he say?
Does he say, I should have done this?
I should have done that.
I should have kept them is what he said,
because he leaned on them so much. He leaned on their advice.
Bob Haldeman was the guy he talked to, the first guy he talked to in the morning, the last guy he
talked to at night. Oh wow. These guys are very big influential people in his administration.
Oh yeah, no, no. They were the two key guys that he, I mean, that he talked to all the
time.
What did they end up doing afterwards?
What big job did they have after Nixon?
Did they ever have another big job where nobody trusted them?
Well, they both went to prison.
And then they both wrote books and I can't remember.
They both went to prison?
How long did they, do you remember how long they were in prison?
Was it a good amount?
It was, I I think several months. I mean they were not, it wasn't years and years. I can't
remember. So Nixon took responsibility for this happening with these guys. He felt like
it was his fault that they went to jail. I think it was, he felt it was his fault that
they, I think he felt they got a bad rap. And I think a lot of them got bad raps. That's a whole different story that
so
Did they ever have another job rap? Oh, they went to what he was found guilty and in prison were 18 months around on release
He returned to private life on the successful
Is that Halderman or
Halderman yeah, he had another job afterwards.
So he came back and went in business.
He was fine, he died from cancer at 60 something.
Yeah.
How about.
Ehrlichman wrote books, and I don't know
if he had a real job, he wrote books.
He was also in jail for a year and a half.
By the way, did you ever see them
after the Watergate scandal?
Were you ever there where they reunited afterwards?
I saw Haldeman.
You saw Haldeman?
Yeah.
Him and Nixon were together afterwards?
No, I just saw Haldeman.
And how was...
Personally, one on one.
Oh, I'm sorry, got it.
But never with Nixon.
They never reunited with Nixon.
No, they did reunite, but I wasn't with them.
All three of them?
No, I don't think I ever saw Ehrlichman again. Is it because was like done as far as I know okay, and when you met with Haldeman, how was he was he?
It was it was a very interesting meeting
Haldeman
We were all terrified of Haldeman in the White House why he was a very because he was a very
They called him sweet old Bob because it was, because it was the initials for SOB.
So he was a tough guy.
Because he was very stern, very, he had very strict rules, and he had a very stern demeanor and personality.
And he wasn't very, you know, ran things all by the rule book.
So I never had, I had one conversation with him the entire time I was in the White House.
And then I knew he was going to call me to get some piece of information.
And I was scared, I was frightened that I was nervous that he was going to call me for
this piece of information that I would screw up and I'd get in trouble.
And even though it was just a simple, he was going to call me to ask me how the press treated some piece of information.
So people were...
He had a reputation.
Reputation.
What caused the reputation though?
Would he have blow ups or...
Yeah, just don't screw up around Haldeman, you get in trouble.
He's just a tough guy.
He ran a tight ship.
And even those people who worked for him knew that he was stern and ran a real
tight ship.
So, anyway, Bob was just...
Was he Nixon's number one general?
Yeah, he was chief of staff.
Okay, and then how about Ehrlichman?
What role did he play?
He was head of domestic council, he was head of domestic affairs.
But he was the lead, he and Haldeman went to school together, and Haldeman brought him
into the campaign to run the advance operation.
But then Ehrlichman ran the whole domestic affairs operation.
So he ran all the domestic, So he oversaw the entire domestic council
and all the domestic legislation and everything else.
So Ehrlichman was not as feared as Haldeman was?
Well, he didn't have the same role as Haldeman in terms of running staffing or anything else.
Got it. But the two of them were known as quote the Germans.
The Germans, were they German?
Yeah, Ehrlichman-Holdeman.
Right, so they were Germans but born here obviously.
Yeah.
Okay, so UCLA alumni and interesting.
So how about Ford?
Did he have a relationship with Ford?
Would he talk about Ford or they were not that close?
Well, they were close.
They came into Congress, I think Ford came into the Congress, I think in 48.
And Nixon came in in 46 and they were colleagues throughout
the years in Congress and they were always, you know, close friends and colleagues throughout all those years.
They weren't, I don't think they were pals, real close pals, but they were friends.
I mean, they didn't, so I don't know that they socialized together that much, but he
wouldn't have chosen him as vice president if he didn't have trust in him or feel that
he was, you know, could be safe around him or anything else.
Did he trust Reagan?
Was he a fan of Reagan?
Oh yeah, very much so.
Well, once he got elected, he was.
He was wary of Reagan in 68 because he viewed Reagan as a potential challenger.
So once he got elected president, Reagan was not a political threat to him, yes.
But as long as Reagan was a political threat to him, that was a different story.
Were you having a room with the three of them?
Oh yeah.
How was that when you guys were together? How was that when you guys were together? It's on the cover of the book.
How was that when you guys were together?
Oh, that was a, that's the last chapter of the book.
It's an amazing story.
It's, I call it The Lions Gather.
And it was fantastic.
Didn't you have a nickname?
The Lions, they called you, what was your nickname?
Oh, oh no, my, Anoda?
Yeah, I read another nickname for you
That said, uh, what was the other nickname I read for you? That was another nickname I saw
There you had let me see if I can find this or not
But they had a nickname for you. Maybe you don't know this nickname. You're gonna find out about it years later. Oh
Who knows I saw nicknames. I'll find it. I'll tell you what the nickname I saw
uh, oh the line of uh
I'll find it, I'll tell you what the nickname I saw. Oh, the line of, Khachikian was acting in California,
election instruments, 80s, 80s, he's registered,
regarded as a line of California GOP politics.
Yeah.
Yeah, so how many?
