
The Vermont Conversation with David Goodmanย is a VTDigger podcast that features in-depth interviews on local and national issues. Listen and subscribe for free onย Apple Podcasts,ย Spotifyย or wherever you get podcasts.
Fifty years ago, a burglary took place at the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee in the Watergate office complex in Washington, D.C. What seemed like a petty crime spiraled into a conspiracy and coverup that led to the downfall of President Richard Nixon. A half century later, the echoes of that scandal still reverberate as Congress investigates the alleged crimes and coverups of another president, Donald Trump.
Vermont authorย Garrettย Graffย reexamines the scandal that would shape all others in his new book,ย “Watergate: A New History.”ย Graffย is a journalist and historian who has spent nearly two decades covering politics, technology and national security. He has served as editor ofย Politicoย andย Washingtonianย magazines, and he has contributed toย Rolling Stone, The New York Times,ย CNN and numerous other media. His previous books include theย New York Timesย bestseller, โThe Only Plane in the Sky: An Oral History of 9/11โ and โThe Threat Matrix: Inside Robert Muellerโs FBI and the War on Global Terror.โย Graffย is the director of cyber initiatives forย The Aspen Institute.
โWatergate is the most fascinating story ever told of how power unfolds in Washington because no single institution โย ย the media, the Justice Department, the House, the Senate โ is able to force Richard Nixon from office,โย Graff said. โInstead, it’s this incredibly complex relationship of checks and balances โฆ that is required in order to force a corrupt and criminal president from office.”
Unlike today, Democrats and Republicans in Congress played a role in policing the Nixon presidency to maintain the balance of power, Graff said.
“The Republican Party sort of had a sense of outrage that was not in evidence in either of the Trump impeachments,” he said.
Graffย is concerned that the country has not learned the lessons of Watergate.
โI think we are headed for a deeply grave crisis in our democracy. And it’s not at all clear to me that America has the wherewithal or the courage to avoid that future right now,” he said.


