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watergate

entry · 1972–1974 · status: archived · presidential pardon

summary

The Watergate scandal began June 17, 1972, when five men were arrested for breaking into the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate complex in Washington, D.C. The investigation that followed — conducted by Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, with critical leaks from FBI Associate Director Mark Felt ("Deep Throat") — established that the burglars were tied to President Richard Nixon's reelection campaign and that the cover-up reached the Oval Office. Nixon resigned August 8, 1974, the only U.S. president to do so. He was pardoned by his successor, Gerald Ford, on September 8, 1974 — one month later, before any charges could be filed.

the receipts

the precedent

Watergate is foundational because it produced two contradictory templates that have governed every presidential scandal since:

  1. The investigative template. Two-source verification, anonymous high-level sourcing, congressional oversight hearings broadcast on television, special prosecutor independence. This template won. Nixon resigned.
  2. The cover-up-as-strategy template. Lying. Stonewalling. Tape destruction. Loyalty above duty. Then — when the cover-up fails — the pardon. This template also won. Nixon never went to prison.

Every administration since 1974 has chosen which template to operate from. Most have chosen the second.

why this matters to PRIOR

Watergate is the modern foundational case in cover-up-as-crime. Nixon's underlying offense — political dirty tricks during a reelection campaign — was less serious than the obstruction of justice he committed to hide it. The pattern recurs across every cycle PRIOR indexes: the original conduct is ugly; the cover-up is what triggers the prosecution; the pardon (or its corporate equivalent: the consent decree, the deferred prosecution agreement) is what ends the prosecution before the substantive verdict. Watergate established the template. The template has not retired.

"the cover-up was the crime. the cover-up was also the lesson learned by everyone who came after him."

sources