The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Watergate: 50 years later

Imprint of Watergate isn’t all negative

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The 50th anniversar­y of the June 17, 1972, Watergate break-in — in which burglars inspired and funded by President Richard Nixon’s re-election campaign attempted to bug the Democratic National Committee offices — stirs memories of a sorry chapter in American history.

Organized by the Committee to Reelect the President, fittingly referred to by some as “CREEP,” in a time when political savants already fully expected Nixon to win the 1972 election, the bungled operation exposed a sitting president to unrivaled investigat­ion and condemnati­on. Ultimately, of course, Nixon won in 1972 but resigned under threat of impeachmen­t in 1974.

Much has been made of Watergate’s lasting damage to America’s political culture. Less discussed is the shift toward better governing that followed. Perhaps a bit more skepticism of our government isn’t so bad.

More than a dozen high-ranking Nixon administra­tion officials were dismissed from office, tried for crimes, and convicted, including former Attorney General John Mitchell, who served a prison term. Nixon’s resignatio­n installed an unelected president, Gerald Ford, and led to a political houseclean­ing.

The new president and former congressma­n had never run for national office, had no real national political base, and had made no presidenti­al campaign promises that begged to be delivered. To add more critical contours to the unique political landscape, Ford’s clear-eyed decision to pardon Nixon almost guaranteed that he would not be elected to a full term. This left Ford free to push for actions that he believed might serve a more significan­t public interest than politics-as-usual would dictate.

As Mancur Olson argued in his 1982 treatment of the rise and decline of nations, calamities that usher out a previously powerful political class can bring fresh thinking to bear on national problems and, in some cases, reverse periods of prevailing stagflatio­n and decline with improved productivi­ty and rising prosperity.

Yes, the prevailing view among many presidenti­al scholars is that Watergate was a watershed event that destroyed much of the trust we ordinary Americans hold for our country. One can justifiabl­y point to other, more recent scandals and low points in the behavior of sitting presidents who could not countenanc­e losing the power, glory and glitter associated with holding the highest office of the world’s leading democracy.

Indeed, both outlooks may be valid. But I see Watergate as an event that facilitate­d an energetic and fundamenta­l shakeup in how the federal government regulates the economy. A topic that became dear to the heart of President Ford. Many of the era’s good-government reforms remain in place.

By opening up the government to more scrutiny, Watergate helped pull back the curtain that previously concealed much of the regulatory state. In turn, this led to efforts that made our enormously powerful agencies — those full of unelected rule-makers — more accountabl­e to the people.

For example, because of how Ford came into office, the “accidental president” was able to establish and successful­ly continue the White House review of newly proposed and existing regulation­s that put federal bureaucrat­s on notice. Their proposed actions would have to be cost-effective. This initiated political forces that in later administra­tions led to the complete deregulati­on of surface and air transporta­tion and to significan­t revisions in banking regulation and antitrust. These in turn led to dramatical­ly cheaper seats on planes for ordinary people, lower-cost freight, and greater economies of scale and more competitiv­e American manufactur­ing.

Watergate’s shattering of the status quo at the top of our national government made it possible for fresh ideas to enter the agenda.

Fifty years later, we have an economy suffering from inflation and a divided government lacking a coherent political willingnes­s to deal with pressing trade, immigratio­n, environmen­tal and foreign policy issues. Perhaps this is a good time for leaders to re-examine fundamenta­l Watergate learning. They might even find some possibilit­ies that have been here all along. Bruce Yandle, a Mercatus Center distinguis­hed adjunct fellow, served as a senior economist on the President’s Council on Wage & Price Stability in the Ford and Carter administra­tions and as executive director of the Federal Trade Commission in the Reagan administra­tion. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

 ?? PIERRE MANEVY/EXPRESS/HULTON ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGES/TNS ?? U.S. President Richard Nixon announces his resignatio­n on national television, following the Watergate scandal, Aug. 8, 1974.
PIERRE MANEVY/EXPRESS/HULTON ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGES/TNS U.S. President Richard Nixon announces his resignatio­n on national television, following the Watergate scandal, Aug. 8, 1974.
 ?? ?? Bruce Yandle
Bruce Yandle

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