Last week, Our Land reader Ernie Drown sent in a request: “I wish you’d comment about the astonishing revelations in Peter Baker’s March 18 article in the New York Times about John Connally’s efforts to steal the election from Jimmy Carter. IMO, one of the most important stories of the decade, which has been followed by deafening silence.”
 
Our Land

A NEWSLETTER FROM DAVID CORN

Our Land

A NEWSLETTER FROM DAVID CORN

 

A New Reagan Bombshell Reminds Us of the GOP’s Dependence on Dirty Tricks

By David Corn  March 28, 2023

In Germany on January 21, 1981, former President Jimmy Carter greets the American hostages freed from Iran that day. AP

In Germany on January 21, 1981, former President Jimmy Carter greets the American hostages freed from Iran that day. AP

Last week, Our Land reader Ernie Drown sent in a request: “I wish you’d comment about the astonishing revelations in Peter Baker’s March 18 article in the New York Times about John Connally’s efforts to steal the election from Jimmy Carter. IMO, one of the most important stories of the decade, which has been followed by deafening silence.”

 

Usually, I respond to such queries in the Mailbag section of the newsletter (which is available only to premium subscribers), but Ernie’s note warrants lead-item attention. In case you missed it, let’s start with the “astonishing revelations” he references. Ben Barnes, a veteran Texas politician, told the New York Times that during the 1980 election he witnessed a secret effort by candidate Ronald Reagan’s team to stall the release of the 52 Americans held hostage in Iran. The goal was to prevent incumbent President Jimmy Carter from gaining a political bounce. What Barnes described would be one of the vilest and meanest political dirty tricks in US history, delaying freedom for Americans held in appalling conditions in order to undermine a president and affect an election. This story is a vivid reminder of a damning fact: Most modern Republican presidents won office thanks to some degree of skullduggery.

 

In the 1960s and 1970s, Barnes was a Democratic state legislator and lieutenant governor in the Lone Star State, with the reputation for working well with Republicans. He had helped George W. Bush obtain a much-desired spot in the Texas Air National Guard, which kept the young fellow from being drafted and possibly sent to Vietnam. His mentor was Connally, a towering figure in Texas politics who had been riding in the limo with President John Kennedy in Dallas on November 22, 1963. A protégé of Lyndon Johnson and a former governor, he had served in the administrations of Kennedy and Richard Nixon. Connally, who switched from a D to an R in the 1970s, competed in the GOP presidential primaries in 1980 and was clobbered by Reagan, then governor of California. Afterward, he eagerly jumped on the Reagan express, committed to helping his former foe win the White House and hoping that his loyalty would land him a job in a Reagan administration.

 

Throughout the 1980 race, the Reagan team fretted that if Carter managed to achieve the release of the hostages—who had been seized the previous year after the Iranian revolution led to the installation of an Islamic fundamentalist regime—the president’s popularity would soar and boost his reelection prospects. According to Barnes, that summer, he and Connally took a trip to the Middle East, and in meetings with regional leaders in various capitals, Connally shared a message that was to be conveyed to Iran: Hold on to the hostages; you will get a better deal if Reagan wins. Once Connally and Barnes were back in the United States, Barnes recalled, Connally briefed William Casey, the Reagan campaign chair, on the trip at a lounge in the Dallas/Ft. Worth airport.

 

Reagan ended up soundly defeating Carter, and the hostages were released months later on Inauguration Day, January 20, 1981, once Carter was out of office. For years afterward, arms dealers, Middle East fixers, and other shifty figures claimed the Reagan campaign had conspired to persuade Tehran to hold on to the hostages until after the election. These unconfirmed whispers and allegations included tales of secret overseas visits and covert negotiations conducted by Casey (a future CIA director), supposedly including a hush-hush trip to Madrid to huddle with Iranian representatives. Eventually, Gary Sick, a former national security aide to Carter, published an op-ed in the New York Times in April 1991 suggesting the Reagan campaign had cut a treasonous deal with Iran. The shorthand term for this scandal was the “October Surprise.”

