Richard Milhouse Nixon & The Watergate Scandal. the Pentagon Papers DOD classified assessment of the Vietnam War 1971. The 7,000 page document Papers.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Nixon & Agnew Behind the scenes Nixon administration pursued political enemies with  Legal means  Illegal means  “dirty tricks” campaign against.
Advertisements

NIXON AND WATERGATE THE SCANDAL THAT SHOCKED AMERICA.
Watergate: Nixon’s Downfall How does the Watergate cover up lead to Nixon’s downfall?
Chapter 21 Section 2 The Watergate Scandal
Presentation by Robert Martinez Primary Content Source: America’s.
Watergate.
Nixon and Watergate. The Election of 1968 Nixon campaigned as a champion of the "silent majority," the hardworking Americans who paid taxes, did not demonstrate,
Watergate Scandal 1970’s. Early in the morning of June 17, 1972, several burglars carrying wiretapping equipment were arrested inside the office of the.
The Watergate Scandal Semester 2 Week 13. Nixon’s Thought Process  Nixon had grown defensive, secretive & often resentful of his critics  Nixon had.
Nixon and Watergate. Crisis in the Presidency Dark Secrets 1971-Nixon-told his staff to compile an “enemies list” of critics as well as organized a.
Watergate. The Watergate break-in had its roots in Richard Nixon's obsession with secrecy and political intelligence. To stop "leaks" of information to.
From Watergate to Ford 32-2 The Main Idea The Nixon presidency became bogged down in scandal, leading to the first presidential resignation in American.
Richard Nixon and the Watergate Scandal Chapter 31.
WATERGATE SCANDAL ETHICAL DILEMMA Francisco Ramírez A Sofía Elosúa A Mariana de la Garza a
Watergate The downfall of President Richard M. Nixon.
Nixon and Watergate. The Election of 1968 Richard Nixon narrowly won the 1968 election, but the combined total of votes for Nixon and Wallace indicated.
Chapter 29, Lesson 3.   Committee to Re-Elect the President  Approached by a former FBI agent who proposed to spy on Democrats  Planned called for.
The U.S. vs Nixon Blaise Murfitt What is the U.S. vs Nixon? The U.S. vs Nixon was a landmark Supreme Court case in which President Richard M. Nixon was.
For U.S. – War Over For Vietnam – NOT Over Don’t obey cease-fire 1975: Vietnam unified (comm.) Death Toll U.S. – 58,000 (300,000 injured) Vietnam – 2 million.
Nixon Resignation Speech…. Republican Richard Nixon was elected to the presidency of the United States in 1968 when he defeated his Democratic opponent.
The Fall of Richard Nixon. Watergate November 1968: Richard Milhous Nixon, the 55-year-old former vice president who lost the presidency for the Republicans.
The Watergate Complex The President’s Men When Nixon took office, the executive branch was the most powerful branch in the government – it had taken.
Nixon and Watergate Ch. 31, Section 2, pgs
From Watergate to Ford The Main Idea The Nixon presidency became bogged down in scandal, leading to the first presidential resignation in American history.
Watergate: Nixon’s Downfall
Watergate. The Pentagon Papers The Pentagon Papers Published by the New York Times in 1971 Published by the New York Times in 1971 Classified Defense.
Nixon and Watergate. THE NIXON YEARS Domestic Agenda ( ) Aimed to trim back social welfare programs—believed more responsibility for social programs.
The Watergate Scandal. ■Essential Question: –What was the Watergate scandal & how did it change American politics in the 1970s? ■Warm-Up Question: –What.
Unit 9. The Watergate Scandal Chapter 28 Section 2.
The Watergate Scandal. Objective Examine the circumstances surrounding the Watergate scandal and the impact on the presidency.
Watergate Scandal. “Watergate”  Watergate is a general term to describe a series of complex political scandals ranging from  Watergate specifically.
Watergate: Nixon’s Downfall
Unit 8/9 Finale’ This is it yall…. The last set of notes for this semester.
The 1970s: Toward a Conservative America. Richard Nixon Winner of the 1968 and 1972 elections Winner of the 1968 and 1972 elections Conservative Republican.
The Watergate Complex The President’s Men When Nixon took office, the executive branch was the most powerful branch in the government – it had taken.
Nixon Foreign & Domestic Policy. Nixon & Communism Henry Kissinger: Nixon’s Sec. of State Realpolitik: focus on concrete national interests, not ideology.
Argued July 8, decided July 24, 1974 By Melissa Davenport & Maria Terrero Maria Terrero.
VIETNAM. Nixon’s Policy “Vietnamization” withdraw troops slowly, and pass fighting to South Vietnamese Army (ARVN) went from 500,000 troops.
Outcomes: Nixon and Watergate. Nixon – The Man ( ) Self-Made Man Political Path 1946 – First elected to Congress 1950 – Won election to U.S. Senate.
President Richard Nixon. Meanwhile…..  Nixon was one of the most successful American presidents of the twentieth century in terms of foreign policy,
Nixon & Domestic Policy Conservative president who tried to reduce/eliminate Great Society programs Conservative president who tried to reduce/eliminate.
The Watergate Scandal Chapter 27, Section 2 By Mr. Thomas Parsons.
When you think of a “scandal”, what scandal comes to mind? (other than Watergate )
Watergate: Nixon’s Downfall Chapter 24 section 2.
The Watergate Scandal Unit 4 Section 3 Part 4. A. The Election of 1972 Nixon’s first term as president was ending Nixon’s first term as president was.
Unit 11: Nixon and Watergate. Watergate Exam 1. Creep 2. John Mitchell 3. Plumbers 4. John Dean 5. Woodward/Bernstein 6. Watergate 7. James McCord 8.
Incident Five men break into the Democratic National Committee Headquarters at the Watergate hotel To wiretap phones (in 1970s, who had that technology?)
The Imperial Presidency of Richard Nixon. PDN What issued faced Nixon as he took office in 1968?
Nixon and Watergate.
The Watergate Crisis Ch. 31 Sec. 2 Pp
When you think of a “scandal”, what scandal comes to mind
The Watergate Investigations: Judge John Sirica
Watergate Scandal.
Nixon and the Watergate Scandal
The biggest political scandal to hit the United States
The Nixon Administration
Richard Nixon THE WATERGATE SCANDAL.
Nixon and Watergate.
Nixon and Watergate.
Richard Nixon Administration
Watergate Scandal Primary Content Source: America’s History, Sixth Ed. Henretta, Brody and Dumenil. Images as cited.
Nixon and Watergate.
Nixon and Watergate.
Watergate.
Watergate Scandal Presentation by Robert Martinez
Watergate Scandal.
Richard Nixon and the Watergate Scandal
1970s Pt 1- Nixon, Watergate, and Ford
Richard Nixon’s popularity rating was over 60%
Presentation transcript:

