Watergate Scandal - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Watergate Scandal

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As commander-in-chief, Nixon asserted unlimited authority, excusing his wiretapping. The president does not have absolute power due to checks & balances. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Watergate Scandal


1
WatergateScandal
Presentation by Robert Martinez Primary Content
Source Americas History, Sixth Ed. Henretta,
Brody and Dumenil. Images as cited.
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2
  • On June 17, 1972, five men carrying
    wiretapping equipment were arrested breaking into
    the Democratic National Committees headquarters
    located in the Watergate Complex in Washington
    D.C.

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ergate-complex.jpg
3
Watergate Burglars
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rgate-burglar.jpg
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  • Questioned by the press, the White dismissed
    the incident as a third-rate burglary attempt.
    Pressed further, President Nixon himself denied
    any White House involvement (lying.)

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atergate.jpg
5
  • In fact, G. Gordon Liddy E. Howard Hunt,
    were former FBI and CIA agents currently working
    for Nixons Committee to Re-elect the President.
    Their job was to protect the Nixon
    administration, anyway necessary, legal or not.

Howard Hunt
G. Gordon Liddy
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6
  • 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.

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n/post/images/oct10_detail.jpg
7
  • 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.

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s03472u.jpg
8
  • 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.

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crook.jpg
9
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g.jpg
10
  • Ordering the CIA to stop the FBI from
    investigating the Watergate incident was an
    obstruction of justice, a criminal offense.

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n.jpg
11
  • Nixon managed to keep the lid on the incident
    until after his re-election, but eventually the
    lid blew off due to congressional investigations.

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/whitehouseconnection.gif
12
  • In January 1973, the Watergate burglars were
    found guilty. One of them began to talk about his
    White House connections.

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rnardbarker_arraignment_2050081722-21567.jpg
13
  • In the meantime, two reporters at the
    Washington Post, Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward,
    uncovered the Committees to Re-elects illegal
    slush fund and its links to key White House
    aides.

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raham.gif
14
  • 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.

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raham.gif
15
  • 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.
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raham.gif
16
  • 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.

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/nixonsmen.gif
17
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18
  • 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.

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20
  • 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.

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ictures/2008/12/19/1229689270212/Gallery-deepthroa
t-dies---010.jpg
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rgate2.jpg
22
  • By then, the House of Representatives had
    began to consider articles of impeachment, to
    remove the president from office.

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cs/watergate3.jpg
23
  • Certain that he would be convicted by the
    Senate, on August 9, 1974, Nixon became the first
    U.S. president to resign from office.

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24
Gerald Ford swears in as President of the United
States.
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25
  • 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.

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_agnew.jpg
26
  • 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.

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27
  • President Ford took that action, he said, to
    spare the country the agony of Nixons criminal
    prosecution. He felt the country needed to move
    on.

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d-pardons.jpg
28
  • 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.
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s/H60s.jpg
29
  • 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.

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30
  • 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.

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rgate11.gif
31
  • Congress pushed back against the abuses of the
    Nixon administration, passing the War Powers Act
    (1973), limiting the presidents ability to
    deploy U.S. forces without congressional approval.

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7/
32
  • 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.

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campaign.finance/campaign.finance.jpg
33
  • Lastly, Congress passed the Federal
    Intelligence Surveillance Act (1978), prohibiting
    domestic wiretapping without a warrant.

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