Winner of the Spring 2017 StMU History Media Awards for
Article with the Best Use of Scholarship
The Nixon Watergate Scandal was one of the worst scandal that a president has ever been embroiled in. Americans put all of their trust into this highest and more honorable position, and Richard Nixon, through his actions, completely destroyed that trust. It was a scandal that was completely unnecessary, putting himself and the country through an agonizing constitutional crisis because of dirty politics and a shameful and illegal cover-up. But that’s what makes the Watergate Scandal something incredibly important and worth knowing about. We will see dirty politics again, and have even since Watergate, which is why the parallels from Nixon’s presidency may well resonate with past, current, and future presidencies. We can learn from this scandal, and we may prepare the American public to deal with corruption like Nixon’s again, should it ever happen that our presidents abuse the powers of their august office like Nixon did.
Richard Nixon was the thirty-seventh President of the United States of America and was the living embodiment of the idea that reputation takes a long time to build, but a short time to destroy. Nixon was born on his family’s farm and was immediately subject to struggle, as both of his parents were abusive, either physically or mentally, and two of his siblings died very early in their lives. All of this did not carve an easy path for the young man to pursue, and forced Nixon to work hard for the things he wanted; and despite the difficult path he was given, the drive and character he developed from this were subjectively worth it. Nixon attended college at Whittier College in California, to play football and further his academic career; and by his graduation as second in his class, he succeeded academically. Furthermore, he received a scholarship to Duke University Law School, with some help from the President of Whittier College, who said: “I believe Nixon will become one of America’s important, if not great leaders,” which would become at least partially true.1 His continued success did arrive at a roadblock when he didn’t obtain a position at any of the major New York Law firms. However, he did land a position in a law firm back in Whittier, in which he soon became a partner. He was also placed on the Whittier College Board of Trustees at the age of 26. Soon after, Nixon began federal work in the Office of Emergency Management. When World War II started, Nixon joined the army and had some success there, reaching the rank of Lieutenant Commander. After the war, he had some congressional hopes. After earning his Congress membership, Nixon joined the House Committee and Select Committee on Foreign Aid, and was again quite successful. Nixon then went on to become strongly anti-communism, which doesn’t say much because most politicians were so at that time. However, Nixon garnered a lot of attention because of his strong opinions and views. This, coupled with other things, led him to be chosen for the Republican Party’s Vice Presidential nominee in 1952. He subsequently won this role. He served under Dwight Eisenhower, who believed that the Vice President should have more duties than previously. In this position, Nixon was again successful, which seems to be a recurring theme. Like many Vice-Presidents, Nixon went on to become the Republican nominee for President in 1960, but facing off against John F. Kennedy, Nixon lost the presidency by a mere 100,000 votes. After this, Nixon again lost the race for governor of California, and then went to work again at a law firm. This didn’t last long, however, as eight years later Nixon found himself the Republican nominee for president once again, but this time, his campaign ended in victory.2
Nixon took the office of President in 1969, and despite his important past, a new chapter in his life really started in that year. Nixon immediately went to work trying to bring an end to the Vietnam War, which was not going in his favor, as his conferences and talks never came to any sort of resolution, and the conflict just continued and even spread to neighboring Cambodia and Laos. However, he began recalling troops stationed there, and once most had come home around 1972, peace treaties seem a likely possibility. Nixon also worked to reduce the amount of nuclear warheads, signing the important Strategic Arms Limitation Talks agreements with the Soviets about mutually limiting the production and total amount of intercontinental ballistic missiles both countries had. Nixon also made a historic visit to China, becoming the first president to do so. While trying to end the war abroad, Nixon also had problems at home, particularly economic problems with inflation. He sought to fight inflation by going off the gold standard and letting the American dollar float. All in all, Nixon had a mixed bag of a first term, with no real disasters and no major victories. That all changed quite quickly, and soon all of Nixon’s accomplishments would be overshadowed by his actions during the Watergate Scandal.3
