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From Watergate to Ford

From Watergate to Ford. The Nixon Presidency became bogged down in scandal, leading to the first presidential resignation in American history. “Do Now” Activity. Answer the following questions on a piece of paper:

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From Watergate to Ford

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  1. From Watergate to Ford The Nixon Presidency became bogged down in scandal, leading to the first presidential resignation in American history.

  2. “Do Now” Activity • Answer the following questions on a piece of paper: • Think about if you have done something that was dishonest and just a few people knew about it. • What would you do if more people found out about “what you did” and started to question your friends? • What would be your course of action? • Would you deny it? What if they were going to take you to trial and ask you questions about it in front of a lot of people? What if you personally had evidence that could link you to the crime? • What if there was a possibility you could go to jail?

  3. A piece of tape brings down a Presidency • A security guard, named Frank Willis, noticed a piece of tape covering a door latch in the garage of the Watergate hotel-office complex on June 17, 1972, he was not alarmed. • Willis removed the tape, but when he returned to check the door later, it had been taped again. • Willis called the police and they found a group of five men who had broken into the offices of the Democratic National Committee, which were housed at Watergate.

  4. Watergate Revealed • The group was in the process of installing or repairing eavesdropping equipment. • They were also planning to take pictures of the contents in the filing cabinets. • In the beginning it was not clear why the burglars had broke into the offices. • The story caught the attention of reporters at the Washington Post. As a result of their efforts, Watergate would soon be a household name.

  5. Election of 1972 • Nixon had just finished his first term. He lost by a narrow margin to Kennedy in 1960 and won by a narrow margin in the election of 1968. • He would leave nothing to chance! • Nixon advisers John Ehrlichman and H.R. Haldeman had created a group called “Plumbers”. • The job of the “plumbers” was to fix leaks of secret information.

  6. Daniel Ellsberg Break-in • The “plumbers” had broken into the offices of Daniel Ellsberg in an effort to discredit him. • Ellsberg had leaked the Pentagon Papers, which showed American involvement in Vietnam all the way back to the Truman administration. • Why do you think they broke in his office? What did they hope to damage? Did they have the right to do this? • Do you see a pattern emerging?

  7. Nixon’s Plan • The plan was to send a team of burglars to break into the offices of the Democratic National Committee at the Watergate hotel-office complex. • What do you think the strategy was? • The break-in hardly made news when it first came out, but soon connections were made to the president.

  8. Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein • Two young reporters would not let the story die and they began to uncover troubling facts. • They reported that one of the burglars had received a $25,000 check that had been originally sent to the president’s re-election campaign. • The Post stories did not affect voting and Nixon was re-elected in a landslide (1972).

  9. The Scandal Unfolds • By February 1973, seven men involved with the break-in had been convicted or had plead guilty to a variety of crimes. • Other White House officials were involved and people began to wonder if Nixon knew about it. • Everyone was paying attention. • Nixon ordered a full investigation. In April 1973, Haldeman and Erlichman resigned from their jobs, as did Nixon’s attorney general.

  10. “No whitewash in the White House” • Is he guilty? What do you think? • The actions were meant to signal the tough action of the president against wrongdoing. • An independent investigator would look into the scandal, his name was Archibald Cox.

  11. Butterfield’s bombshell • The Senate committee held televised hearings. • “What did the president know, and when did he know it?” • Alexander Butterfield revealed that since 1971, Nixon had tape-recorded all conversations in his offices. • Would you have destroyed the tapes?

  12. What happened next? Use your textbook! pp. 1030 - 1031 • See if you can find out what happened to Nixon? • Look up executive privilege and the Saturday night massacre and see what you find. • What would you predict? • As a president would he have the power to turn down requests?

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