I had a lot of nicknames, people who worked for me
probably gave them to me, yeah.
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["Pomp and Circumstance March"]
How often were you with the three of them together,
with Nixon and Reagan?
Oh, just that one time.
Okay, got it.
And it was such a fascinating meeting.
That's why it's the last chapter of my book.
What is this picture?
What's this moment here?
That's the end of the meeting.
It was two days before we opened the Nixon Library.
I oversaw the opening of the Nixon Library in 1990.
We opened the library on July 9th.
I tell you, Kiki, you're a very good looking man.
Look at that picture right there.
Look at that smile, you look like a Hollywood lawyer.
Look at that big time.
Yeah, well, somebody said they'd never seen me so happy.
Ha ha ha ha.
I don't know.
So after you working with Nixon,
was your relationship with Nixon what helped you
get President Reagan to make you the chief speechwriter?
Yes, yes.
That's obviously signed that Reagan trusted Nixon
to call and say who do you recommend
and Nixon made the recommendation, I would assume.
It was not directly to Reagan, it was indirectly.
How did, what do you mean indirectly?
When Nixon finished the memoirs and was basically had gotten, the purpose of the memoirs and the Frost interviews was to get Watergate behind him,
to reinvent his life, to restructure, to get his financial house in order.
He got paid a lot of money for the memoirs or anything else.
Plus he was bored living in San Clemente because people had a hard time coming out to see him.
So that's when he wanted to move to New York. That's in late 79, early 80. So I was going to be out of a job.
So he kept me on, Nixon kept me on in 79
throughout as a consultant part-time.
And then I started looking for work.
And then I had friends in the Reagan campaign
that he started up for president in late 79.
These were old pals that actually had also had worked for Nixon previously.
And so I had some consulting arrangement with them as well.
Nixon said, I'm going to, then he announced to me, I'm moving to New York, because I got
to be where the action is.
And he said, about this time, he said,
I'm going to introduce you to Stuart Spencer.
Stuart Spencer ran Reagan's gubernatorial campaigns
in 1966 and was his political advisor for all those years,
the Spencer Roberts, Spencer Roberts Organization.
So Stu Spencer was previously Reagan's campaign managers.
And Stu Spencer was somebody that Nixon knew
from political campaigns.
He managed Nelson Rockefeller's campaign in 64.
Yeah.
And, but, but Stu Spencer had also run
Jerry Ford's campaign in 1976.
So, even though he had run Reagan's campaigns previously, he was no longer on Nancy Reagan's
Christmas card list.
So he was, but he had an office in Newport Beach and had a lot of political contacts.
And so Nixon said, go, go sit down with Stu Spencer and see if he's
got any work for you. So I met with Stu in 1979, and Stu said, well, why is Dick Nixon
sending you to see me? And I said, well, he said, you have a lot of contacts. So I started
meeting with Stu, and I had actually did a little help with him writing some stuff. I
write about this in the book. And so, Stu and I stayed in touch and in 1980 Reagan's
campaign started getting into trouble in August and September. It wasn't doing
well. And Nancy and Ron Reagan said, we've got to do something to get things in order,
especially Nancy did, because she was sort of the boss. And she said, you know what, even though we're unhappy with Stu, we've got to get Stu back.
And so they called Stu up, and Stu said, OK, if you're going to get me back, even though
we've had all these problems with each other in the past, the problem with your campaign
is you're trying to run it from the headquarters.
If I'm going to be in this campaign, I'm going to run it from the plane.
You can't run it from the headquarters.
And if I'm going to run it from the plane, I have to choose the policy person, the press
person, the person who runs the campaign tour, then I get to have a speechwriter
with me. And that person turned out to be me. So Stu Spencer...
Interesting guy by the way. Yeah. He's 97 years old. Last time he voted for a
Democratic president was in 1947-48, Truman, and in 2020 he voted for Biden
over Trump. Yeah, he doesn't like Trump.
No, he's not a fan of Trump.
No.
So, okay, so you get into the Reagan family.
You're now his chief.
Yeah, I had been begging to get involved
in the Reagan campaign for months and months and months,
and they were not letting me get the job I wanted,
by the way.
Did they give you a reason why?
Was it because they just didn't trust you?
Oh, they said, we don't have the money,
we're having trouble with our budget,
blah, blah, blah, they were giving me all kinds of...
What was your first meeting with them?
When's the first time you met him?
First time I met, well, first time I met him
was at UC Santa Barbara again.
I was student body president and I introduced him.
I got him to speak to the campus
and that was one of my jobs.
I got to introduce whoever spoke to the campus.
And who was he then, the governor?
No, he was running for governor.
And this is 66.
66.
And was UC Santa Barbara a party school back then
or not really?
Yeah, well, yeah, it was a party school.
But I was married, so.
I mean, UC Santa Barbara had a reputation when I was in
My early 20s late teens. Yeah. Yeah great bookstores. Yeah long bookstores
That a matter what you wanted everybody you wanted was there there was something in the water. I don't know what it was
Well, okay. I'm gonna start interviewing you
Well, I will plead the fifth is what I will do if we go through that.
So I introduced Reagan at the, at the, to, uh,
to the student body back in 66. That's the first time I met him. So, uh,
but that, that was, we,
we had no conversation with each other other than I talked to him on the stage
for two minutes, but pleasant guy. Yeah. oh yeah, he's a genius, always a genius.
But then I briefed him,
I did have a consulting arrangement with them
in early 1980, I briefed them on issues
along with several other people,
but then I lost all contact with them
because they had all these BS issues
with their budget and this, that, and the other.
