Watergate is still a far cry, but the howls at Trump sound more like shrieks now.
Since President Richard Nixon's resignation in 1974, the English-speaking world has had the tendency of equating every major political scandal to Watergate—the foiled bid to bug the offices of the Democratic national committee at the Watergate office complex and the related underhand activities planned by a Nixon administration aiming for re-election. newsrooms have enthusiastically attached the suffix “gate” to the core word of a scandal to convey its potential for damage to the ruling regime. in the context of the United States, perhaps, this has been a bit of an overkill.
“For almost half a century, wannabe Woodwards and Bernsteins have pared every unflattering revelation to Watergate, without a shred of perspective, leaving entire generations of younger Americans confused as to what they were talking about,” observes political commentator Matt Bai.
But recent, explosive political developments that suggest the slow brewing of an internal resistance and growing resentment to President Donald Trump’s ideas, policies and style of functioning among close aides and key members of his team, have led commentators to wonder if this was the real McCoy: a countdown for Watergate II.
Quite fittingly, this was put in motion by Bob Woodward’s damning account of the Trump administration in his new book, Fear: Trump in the White House, followed by a soberly excoriating, anonymous OpEd column in The New York Times by a “senior official” in the administration. It spoke of an internal pushback within Trump’s office.
Significantly, even former president Barack Obama, who until now had re frained from naming Trump, has now broken his silence and weighed in to name the current incumbent of the Oval Office in his stinging public criticism. “The joke’s on us, though,” says Bai.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 24, 2018-Ausgabe von Outlook.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 24, 2018-Ausgabe von Outlook.
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