The events that led to the Watergate scandal was put into motion about two years before the actual burglary that set off the chain-reaction for our commander-in-chief, but the unraveling and beginning of the end of Richard Nixon can be traced back to June 17, 1972. Before that date again, Watergate was not public news, and only members in the White House and Nixon’s administration knew of “a plan.” Analysts and those working in the Nixon administration during his first term believed that Nixon was probably going to lose his re-election. Those experts came to this conclusion by using the administration of Lyndon Johnson as a comparative. In other words, the Nixon administration believed that Nixon’s poll numbers and his public appeal matched those of Johnson’s a few years before, causing Johnson to decline running for reelection in 1968. To combat this perceived eventual downfall, Nixon and his administration began employing wiretapping, which was something that this administration had begun using earlier to spy on “enemies of the United States,” but actually to spy on anyone that posed a possible threat to his administration that might release any sort of information that could damage their reputation. This wiretapping culminated in a plan that centered on bugging the phones, taking pictures, and stealing documents from the Democratic National Committee Headquarters at the Watergate Hotel complex in Washington. The plan was put into action by a group known as the Plumbers, who had been trained in security and spying for the White House, to prevent leaks that could damage the Nixon administration. This group broke into the Watergate facility on May 27, 1972, and were quite successful. The group then also wanted to break into Senator McGovern’s headquarters, because he had became the Democratic nominee for president. This attempt was unsuccessful.4
Prior to the failed Watergate break-in, the team, and probably the members of the administration who were in on the plan, realized that one of the bugs was placed incorrectly, so the subsequent break-in was necessary. Thus, on June 17, 1972 the Plumbers team broke into the Watergate facility once again, and fixed the incorrectly placed bug. However, Frank Wills, a security guard at the facility, had noticed that doors had been taped open, and when he removed the tape and later found them re-taped again, Wills called the police. Five of the Plumbers were captured, and a phone number that belonged to E. Howard Hunt, a white house official, was found on some of the Plumbers, immediately linking the White House to the break in. Of course, with Nixon being the president, news of the break-in started stirring up questions over his possible involvement. Soon, the American people’s questions would be answered, as they watched their President lie and cover-up his administration’s illegal activities.5
Once the story of the break-in started coming out, Nixon and his staff began planning an elaborate cover-up in order to protect Nixon and the White House. This was the second worst decision Nixon ever made, following the break-in itself. Nixon’s choice to cover-up any White House involvement in the break-in, instead of just being honest with the American public and accepting the consequences, caused him the loss of the American’s people trust and ultimately the presidency itself. Nixon made his first speech regarding Watergate a little more than a month after the break-in, and like the entire cover-up, it was full of lies. Also, the men who were captured at the Watergate complex all pleaded guilty in court, in front of Judge John J. Sirica, who believed that more people than those captured were involved in the break-in.6
The break-in probably would have died down and Nixon might have gotten away with it, if it wasn’t for key figures like Sirica believing that more people were involved, as well as a few journalists from the Washington Post, who continually attempted to dig deeper into the situation. These journalists began finding informants that, well, lived up to their namesake. As they gained more and more information, they began releasing this information to the public, and eventually they gained enough attention to cause others to begin digging into the situation themselves. The cover-up slowly began to fall apart. The media exposés and the information that was being brought to light only escalated when the Senate Watergate Investigation Committee began its investigations into the situation, discovering that a taping system existed that had recorded conversations taking place in the Oval Office.7