So I didn't get hired until there was five and a half weeks
left in the campaign when Stu Spencer says,
"'I get to choose the speechwriter.'"
That's how I got involved.
So now you're in.
Now I'm in. Speechwriter.
I'm on the airplane.
You're on the airplane with him.
Critical.
Tell me. It's critical because
that's where the campaign is being run.
Right. Day to day. On Air Force One. No, no, no, this is, this is, he's a candidate.
He's a governor. He's a governor, you're on the plane with him.
I mean, we called him governor, he's ex-governor.
How many hours did you spend with him versus Nixon?
Was it more Nixon than Reagan?
One on one I spent probably in aggregate more hours
with Nixon because I worked on his book with him.
Got it.
But I did spend a lot of time with Reagan.
With Reagan.
Was Nancy more present when you're talking to Reagan
than Pat being present when you're talking to her?
I can see that.
Yes, yes, yes.
Did she give you vibes of a control freak
or somebody that was just protective of her husband?
Both.
Give me examples of control freak. protective of her husband? Both.
Give me examples of control free.
Well, this is, this is why people need to read my book.
I called her the chief of staff and she joined the campaign,
which was a positive thing.
Because he trusted her. He, he trusted nobody more than he trusted Nancy Reagan.
He called her mommy.
And when she didn't, when I first joined the campaign, she wasn't on the plane.
She was still in Los Angeles. And then she joined us a week later,
and things were wobbly, wobbly, wobbly.
But then she came on the plane, and it steadied him,
because he always, he just needed her by his side.
But there was like an occasion I describe in the book,
where, for example, I was under great pressure to get this speech to him.
We were on our way to Lima, Ohio.
It was Lima or Lima, I can't remember how they pronounce it now.
And we were doing a speech and we're 45 minutes away and we're under pressure and the plane's on final approach and we're trying to get the speech and I'm under pressure trying to type it in the
back and we have to write it but on the half sheets to get to him. And she walks back to me and she says,
Ken, where's the speech?
Ma'am, I'm working on it. We're trying to get it done.
Where's the speech?
I'm not saying I'm almost done.
She says, Ronnie is looking for the speech.
So you get the feeling now.
Urgency. Let's go. Where is it at? I need it.
Yeah, he needs it right away. So you get the feeling now. Urgency, let's go. Where is it at? I need it.
Yeah, he needs it right away.
And I get it, rip it out of the typewriter,
the secretaries have to type it up,
they have to put it on half sheets,
get it up to him, take it up to him.
So that's her role as being a control freak
and being in charge all at one time.
Was this a she thing or was this him?
Like you know certain CEOs are afraid of firing people.
That's him being telling, asking her to do what.
Oh got it, so it's she.
He can't be a confrontation.
I got it, so he was a guy that would avoid conflict.
If he needed to fire somebody,
he couldn't do it, Nancy, can you fire this person?
Exactly.
Interesting, so it's not her doing,
taking the initiative, he was relying on her
and delegating to do the tough job.
Several times.
Wow.
Oh yeah.
Wow.
Do you ever have a moment where President Reagan
gave you direct criticism, one on one?
Yes.
When was that?
Once.
It was, it's a famous moment in the book, and that it's a very, it makes a big, very
big difference in policy.
And that's when, it's prior to the first Geneva summit with Gorbachev. And he brought me in. I was back in California, but he's going to prepare
a speech before the General Assembly to the United Nations in the fall of 1985. And I get called in in, I think the speech is in October of 1985, September, October
of 1985. And the basic speech is written by his speech writing staff, and I get called
in because they want me to shape it up and put it in his words and make sure it's edited properly.
So I get called in from California and I have two meetings with him.
And I'm assuming it's the initial speech is written by Ben Elliott, the head of the
current speechwriting staff, and it's pretty tough anti-communist speech.
And I'm assuming he still wants it to be a pretty tough anti-communist speech, because
this is Ronald Reagan.
So I edit the speech and work it out, and I make it the tone just pretty much the way
it's supposed to be.
And I finalize it, get the final edits in, have my secretary ship it into him the night before.
And then we have a meeting. I don't think you have, I don't know if you have the picture of it.
It's a picture of us sitting around in the Oval Office. I'm sitting right next to him in the Oval Office, and there's several of us in the meeting.
It's in the Oval.
Anyway, there's me next to him, and there's Pat Buchanan, Don Reagan, John Poindexter,
and Bud McFarland.
And so I sit down.
I think I'm going to get a pat on the back for doing a nice speech
for Reagan.
First thing he does is he says, well, Ken, if we're going to have a different relationship
with Gorbachev, we can't be using this harsh rhetoric regarding the Soviet Union.
And I go, whoa, where'd this come from?
All of a sudden, Reagan's going soft on communism.
And I'm getting spanked in front of all these other guys.
And it's really, you know, I mean, my feelings are getting hurt.
And I think I'm getting sabotaged by somebody in the White House.
And then he starts going on and on about that he doesn't like the language, it's too tough,
and it just doesn't sound like him at all.
And so he wants it changed.
This is the meeting is around 10 o'clock or whatever it is, somewhere around there.
I've got a flight going back to California at 5.
So now I've got just about four hours
to re-edit this whole speech and change the language.
And all this time, I thought I'm being sabotaged.
Well, it turns out that this is a whole change in philosophy
that he wants a different approach.
Strategy?
Yeah, strategy.
Strategy, approach to Gorbachev before the summit.
Now, I write a whole chapter on this
because I found out years later,
talking to Bud McFarland,
that the influence on him was from Lady Thatcher,
who told him he needs to have a different view
towards Gorbachev, and then Nancy, Mrs. Reagan,
wanted him to soften up.
