Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
The Atlantic

How My Grandfather Helped Bring Down the Nixon Presidency

He was an ordinary businessman with no experience in journalism or politics, but he helped Woodward and Bernstein break a Watergate-era story.
Source: Ron Frehm / AP

In April 1974, President Richard Nixon released a thousand-page transcript of secretly recorded White House conversations, hoping to put an end to the Watergate scandal that was threatening his presidency. After the House Judiciary Committee demanded the tapes of these conversations, he offered the transcript instead, claiming it would prove his innocence. “The master of concealment, in a sudden reversal, has stunned the nation with an avalanche of garbled disclosure,” from the week of the release. “And through the sheer volume of the release, he has accomplished a takeover of our daily lives. The good citizen who reads

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Atlantic

The Atlantic6 min read
What I Learned at the Police Academy
Sonya Massey was just holding a pot of water in her own kitchen when an Illinois sheriff’s deputy, Sean Grayson, threatened to “fucking shoot” her in the “fucking face.” The body-camera footage from that night shows how quickly an interaction with a
The Atlantic6 min read
The Post-liberal Catholics Find Their Man
When journalists write about ties between Donald Trump and the religious right, they usually focus on evangelical Protestants. That emphasis makes sense, given that evangelicals make up a sizable portion of the GOP’s electoral coalition, and their en
The Atlantic6 min read
The Best Therapy for Our Anxiety Epidemic
Want to stay current with Arthur’s writing? Sign up to get an email every time a new column comes out. To note that a mental-health crisis is hitting American adolescents and young adults is hardly news—data to that effect emerge almost every day. Th

Related Books & Audiobooks