Richard Milhouse Nixon & The Watergate Scandal

the Pentagon Papers DOD classified assessment of the Vietnam War The 7,000 page document Papers. Cast doubt on the justification for entry into the war Revealed that senior government officials had serious misgivings about the war. Nixon sued the New York Times and Washington Post The Supreme Court ruled that the papers could continue to publish the documents.

Only Nixon could go to China "There is no place on this small planet for a billion of its potentially most able people to live in angry isolation.” February 1972 Nixon travels to China First sitting president to visit China Helped normalize relations with China Ushered in an era of detente, or what President Ford would call, a “thawing out” of relations between the USSR and USA

On June 17, 1972, five men carrying wiretapping equipment were arrested breaking into the Democratic National Committee ’ s headquarters located in the Watergate Complex in Washington D.C. Watergate

Watergate Burglars

Questioned by the press, the White House dismissed the incident as “ a third-rate burglary attempt. ” Pressed further, President Nixon himself denied any White House involvement.

In fact, G. Gordon Liddy & E. Howard Hunt, were former FBI and CIA agents currently working for Nixon ’ s Committee to Re-elect the President. Their job was to protect the Nixon administration, anyway necessary, legal or not. Howard Hunt G. Gordon Liddy

Hunt and Libby had arranged for the illegal wiretaps (listening devices) at the Democratic headquarters, part of their campaign of ‘ dirty tricks ’ against the rival Democratic party.

The Watergate incident was not an isolated incident. It was part of a pattern of illegality and misuse of power by a paranoid and ruthless White House.

Nixon could have dissociated himself from the break-in by dismissing his guilty aides, but it was election time. Fearful of bad press, he arranged hush money for the burglars and instructed the CIA to stop the FBI investigation.

Ordering the CIA to stop the FBI from investigating the Watergate incident was an obstruction of justice, a criminal offense.

Nixon managed to keep the lid on the incident until after his re-election, but eventually the lid blew off due to congressional investigations.

In January 1973, the Watergate burglars were found guilty. One of them began to talk about his White House connections.

In the meantime, two reporters at the Washington Post, Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward, uncovered the Committee ’ s to Re-elects illegal “ slush fund ’ and its links to key White House aides.

The slush fund received its money illegally from the campaign contributions of the Republican party to finance “ mischief ” against anyone that posed a threat to the Nixon administration.

In May, a Senate committee began holding nationally televised hearings, at which it was discovered that the Watergate break-in was linked to the White House. Attorney General John Mitchell, controlled secret “slush fund.”

The guilty White House officials implicated President Nixon. During the testimony, it was discovered that Nixon had installed a secret taping system in the Oval office.

Claiming executive privilege, Nixon refused to surrender the White House tapes. Under enormous pressure, he eventually released some of the tapes. One of the tapes was suspiciously missing 18-minutes of recording.

Finally on June 23, 1974, the Supreme Court ordered Nixon to release the unaltered tapes. Lawyers were shocked to find concrete evidence that the president had ordered the cover-up of the Watergate break-in.

By then, the House of Representatives had began to consider articles of impeachment, to remove the president from office.

Certain that he would be convicted by the Senate, on August 9, 1974, Nixon became the first U.S. president to resign from office.

Gerald Ford swears in as President of the United States.

The next day, Vice President Gerald Ford was sworn in as president. Congressman Ford had replaced Vice President Spiro Agnew, who had himself resigned in 1973 for accepting “ kickbacks ” while governor of Maryland.

A month later, Ford stunned the nation by granting Nixon a “ full, free, and absolute “ pardon ” for all offenses he had committed or might have committed during his presidency. ”

President Ford took that action, he said, to spare the country the agony of Nixon ’ s criminal prosecution. He felt the country needed to move on.

In Moscow, puzzled Soviets leaders could not understand, how a powerful president could be forced to resign, because of what they viewed as a minor offense. President Nixon shaking hands with Soviet Premier Brezhnev.

Soviet history knew no parallel. That was one lesson of Watergate – that, in America, the rule of law prevailed. No one is above the law, not even the president.

A second lesson involved the constitutional separation of powers. As commander-in-chief, Nixon asserted unlimited authority, excusing his wiretapping. The president does not have absolute power due to checks & balances.

Congress pushed back against the abuses of the Nixon administration, passing the War Powers Act (1973), limiting the president ’ s ability to deploy U.S. forces without congressional approval.

Congress passed the Freedom of Information Act (1974), protecting privacy and access to federal records, and the Fair Campaign Practices Act (1974), limiting and regulating contributions in presidential campaigns.

Lastly, Congress passed the Federal Intelligence Surveillance Act (1978), prohibiting domestic wiretapping without a warrant.