Anyway, that's when I got, that's a long way of telling you
that you asked me if I ever got negative vibes from him.
That's when I got.
Aside from that?
No, aside from that.
You ever saw him lose his cool?
Yes.
Did you ever see him lose his cool? Yes.
Not badly, but just he was angry.
He got angry about in private when he felt that he was,
this is again towards the end of his administration, and complained
about, not angry in the sense of his voice rising or anything else, but he was angry
about how he got taken by his staff on raising taxes in 1982.
That still, that bothered him.
Really?
Yeah.
Why?
Because he was lied to by his staff.
Staff manipulated him.
Who, when you say staff, is there a name or two?
Well, there are several of them.
Richard Darman, Jim Baker. Jim Baker. David Gergen, they all work together.
And they lied to Ron?
David Stockman.
Well, they manipulated him in ways that they wanted him to go.
Let's put it that way.
Would you say...
I write about it, so I don't, it's not like I'm telling you something.
Would you say Jim Baker, James Baker, I read his book, phenomenal story of who he was, tough guy.
What was your impression of Jim Baker when you were on him?
He was a very pleasant guy, he's very affable.
And basically I always got along with him.
And very charming, you know, comes from Texas.
He has that Texas charm.
But he can be very tough. But we had-
Was he an SOB?
Was he a qualified SOB?
Yeah, he could be.
We crossed swords later on in the 84 campaign.
But then we, you know, basically I think he decided
that he and I would be, we're better off not getting
in a pissing match with each other.
But I think at the end of the day, he preferred not to have to do battle with me.
But it's clearly we had different views of where Reagan should go. And he wanted Reagan to be much more,
had a softer view of America than I did.
And I want to take that, he wanted Reagan to be
less Ronald Reagan than Ronald Reagan was.
Let's put it that way.
Jim Baker, some people say he was the first Dick Cheney
before there was a Dick Cheney.
Would you agree with that?
I don't know what that means.
Meaning he, you know how they say Dick Cheney
was the guy that was making a lot of decisions
behind closed doors with Bush,
and Jim Baker was the one that ran the show, or no?
Well, there's a lot to do with that,
but I think, yes, I would say that,
but not in a positive way.
Not in a positive way?
Yeah, because again, as I write about it in the book,
especially on domestic policy issues,
he did things, it's not just him,
he brought in people that worked against Reagan's interests. And I write about
it in the book. And it's important that people read about it. It's that, and Reagan talks
about decisions that were made that were not in Reagan's interests. Now Reagan doesn't name names because he didn't realize what was going on and
and
It's just that I found information in the archives and I and when I researched the book I found
more and more information that
led me to
Find factual reasons to believe that Reagan was, you know, he was taken to the
woodshed on these things.
Did you ever read the book The Man Who Ran Washington?
Yeah, I did.
What did you think about it?
Well, I thought it was a fluff job on Jim Baker.
He embellished his, a lot of it was good in the sense that it exposed a lot of things
about him and a lot of it was good in the sense that it exposed a lot of things about him, and a lot
of it was a fluff job.
Was Baker more a Bush guy or a Reagan guy?
Well he was more, look, he did his job, he did mostly what, he was a Reagan guy in the sense that if he was required to do something that
Reagan really wanted to do, he did it.
But if he could get away with doing something that he believed that Reagan should do, even
if Reagan did not want to do it, and he could get away
with Reagan doing it, he would do it. And that was like the tax package in 82, raising
taxes. They all thought that was in Reagan's interest. And they convinced it was in Reagan's
interest. And Reagan called it one of the worst mistakes of his presidency.
And he told me that twice.
Behind closed doors, how did Reagan feel about Bush?
He liked him.
He liked him?
Yes, he did.
Did he trust him?
Yes.
He trusted him?
Yes.
Senior?
Yes.
He liked Bush, and he felt Bush was a good vice president he
trusted him like them did you know any different did you ever read the story
about Bush senior and his son Neil meeting with Hinkley's brother coming
down to dinner a day before the shooting, the same day as shooting and then that guy canceled?
No.
You never heard of that?
Trying to see what, Rob, can you play the clip?
I think Tripoli talks about that.
No, not that one.
I texted it to you and there was an article written
about this.
I mean, if you're saying no,
that means he never brought it up.
It's, you follow Joe Rogan? You know who Joe Rogan, you know Joe Rogan is yeah. No, yeah, Rob. I texted you
So if you just look at your text, you'll find it. I texted you
Right before us getting into it. It's a clip
That just came out. I want to say last week. I don't know if you have it Rob or not
I don't have it. Okay, so there is a clip of
Let me find this thing for you
Hang on one second
Is this it?
Yeah, it's on Twitter. If you go on Twitter, you should be able to find it
Let me see here
Let me see here
It's very interesting and then I I went and looked at it.
I'm like, is there really any credibility behind this?
And then you see some of the stories about...
So funny, Rob.
I literally watched this before we went live.
So your impression is they were good.
There was no issues there.
No, no, no.
And I have high regard for Bush himself.
It's just that when he brought Baker in, see Baker brought in people to work for him that didn't
did not have Reagan's interests in their heart. They were there were They felt like they were independent. I mean, again, you have to read my book.
This guy, Darman, was a terrible influence. And Baker gave him a free hand. And it was
just destructive to Reagan's domestic presidency in my judgment.
And it's a story that needs to be told.
And he was an abrasive personality.
Baker or the guy that he brought in?
Darman.
