5/30: Corruption

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5/30: Corruption In your opinion, how can confidence in government be increased? What can the government do to make itself more transparent and open to the American people? Can illegal activity in government ever fully be prevented?

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5/30: Corruption. In your opinion, how can confidence in government be increased? What can the government do to make itself more transparent and open to the American people? Can illegal activity in government ever fully be prevented?. Warren G. Harding was elected president in 1920 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of 5/30: Corruption

Page 1: 5/30: Corruption

5/30: Corruption In your opinion, how

can confidence in government be increased? What can the government do to make itself more transparent and open to the American people? Can illegal activity in government ever fully be prevented?

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Warren G. Harding was elected president in 1920

Rather than struggle to master the complexities of the job, Harding trusted others to make decisions

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Many were his close friends, men he enjoyed relaxing and gambling with at late-night poker games

Known as the Ohio Gang, they were not hones public servants

They were mostly greedy, small-minded men who saw government service as a chance to get rich at the expense of the very citizens they were supposed to serve

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Charles Forbes, head of the Veterans’ Bureau, wasted hundreds of millions of taxpayers’ dollars

For example, his department bought $70,000 dollars worth of floor cleaner – enough to last 100 years – at more than 24 times the fair price

Another Harding pal, Attorney General Harry Daugherty, used his position to accept money from criminals

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The Teapot Dome Scandal Explodes In 1921, Secretary of the

Interior Albert Fall arranged to transfer oil reserves in Elk Hills, California, and Teapot Dome, Wyoming, from the Navy Department to the Interior Department

The oil reserves were intended for the navy’s use in time of emergency

Harding signed the transfer

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Once Fall had control of the oil, he forgot about the needs of the navy

He leased the properties to private oilmen in return for “loans” – which were actually bribes

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Rumors of the deal led to a Senate investigation, and, by 1924, the entire situation was revealed by the public

Later, the oil reserves were returned to the government

Fall was sentenced to a year in prison

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Although Harding was never prosecuted for the scandal, it is thought that he had some knowledge of what was going on

He later died of a heart attack in 1923, while still in the presidency

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Flash Forward… 1972: President

Nixon is re-elected president, amidst great fanfare

Little did he know that his downfall was already in motion…

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June 1972 Five men linked to

President Nixon’s reelection campaign are arrested for trying to bug the offices of the Democratic National Committee in the Watergate complex in Washington, D.C.

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April 1973 Nixon denies knowledge of the

Watergate break-in or any coverup

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May 1973 Archibald Cox is

named as the Justice Department’s special prosecutor for Watergate

The Senate Watergate Committee begins nationally televised hearings

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June 1973 Former White House counsel John Dean

tells investigators that Nixon authorized a coverup

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July 1973 Nixon, claiming

executive privilege, refuses to release the tapes of secretly recorded Oval Office conversations

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October 1973 Nixon offers investigators summaries of

tapes, which Special Prosecutor Cox refuses

Nixon fires Cox This triggers other firings and

resignations in what becomes known as the Saturday Night Massacre

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March 1974 Former Nixon administration officials are

indicted on charges of conspiracy in the Watergate break-in

Richard Nixon is named as an “unindicted co-conspirator”

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July 1974 The Supreme Court

rules unanimously that Nixon must surrender all of the White House recordings requested by the new special prosecutor

The House Judiciary Committee recommends impeachment

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August 1974 Transcripts of

tapes show that Nixon ordered a coverup of the Watergate break-in

On August 9, Nixon becomes the first U.S. President to resign

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While Watergate damaged the public’s trust of government officials, the U.S. government’s system of checks and balances withstood the crisis

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Lawmakers passed laws to prevent similar abuses

The role of the press in bringing the scandal to light reminded the public of the importance of a free press in a democratic society

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Federal Election Campaign Act Amendments (1974) Set limit on campaign

contributions, provided partial federal funding for presidential campaigns, created the Federal Election Commission to enforce these laws

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Freedom of Information Act Amendments (1974) Penalized government officials who

withheld documents illegally

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Government in the Sunshine Act (1976) Opened meetings

of many government agencies to the public

By 1977, all states had passed sunshine laws

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Ethics of Government Act in 1978 Required financial disclosure forms

from public officials, restricted government officials’ ability to lobby, created the office of special prosecutor