Measuring Presidents’ Misdeeds
During Watergate, historians helped catalogue accusations made against past Presidents; their findings may be useful again.
These days, even Nixon’s underhandedness begins to look upstanding.
William McFeely, now eighty-seven, and retired from the University of Georgia, covered Andrew Johnson and Grant.
“I think Nixon was pretty bad, but I think that even he had a respect for the Cons ution, and for a cons utional sense of the value of the Presidency,” McFeely says.
“Trump trounces on those.”
Woodward, reviewing the 1974 findings, made a list of never-befores:
“Heretofore, no president has been proved to be the chief coordinator of the crime and misdemeanor charged against his own administration as a deliberate course of conduct or plan.
Heretofore, no president has been held to be the chief personal beneficiary of misconduct in his administration or of measures taken to destroy or cover up evidence of it.
Heretofore, the malfeasance and misdemeanor have had no confessed ideological purposes, no cons utionally subversive ends.
Heretofore, no president has been accused of extensively subverting and secretly using established government agencies to defame or discredit political opponents and critics, to obstruct justice, to conceal misconduct and protect criminals, or to deprive citizens of their rights and liberties.”
Trump has already done some of them—
not secretly but publicly, gleefully, and without consequence—
and is under investigation for more.
“However much Richard Nixon deserved impeachment and the end of his Presidency,” he says,
“what he did does not match the Trump Presidency in its malfeasance,
and in the depth of his failure as President.”
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2...Q2MjMyOTk4MQS2

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Chris spending all that time copying and pasting for nothing to come true
There was no pay for play


