Getty Ed Meese. Edwin Meese was the 75th US Attorney General, serving under President Ronald Reagan. After retiring from politics, Meese joined the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank in Washington DC. Meese has written a number of books about conservative philosophy and the Reagan legacy, and is considered a leading conservative voice.
Former US Attorney General Edwin Meese III, member of the National War Powers Commission listens during a phone call prior to a press conference on July 8, 2008 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC.
Meese’s self-stated aim was to bring down the then-new Affordable Healthcare Act, better known as Obamacare.#N#His plan was to defund the government the government unless Congress agreed to defund Obamacare.#N#In the end, in spite of high-profile speeches by Ted Cruz and Mike Lee, the plan fizzled out.
Meese criticized Trump for his “divisive” campaigning style. He said that Trump’s political attacks had “poisoned” the atmosphere among Republicans.
Meese’s friend E. Robert Wallach was sentenced to six years in prison and fined $250,000 for allegedly selling influence with the government. Wallach was charged with taking hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes from Wedtech Corporation, a Bronx military contractor, in return for helping them get military contracts from the Reagan administration. Prosecutors believed that Meese was the middleman between Wallach and the Reagan administration, who helped make sure that Wedtech got the contracts.
1. Meese , Once a Sharp Critic of Donald Trump, Changed His Mind and Backed Trump After the Election. Ed Meese With the Reagan Administration. At the start of the last presidential campaign, Meese joined a group of conservative thinkers who called themselves “Conservatives against Trump.”.
In a Federal Bribery Case, A Federal Prosecutor Said That Meese Was “Incompetent at Best, Corrupt at Worst”. Meese and others from the Reagan administration. Meese was allegedly implicated — although never charged — in a high profile corruption and racketeering trial that centered around a Bronx military contractor.
Meese was part of Reagan's conservative surge in the Republican Party of the mid-1960s "movement conservatives" who strove to rebuild the party after its disastrous defeat in the presidential election of 1964. Reagan's election as governor of California in 1966 signaled the party's comeback and pointed the way toward its rightward shift.
In the mid-1970s, Meese returned to private practice and taught law school until Reagan's 1980 campaign for president stumbled in the early going. Meese came aboard to run the daily campaign functions, and Reagan was soon the party front-runner again.
Meese was accused of unethical conduct in office at the time, and a report by the onetime Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox cited him for "blindness to the abuse of position.". Further allegations followed.
Trump To Honor Ed Meese, Close Adviser To Reagan Who Left Under Ethics Cloud Edwin Meese III was part of Ronald Reagan's surge among "movement conservatives" who strove to rebuild the Republican Party after its disastrous defeat in the presidential election of 1964.
Meese was Gov. Reagan's legal secretary, then his executive assistant and finally chief of staff. He was a close confidante at some of Reagan's stormiest moments, as when his crackdown turned deadly during the People's Park protests in Berkeley, Calif., in 1969.
As urban unrest grew in the 1960s, Meese and a close friend, Lowell Jensen, were deputy district attorneys taking a hard line on crime and political activism on the left, including toward student protesters in Berkeley and early manifestations of the Black Panther movement in Oakland.
Meese has never given anyone cause to doubt his ideological bona fides. Meese 's early life and education exemplified the ambitious young man who rose from the middle class to mingle with the country's most powerful people.
The Meese Report (named for Edwin Meese ), officially the Final Report of the Attorney General's Commission on Pornography, is the result of a comprehensive investigation into pornography ordered by U.S. President Ronald Reagan. It was published in July 1986 and contains ...
Porn, Feminism & the Meese Report first published in the Proletarian Revolution No. 27 (Winter 1987) by the League for the Revolutionary Party (New York City). Some Say Meese Report Rates an 'X' by Edwin McDowell (October 21, 1986) New York Times.