The discovery of these tape recordings of Nixon’s various conversations with his staff was the most important clue to discovering what really happened with the White House’s involvement in the Watergate break-ins. Nixon knew that if these tapes were publicly released, that his presidency would be over. To keep his secret safe, Nixon refused to comply with the subpoena from the Watergate Special Prosecutor Achibald Cox to hand over the tapes, but when he refused, Nixon ordered Attorney General Elliot Richardson to dismiss Cox, but then Richardson refused and resigned; thus Nixon ordered deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus to do the same, and now he refused and resigned as well! This loss of multiple higher-ups in the White House became known as the Saturday Night Massacre, and set Nixon back once again. Furthermore, Nixon pleaded with the courts that the tapes contained only private conversations, and were protected by executive privilege and national security concerns. The United States Supreme Court did not accept that, and ordered Nixon to release the tapes. The fact that Nixon tried so hard to cover these tapes up, and fired many people that worked for him, began destroying the public’s trust in him, and many came to understand that he did indeed play some part in the Watergate heist. During criminal trials of others that were discovered to have worked on Watergate, about 200 hours of conversation were released in transcript, of about the 3500 hours recorded. On review of these transcripts there was an 18-minute gap where you can’t hear anything, and whatever was being talked about is still unknown today. But Nixon’s involvement now was quite clear, and it was obvious he had been covering everything up from the very beginning, effectively lying to the entire country. Now, the Watergate scandal involved the most important figurehead in the United States, and made front-line news everywhere. Repercussions came for Nixon in the form of impeachment proceedings.8
About two years after the break-ins, and after all of the evidence had been properly and thoroughly understood, Congress approved articles of impeachment, which outlined all of Nixon’s wrongdoings, with the biggest accusation being his involvement in covering-up and misleading the investigation of the break-in, followed by his actual involvement in setting up the Plumbers group and breaking into the Democratic Party Headquarters. By this time, everyone knew that Nixon was not going to get re-elected, and now the focus was on whether or not he should even be allowed to finish his current term, which he wouldn’t. Nixon knew this as well, and on August 9, 1974, Nixon resigned as President.9
Yes, this scandal caused President Nixon to resign from office, because if he hadn’t, he would have been removed anyway. But the more interesting question than why the person with the most respected and trusted job in the United States would do something like this, is why he did it. Like every politician everywhere, Nixon wanted to win his re-election, and to do this, he needed to campaign and market himself, which is something every politician does. However, Nixon and his administration believed that he was doomed not to win his re-election, and so they attempted to use their positions of power to do anything they could to gain information on and weaken the opposing Democrats by any means necessary. One of those ploys was the Watergate scandal. The irony is that Nixon probably would have won re-election anyway, if he had just played the game fair. The Watergate scandal was a completely failure, and now we see that it was pointless as well. 10
Nixon’s participation in planning the break-in was already illegal, but his actions in covering the incident up and lying to all of America has gone down in history as one of the worst things a president has ever done, and he and his legacy will forever be tarnished by it. It also showcases the fact that presidents are not above the law and must still answer to the people, and abide by the Constitution.
- The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives, 2001, s.v. “Nixon, Richard Milhous.” ↵
- The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives, 2001, s.v. “Nixon, Richard Milhous.” ↵
- The Scribner Encyclopedia of American Lives, 2001, s.v. “Nixon, Richard Milhous.” ↵
- Dictionary of American History, 2003, s.v. “Watergate,” by Richard M. Flanagan and Louie W. Koenig. ↵
- Dictionary of American History, 2003, s.v. “Watergate,” by Richard M. Flanagan and Louie W. Koenig. ↵
- Dictionary of American History, 2003, s.v. “Watergate,” by Richard M. Flanagan and Louie W. Koenig. ↵
- Dictionary of American History, 2003, s.v. “Watergate,” by Richard M. Flanagan and Louie W. Koenig; St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Watergate,” by Elizabeth Purdy. ↵
- Dictionary of American History, 2003, s.v. “Watergate,” by Richard M. Flanagan and Louie W. Koenig; St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Watergate,” by Elizabeth Purdy. ↵
- St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, 2013, s.v. “Watergate,” by Elizabeth Purdy. ↵
- Dictionary of American History, 2003, s.v. “Watergate,” by Richard M. Flanagan and Louie W. Koenig. ↵
76 comments
Isabel Soto
This article does a great job of explaining the timeline of Nixon’s fraudulent activities that led him to be the only president of the United States to ever resign. He sets an infamous example that presidents cannot act above the law. His actions should make the people of America question how many people in the government, past and present, are lying to America?
