On Aug. 8, 1974, President Richard M. Nixon, with impeachment proceedings underway, announced that he would resign the office of president effective at noon the next day. By the end of July 1974, ...
WASHINGTON – Exactly 50 years ago, a beleaguered President Richard M. Nixon entered the Oval Office, stared into a television camera and performed an act that still echoes in today's very different ...
Five decades ago, on August 8, 1974, then-President Richard Nixon announced his intention to resign from office – the first president in American history to do so. "By taking this action, I hope that ...
Comey Case Mea Culpa: Statute of Limitations Not Necessarily a Bar to New Indictment If Current One Is Dismissed Comey Case Developments: (5) Motion to Dismiss Based on Illegality of Interim U.S.
Log-in to bookmark & organize content - it's free! Biographer and historian John Farrell talked about his book, "Richard Nixon: The Life," and the significance of Nixon's resignation. Biographer and ...
A close relative of former President Richard Nixon is for the first time publicly discussing the disgraced prez’s resignation over Watergate — and says it reminds him of how unfairly Donald Trump is ...
Fifty years ago this week, Richard Nixon resigned from the presidency, and it might not have happened—at least not when it did—without the Constitution’s 25th Amendment and its vice presidential ...
Raymond K. Price Jr., a cerebral, pipe-smoking speechwriter for President Richard M. Nixon who helped write the first and last words of his presidency, his inaugural addresses and his resignation ...