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Edwin Meese
75thUnited States Attorney General
In office
February 25, 1985 – August 12, 1988[1]
PresidentRonald Reagan
Preceded byWilliam French Smith
Succeeded byDick Thornburgh
Counselor to the President
In office
January 20, 1981 – February 25, 1985
PresidentRonald Reagan
Preceded byRobert T. Hartmann
John Otho Marsh Jr.(1977)
Succeeded byClayton Yeutter(1992)
Personal details
Born
Edwin Meese III

(1931-12-02)December 2, 1931(age 92)
Oakland, California,U.S.
Political partyRepublican
Spouse
Ursula Herrick
(m.1959)
Children3
EducationYale University(BA)
University of California, Berkeley(LLB)
AwardsPresidential Medal of Freedom(2019)[2]
Military service
Branch/serviceUnited States Army
Years of service1953–1984
RankColonel
UnitField Artillery

Edwin Meese III(born December 2, 1931) is an American attorney, law professor, author and member of theRepublican Partywho served inRonald Reagan'sgubernatorial administration(1967–1974), theReagan presidential transition team(1980–81), and theReagan administration(1981–1985). Following the1984 presidential election,Reagan considered him for theWhite House Chief of Staffposition, butJames Bakerwas chosen instead.[3]Meese was eventually appointed and confirmed as the 75thUnited States Attorney General(1985–1988), a position he held until resigning in 1988 amidst theWedtech scandal.

Meese currently serves as a member of the board of trustees forThe Heritage Foundation,aWashington, D.C.-basedthink tank.[4]He was also a distinguished visiting fellow at theHoover InstitutionatStanford University.[5]He is a member of the national advisory board of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education and a member of the board of directors of theFederalist Society.[6]He has served on the board of Cornerstoneclosed-end funds.

Early life and education

[edit]

Meese was born on December 2, 1931, inOakland, California,the eldest of four sons born to Leone (née Feldman) and Edwin Meese, Jr.[7]He was raised in a practicingLutheranfamily, of German descent.[8][9]His father was an Oakland city government official, president of the Zion Lutheran Church, and served 24 years in the non-partisan office of Treasurer ofAlameda County.

At age 10, Meese published along with his brothers amimeographedneighborhood newspaper, theWeekly Herald,and used the proceeds to buy awar bond.The young Meese also rode a bicycle on a paper route and worked in a drugstore. AtOakland High School,Meese was involved in theJunior State of Americaand led his high school debate team to statewide championships. He wasvaledictorianof Oakland High School's class of 1949.[10]

Two weeks prior to graduation, Meese was accepted toYale Universityand granted a scholarship. At Yale, Meese served as president of theYale Political Union,chairman of the Conservative Party, chairman of theYale Debate Association,and a member of the secret societySpade and Grave.Meese made the dean's list, and graduated with aB.A.inpolitical sciencein 1953.[10]

Military service

[edit]

At Yale, Meese was a member ofROTC.Upon graduating in 1953, he obtained a commission in theU.S. Armyas aSecond Lieutenant.He spent 24 months atFort SillnearLawton, Oklahoma.Meese worked in logistics, conducting installation and operations of the240 mm howitzer M1.Meese completed active duty in 1956 and continued in theU.S. Army Reserve,specializing in military intelligence. Meese retired from the Army Reserve as acolonelin 1984.[10]

Career

[edit]

Meese returned to California, where he obtained a law degree fromUC Berkeley School of Lawin 1958 and was a stateMoot Courtchampion.

He accepted a position with the district attorney's office ofAlameda County, Californiaas alaw clerk.While there, he worked under district attorney J. Frank Coakley and future district attorneyDelwen Lowell Jensen.Jensen received aLEAAgrant to develop DALITE (District Attorney's Automated Legal Information System),[11]a case management software program, likePROMIS(Prosecutor's Management Information System), developed byInslaw.[12]Meese prosecuted felony cases while maintaining a private practice on nights and weekends, where he focused on civil law. During this service, he first drew the attention ofRepublicanState SenatorDonald L. Grunsky,who would later recommend him togovernor-electRonald Reagan.

