1968
- November 1968:
Richard Milhous Nixon, the 55-year-old former vice president who lost the
presidency for the Republicans in 1960, reclaims it by defeating Hubert
Humphrey in one of the closest elections in U.S. history.
1970
- July 23, 1970:
Nixon approves a plan for greatly expanding domestic
intelligence-gathering by the FBI, CIA and other agencies. He has second
thoughts a few days later and rescinds his approval.
1971
- June 13, 1971: The
New York Times begins publishing the Pentagon Papers – the Defense
Department’s secret history of the Vietnam War. The Washington Post will
begin publishing the papers later in the week.
- September 9, 1971: The
White House “plumbers” unit – named for their orders to plug leaks in the
administration – burglarizes a psychiatrist’s office to find files on
Daniel Ellsberg, the former defense analyst who leaked the Pentagon
Papers.
1972
- 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.
- June 19, 1972: A
GOP security aide is among the Watergate burglars, The Washington Post
reports. Former attorney general John Mitchell, head of the Nixon
reelection campaign, denies any link to the operation.
- August 1, 1972: A
$25,000 cashier’s check, apparently earmarked for the Nixon campaign,
wound up in the bank account of a Watergate burglar, The Washington Post
reports.
- September 29, 1972:
John Mitchell, while serving as attorney general, controlled a secret
Republican fund used to finance widespread intelligence-gathering
operations against the Democrats, The Post reports.
- October 10, 1972: FBI
agents establish that the Watergate break-in stems from a massive campaign
of political spying and sabotage conducted on behalf of the Nixon
reelection effort, The Post reports.
- November 11, 1972:
Nixon is reelected in one of the largest landslides in American political
history, taking more than 60 percent of the vote and crushing the
Democratic nominee, Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota.
1973
- January 30, 1973:
Former Nixon aides G. Gordon Liddy and James W. McCord Jr. are convicted
of conspiracy, burglary and wiretapping in the Watergate incident. Five
other men plead guilty, but mysteries remain.
- April 30, 1973:
Nixon’s top White House staffers, H.R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman, and
Attorney General Richard Kleindienst resign over the scandal. White House
counsel John Dean is fired.
- May 18, 1973: The
Senate Watergate committee begins its nationally televised hearings.
Attorney General-designate Elliot Richardson taps former solicitor general
Archibald Cox as the Justice Department’s special prosecutor for
Watergate.
- June 3, 1973:
John Dean has told Watergate investigators that he discussed the Watergate
cover-up with President Nixon at least 35 times, The Post reports.
- June 13, 1973:
Watergate prosecutors find a memo addressed to John Ehrlichman describing
in detail the plans to burglarize the office of Pentagon Papers defendant
Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist, The Post reports.
- July 13, 1973:
Alexander Butterfield, former presidential appointments secretary, reveals
in congressional testimony that since 1971 Nixon had recorded all
conversations and telephone calls in his offices.
- July 18, 1973:
Nixon reportedly orders the White House taping system disconnected.
- July 23, 1973:
Nixon refuses to turn over the presidential tape recordings to the Senate
Watergate committee or the special prosecutor.
- October 20, 1973:
Saturday Night Massacre: Nixon fires Archibald Cox and abolishes the
office of the special prosecutor. Attorney General Richardson and Deputy
Attorney General William D. Ruckelshaus resign. Pressure for impeachment
mounts in Congress.
- November 17, 1973:
Nixon declares, “I’m not a crook,” maintaining his innocence in the
Watergate case.
- December 7, 1973: The
White House can’t explain an 18 1/2 -minute gap in one of the subpoenaed
tapes. Chief of staff Alexander Haig says one theory is that “some
sinister force” erased the segment.
1974
- April 30, 1974: The
White House releases more than 1,200 pages of edited transcripts of the
Nixon tapes to the House Judiciary Committee, but the committee insists
that the tapes themselves must be turned over.
- July 24, 1974: The
Supreme Court rules unanimously that Nixon must turn over the tape
recordings of 64 White House conversations, rejecting the president’s
claims of executive privilege.
- July 27, 1974:
House Judiciary Committee passes the first of three articles of
impeachment, charging obstruction of justice.
- August 8, 1974:
Richard Nixon becomes the first U.S. president to resign. Vice President
Gerald R. Ford assumes the country’s highest office. He will later pardon
Nixon of all charges related to the Watergate case.
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