And Darman admits, admitted in private conversations with reporters that he didn't want public until I found them,
that he wanted a change, that he came to the White House to change Reagan's economic program.
Now he had no business doing that.
He had absolutely no, you don't come to work for the president to change changes economic program. Do you want somebody to come to your organization
and secretly try to change what you're doing? That's wrong. They can't come to work for...
But how do you not catch that? How do you as the president not catch that? Because you're trusting your chief of staff.
Now when you have, but you still get criticized for the person you hired. That's
I've made a lot of bad hires.
How did Reagan hire somebody that he didn't trust like Baker?
Did he have a relationship with Baker?
Or was, was Baker, would he, would Baker be somebody that was part of the swamp?
That's, that's, that's a good question.
That's Baker, Baker's working, he's working the press all the time.
And and Reagan's a really trusting man. He's working the press all the time.
And Reagan's a really trusting man.
And he's assuming that the staff's doing the best thing for him.
And plus, at the end of the day, they on his 82 State of the Union address.
And he gives me this long lecture about how Lady Thatcher is screwed up by raising taxes
in Britain, how she, by changing her mind, by reneging on her plan that she had cut taxes,
by raising taxes, well, he gave me this long economic lecture about what a stupid mistake
she made.
She should have never done that.
And I thought, boy, good for him.
He's sticking by his guns.
He's not going to raise taxes this next year. And then he signs on to this Tax Equity and
Fiscal Responsibility Act, TEFRA, in 1982. Now once he does that, he's going to sign
on to this bill. He starts calling in. He calls in Marty Anderson and he calls in Len Ofziger and he
calls me in and he calls us all in in order to tell us, I don't want you guys arguing against
me on this out in public because I'm changing my mind obviously. They've convinced him that he's not actually raising taxes.
Mr. President, these are only excise taxes.
They aren't real tax increases because they aren't income taxes.
And then they've convinced him that we're going to get $3 in budget cuts for every dollar
of excise tax you raise. And then in 1988, when we're working on the speech, farewell speech to the Republican
Convention, he does pounding on his damn desk to me.
He says, the fellas misled me.
He says, damn it.
He says, they promised me $3 in budget cuts
for every dollar of tax increase.
Instead, for every dollar of tax increase, I got $1.70.
I got $1 dollar seventy in revenue and I got a dollar seventy of tax increases for
every dollar in budget cuts. I got just the opposite. And he felt that he got screwed
and he got lied to.
As part of his legacy though, he raised taxes. A lot of people say that and it's unfortunate
because it stays and years later they're like you say Reagan is such a great president. He raised taxes, right?
You know if I was the president I would do it
I don't know how you I would have a because when I do calls, I have lawyers who hold lawyers accountable
I don't know if that makes sense. So let's just say this lawyers are
Raining a contract form you're looking at an agreement and you'll send me the red notes and all this other stuff.
Then I'll go to this lawyer and say,
do you think this lawyer's doing a good job doing this?
And he holds them and is like, no, he missed this one part.
Then I'll go to this lawyer and I'll say,
how about this one part?
Oh, I missed that one, I fixed it.
So sometimes you need, like if you get the accountants
that are doing numbers, financing taxes,
you almost have another team over here
that no one knows about,
a shadow team that holds these guys accountable,
or else sometimes you're not gonna know everything
about every law, about every IRS,
about every code, about every CP, every account.
But if you can do that,
that allows you to hold people accountable.
This is the clip I was sharing with you
that happened two weeks ago.
This is literally the same day
when Trump's interview dropped.
This was dropped six, seven, eight hours
prior to that interview, Rob, if you can play play this clip the gentleman that he's having on right
there is a comedian talking to Rogan both of them are very good he's very
funny but he is what he had to say go ahead Rob one of the things I wanted to
talk to you about I wanted to play this but we decided we shouldn't play it we
don't want anybody to have any sort of a way to get it down the episode of you
when you're on the view make this this- That's not the one Rob?
One of the things I wanted to talk to you about.
No, that's not the one.
There it is.
Okay, go ahead Rob.
It's related to Obama and Bush.
The Bushes had dinner with the Hinkley's
the night before Reagan got shot.
What?
Yeah.
Is that crazy?
Do you think, okay, I always thought
Hinkley was a lone nut that was infatuated with Jodie Foster.
I had the delusion back in 1981
that by shooting the president, I could impress Jodie Foster.
Which me saying that now, it's ridiculous.
But that's what I believed back then.
There's actually interviews, dude, where he said, Uncle George told me to do it.
Oh, Jesus.
Okay.
Didn't they just let him out?
Yeah.
And now he's doing like, Plain and Coffee beans because he's put out an album or something
like that.
So by the way, Rob, pull up the story that we saw.
There's our connection between John Hinckley Jr. and the Bush film.
Can we give credit to whoever wrote this?
What is it called?
It's called grunge.com.
You ever heard of those guys, Rob, before or not?
I have not.
Okay.
Go a little lower to see who it is.
And by the way, the story, matter of fact, this is the better way to do it.
This was written on New York Times many, many years ago.
So if you go more into the norms of Mazza, at the moment, Washington do it. This was written on New York Times many many years ago So if you go morning 5th, no, it's a mother at the moment Washington DC raising one song with the
Witnessing was it arm called little lower up at the bottom
It talks about the Bush connection go lower go lower go lower if you type in Neil
Why don't you just type in control F Neil there to Scott Hinckley had met with Neil Bush earlier that you're at a party and became
Friendly with the fourth child of George W. Bush according to Garnet News Services
after news of the assassination attempt broke,
Neil Bush canceled a dinner in the shooting aftermath,
the media swarmed the Bush family
on their connection to the Hinckleys.