In 1959, he married his high school sweetheart Ursula Herrick, daughter of Oakland's postmaster.[10]

California governor's office

[edit]

Meese joinedRonald Reagan'sgubernatorialstaff in 1967 as legal affairs secretary, serving in that role for a year, until 1968. In 1969, he became Governor Reagan's executive assistant andchief of staff,and served in that capacity until 1974. Despite his later well-known reputation of being fond of Reagan, Meese was initially reluctant to accept the appointment. "I was not particularly interested", he later said of the position.[10]

Meese was known for his ability to explain complex ideas to Reagan in a way that often mirrored Reagan's own speaking style and mannerisms, leading Reagan biographerLou Cannonto describe him as "Reagan's geographer".[13]

After being named Reagan's chief of staff, Meese convinced his predecessor's deputy,Mike Deaver,to stay on with him, beginning a partnership that would last more than two decades.[14][full citation needed]For his role in Reagan's office, Meese earned reluctant praise from across the aisle.Bob Moretti,a Democrat and former Democratic Speaker of the Assembly, said, "Were I in the governor's seat, I would want someone like [Ed Meese] on my side."[15]

Berkeley protests

[edit]

As Reagan's chief of staff, Meese was instrumental in the decision to crack down on student protesters atPeople's ParkinBerkeley, California,on May 15, 1969. Meese was widely criticized for escalating the official response to the People's Park protest, during which law enforcement officers killed one student, on his way to class, who was not a protester and injured hundreds of others, including bystanders. Meese advised Reagan to declare astate of emergencyin Berkeley, contrary to the recommendation of the Berkeley City Council. That resulted in a two-week occupation of People's Park byNational Guardtroops.

The first governor to turn to Meese for advice on riot control was DemocratEdmund (Pat) Brown,who first telephoned Meese seeking advice on how to best handle the situation. "I told him," Meese said, "that the people in that building should be arrested and taken out of there. I told him that if they were allowed to stay, there would be another mob scene, even bigger, the next day." Meese and Deputy District AttorneyLowell Jensenlater served as co-counsels in the trial of Berkeley demonstrators. Meese was recognized as one of five "Outstanding Young Men of California" by the California Junior Chamber of Commerce for his role in countering the Berkeley demonstrators.[10]Meese's role in quelling the riots atUC Berkeleyhas been identified by critics and supporters as an example of a conservative law-enforcement philosophy at work.[16]

Industry and academia

[edit]

From January 1975 to May 1976, inChula Vista,San Diego County, California,Meese served as vice president for administration ofRohr Industries,manufacturer ofrailcarsfor theSan Francisco Bay AreaBay Area Rapid Transit.[17][18][19][20][21][22]He left Rohr to enter private law practice inSan Diego County, California.

After receiving a grant from theSarah Scaife Foundation,Meese developed what he called "a plan for a law school center for criminal justice policy and management". The plan was accepted by theUniversity of San Diego,a private Catholic school.[10]From the fall of 1977 to January 1981, Meese served as professor of law at the university, where he also directed the Center for Criminal Justice Policy and Management.[23]During the same time, Meese served as vice chairman of California's Organized Crime Control Commission and participated in theCalifornia Bar Association's criminal law section.[10]

Reagan presidency

[edit]

Presidential campaign and transition

[edit]

Following theIowacaucuses, Meese joined the1980 Reagan presidential campaignfull-time as chief of staff in charge of day-to-day campaign operations and senior issues adviser.[24]After the1980 election,Meese headedReagan's transition effort.

At the advice of Meese, Reagan secretly allowed his campaign to establish a transition office to avoid difficulties similar to those faced by theNixon administrationin itstransitionfollowing the1969 election."Ed had an uncanny ability to look down the road," said Pen James,Assistant to the President for Presidential Personnel.Meese's presidential transition team employed more than 1,000 individuals, with 311 being paid in federal funds, 331 working for a "token" $1, and the rest serving as volunteers. When accounting for inflation, the Reagan transition team spent slightly less money than the Carter transition team, $1.75 million versus $1.78 million.[10]

Counselor to the President

[edit]
Meese withPresidentRonald Reaganin October 1981
"The Troika":Chief of staffJames Baker,Counselor to the president Meese, and Deputy chief of staffMichael Deaverat theWhite House,December 1981

On November 17, 1980, Meese andJames Bakerheld a meeting to divide their list ofWhite Houseresponsibilities, since both saw the potential for future conflict because of their positions being somewhat similar in nature. The one-page memorandum listed Meese's responsibilities as:

  • "Counselor to the President for Policy (with cabinet rank);
  • member Super Cabinet Executive Committee (in absence of the President and V-P preside over meetings);
  • participate as a principal in all meetings of full Cabinet;
  • coordination and supervision of responsibilities of the Secretary to the Cabinet; *coordination and supervision of work of the Domestic Policy Studies and the National Security Council;
  • with Baker coordination and supervision of work of OMB, CEA, CEQ, Trade Rep and S&T; *participation as principal in all policy group meetings;
  • attend any meeting which Pres attends – w/his consent. "[25]

Meese became Counselor to the President, who appointed him as a member of both hisCabinetand theNational Security Councilfrom 1981 to 1985. On Monday, September 14, 1981, Meese chaired the first White House discussion of what would become Reagan'sStrategic Defense Initiative(SDI), the missile defense program.[10]

Meese served as a liaison to theconservative evangelicalcommunity, arranging for meetings between social conservative leaders and the president. Meese was lauded by social conservatives for his address to the Congress on the Bible in March 1982, when he said, "Someone has estimated that throughout the course of history man has adopted over four billion laws. It seems to me, with all that effort, we haven't improved one iota on the Ten Commandments."[26]

Near the end of Reagan's presidency, Meese's involvement in theIran–Contra affairas a counselor and friend to Reagan was scrutinized by the independent counsel for Iran/Contra Matters, which stated in its official report that Meese's knowledge of the 1985 HAWK transaction "raised serious legal questions".[27]

Meese was considered a powerful and influential figure in theWhite House.Former Reagan advisor and journalistDavid Gergensaid, "He's a tremendously influential and highly valued adviser to the President who advises on issues all across the board. He's one of the men who has known [the President] so long and so well he's become almost an alter ego of Ronald Reagan."[10]

Comments on hunger in America

[edit]

Meese created a storm of controversy in December 1983 after his responses to questions about hunger in America. In response to a question about balancing spending cuts against the need to feed hungry children, he said that he had seen no "authoritative" evidence that children in America were going hungry and that some of the allegations "are purely political." When asked about soup kitchens, he said that "some people are going to soup kitchens voluntarily.... I know we've had considerable information that people go to soup kitchens because the food is free and that that's easier than paying for it."

Democratic leaders and social welfare activists called his comments "disgraceful," "an outrage," "unkind," "mean-spirited," and "absolutely ridiculous".Tip O'Neill,theSpeaker of the House of Representatives,compared Meese toEbenezer Scrooge.[28][29]

Shortly after, Meese offered a tongue-in-cheek defense of Scrooge, saying that he "had his faults, but he wasn't unfair to anyone" and that he suffered from "a bad press".[30][31][32]

Attorney General

[edit]

Reagan nominated Meese to beWilliam French Smith's successor asU.S. Attorney Generalon January 23, 1984.[33]For more than a year, Democrats repeatedly charged Meese with unethical conduct to bar his confirmation as attorney general, including a report byArchibald Coxto theSenate,which alleged that Meese had a "lack of ethical sensitivity" and "blindness to abuse of position".[34]

Meese was finally confirmed by a vote of 63–31, with more opposition than any other Attorney General nominee had received since the 1920s. He began serving as Attorney General in February 1985.[35]

In 1985, Meese receivedGovernment Executivemagazine's annual award for excellence in management for his service in this role.[36]

Bechtel scandal

[edit]

In the mid-1980s, there was a federal investigation into Meese's connections and alleged financial improprieties related to his efforts to help theBechtelCorporation build a pipeline inIraq.The pipeline was to extend from Iraq toJordanand was negotiated by Meese,Shimon Peres,Bruce Rappaport,Robert C. McFarlane,and others. A report by special prosecutorJames C. McKaycleared Meese of criminal wrongdoing but criticized him for ethical lapses, especially regarding bribes toIsraelnot to attack an Iraqi oil pipeline that benefited associates of Meese.[37]

Iran-Contra scandal

[edit]

In the late-1980s, Meese was investigated for his role in covering up theIran-Contra affairto limit damage to Reagan.[38]Although evidence supporting this accusation came to light, Meese was ultimately not charged with any obstruction.[39]

Wedtech scandal

[edit]

