Dishonest Abe

Lichtman, Allan J.

Dishonest Abe How LBJ’s favorite Supreme Court justice became the prototype of Washington’s valueless lawyers by Allan J. Lichtman Imagine a man with great abilities and strong...

...Unfortunately, the reader has to work too hard to find lessons that should be readily evident after 400 pages...
...These themes are not fully explored in Kalman's work...
...But the big picture is often lost in the detail, a weakness that is made more glaring by the lack of a thematic introduction or a synthetic conclusion...
...Dishonest Abe How LBJ’s favorite Supreme Court justice became the prototype of Washington’s valueless lawyers by Allan J. Lichtman Imagine a man with great abilities and strong convictions, but few, if any, principles...
...Ends would always sanction means, and contradictions could be rationalized or simply ignored...
...Kalman largely misses the point that the Washington lawyer couldn't represent corporations during business hours and then change clothes and advance liberal ideals during his spare time...
...The value.of such contracts was enormous: his clients could plead their cases without formal procedures or opposing views...
...Her book contains new information and analysis, but no startling revelations or striking new interpretations...
...In assessing Fortas’s fall, Kalman shows that he ultimately rejected the retainer from the Wolfson Foundation and returned the only payment he received...
...Of course, the corporate advocate could still promote social justice...
...Prior to World War 11, big business came to Washington largely to keep government off its back...
...Her book also follows by just two years another lengthy Fortas biography, Bruce Allen Murphy’s Fortas: The Rise and Ruin of a Supreme Court Justice, that traverses much of the same territory...
...But just after leaving Interior he had “a convenient lapse of memory” when called upon by Congress to corroborate Ickes’s charges that President Truman’s appointee for undersecretary of the Navy had sought to trade political contributions for the leasing of oil rights...
...For five years he loyally served Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes...
...Kalman accurately links Fortas’s problems to his obsessive secrecy, his concern for financial security, and his mistrust of Congress and the public...
...It was but a small step for him to become the ex parte adviser par excellence to his old friend Lyndon Johnson...
...But Kalman devotes only one line to that episode...
...But he is largely remembered as the first Supreme Court justice to resign under allegations of improper conduct...
...Amazingly, there is yet more to say about Abe Fortas...
...By using the knowledge and connections they had acquired in public service on behalf of corporate America, former New Dealers like Abe Fortas and Thomas Corcoran ("Tommy the Cork") weren't simply continuing government's "coexistence with big business" that had been part of the New Deal...
...By then the damage to Fortas’s reputation was done...
...He advised President Johnson on domestic and foreign issues, drafted speeches, and even helped with legislation while serving on the Supreme Court...
...We now have two good books that have devoted more than 1,000 pages to Fortas...
...But neither work fully recognizes the significance of his transitional role in American history, adequately probes the moral issues raised by his career, or fully illuminates the inside world of one of Washington’s premier lawyerflobbyisls...
...Transcripts of the wiretap surveillance of Corcoran (conducted by the Truman administration from 1945 to 1947) show how Fortas teamed up with him to work the squeeze play on a financier trying to avoid prosecution for draft evasion...
...The author fails to describe adequately the new Washington in which Fortas operated and the policy implications of his corporate practice...
...Yale Universi@P ress, $29.95...
...The strength of Kalman’s book is the depth in which she traces Fortas’s odyssey from New Deal whiz kid to fallen Supreme Court justice, expertly revealing his different roles and personae...
...This is the Abe Fortas that emerges from the pages of Laura Kalman’s carefully researched and well-written biography of the public man.* It is precisely this kind of man who would falsely believe that he could simultaneously serve the most powerful private interests and promote the public good...
...Kalman details Fortas's exemplary pro bono work on civil liberties-work that did not involve the shaping of the political economy and that aided Fortas's career by building his reputation as an advocate...
...Laura Kalman...
...As a Supreme Court justice, Fortas tended to reach decisions based on his personal convictions Allan J. Lichtman teaches history at American University...
...1990...
...Fortas helped Lyndon Johnson steal the senatorial election of 1948 and promoted voting rights for minorities...
...They hoped to extract great sums from the financier, some of which, the conversations suggest, would be diverted to a Selective Service director...
...It was Fortas's role as a Johnson adviser while on the Court and his financial arrangements with a businessman who was under federal investigation (and later was convicted of violating securities laws) that ultimately forced him from the Court...
...During the war, business crowded into the capital for a different purpose: to gain contracts, concessions, and favors from the agencies that now directed the economy...
...The public simply didn’t need to know what it couldn’t possibly understand...
...But she also notes that he held on to the $20,000 for several months, returning it only after the financier was indicted...
...Corporate America successfully battled the few New Dealers remaining in government to get around the regulations adopted in the 1930s and to ensure that private enterprise, not public agencies, controlled the new economic order...
...After a brilliant career at Yale Law School, Fortas quickly rose to the top of the New Deal bureaucracy, becoming undersecretary of Interior at age 3 1. After World War I1 he fluidly made the transition to power lawyer and LBJ confidant...
...Relativism likewise guided Fortas’s approach to the law, both as advocate and arbiter...
...Abe Fonas: A Biogrqhy...
...In accepting a lifetime yearly retainer of $20,000 (about half his Supreme Court salary) from the family foundation of embattled entrepreneur Louis Wolfson, Fortas was engaging in the same kind of squeeze play that had helped make Washington lawyers rich...
...Fortas, Kalman shows, was the preeminent moral relativist...
...As the managing partner of Arnold, Fortas, and Porter, he felt he could in good conscience represent polluters, chiselers, and cigarette companies, because everyone deserved representation, no matter their character or practices...
...These were not lapses but logical extensions of his earlier career...
...But his problems are also tied inextricably to his role as lawyer/fixer...
...They were selling out the New Deal objective of placing the public interest ahead of purely private gain...
...Never mind that other former New Deal lawyers-Benjamin Cohen, Joseph Rauh, Clifford Dun-had chosen careers that did not focus on aiding the rich and powerfd...
...Kalman’s book is notable for its thorough research, narrative depth, and intelligent commentary on Fortas’s personal style and philosophy (or lack thereof...
...The Fortas story provides an inside perspective on the transformation of American public life that followed World War I1 and proves that history can still teach by moral example...
...Much of the significance of the Fortas story lies in his transitional role in forging a new relationship between business and government and in the connections between his prior career and his downfall as a justice...
...then to search for justification in precedent and social science...
...Fortas had often used his inside connections to arrange ex purre contracts with government agencies...
...Those ideals were being shredded by his defense of clients' interests...
...He is the co-author of 13 Kevs to the Presidency (Modison Books...
...His brilliant advocacy made him one of the most influential members of the Warren Court but also earned him the enmity of purists like Justice Hugo Black, who believed that a consistent judicial philosophy should guide decisions of the Court...
...Troubled clients were usually willing to work out sweetheart deals . . . and no one but the lawyer and client needed to know the details...
...He could remain a back-room power in Washington while in his own mind keeping his Court life segregated...
...More important, she generally fails to provide an inside account of what goes on behind the scenes at a litigation/lobbying firm like Arnold, Fortas, and Porter...
...To cite one example: In 1945 the Export-Import Bank was given lending authority of $3.5 billion (more than one-third of the entire federal budget for 1940) to aid foreign purchases of American goods...
...He would lack the internal gyroscope to harmonize his disparate beliefs or guide his personal conduct...
...And business stayed after 1945 to reap the enormous profits generated by the creation of a global economic and strategic system dominated by the United States...
...Both authors combed through vast archival material, but Kalman had privileged access to Fortas’s personal papers...

Vol. 22 • December 1990 • No. 11


 
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