 

House and Senate investigators examined the October Surprise story and found no evidence to confirm that Casey and the Reagan campaign had sought a covert accord with Tehran. (They had never heard of a Connally mission and did not investigate that.) Yet two decades later, a relevant White House memo written during the George H.W. Bush years was discovered. It reported the existence of “a cable from the Madrid embassy indicating that Bill Casey was in town, for purposes unknown.” This memo had not been turned over to the congressional investigators. Very suspicious, right?

 

Without substantiation, the October Surprise tale faded away and became part of the forgotten lore of ever-scheming Casey. Barnes’ disclosure revived this hard-to-nail-down scandal. “History needs to know that this happened,” Barnes told the Times. “I think it’s so significant and I guess knowing that the end is near for President Carter put it on my mind more and more and more. I just feel like we’ve got to get it down some way.”

 

Is Barnes telling the truth? Baker set out to corroborate his explosive allegations. “Mr. Connally, Mr. Casey and other central figures have long since died and Mr. Barnes has no diaries or memos to corroborate his account,” Baker writes. “But he has no obvious reason to make up the story and indeed expressed trepidation at going public because of the reaction of fellow Democrats.” Baker was able to find a document in Texas records showing that the former Texas governor did travel to Jordan, Syria, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Israel in the summer of 1980, and that Barnes was listed on an itinerary as accompanying him. And, as Baker reports, over the years, Barnes has shared the story of this trip and Connally’s message to Tehran with several friends. But there is no direct confirmation of Connally encouraging Iran to keep the Americans to benefit the Reagan campaign. There’s no telling how involved Casey or Reagan might have been in this initiative.

 

But Barnes’ account is solid—though not conclusive—evidence of a traitorous Republican misdeed. Encouraging a foreign adversary to hold on to American hostages would be a profound betrayal and an act of tremendous villainy.

 

If the October Surprise caper did occur, that would mean that most of the GOP presidents since Dwight Eisenhower have reached the White House via dirty tricks. During the 1968 election, Richard Nixon clandestinely impeded the Vietnam war peace talks between the United States and North Vietnam to deny Lyndon Johnson and his vice president, Hubert Humphrey, the Democratic presidential candidate, a political victory that would bolster Humphrey’s campaign. (Garrett Graff details this foul plot in his recent book, Watergate: A New History, and Rachel Maddow produced a documentary on this episode.) Nixon narrowly won that contest. And in 1972, there was Watergate. Forty-four years later, Trump triumphed partly due to the help of the secret Russian attack on the election that he and his campaign aided and abetted by falsely denying its existence.

 

In between Nixon and Trump, the Bushes also attained the White House with the aid of underhanded trickery. George H.W. Bush covered up—that is, lied about—his role in and knowledge of the Iran-contra scandal when he ran for president in 1988. His team that year mounted what political journalists of the day considered the dirtiest presidential election in decades, with its below-the-belt attacks on Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis, the Democratic nominee. (Remember the whisper campaign that Dukakis had an undisclosed psychological ailment and the infamous Willie Horton ad?) And George W. Bush prevailed in the 2000 election, partly because of the phony “Brooks Brothers riot” that his campaign operatives and supporters orchestrated to stop an important recount in Miami. He won reelection in 2004 with help from the Swift Boat smear campaign waged by Bush allies against Massachusetts Sen. John Kerry, the Democratic standard-bearer.

 

Certainly, not all political perfidy is created equal. Trying to prolong a war or committing break-ins, forgeries, and other crimes to win an election (Nixon) is more devious than spreading rumors that an opponent is mentally ill (George H.W. Bush). Providing cover to a foreign adversary covertly attacking an American election (Trump) is worse than winking at a lie-driven operation to brand a rival as a war-hero fraud (George W. Bush.) Encouraging a regime to keep Americans imprisoned longer than necessary hits the high end of the list of sleazy and mendacious tactics.