In February 1987, James C. McKay was named independent counsel in theWedtech case.The investigation centered on actions Meese took that benefited him and his longtime friend and former lawyer, E. Robert Wallach. McKay looked into Meese's involvement, while Attorney General, in negotiations involving the company Wedtech. (E. Robert Wallach worked as a lobbyist for the company and sought help from Meese on Wedtech contract matters.)[40]

McKay never prosecuted or sought indictment of Meese, but in his official report, which is still confidential, he was highly critical of Meese's ethics and urged further investigation of Meese's role in that scandal and others such as Meese's efforts to helpBechtel Corporation.Meese described it as a "full vindication". While Meese was never convicted of any wrongdoing, he resigned in 1988 when the independent counsel delivered the report on Wedtech.[41]

Prior to his resignation, several top Justice Department officials resigned in protest of what they and others viewed as improper acts by the Attorney General.[42]

Reagan publicly voiced support for Meese in his role as Attorney General, during a press conference: "If Ed Meese is not a good man, there are no good men." That was in response to questions about his actions at the Justice Department.[36]

Meese Report

[edit]

On May 21, 1984, Reagan announced his intention to appoint the Attorney General to study the effect ofpornographyon society.[43]TheMeese Report,convened in the spring of 1985 and published its findings in July 1986. The Meese Report advised that pornography was in varying degrees harmful.[44]Following the release of the report, guidelines of the Meese-led Department of Justice were modified to enable the government to file multiple cases in various jurisdictions at the same time which eroded some of the markets for pornography.[45]

Drug control policy

[edit]

As Attorney General, Meese chaired the National Drug Policy Board, which coordinated withNancy Reagan's "Just Say No,"national anti-drug educational campaign. One of Meese's innovations was to seek the cooperation of drug-producing countries.

"One of our most effective weapons against drug traffickers," Meese wrote in his autobiography, "was to confiscate the assets of their criminal activity, such as expensive autos, yachts, businesses and homes.... To make this technique even more effective, we shared the proceeds with cooperating local law enforcement agencies to enhance their drug-fighting activities."[46]

Supreme Court views

[edit]

In 1985, Meese delivered a speech calling for a "jurisprudence of original intent"[citation needed]and criticizing theSupreme Courtfor straying from the original intention of theU.S. Constitution.JusticesWilliam J. BrennanandJohn Paul Stevensdisagreed with Meese publicly later that year. The dispute foreshadowed the contentiousRobert Borkhearings of 1987.

Meese was known for his opposition to theMiranda Warningruling by the Supreme Court, which required a suspect's rights to be read to him before he is questioned by authorities.[47]

U.S News & World Report:You criticize the Miranda ruling, which gives suspects the right to have a lawyer present before police questioning. Shouldn't people, who may be innocent, have such protection?
Meese:Suspects who are innocent of a crime should. But the thing is, you don't have many suspects who are innocent of a crime. That's contradictory. If a person is innocent of a crime, then he is not a suspect.[47]

Iraq Study Group

[edit]

In May 2006, Meese was named a member of the bipartisanIraq Study Groupby the group co-chairmen,James Baker IIIandLee H. Hamilton.The Iraq Study Group was commissioned to assess and report on the contemporary status of theIraq War.Meese co-authored the group's final December 2006 report.[48]

Fellowships and honors

[edit]
Meese (center left) discussing the findings of the9/11 Commissionwith then-FBI directorJames Comey,March 2015
Meese receiving thePresidential Medal of Freedomfrom presidentDonald Trump,October 2019

In 1982, Meese was elected as a fellow of theNational Academy of Public Administration.[49]Meese serves on the boards of several institutions. Meese has held the Ronald Reagan Chair in Public Policy atThe Heritage Foundationsince 1988, when he joined the think tank. It is the only policy chair in the United States officially named for the 40th president.[23][50]He is also chairman of Heritage's Center for Legal and Judicial Studies, founded in 2001 to advance conservative views about the Constitution, legal principles and their impact on public policy.[50]

Meese is currently the second vice chairman ofLandmark Legal Foundation,a conservative non-profit legal group.[51]He serves as an adjunct fellow at theDiscovery Instituteand is a member of the board of directors of theJunior State of America[52]Meese is also on the board of directors of theCapital Research Center,aconservative think tankdevoted to the research of non-profit groups.[5]

Meese served on the executive committee (1994) and as president (1996) of theCouncil for National Policy(CNP), and he was co-chairman of theConstitution Project's bipartisan Sentencing Committee.[53]