The fact that they had a dinner schedule with Scott Hinckley
and obviously Scott Hinckley,
his brother's the one that tried to shoot him,
you've never heard of this story.
No. Rob, can you go to John Hinckley's, go to John Hinckley, his brother's the one that tried to shoot him. You've never heard of this story. No.
Rob, can you go to John Hinckley's Wikipedia?
Was it dinner with President Bush?
Neil Bush, President Bush's fourth son.
OK.
So if you can, there you go.
So zoom in a little bit, Rob, right there,
so I can read it right there.
It says New York Times, the eldest Hinckley child, Scott
30, the vice president of his father's company
and friend, Neil Bush, the son of the president, Scott Hinkley, and a date had been invited to
have dinner with the young Bush's home last night, but the dinner was canceled after the shooting.
And that's New York Times, by the way, which is kind of weird. You've never heard of this before.
Wow. What do you think about this?
Do you give any of this any credence?
Or it's like, nah, just, this is.
So what if they did?
What if they did have dinner?
Well, you know how Lyndon Johnson became a president
and the one story that no president ever wants to leak
is how John F. Kennedy got assassinated.
I interviewed a guy named Jim Jenkins
who was one of the four men right after John F. Kennedy died that
held his brain, held his, and these were the four military folks who held his
brain and they said look, he said you know he left the life and he said
somebody had messed with it before it came to us and I said what he means,
somebody had messed with it before he came to us. And I said, what do you mean? So somebody had messed with it before it came to us.
And I went through the rabbit hole,
I interviewed another man who worked on that day,
and I interviewed a bunch of different guys,
I went through the whole thing.
And a lot of people point to Lyndon Johnson
being behind what happened to Kennedy,
and the reason why it goes to Lyndon Johnson.
Lyndon Johnson was a Texas guy, so in this case,
the fastest way to become a president
is God forbid something happens to the president,
you're the president, right?
The VP becomes the president.
You know, so why would you meet with the brother
whose brother tried to kill the president?
I see where you're going.
It's just that if you knew George H.W. Bush, he was such a gentleman and such a...
That would not...
It would be so beyond the pale for him.
Now, I don't know about his kids, but that would be something beyond anything
he would ever...
What was he like when you were on him?
He was such a nice... Look, I first connected with George H.W. Bush when I was in the Nixon
White House, and he was head of the Republican National Committee.
This was an interesting story.
And I had to write speeches for people to support President Nixon against impeachment
and Watergate issues.
And so Bush was at the Republican National Committee.
And so I had to write a speech for him defending Richard
Nixon. So I wrote this tough speech for Bush, and so he went out kicking somebody, you know,
kicking butt and everything else. And he called me afterwards. So this is in 1974. I'm guessing it had to be late 73 or somewhere in 74 when he was head of the Republican
National Committee.
And he had the courtesy to call me at the White House, and I was deputy special assistant
to the president, just a small fry, and to thank me for writing that speech.
And people almost never did that. And thanked me it was a courtesy call and he
said Ken I just want to thank you for helping me with that speech he said you
know that's it's tough duty out there I'm just and he was carrying the water
for Nixon and and and he didn't want to it was because that was a tough job for
him to do but he was head of the Republican National Committee and he knew he had to do it because he was loyal to President
Nixon.
And so I'm just saying that's the kind of guy he was.
And every contact that I had with him when he was vice president, when he was a candidate
for and when I saw him as president, he was just always the nicest gentleman I've ever known.
I can't say anything else about him.
Yeah, I had a moment when I-
I have different views about his other family.
Who, Jeb or-
W.
Oh really?
Did you ever interaction with him?
Just indirectly, but I mean,
I just wish that he was more active on behalf of his party, that's all.
You mean today?
Yeah.
And, you know, when you say that, are you yourself, because you've spent time with Nixon,
with Reagan, with a lot of different, I think you even helped write, if I'm not mistaken,
you were an advisor to McCain's camp, you were an advisor to a couple other people, right, if I'm not mistaken, you were an advisor to McCain's camp.
You were an advisor to a couple other people,
right, if I'm not mistaken.
McCain, Dole.
McCain, Dole, some of these other guys.
You've been around.
So are you someone that's supportive
of President Trump right now going against Kamala?
Yeah.
So you're not, the Bushes are not fans of Trump.
They haven't been since he made the comments that he made.
He's not somebody that is liked by the Bushes. And the way he went after Jeb,
that's like the last time you heard anything good from Bushes towards Trump.
Look, President George W. Bush doesn't have to like Trump. He doesn't have to
campaign for him. But there are hundreds of other Republicans he could be out there helping.
Interesting.
And he doesn't, he isn't out there doing it.
And why do you think that is?
I have no idea.
But I would, I wish he, he's got the ability to raise a lot of money.
And he's a former president of the United States.
Do you have any reasons why you think he does that?
I think probably the reason is that he'll be asked about President Trump and I think
there's ways to do that without, you know, you don't have to answer that question, just
saying, look, I'm out here to help, I'm out here to help Ken Calvert get elected to Congress
in Riverside County.
Is that part of his duty, you think?
Like when he ran, did other previous presidents help him out?
I wonder, can you pull up which... Here's what I'll say is that
President George W. Bush
got elected because Republicans all over the country helped him
and everything good that happened to him
was happened because Republicans all over the country
no matter how they felt
about his politics, helped him. And I go back to Richard Nixon in 19, throughout
his career, he campaigned for Republicans, whether liberal, moderate,
conservative, left-wing, right-wing, whatever. He campaigned for
Jacob Javits who was a liberal Republican. He campaigned for Barry Goldwater who was
a right-wing Republican. He campaigned for Republicans all over the country. And so
if you're part of the party and you owe your livelihood to them and look, people say to
me, are you a Trumper?
