The Legacy of Watergate

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The Watergate Scandal changed the laws that the President must abide by regarding secrets that he could withhold from Congress. The most notable alterations are towards the law regarding explicit information acts such as the amendment of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). After Watergate, the Freedom of Information Act was changed to allow Congress access to information that the president deems a matter of national security, and should be withheld from the public. This was initiated by several actions that President Nixon took, such as withholding the “smoking gun tape” which single-handedly solidified his involvement in the scandal . He did not want to release it because it negated everything he had previously said about his lack of involvement in the cover up. Nixon was taking inadvertent steps towards changing the secrecy statutes surrounding the government and the information they held by his actions in Watergate.
The name Watergate came from the complex that the burglary took place in, even though it came to mean so much more than just the break-in. The term Watergate now includes all of the illegal actions taken by the Nixon administration that preceded and followed the break in. The scandal started when the command was given for several individuals to break into the Democratic headquarters to gather information and plant wire taps on certain phones. The perpetrators were caught in the act, and it was found that they had a connection to the Nixon reelection committee, and had money from the committee deposited into the burglars bank accounts . Included in the actions is the money trail that led to several big name politicians on Nixon’s payroll, the smoking gun tape, and the ‘dirty tricks’ used by the Nixon administ...

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...t Address.” Address, Address to the Nation about the Watergate Investigations from President Nixon, Washington DC, April 30, 1973.
4. Nixon, Richard. “Watergate, Second Address.” Address, Address to the Nation about the Watergate Investigations from President Nixon, Washington DC, April 30, 1973.
5. The Smoking Gun Tape. Richard Nixon, H.R. Haldeman. June 23, 1972. http://watergate.info/1972/06/23/the-smoking-gun-tape.html
Secondary Sources:
1. The Washington Post (Washington DC), “’The Original Watergate Stories’,” June 13, 2012. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/special/watergate/part1.html
2. Kilpatrick, Carroll. “President Refuses to Turn Over Tapes; Ervin Committee, Cox Issue Subpoenas Action Sets State for Court Battle on Powers Issue.” The Washington Post [Washington DC] 24 July 1973: n. page. The Washington Post. Web. 3 Apr. 2014.

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