Meese served two terms as a member of the board of visitors ofGeorge Mason Universityfrom 1996 to 2004. From 1998 to 2004, he served asrector(chairman) of the board.[54]

For his lifetime of service and leadership, Meese was named the first-ever Honorary Reagan Fellow atEureka CollegeinEureka, Illinoisat a ceremony inWashington, D.C.in 2008. Recognizing Meese as a model for young people, the honor was given on behalf of the Reagan Fellows program PresidentRonald Reagan,established at his own alma mater in 1982. Meese is a charter member of the Ronald W. Reagan Society of Eureka College and was a featured speaker at the "Reagan and the Midwest" academic conference held on the college's campus to launch the Reagan Centennial in 2011.

In 2017, Meese became a veteran companion of theMilitary Order of Foreign Wars.

Meese serves as a member of the board of directors of theMercatus Center,a non-profit market-oriented research, education, and outreachthink tanklocated onGeorge Mason University'sArlingtoncampus.[55]

The Republican National Lawyers Association annually bestows the "Edwin Meese Award" to a notable Republican attorney or official. Previous recipients have includedLindsey Graham,John Ashcroft,Don McGahn,C. Boyden Gray,andMichael Mukasey.

On October 8, 2019, U.S. presidentDonald Trumppresented Meese thePresidential Medal of Freedom,the highest civilian honor in the United States.[56]Former Meese chief of staffMark Levinpaid tribute to him at the ceremony.[57]

Books and film

[edit]

Meese has authored or co-authored a number of books on government, judiciary and civics, including:

  • A Familiar Exposition of the Constitution of the United States,Bicentennial Edition (1986)
  • The Great Debate: Interpreting Our Written Constitution(1986)
  • With Reagan: The Inside Story(1992) Regnery Gateway,ISBN0895265222
  • Making America Safer: What Citizens and Their State and Local Officials Can Do to Combat Crime(2000)
  • Defending the American Homeland(2002)
  • Leadership, Ethics and Policing: Challenges for the 21st Century(2004)
  • The Heritage Guide to the Constitution(2005)ISBN159698001X
  • Judicial Tyranny: The New Kings of America?– contributing author (Amerisearch, 2005)ISBN0975345567

Edwin Meese has been a subject of many TV documentaries. Documentaries in which he personally appears include:

