Watergate

During the early-morning hours of June 17, 1972, five men working for Nixon’s reelection crept into Democratic Party headquarters in the Watergate complex in Washington, D.C. Intending to repair a bugging device installed in an earlier break-in, they were discovered and arrested. Nixon and his aides then tried to cover up the burglars’ connection to administration officials, setting in motion the scandal reporters dubbed Watergate.

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Watergate In this drawing, famed political cartoonist Herbert Lawrence Block, known as Herblock, cleverly combined two elements of the Watergate scandal that felled Nixon. During the investigation, the President declared, “I am not a crook,” and the tapes of conversations in the Oval Office that he was forced to turn over to investigators showed an eighteen-minute gap at a critical moment.
© The Herb Block Foundation.

Nixon was not the first president to lie to the public or misuse power. Every president since Franklin D. Roosevelt had enlarged the powers of his office in the name of national security. This expansion of executive powers, often called the “imperial presidency,” weakened traditional checks and balances on the executive branch and opened the door to abuses. No president, however, had dared go as far as Nixon, who saw opposition to his policies as a personal attack and was willing to violate the Constitution to stop it. [[LP Photo: P30.04 Watergate/ROA_04224_30_P04.JPG]]

Upon learning of the Watergate arrests, Nixon plotted to manipulate the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to conceal links between the burglars and the White House, while publicly denying any connection. In April 1973, after investigations by a grand jury and the Senate suggested that White House aides had been involved in the cover-up effort, Nixon accepted official responsibility for Watergate but denied any knowledge of the break-in or cover-up. He also announced the resignations of three White House aides and the attorney general. In May, he authorized the appointment of an independent special prosecutor, Archibald Cox, to conduct an investigation.

Meanwhile, speaking before a Senate investigating committee headed by Democrat Samuel J. Ervin of North Carolina, White House counsel John Dean described projects to harass “enemies” through tax audits and other illegal means and implicated the president in efforts to cover up the Watergate break-in. Another White House aide struck the decisive blow when he disclosed that all conversations in the Oval Office were taped. Both Cox and Ervin immediately asked for the tapes related to Watergate. When Nixon refused, citing executive privilege and separation of powers, they won a unanimous decision from the Supreme Court ordering him to release the recordings.

Additional disclosures exposed Nixon’s misuse of federal funds and tax evasion. In August 1973, Vice President Spiro Agnew resigned after an investigation uncovered his acceptance of bribes while governor of Maryland. Nixon’s choice of House minority leader Gerald Ford of Michigan to succeed Agnew won widespread approval, but Agnew’s resignation further tarnished the administration, and Nixon’s popular support plummeted.

In February 1974, the House of Representatives began an impeachment investigation. In April, Nixon began to release edited transcripts of the tapes. The transcripts revealed Nixon’s orders to aides in March 1973: “I don’t give a shit what happens. I want you all to stonewall it, let them plead the Fifth Amendment, cover up or anything else, if it’ll save it—save the plan.” House Republican leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania called the documents a “deplorable, shabby, disgusting, and immoral performance by all.”

In July 1974, the House Judiciary Committee voted to impeach the president on three counts: obstruction of justice, abuse of power, and contempt of Congress. Seven or eight Republicans on the committee sided with the majority, and it seemed certain that the House would follow suit. Georgia state legislator and civil rights activist Julian Bond commented, “The prisons of Georgia are full of people who stole $5 or $10, and this man tried to steal the Constitution.”

To avoid impeachment, Nixon announced his resignation to a national television audience on August 8, 1974. Acknowledging some incorrect judgments, he insisted that he had always tried to do what was best for the nation. The next morning, Nixon ended a rambling, emotional farewell to his staff with some advice: “Always give your best, never get discouraged, never get petty; always remember, others may hate you, but those who hate you don’t win unless you hate them, and then you destroy yourself.” Had he followed his own advice, he might have saved his presidency.