Harry Micajah Daugherty (born Jan. 26, 1860, Washington Court House, Ohio, U.S.—died Oct. 12, 1941, Columbus, Ohio) was an American lawyer and political manager for Warren G. Harding who was accused of corruption during his tenure as Harding’s attorney general (1921–24).
After receiving a law degree from the University of Michigan in 1881, Daugherty returned to his birthplace and set up a legal practice. He quickly gained a reputation for blending law and politics, aiding his clients through the adroit use of political connections.
Daugherty’s own career in elective politics was brief. He served first as township clerk and then for two terms in the Ohio legislature (1890–94). In 1893 he moved his law practice to Columbus, became wealthy representing large corporations, and found—after failing in bids for state attorney general (1895) and governor (1897)—that his abilities were better suited to managing other people’s campaigns.
In 1902 Daugherty worked with a young candidate for lieutenant governor, Warren G. Harding. He managed Harding’s subsequent campaigns, including those for the U.S. Senate in 1914 and for the presidency in 1920. It was Daugherty who predicted a deadlock at the Republican national convention that year, to be resolved, in his words, by a small group of men “in a smoke-filled room” who would pick Harding as the nominee.
Daugherty faced bitter public opposition when Harding named him attorney general, and he nearly faced impeachment proceedings in 1922. Rumours of corruption circulated around him during Harding’s administration, and when he refused to open Justice Department files to a congressional committee investigating charges of wrongdoing by Harding’s associates, he was dismissed (March 1924) by Pres. Calvin Coolidge.
In 1927 Daugherty twice went to trial on charges of graft and fraud stemming from his actions as attorney general; both trials ended in hung juries. He spent the rest of his life in law practice in Ohio, maintaining his innocence to the end and defending both himself and Harding in The Inside Story of the Harding Tragedy, written jointly with Thomas Dixon in 1932.