  • In The Face of Evil(2004)
  • William F. Buckley: Right from the Start(2008)
  • Hippies(2007)
  • I Want Your Money(2010)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Attorney General InterviewArchivedMay 9, 2021, at theWayback MachineC-SPAN.
  2. ^"Remarks by President Trump at Presentation of the Medal of Freedom to Edwin Meese".whitehouse.gov.Archivedfrom the original on July 9, 2021.RetrievedMarch 21,2020– viaNational Archives.
  3. ^"James Baker's 7 Rules for Running Washington".Politico.September 28, 2020.Archivedfrom the original on February 6, 2022.RetrievedFebruary 6,2022.
  4. ^"Heritage Foundation".Archived fromthe originalon April 30, 2009.
  5. ^ab"Edwin Meese III".Hoover Institution.Archivedfrom the original on June 7, 2019.RetrievedJune 6,2019.
  6. ^"Federalist Society".fed-soc.org.Archived fromthe originalon November 8, 2012.RetrievedNovember 28,2012.
  7. ^Outstanding young men of America(1965 ed.). Montgomery Junior Chamber of Commerce. 1965.Archivedfrom the original on January 19, 2023.RetrievedNovember 26,2020.
  8. ^Bronner, Ethan(July 28, 1987)."Edwin Meese: Images In Contrast".The Boston Globe.Archived fromthe originalon November 7, 2012.RetrievedJuly 6,2017.
  9. ^Coleman, Kate (May 4, 1986)."The Roots of Ed Meese: Reagan's Polemical Attorney General Has Prompted a Major Constitutional Debate, Surprising Those Who Knew Him in His Pragmatic Early Days, in the Quiet Hills of Oakland and During the Turbulent '60s".Los Angeles Times.Archivedfrom the original on January 11, 2012.RetrievedJuly 18,2011.
  10. ^abcdefghijkEdwards, Lee.To Preserve and Protect,The Heritage Foundation, 2005,ISBN0-89195-116-4.
  11. ^"Improving Prosecution? The Inducement and Implementation of Innovations for Prosecution Management | Office of Justice Programs".www.ojp.gov.RetrievedFebruary 1,2024.
  12. ^Fricker, Richard L. (1993)."The INSLAW Octopus".Wired.pp. ppg.1–8.Archivedfrom the original on May 16, 2009.RetrievedAugust 28,2008.
  13. ^Cannon, Lou (2005).Governor Reagan: His Rise to Power.PublicAffairs.p. 592.ISBN978-1586482848.
  14. ^Heritage Foundation (November 2004). "Interview with Michael K. Deaver".{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal=(help)
  15. ^Schieffer, Bob; Gary Paul Gates (1990).The Acting President.Plume.p. 45.ISBN978-0525485797.
  16. ^Ravitch, Diane(1983),The Troubled Crusade,New York:Basic Books,p.191,ISBN978-0465087570
  17. ^"Office of the Attorney General | Attorney General: Edwin Meese, III | United States Department of Justice".www.justice.gov.October 23, 2014.RetrievedFebruary 1,2024.
  18. ^Jr, George Lardner; Thornton, Mary (September 3, 1987)."A WEDTECH ENTANGLEMENT".Washington Post.ISSN0190-8286.RetrievedFebruary 1,2024.
  19. ^"Back in Law Enforcement".Washington Post.ISSN0190-8286.RetrievedFebruary 1,2024.
  20. ^"Meese (Edwin) papers".oac.cdlib.org.RetrievedFebruary 1,2024.
  21. ^"Edwin Meese III".Critical Incident Analysis Group - CIAG.RetrievedFebruary 1,2024.
  22. ^"Officer Edwin Meese"(PDF).cia.gov.RetrievedFebruary 25,2024.
  23. ^abYost, Pete (July 14, 1988). "Meese to Join Heritage Foundation, Hoover Institution". Washington.Associated Press.
  24. ^Wirthlin, Dick;Wynton C. Hall (2004).The Greatest Communicator: What Ronald Reagan Taught Me About Politics.Hoboken, NJ:John Wiley & Sons.p. 45.ISBN978-0471736486.
  25. ^Schieffer, Bob; Gary Paul Gates (1990).The Acting President.Plume. p. 83.ISBN978-0525485797.
  26. ^Meese, Edwin. "Papers of Edwin Meese II".Stanford University.
  27. ^"Walsh Iran / Contra Report".Federation of American Scientists.November 1986.Archivedfrom the original on June 1, 2009.RetrievedAugust 24,2009.
  28. ^Robert D. McFadden (December 10, 1983)."Comments by Meese on Hunger Produce a Storm of Controversy".The New York Times.Archivedfrom the original on August 8, 2014.RetrievedJuly 24,2014.
  29. ^Lynette Clemetson (August 17, 2005)."Meese's Influence Looms in Today's Judicial Wars".The New York Times.Archivedfrom the original on April 2, 2015.RetrievedJuly 24,2014.
  30. ^Francis X. Clines (December 16, 1983)."Meese Assails 'Myth' that Reagan has Weak Record on Poor".The New York Times.Archivedfrom the original on August 8, 2014.RetrievedJuly 24,2014.
  31. ^"Edwin Meese finds soul-mate in Scrooge".Boca Raton News.December 16, 1983.Archivedfrom the original on January 19, 2023.RetrievedJuly 24,2014.
