Watergate and the Crisis of American Democracy, 1972-1974
The complete narrative history of Watergate — Richard Nixon, the cover-up, Deep Throat, impeachment, and the resignation that proved no president is above the law, 1972-1974.
Shortly after midnight on June 17, 1972, security guard Frank Wills found tape covering a door latch in the Watergate complex. He removed it. An hour later, new tape covered the same latch. He called the police. Officers found five men in surgical gloves on the sixth floor of the Democratic National Committee headquarters — carrying $2,300 in sequentially numbered bills, surveillance equipment, and a lock pick. Their leader was James McCord, security director of Nixon's Committee to Re-Elect the President.
This is the story of how that third-rate burglary became the greatest constitutional crisis since the Civil War. Across twenty-four chapters, historian James Prescott Marlowe traces the Watergate scandal — from the 1972 break-in through the Saturday Night Massacre, the Supreme Court's unanimous ruling in United States v. Nixon, the smoking-gun tape, and Richard Nixon's resignation on August 9, 1974 — and examines the reforms and lasting questions it left behind.
Watergate produced Haldeman and Ehrlichman's convictions, the only presidential resignation in American history, and constitutional precedent on executive privilege that governs American law today. Can democratic institutions hold the most powerful official in the world accountable? They can. But it is not guaranteed.
For readers of Bob Woodward's ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN and John Dean's BLIND AMBITION.
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