Watergate Scandal

Words: 567
Pages: 3

A Greek Tragedy - a distressful and melancholy event that could have been easily avoided if the leading characters chose to make different choices. Watergate was a Greek Tragedy. The biggest political scandal of the 20th century to enshroud America, led by the former leader of the free world, President Richard Nixon. This essay will investigate: to what extent did the Watergate Scandal contribute to the disestablishment of the Nixon Administration?

Richard Nixon was elected as the 37th President of the United States in 1969 after successfully serving as Vice-President under President Dwight D. Eisenhower. During his first term, President Nixon was able to successfully pull out troops from South Vietnam and initiate strategic military discussions
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This essay will explore who those central characters were and what role they played in the disestablishment of the Nixon Administration. Some of these politicians include John Ehrlichman, who was President Nixon’s domestic policy advisor, H.R. Haldeman, who President Nixon’s chief of staff, G. Gordon Liddy, who was the former FBI agent that aided in planning the break in at the Democratic National Committee offices, John Dean, who was on the White House Counsel, and John Mitchell, who was the U.S Attorney General at the time. All of these men were in high positions of authority and were extremely valued within the Nixon …show more content…
The cover up that was initiated after the Democratic National Committee break-in forced President Nixon and his administration to deny any knowledge or association of the event. Secondly, how the resignations and prosecutions of many of his senior aides allowed President Nixon to distance himself from the Watergate scandal. Lastly, the resignation was the final straw in the scandal where President Nixon was forced to resign his post as a result of his recklessness. This essay will investigate how the corruption that rocked the Nixon Administration also blinded the Oval Office of its legal and ethical obligations in upholding the Constitution of