  32. ^Edwin Meese defends hunger remarks, Ebenezer Scrooge (1983)onYouTube
  33. ^"CQ Almanac Online Edition".library.cqpress.com.Archivedfrom the original on January 19, 2023.RetrievedFebruary 6,2017.
  34. ^Warner, Leslie Maitland (December 19, 1994)."Common Cause Bids Senate Vote against Meese".The New York Times.p. A19.Archivedfrom the original on June 24, 2016.RetrievedMay 6,2016.
  35. ^Werner, Leslie Maitland (February 24, 1985)."Senate Approves Meese to Become Attorney General".The New York Times.Archivedfrom the original on February 7, 2017.RetrievedFebruary 7,2017.
  36. ^ab"Speaker Bio: Edwin Meese".The Leadership Institute.Archivedfrom the original on March 14, 2012.RetrievedMay 14,2013.
  37. ^Meese and the Pipeline: The Story So FarArchivedMarch 14, 2017, at theWayback MachineNew York Times. February 24, 1988.
  38. ^"Understanding the Iran-Contra Affairs".Brown University.Archivedfrom the original on December 13, 2019.RetrievedJanuary 3,2020.
  39. ^"Understanding the Iran-Contra Affairs: Edwin Meese III".Brown University.Archivedfrom the original on January 19, 2020.RetrievedJanuary 3,2020.
  40. ^Jackson, Robert L.; John J. Goldman (August 9, 1989)."Wallach Found Guilty of Racketeering, Fraud: Meese's Friend, Two Others Convicted in Wedtech Scandal".Los Angeles Times.Archivedfrom the original on January 11, 2012.RetrievedFebruary 18,2010.
  41. ^"Atty. Gen. Meese Resigns: Says He's Been Cleared and Leaves With Clean Name: Acts After Prosecutor Files Report".Los Angeles Times.July 5, 1988.Archivedfrom the original on November 7, 2012.RetrievedJuly 5,2011.
  42. ^["Two Meese Aides Resign After Urging Ouster".Chicago Tribune.March 30, 1988.Archivedfrom the original on May 1, 2019.RetrievedMay 1,2019.
  43. ^Remarks on Signing the Child Protection Act of 1984ArchivedOctober 11, 2008, at theWayback Machine,The American Presidency Project.
  44. ^Meese v. Playboy[permanent dead link],National Review,September 26, 1986.
  45. ^Alberta, Tim. (November–December 2018). "How the GOP Gave Up on Porn".Politico websiteArchivedNovember 11, 2018, at theWayback MachineRetrieved November 11, 2018.
  46. ^Meese, Edwin (1992).With Reagan: The Inside Story.Regnery Gateway.p.309.ISBN978-0895265227.
  47. ^ab"Justice under Reagan: Reagan seeks judges with 'traditional approach' (interview)".U.S. News & World Report.Vol. 99, no. 1. October 14, 1985. p. 67.ISSN0041-5537.
  48. ^Larson, Ian; Sucher, Lauren (May 31, 2006)."Edwin Meese Replaces Rudolph Giuliani on Iraq Study Group".United States Institute of Peace.p. 1. Archived fromthe originalon June 1, 2006.RetrievedMay 1,2009.
  49. ^Incorporated, Prime."National Academy of Public Administration".National Academy of Public Administration.RetrievedApril 17,2023.
  50. ^ab"Meese, Panel to Weigh Rule of Law at Tucson Event".Targeted News Service.Targeted News Service. January 1, 2010.
  51. ^"About Landmark Legal Foundation".Landmark Legal Foundation.Archivedfrom the original on December 3, 2021.RetrievedDecember 3,2021.
  52. ^"The Junior State of America Announces Council of Governors for 2008–2009".Junior State of America.April 28, 2008.RetrievedAugust 24,2009.[dead link]
  53. ^"Constitution Project".Archived fromthe originalon August 13, 2007.RetrievedOctober 25,2007.
  54. ^Walsch, Daniel (March 4, 2004)."Q&A with Edwin Meese, Rector of the Board of Visitors".The Mason Gazette.George Mason University.Archived fromthe originalon September 27, 2011.RetrievedAugust 11,2011.
  55. ^"Edwin Meese".Mercatus Center. August 15, 2008.Archivedfrom the original on October 14, 2011.RetrievedAugust 11,2011.
  56. ^Cassidy, John (October 10, 2019)."What Ed Meese's Presidential Medal of Freedom Says About the G.O.P. and Impeachment".The New Yorker.Archivedfrom the original on October 11, 2019.RetrievedOctober 12,2019.
  57. ^"User Clip: Mark Levin Congratulates Ed Meese | C-SPAN.org".www.c-span.org.Archivedfrom the original on July 26, 2022.RetrievedJuly 26,2022.
[edit]
Political offices
Vacant
Title last held by
Robert T. Hartmann
Counselor to the President
1981–1985
Vacant
Title next held by
Clay Yeutter
Vacant
Title last held by
John Marsh
Legal offices
Preceded by United States Attorney General
1985–1988
Succeeded by
U.S. order of precedence(ceremonial)
Preceded byas Former US Cabinet Member Order of precedence of the United States
as Former US Cabinet Member
Succeeded byas Former US Cabinet Member