Documents Cast New Light on Ickes's Tie to
Teamsters
By DAVID JOHNSTON
October 7, 1998
WASHINGTON -- A House panel
investigating the Teamsters union disclosed internal White House
documents Tuesday that shed a fuller and harsher light on an effort by
Harold Ickes, former White House deputy chief of staff, to resolve an agricultural labor
dispute in California in behalf of the union.
The new documents are significant because they have surfaced at a
time when Ickes' truthfulness about his activities with the teamsters is the subject of a
90-day Justice Department inquiry that could lead to the appointment of an independent
prosecutor. Attorney General Janet Reno has until December to decide whether to go forward
with an outside inquiry.
Reno is examining Ickes' statements last year to
the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, which first investigated the
matter in its campaign finance investigation. When Ickes was asked by Senate investigators
what the Clinton administration did regarding the strike at the Diamond Walnut Growers
cooperative, he replied, "Nothing that I know of."
But on Tuesday the House subcommittee on oversight and
investigations released a March 6, 1995, memorandum by Ickes to Mickey
Kantor, who was the U.S. trade representative at the time. It said Ickes had met with a
group of Teamsters officials and wanted to meet with Kantor to persuade him to intervene
in behalf of striking Teamsters.
"Given the situation I would like to meet
with you at your very earliest possible convenience to discuss this situation," Ickes
wrote to Kantor.
Additional documents released Tuesday showed that Ickes did meet
with Kantor on March 24, 1995, and followed up the meeting with a
thank-you letter on March 27, 1995. Then, on April 4, 1995, Kantor telephoned William
Cuff, the president of Diamond Walnut Growers.
Ickes' efforts on behalf of the Teamsters occurred against the
backdrop of White House efforts to rejuvenate a relationship that had cooled after the
union supported Clinton and other Democratic candidates in the 1992
campaign. The Senate inquiry found that in the early months of 1995, Ickes considered
several specific proposals to enlist the Teamsters' support.
Rep. Peter Hoekstra, R-Mich., said his committee would continue to
investigate the Teamsters, including the union's activities with the Democratic National
Committee and its dealings with Charles Ruff, the White House counsel who was hired by the
union when he was a lawyer in private practice in 1993.
On Tuesday, Robert Bennett, Ickes' lawyer, dismissed the
significance of the documents unearthed by the committee. Bennett said
Ickes did not interpret his meeting with Teamsters officials, his memorandum to Kantor or
even Kantor's telephone call to Diamond Walnut as "doing anything for the union"
because Clinton officials did not take concrete action to pressure the
company into settling the strike.
At a subcommittee hearing Tuesday, Kantor testified that his call
to Cuff was nothing more than a brief status inquiry. Kantor said he
asked "for an update and what are the prospects for settlement." Kantor added,
"I considered the call benign, part of my job and of no great consequence."
But Cuff testified Tuesday that he never before received a phone call from such a high-ranking official. He said the
inquiry unsettled him enough to report the call officially to his company's board.
"There was absolutely no explicit threat," Cuff said.
"The only thing I would say is that when you get a call from a
senior official of the administration you have to be concerned."
He added, "I figured it was part of the ongoing significant
effort by the union to try to bring us to our knees."
Copyright 1998 The New York Times Company