 

It's noteworthy that none of the successful Democratic presidential contenders of the past 50 years have been credibly accused of such deceit. Trump tried with the Big Lie—his evidence-free argument that Democrats, the Deep State, the media, and who-knows-who-else stole the election from him. But only his cultists fell for that crap. Republicans might point to Kennedy’s narrow win in Illinois in 1960 and allegations of ballot-stuffing. But these accusations have long been debated without yielding a definitive conclusion, and Kennedy would have won the Electoral College vote without Illinois.

 

Unfortunately, the Barnes revelation has generated only a moderate ripple in the news cycle. PBS’s NewsHour aired a segment on this scoop. A few newspapers ran stories. (A New York Post columnist harrumphed at the New York Times piece for being predicated on a single source.) The Times followed up with reactions from the former hostages. Barry Rosen, who was press attaché at the US embassy in Tehran, observed, “It’s nice that Mr. Barnes is trying to soothe his soul during the last years of his life. But for the hostages who went through hell, he has not helped us at all. He has made it just as bad or worse.” He chastised Barnes for waiting 43 years to come forward, and added, “It’s the definition of treason...knowing that there was a possibility that the Carter administration might have been able to negotiate us out of Iran earlier.” (The paper also reported an outrageous transgression: Many of the surviving hostages “feel neglected by the government, which has paid them only about a quarter of the $4.4 million that they were each promised by Congress in 2015, after decades of lobbying for compensation.”)

 

Barnes’ account—coming from a credible witness—ought to receive more attention. Perhaps there is a person in the United States or the Middle East who can back up his story. Did US intelligence collect any information about Connally’s trip? His tale now taints Reagan’s victory. Moreover, it prompts a broader question: Can a Republican win a presidential election without engaging in dishonest scheming or betraying the nation?

 

Got anything to say about this item—or anything else? Email me at ourland@motherjones.com.

Elite Bonding

This past weekend, the New York Times published a long profile of New York Mets owner Steven Cohen and his herculean effort to sportswash his reputation by buying the baseball club. The piece itself showed how well sportswashing can succeed for the rich and powerful. The article did mention that the hedge fund billionaire’s firm pleaded guilty to insider trading in 2013 and had to pay a whopping $1.8 billion in fines, an episode that soiled Cohen’s reputation on and off Wall Street. But the profile did not dwell on this unpleasantness. Instead, it focused on Cohen’s tenure as a team owner willing to pay gazillions to obtain the best players for his club—a move that has made him rather popular in Queens and throughout the Big Apple. Presto. The take-home message: Sportswashing works. But I was moved by a heartwarming passage that showed how elites have each other’s backs:

 

Publicly, Cohen has spoken little about those years [in which his company was pursued and punished for corporate crimes]. “You always go to your friends,” he said tersely in the interview.

 

One friend came to understand his circumstances better than most. [Former New Jersey Gov. Chris] Christie steered through his own public crisis, just after Cohen’s, over associates carrying out apparently retaliatory lane closures at the George Washington Bridge. The former governor said the dual controversies became “one of the bases of the friendship.”

 

“He was going through some really difficult moments,” Christie said. “You can have conversations in a way that you just can’t have with other people who haven’t experienced that kind of public scrutiny.”

 

Before Cohen offered him any advice, Christie recalled, he asked a question: Did you do it?

 

“That’s something only a friend can really ask,” Christie said. “And I said no. And he goes: ‘Well, then screw it. Hang in there and just fight through it.’”

 

How touching.

The Watch, Read, and Listen List

Shrinking. Here’s one more sitcom about a (mostly white) group of people living in a (mostly white) affluent suburb who, alas, have problems. But…it is so well done and so good. Jimmy, Paul, and Gaby are therapists in a practice they co-run in lovely Pasadena, California. Jimmy is a mess after the death of his beautiful wife in a car accident. He’s neglecting his 16-year-old daughter, Alice, avoiding friends, drinking too much, and losing faith in his profession, questioning if the sessions he conducts benefit his patients. Paul is contending with the onset of Parkinson’s and attempting to reconnect with an adult daughter he abandoned as a kid. Gaby is coping with a divorce and trying, as a young Black woman, to establish herself in this outfit with these two white guys. This has all the trappings of yet another insufferable, classist production. The show even has the trope-ish next-door couple: a busybody (yet well-meaning) wife and a dopey (yet well-meaning) husband. But with superb writing, it forges exactly the right mix of pathos, cringe, sweetness, and humor.