D'vaughn Duran
I have heard of the Watergate scandal and how that was a big moment for the United States because a lot of people were on the edge of their seats. I think this article was great and the description of the Wategates with the corruption from the president at this time period was very surprising. How it was carried out and the Nixion price he paid cost him his life work in a way!
Victoria Castillo
Great article and congratulations on your award! I knew about the Water Gate Scandal and that President Nixon was involved in it, but I never knew that this scandal was on the move for two years before it became public. I also didn’t know that Nixon’s entire administration was the one helping to orchestrate the whole Water Gate Scandal as well. It’s also silly to think that the Plumbers could have gotten away with the burglary as well if only they had been more aware of the tape being removed.
Ian Poll
There will, unfortunately, always be some type of abuse of power, it’s just if the public knows about it or not. Nixon dug himself in an unnecessary hole and it spiraled out of control. It’s odd how a man with so much success, would want to go further and risk everything he had. It is funny how when people think of Nixon, the first thing they think of is the Watergate Scandal and they know very little of the accomplishments he made.
Andrea Tapia
First, congratulations on your award it was well deserved! The article was very formatted and easy to understand when I was reading it. I was not fully aware of the Watergate Scandal, but I was able to have a better understanding of what went down with it. I knew we lived a life of chaos, but I forgot even the ones we vote for can turn away from the promise they made for us. This is a wake-up call to know that we shouldn’t always trust everyone just because they say they will change the world for the better. Nixon lived a abusive life with his parents so it makes sense that he wasn’t all there in the head as we believed he was. The videos really helped me a lot that were provided in this article and that Nixon should have been honest from the beginning.
Maria Jose Haile
First off, Congrats on winning an award for this well-read article about the Watergate Scandal. You do a great job portraying the history it all. I’ve always had an interest about the scandal and how it came to be. Therefore I enjoyed being able to read more about it besides being able to tour behind it while being a young kid.
Sara Davila
This was a very interesting article to read. I like how the author described the event step by step and what led up to this scandal. I remember reading about this event in history but I never would have dug deeper and got a better understanding like this article provided for me. It also opened my eyes to how corrupt our government could get.
Madison Goza
Your article was a fascinating read! I was familiar with the investigative journalism in this case, but not necessarily super familiar with the story of Nixon, so I was able to learn a lot through your article. I like how in your introduction you set up the larger legacy of Watergate and Nixon, as well as the history of the American public’s trust in the office of the presidency that is completely destroyed by the scandal. I appreciated how you also highlighted the moments that led Nixon to the presidency; it gave me better context to understand the Watergate Scandal. Great job!
Nicholas Burch
This article does a great job of explaining the timeline of Nixon’s fraudulent activities that led him to be the only president of the United States to ever resign. He sets an infamous example that presidents cannot act above the law. His actions should make the people of America question how many people in the government, past and present, are lying to America? Considering he almost got away with it, this question still haunts me to this day.
Cristianna Tovar
I loved how the author provided background information about Nixon and his life before his presidency. Whenever I hear Nixon’s name, it’s almost always associated with the Watergate Scandal, so before reading this article, I didn’t know that much about his life before he became president in 1969. Since he had worked so hard to be successful in his past and accomplished many great things on his own, I was surprised that Nixon ended up trying to spy on people that were considered a threat to him. I think it shows his insecurity of not being the most popular or memorable President. I thought it was crazy how such a simple mistake such as re-taping the doors when they had been removed by the security guard caused a huge chain-reaction of guilt for the White House. It makes me wonder what other things former presidents have done that we aren’t aware of.