San Clemente, Calif., in 1978 was the Elba of America. I went there fresh out of college for a job working as a researcher for David Eisenhower, which quickly became a job as an editorial assistant to former President Richard M. Nixon, who had finished his memoirs and moved on to the two books I worked on, “The Real War” and “Leaders.”
Early in 1980, Nixon moved to New York City, and I went with him, leaving in the fall for law school. I went back to California in 1989 at his request to oversee construction of his library in Yorba Linda, a second two-year stint with one of history’s remarkable figures.
Which is a long way of saying that my observations on President Donald Trump’s current situation are grounded in hundreds of hours of conversation with a former president, one with great successes and the worst fall in American political history.
Nixon’s oft-repeated view in his unique retirement: Look forward. Always. There isn’t any upside in replaying the past or its decisions, glories and failures. He would occasionally write and talk about the past and events long over informed his take on events happening in real time. But he had no bitter recriminations, no dwelling on what might have been, how he might have acted differently. Just look forward. In the 15 years I knew him, he was remarkably at peace and always focused on the future of the country and the world.