I say, look, I'm a Kachigian Republican.
I believe in lower taxes.
I believe in a strong national defense.
I believe in anti-crime policies.
I believe in a strong border.
I believe in a strong foreign policy.
That makes me, that's the kind of Republican I am.
So I think Nixon believed in that.
I think Reagan believed in that.
I think Trump basically believes in that.
I can't defend every element of his personality.
I don't have to.
But I believe those things as against Kamala Harris being a left-wing nut.
If she's a left-wing nut, you know, Arnold just came out saying he's endorsing her.
Cheneys came out, they're endorsing her.
They're just angry at him.
At Trump.
Yeah. Well, the Cheneys are. Liz is.
Because of comments made.
I guess, yeah. Yeah, I guess. What do you
think about Trump? I think there's a lot of ways he could improve. I think he
could have made this a landslide, not a big landslide, but he could have won
this election very very very comfortably. You think he will? I think if he wins, it's narrowly,
but I think he could have done it comfortably.
If he had changed a lot of things.
But, you know, I'm not in the business anymore.
Have you already voted or no?
I voted.
If I had to give my...
If I gave my advice, I mean, I know Susie, I knew Susie Wilds when she was Susie
Summerall and a campaign worker that worked for me and others in the 84 Reagan Bush campaign.
And I like her.
But if I called her up and gave her advice,
and she'd probably listen to me,
but it wouldn't matter because she'd pass it on
and he'd ignore it.
Well, last thing before we wrap up.
Were you ever there?
I once had Michael Reagan at an event I called it,
Saving America Doing the Impossible,
July of 2009, where I was dressed as George Washington,
my wife was dressed as Lady Liberty,
and another one of my guys was dressed as Lincoln.
And he said, what would you like me to speak about?
I said, just tell stories about your father.
And last time he's seeing him, he went to visit him,
and then he's leaving, he looks back,
he forgot to hug him, and he looks back,
he's going like this, and Michael comes,
gets out of the car and goes hugs him and leave
Did were you with him at the last days when his memory and he was going through his you know
Challenging times or not really?
No
Well, yes and no
Be I'm okay. I can clear up one thing people me, was he losing it in his last days? And
I said no, his brain was working perfectly at the end of his presidency. I met him in
1990, worked with him on some stuff in the 90 midterm elections, his mind was working good. I helped him on the 1992 convention speech,
and his brain was fine.
But in 92, I did run into him at a, I can't remember,
it was a fundraising event,
and it was the first time he didn't recognize me.
And that was two years before he declared his Alzheimer's.
So years after the end of his presidency. No, that was four years.
And you felt the major difference where he didn't recognize you.
That was the first time night, four years after his presidency.
That was the first time he, I walked up to him and he drew a blank.
What was the exchange like?
I just walked up to him and normally if I walked up to him he'd have a big grin on his
face and say hello, oh, hi Ken.
And he, I said hello Mr. President, wow, great to see you or something like that. And he had
this blank on his mind, which, you know, it's like, I've had that running into high school
classmates that I haven't seen for 50 years, but that's a little different. But this was,
I mean he
He never did he never didn't know who I was. What was the gap between the last time he said four years? No, it was two years
Got it four years after the end of his presidency two years of the last time he saw you
Yeah, and was Nancy did this happen accidentally or was it a schedule thing that you came to the house and no no
This is accidentally but I mean it got it. I mean I didn't it wasn't a shock thing that you came to the house and? No, no, this was accidentally, but I mean,
Oh, okay, got it.
I mean, it wasn't a shock thing.
I mean, I walked up slowly to him and-
And did you try to explain yourself?
Like what was the occasion?
I just said, oh, you know, I told him who I was
and put it in context,
and then we started visiting a little bit.
And then, but I tried not to make him feel uncomfortable let's put it that way. What was Nancy
like at that time at the last days? I didn't have any real contact with her
that much and so we I I didn't you know after the presidency I didn't keep that
much contact I was so active with my other things. I was running political campaigns, and I had my own business and
Iran oh geez, and I was running governor Duke Majin's campaigns in California. I was helping with
Attorney General campaigns, and I guess I should have stayed in better contact with Reagan. I should have visited with him more
It's funny. I didn't.
And he was not one to do phone calls.
With Nixon, we talked on the phone all the time.
We talked on the phone constantly.
Reagan was not that kind of relationship.
Reagan, we didn't talk on the phone.
Interesting.
And with Nixon, did you speak to Nixon when Pat passed away?
Did you have an interaction with him at that time or no? No, no. That would have been
awkward. He was so, he was devastated. It's the only time I think I've seen him
cry. There's videos of him crying. He was sobbing, yes. You ever seen that?
I've seen the videos, yes.
You never spoke to him after the funeral?
No, I was at the funeral, obviously.
But did you guys ever have any exchange after the funeral or no?
Well, probably, I'm sure, because I was on the board of his library foundation and we were still very close.
and we were still very close.
At that time I was with him and he was really, he felt a tremendous sense of loss because he depended on Pat. She was a very strong woman and she never did leave him
or turn her back on him and any of the controversial things he was involved in.
She stuck with him and he leaned on her and depended on her.
That's the voice of Billy Graham.
And this is watching a man,
that's like watching a man that strong in tears.
It's like Trump crying.
It's a very tough thing to see with folks like that.
