On October 18, 1972, John D. Ehrlichman, White House operator, unknown person(s), William E. Timmons, and President Richard M. Nixon talked on the telephone at an unknown time between 5:28 pm and 5:38 pm. The White House Telephone taping system captured this recording, which is known as Conversation 031-120 of the White House Tapes.
Transcript (AI-Generated)This transcript was generated automatically by AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Do not cite this transcript as authoritative. Consult the Finding Aid above for verified information.
Mr. Tim, he's on.
Is John Ehrlichman around?
Mr. Ehrlichman, he's on the phone.
We'll interrupt you.
Thank you.
Oh, the old president's wondering what your Congress is doing.
Oh, God.
What?
Oh, I was afraid somebody was going to ask.
What's going on?
Well, the House moves along pretty good.
I got debt passed without spending.
I sent it over.
They passed an adjournment signing diet to close the business today.
Jerry Ford and Tip O'Neill called the president and said, we're prepared to adjourn.
He said, no, but come down for coffee about four.
I'm going to invite Mike and Margaret Smith to come down and speak here and whatever, you know.
which I had greased up beforehand.
So then they had to go back in to, they recessed and went back in because the highways bill came out of conference.
But Jerry is going to object to it.
There's no quorum in the House, and the Speaker, we think, will not want to vote on it because there'll be no quorum and they'll go out overnight.
You know, it's over.
So we think we'll bluff them down with Jerry Ford.
In the meantime, in the upper body, they had highways up.
They have set that aside temporarily.
to take up a silly securities bill, which is finding an objection.
And we think they'll knock securities down.
It's a fight between the banks and the SEC on some damn thing.
But because they don't have a quorum either, they don't have to vote.
And when somebody raises an objection, they just take it off the calendar to hell with it.
They go back on highways.
We were trying to find somebody in the Senate to take on highways, just like Jerry's going to do in the House.
But we can't find anybody.
Nobody's around.
Wallace Minnitz there and a few others, but they said they're doing other stuff and just couldn't do it.
But we think protected in the house unless Ford keeps it.
Well, are they going to bounce back and forth?
Well, and then they've got debt, the debt bill.
So they haven't done that.
They haven't done it.
Oh, my God.
And Javits is holding Ford, saying that they came out.
You remember Ryder was on that one, Extended Employment Conversation.
Yeah, Magnuson.
Yeah.
They get their pound of flesh by getting the House passed a version of that as opposed to the Senate version in return for spending.
Yeah.
And he's saying, the hell with that.
He said, you pass my pins and needles bill.
Oh, Lord.
Which has got the big, that tax thing?
Yeah.
What, there's an amendment to it?
Yeah, it's already on there.
Magnuson's big unemployment thing that covers New York is on the pins and needles bill.
So he says, you house, pass my pins and needles bill, and I'll take the whole lot for this damn thing.
Consequently, they're dragging on.
God knows what's going to happen.
I called Butterfield a few minutes ago and said, the president ought to make a deadline for me at 6 o'clock or something.
If no action, let me call him and say, forget it, gang.
Well, it's 5.30 now, Bill.
Why don't you do that?
Okay?
Just knock it off.
Well, should I ask Alex to check with the president?
Should I just go ahead and knock it off anyway?
Well, the president said he'll wait over at the house for a call.
Okay.
And just forget the coffee if they're in that much disarray.
Okay.
I'll do it.
Will you?
Yeah.
Okay.
Bye.
Good.