Within the following cases, were any of the actions grounds for impeachment? Firstly, Richard Nixon who, spied on the Democratic National Headquarters and went to great means to cover it up. Next, Warren Harding for taking bribes and giving out government oil and Ulysses Grant for illegally giving his friends and others discounts on stock. Lastly, Gerald Ford for pardoning Nixon was grounds for impeachment. He made it so Nixon could not be charged for his criminal acts and at the same time, it made him look involved with Nixon. America wanted him to resolve this issue and to move forward. However, he acted selfishly, putting his own interests first. Choose three presidents from the following articles which exhibited the worst abuse of power. …show more content…
Nixon had an abundance of evidence against him and had many people, who were willing to testify, that wanted to make the public aware as to what unjust crimes he had committed. He had no chance of not being impeached, so he saw this as an opportunity to resign. Warren G. Harding and other members of his cabinet took bribes from private investors and began to lease government oil to them, which is illegal. He then went to great measures to cover it up. Unlike Nixon, these actions did not catch up to him until after he died. However, no matter when this information came out Warren Harding will forever be known as having a presidency that was surrounded by a huge scandal. Ulysses S. Grant was involved in the Credit Mobilier Scandal. He was guilty of giving steep discounts to politicians, most of whom were his friends, in stock for the Credit Mobilier Company of America, which funded the construction of the Union Pacific Railroad. He should not have behaved in this manner and because of this, his legacy would forever be tarnished, much like Nixon and
This was the end for President Nixon as he was accused of being involved in the apparent theft of secret documents and having wiretapped phones. They were also linked to having involvement in Nixon’s re-election campaign. The thieves were arrested in the DNC. This meant the resignation of President Nixon and put Gerald Ford in
How should history view Rutherford B. Hayes: hero or villain? Explain. Rutherford Hayes the 19th President of the United States didn’t win the popular vote but, “was elected president after a partisan Electoral commission awarded him all of the electoral votes in dispute.” Hayes appears to have a good personality and to have good intentions for the country. It Also seems that he has a very good reputation for honesty.
1. Calvin Coolidge - Governor of Massachusetts who later became the 30th President of the U.S. He is significant because he was involved in the Boston Police Strike. Coolidge called out the National Guard to restore order and was praised for saving the nation from communism and anarchy. 2.
Despite the evidence against him, Nixon decided to deny any involvement in the Watergate break-in. Nixon’s helpers broke into the offices of the Democratic Party and stole documents and information via telephone. When he was first asked, he brushed it off and denied any involvement, until more evidence was brought to light. When further asked to prove his innocence by handing over the White House tapes, he became defensive and refused to do as asked. “The break-in was traced to officials of the Committee to Re-elect the President.
Each scandal was an awful decision made by both presidents for all people involved, though Nixon's Watergate scandal appeared to be filled with disappointment our country. The Watergate scandal
Taken Hostage tells the story of the Iran hostage crisis lasting from November of 1979 to the day Reagan’s inauguration. During this period of time, sixty six Americans were held in captivity by Students Following the Line of Imam after the United States allowed the Shah to undergo medical treatment amidst the Iranian revolution. Americans, after a tough decade of inflation, gas shortages, lack of trust in the government, and the defeat in Vietnam were yet again brought into a situation in which required their complete faith that the Carter administration would save the captives. The hostage crisis was a complete shock to the American people in addition to the heightened tensions because of economic decline, government mistrust, and energy
This how America felt when they found out that President Richard Milhous Nixon, the 37th President of the United States, was a part of the covering up of the Watergate Scandal. It traumatized the entire nation and forced President Nixon to resign. Nixon resigned because he felt he had no choice whatsoever. He knew it was best for all Americans. He also knew it was best for the entire country and that he would have been impeached in the end.
First, Richard Nixon did many things to abuse his presidential powers. Outside of the knowledge of Congress, he ordered the American military to invade Cambodia and Laos. He was responsible for multiple bombing raids there which had major repercussions for our armed forces as well as America. Nixon also bugged the oval office to listen to
Nixon impacted the image of the U.S. presidency in many ways. Richard Nixon did accomplish some good while in presidency however he also performed illegal actions. His wrongdoings completely obscured his greatness, and he was remembered as the only President to resign instead of facing impeachment. As Vice President, he would travel wherever he was needed, and he continued this devoted mentality into his presidential terms (Oates, 338). As President Nixon restored a relationship with China and accomplished the first major arms agreement with the Soviet Union.
Johnson’s offenses, according to Tulis, include refusing to enforce passed laws, abusing pardon power, refraining from appropriating Congressional budget, and verbally attacking his opponents in Congress. He argues, “Andrew Johnson’s political actions were impeachable not because some clause explicitly listed them as offenses, but because they threatened the very functioning of a separation of powers Constitution” (Tulis, “Impeachment in the Constitutional Order”). Although it was questionable whether Johnson was guilty of “high crimes and misdemeanors” or not, it was clear that his executive actions overstepped his constitutional power and breached the equilibrium of check
After all of the corruption and greed caused by the Teapot Dome Scandal, Americans wanted a break and for everything to go back to normal. Coolidge was the perfect fix to the insanity. “Coolidge's image as an honest, frugal New Englander committed to small government helped the Republicans to avoid the worst of the backlash from the Scandal”(“The Teapot Dome Scandal”). After the Teapot Dome Scandal, Americans were begging for a return to normalcy, and Coolidge was able to offer just that as President. He was very honest, unlike the officials during Harding’s presidency, and frugal as well, which was needed to combat the greed of the Scandal.
Political and government, a Scandals of the Harding Administration Harding began his presidency as a reformer. Ultimately, his administration was plagued by corruption and scandals. While Coolidge, aided by Andrew Mellon, helped private enterprise, a stance that helped him win election in 1924. In terms of progressive reform, Interest in reform faded in the 1920s, but some innovations occurred on the state and local levels. Women and political life, after attaining suffrage, many women continued to maintain their own organizations through which they engaged in pressure-group politics.
Johnson was impeached in 1868, near the end of his term, for violating a congressional law. Nixon faced impeachment in 1974, in his second term, for his role in the Watergate scandal. Clinton was impeached in 1998, in his second term, for his affair with Monica Lewinsky.
All of this deceit only made Nixon viewed as dishonest and shady to the American people, making his impeachment seem almost predictable. But something that was not predicted was Richard Nixon’s
Richard Nixon was the 37th president of the United States; he resigned as president after his involvement in the Watergate Scandal. People broke into the Watergate building to wiretap phones and steal secret documents. Nixon knew about the break in before hand and tried to cover it up. When people found out about him trying to cover it up, he decided to resign as president. He gave his speech on August 8th 1974 and resigned on the 9th.