Between the two, just a wild question. Curious what you'll say about this if you have even have an opinion
Some tells me you're not gonna answer that you're gonna be very diplomatic about this answer, but I may be wrong
Who do you think was a better president Nixon or Reagan?
They were two different two different presidents you started diplomatic with your answer there you can't There's no answer to that question.
They had two different times of history.
They were the two leading Cold War presidents.
Nixon set the groundwork for Reagan to be a great president.
Nixon set the groundwork for Reagan to be a great president.
Then indirectly indirectly I take
that as Nixon. No, I'm just saying that they worked in, they were collaborators.
If there's no Nixon, is there a Reagan? I don't think there's an answer.
You can't answer that question.
Yeah.
Did you ever spend time with the young Roger Stone back in the days or no?
Were you ever around Roger Stone?
Oh yeah.
What was he like?
He was just as crazy as a lunacy.
Ridley, Ridley.
Do you have a Roger Stone story?
No, it's just always
um no i don't have any special stories about him just he was he was always the pain in the
ass back and was he is that a that's a picture of uh uh that no i know back in the early 70s.
He was a big Nixon guy.
Yeah, yeah.
Every, if Roger Stone's listening,
every Roger Stone story, you gotta cut it by 80%
and then cut half of that to 40%.
Okay, you're saying exaggeration. Yeah.
Well, you know, have you seen a recent movie
about the president Trump that just came out?
I'm assuming you wouldn't see it.
I was.
Roger Stone's in it.
It's actually very interesting how they paint him to be.
I love Roger.
Yeah, well, he's super entertaining.
No, I was just on his show.
Yeah, I love the guy. He's, he's, he's super entertaining. No, I was just on his show. Yeah. I love the guy. He's…
Well…
Look, the fun thing I've had, I've been in politics since 1968. I've had a wonderful
career. The personalities I've been with, it's just that I turned down Clint Eastwood
to run his campaign for mayor.
Clint Eastwood?
Yeah, he called me up and wanted me to run his campaign for mayor. I turned him down.
Why, did he scare you?
No, no, no, I didn't have time. I said I don't run mayoral campaigns. I'll get you somebody
to do it for me.
Did Arnold ever reach out or no? No, no. I don't run my own campaigns. I'll get you somebody to do it for me
Just but you know, I don't ever reach out or no, no, no, you're not a fan. No, I say he I don't know Why he didn't reach out me. I think probably somebody told him I was more conservative than he was but I have no idea
How was the Khmelnyan? Oh, it's great wonderful man. And
You know, we had the biggest land one of the biggest landslides in history
1986 just totally underestimated he there needs to be a book written about I don't have I should
have written I should write a book about somebody needs to write a book he had a great governorship, had more integrity, probably the man of most integrity in politics
that I've known.
And...
Respect it?
Was he a fighter?
Was he a tough guy?
Tough guy, respected.
Is he the highest ranking?
He's the highest ranking Armenian, right?
In politics, governor on the side, right?
Yeah, ever.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And we got him elected narrowly in 1982
and then got them re-elected by a massive landslide in 86
by 23%.
23%?
The chance of that happening today in California
is not that high.
There's a guy there, I don't know if you're a big fan
of or not, this guy named Newsom,
I don't know if you've heard of him.
You're not a fan of him, so yeah look it's been it's been great having you on
we're gonna put the link to I hope I haven't disappointed you no I'm I like
stories that's what I like yeah I like stories I I'm fascinated by politics my
parents I grew up in a weird family where one side they were communists the
other side they were imperialists, and
that was my introduction to politics.
One side thought, you know...
Yeah, her, your mom was a communist.
She was, she was part of the Today Party.
They were part of the Today Party.
Their Bible was the Karl Marx Communist Manifesto, which I read, and you have to kind of find
out what that was all about.
But now I see this game.
It's a very interesting game, very, very interesting game, this political game, very.
And I learned politics and business
when I started competing and I'm like, wait a minute,
you guys flipped on me, you were nice to me,
now you're a son of a bitch, what happened to you?
Oh, because we're taking a market,
and you guys teamed up together?
So this is all politics, no problem, let's have some fun.
And it was actually fun seeing what that was like.
So anytime I hear stories like the ones you're telling me
right now, fascinated by, but I appreciate,
by the way, do you know how this interview came out?
Happened.
Somebody on Manect reached out to me and they said,
Rob, did you know the story?
They reached out to me, they said,
on Manect, hey, you need to have him on.
Ken's gotta get on the podcast.
I'm like, you gotta be kidding me.
Yeah, let me look into it. And then I'm like, oh wow, what an interesting story. Let's figure out a got to get on the podcast. I'm like you got to be kidding me. Yeah let me look into it and then I'm like oh wow what an interesting story.
Let's figure out a way to get this work in.
Well you need to you need to meet her. She's a jar-big little Armenian girl.
I gotta meet her if she's outside. And respect that's the power of Manek by the way.
You have to respond back as people are paying for respond. That's why that app
works so effectively.
Yeah well she's a a draw big Armenian girl.
I look forward to meeting her.
Sir, it is a pleasure to meet you.
I really enjoyed this two hours with you.
I gotta tell you, good for you.
You went two hours on a podcast.
Not a lot of people can do it.
How old are you?
How old are you?
80 years old.
80 years old, you did a two hour podcast.
This is so impressive.
Hey, I'm gonna go outside and tell you I kicked Patrick's butt
By the way, no bathroom breaks no edit nothing you gotta respect that so great to have you on absolute pleasure
All right. Well, I'll have a cigar sometime. I look forward to it. Take care everybody. Bye. Bye. Bye
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