 

Jimmy, the clueless dad rendered more clueless by the loss of his wife, decides it’s time to dump the cognitive behavior therapy playbook and provide his patients specific tough-love advice on how to overcome their annoying problems. (Drop that loser, he tells a woman stuck in a bad relationship.) This leads to assorted off-the-couch and zany field trips with his patients and a perhaps too-close relationship with Sean, a young Black military vet with anger management issues who’s not buying this whole therapy thing. With boundaries getting muddied, Sean ends up living in Jimmy’s pool house. Paul, a gruff fellow who keeps his emotional distance from everyone, must come to terms with relying on others, as his disease starts to affect his daily routine. Gaby, who does the I’m-confident-as-fuck bit so well, actually needs some TLC and help, as well.

 

Shrinking, available on Apple TV+, sings because of its actors. Jason Segel, one of its co-creators and an accomplished comic and actor (How I Met Your Mother), is perfect as Jimmy, who yearns for Alice’s love and Paul’s admiration, while careening between moments of wisdom and maturity and a series of social disasters. (One involves puking.) It is a treat to watch Harrison Ford put to work his wry comedic chops as Paul. He elevates the clichéd role of a curmudgeon with a heart of gold to a new level. And Jessica Williams, formerly of The Daily Show and the podcast and HBO show 2 Dope Queens, is stunning as the in-your-face Gaby, delivering sick-as-shit, punchy dialogue. (You don’t want to be nominated in an Emmy category with her.) The way the three interact is a sheer delight. These relationships are authentically and meticulously depicted.

 

Shrinking both respects and breaks the sitcom formula. It recognizes its own (mostly) whiteness. In one episode, Sean wants to open a food business called “White Guilt Catering,” figuring that a lot of the wealthy and liberal-minded white people in town would love to say they have a Black caterer. The show captures that Ted Lasso­ special mix of poignancy and silliness. Shrinks with issues—it sounds like a Hollywood elevator pitch that could yield a dull and predictable series. Yet just as Jimmy breaks the rules to lift his patients out of their ruts, Shrinking freshens up a much-worn genre.

ratio 

Read Recent Issues of Our Land

March 25, 2023: The real perversion in Trump’s porn-star-hush-money caper; Dumbass Comment of the Week (Possible Trump Indictment Edition); the Mailbag; MoxieCam™; and more.

 

March 21, 2023: The Iraq War: a personal remembrance of dissent; Los Angeles Times columnist Jean Guerrero’s stunning investigative memoir; and more

 

March 18, 2023: Is anti-wokeness all the GOP has?; Dumbass Comment of the Week (Mike Pence); the Mailbag; MoxieCam™; and more.

 

March 15, 2023: A debate (of sorts) over the Columbia Journalism Review’s huge Trump-Russia fail; Iris DeMent sings out about our current troubles; and more.

 

March 7, 2023: I visit paradise (the Tucson Festival of Books); do we need the blood and guts of All Quiet on the Western Front?; and more.

 

March 4, 2023: The (very selective) Covid wars; the never-ending story of George Santos; Dumbass Comment of the Week (Bezalel Smotrich); the Mailbag; MoxieCam™; and more.

 

February 28, 2023: Ron DeSantis’ war on freedom; Racist of the Week update; Your Honor’s double jeopardy; Richard Thompson keeps getting better; and more.

 

February 25, 2023: The GOP plays the race card with a train wreck; Dumbass Comment of the Week (Scott Adams); an Our Land focus group—do you wanna zoom; the Mailbag; MoxieCam™; and more.

Got suggestions, comments, complaints, tips related to any of the above, or anything else? Email me at ourland@motherjones.com.

Our Land

This message was sent to example@example.com. To change the messages you receive from us, you can edit your email preferences or unsubscribe from all mailings.

www.MotherJones.com
PO Box 8539, Big Sandy, TX 75755