[On May 18th, 1973, the nationally televised Senate Watergate hearings began. So for the 50th anniversary of that historic moment, this week I’ll highlight one telling detail each for a handful of the key figures in those hearings. Leading up to a weekend post on a few contemporary echoes of that moment!]
Speaking
of President
George W. Bush’s 2005 admission that he had authorized NSA wiretaps without
obtaining warrants, John Dean argued that Bush was “the first President to
admit to an impeachable offense.” I’m not sure any American, past or present,
would be in a better position to make such assertions than Dean, who had served
as White
House Counsel under Nixon, had been instrumental in the cover-up
of the Watergate break-in, and after signing a plea deal became a key witness in the
Senate Watergate hearings. Dean isn’t just an impeachment expert, though—he’s
an exemplary illustration of two late 20th century trends: former government
officials becoming political pundits and commentators; and members of the Goldwater
generation of the Republican Party becoming increasingly disillusioned with the
party’s gradual evolution into the Cult of Trump. Reflecting both those trends
is Dean’s trilogy of books released in the first decade of the 21st
century: Worse
than Watergate (2004), Conservatives
without Conscience (2006), and Broken
Government: How Republican Rule Destroyed the Legislative, Executive, and
Judicial Branches (2007). A Watergate-era voice we should all still be
listening to for sure.
Next
Watergate figure tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think?
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