Political Science 1100, Introduction to American Politics, April  3, 2013

Exam 3: Wednesday, April 10, at 9:30 sharp


 

 


 

Bureaucracy

 


2. Presidents Tried To Control the Bureaucracy by Creating Their Own Personal Bureaucracy

     The Executive Office Of The President (EOP)
 

        The Chief of Staff

 

 

3. Conclusion:  Presidents battle to control the bureaucracy, particularly when they are under stress

 

 


Watergate
The Clash of Institutions and the Abuse of Presidential Power


For a Watergate Chronology, click here
 

1. The Mythical President and the Limits of Power

 

2. "Watergate" Was A Different Kind Of Political Corruption

 

3. The Setting: Deep Divisions In The Nation, 1968-1969
 

 

4. Richard Nixon
 
  

Nixon increasingly depended on White House loyalists, especially

Haldeman and Ehrlichman ("The Palace Guard)
 
 

5. The Motive: National Security Leaks
 
 

- June 1971: The New York Times and other papers begin publishing
The Pentagon Papers (read excerpts) leaked by Daniel Ellsberg
 
 

6. The Weapons: Surveillance And Plugging The Leaks


The Plumbers Unit is set up in the White House.
 

 

7. The Crime and The Coverup
 
 

June 17, 1972: Five men, one of whom says he used to work for the CIA, are arrested at 2:30 a.m. trying to bug the offices of the Democratic National Committee at the Watergate hotel and office complex.

 

Washington Post reporters begin to investigate
 
 

April 30, 1973: Haldeman, Ehrlichman resign; White House counsel John Dean is fired
 

May, 1973: Senate Watergate Committee begins hearings

 

Meanwhile, Special Prosecutor Archibald Cox begins an investigation
 
 

 

July, 1973: Hearings show that Oval Office conversations were taped;

The Senate Watergate Committee and Cox each subpoena the tapes;

 
 

October 20, 1973: Saturday Night Massacre: Nixon orders Cox fired;


 
 

April, 1974: Nixon releases written transcripts of the tapes, with words deleted;

the House Judiciary Committee, considering impeachment, demands the original tapes
 
 

July 27, 1974: The House Judiciary Committee votes for the first article of impeachment.

 

August 8, 1974: Nixon resigns

 

8. Lesson: The Continuing Temptation of the Covert Presidency