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Impeachment
The Constitution gives the peoples elected representatives,
Congress, the power to remove presidents from office who have committed
serious crimes or abused their power. This happens in two stages.
First, the House of Representatives votes to impeach the president,
then the Senate serves as a jury when the case goes to trial. The
chief justice of the Supreme Court acts as judge at the Senate trial.
In over 200 years since the presidents office was established,
two presidents have been impeached: Andrew Johnson in 1867, and
Bill Clinton in 1998. Johnson (1865-1869) made the White House his
headquarters for fighting charges made against him. Radical Republicans
and the Democrat Johnson disagreed about Reconstruction, or how
the federal government would bring the southern states back into
the union after the Civil War. In order to stop President Johnson
from blocking their Reconstruction plans, the Republicans passed
two laws. One of the laws stated that the president could not fire
certain government officials without the Senates approval.
When Johnson fired his Secretary of State, Edwin Stanton, the House
of Representatives impeached the president, claiming he broke the
law. Several of the countrys best lawyers agreed to defend
Johnson, and they used space in the White House as an office. By
one vote in the Senate, Johnson survived. He celebrated at the White
House with his lawyers and friends. In the case of President Clinton
(1993-2001), one of the charges made against him was that he lied
about how he had behaved inside the White House. Clinton denied
having a personal relationship with a young woman while she worked
there. Later he admitted that he had misled the country and his
family about the relationship. Many members of Congress believed
that Clinton had been dishonest, but some felt that his behavior
was not serious enough to remove him from office. After a Senate
trial, Clinton was found not guilty of perjury and obstruction of
justice on February 12, 1999.

President Johnson is summoned to his impeachment trial
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Edith Wilson helped her husband govern while he was ill
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Illness
Strikes the President
On October
2, 1919 President Woodrow Wilson (1913-1921) suffered a stroke that
made it difficult for him to use the left side of his body. While
he would partially recover, and walk with the help of a cane, he
was so exhausted he found it very difficult to work. The White House
became a kind of hiding place for Wilson. First Lady Edith Wilson
and the presidents doctors would not tell the public about
the seriousness of the illness. They tried to protect the president,
and thought that if he heard about bad news, it might make his illness
worse. Those who visited Wilson at the White House could stay for
only a short time. Wilsons staff arranged the visits so that
it would be hard to tell how much the stroke had drained him of
his energy. For four months, the United States did not have a president
capable of performing his job and Americans did not know that information.
Because of this, rumors spread about why the president never left
the White House. Was he going insane? Was he dead? While Wilson
was still able to communicate with others after the stroke, his
poor health made him impatient and unwilling to try to understand
why some members of Congress disagreed with his ideas. His illness
came at an important time for the country. Congress was discussing
whether or not the United States should enter an organization called
the League of Nations. The First World War had ended the year before,
and Wilson hoped that the League would be able to keep countries
from going to war in the future. The president did not have the
energy or the patience to work with Congress on this issue and the
United States decided not to join the League. It is impossible to
say for certain that World War II began because the League of Nations
was weakened without the membership of the United States. But Wilson
certainly saw that his presidency ended in failure. A few months
after his stroke, he told his doctor, "It would probably have
been better if I had died . . . ."
The Cuban Missile Crisis
One
of the most frightening moments in modern American history occurred
during a tense two weeks in October 1962. On October 14, a United
States Air Force plane discovered that nuclear missile bases had
been built on the island nation of Cuba. President John F. Kennedy
(1961-1963) learned that the Soviet Union was preparing to place
nuclear missiles in Cuba. Both the Soviet Union and Cuba were communist
countries. Because Cuba is just 90 miles from Miami, Florida, Americans
feared that the missiles could easily and quickly strike the United
States. Kennedy wanted to avoid a nuclear war, but he also needed
to make sure that the missiles were not allowed in Cuba. The president
set up a special executive committee (called Ex-Comm for short)
that was made up of top experts. They met at the White House to
discuss how the United States would respond to the threat. On October
22, Kennedy announced a warning to Soviet leaders that they should
not send missiles to Cuba. In a live television speech from the
White House, Kennedy said that he was sending Navy ships to block
the Soviet ships from landing in Cuba with their missiles. Soviet
leader Nikita Khrushchev responded that he would not stop. The nuclear
missiles were on their way. For several days, a nervous world watched
and waited. Would nuclear war begin? On October 26, a message was
sent to the president. The Soviet ships would turn around and go
home if the United States agreed not to attack Cuba. Kennedy agreed,
and the crisis had ended. For two weeks the world was on the brink
of nuclear war and all eyes were on the White House.

President Kennedy's advisors work to respond to the Cuban
Missile Crisis
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After resigning, Richard Nixon (right) leaves the White
House with his family
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Watergate
It began
with the arrest of seven burglars and it ended with the first and
only resignation of a United States president. On June 17, 1972,
seven men were caught breaking into an office in the Watergate building
in Washington, D.C. The office was the headquarters of the Democratic
National Committee and the burglars were hired by those who were
working to have Republican President Richard Nixon (1969-1974) re-elected.
It looked like the burglars were trying to steal information that
would help Nixon defeat the Democratic candidate, George McGovern,
in the 1972 election. There was no proof that President Nixon had
ordered the burglary, but it was shown that the president of the
United States used his power to tell the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI) to stop investigating. One of Nixons staff also stated
that the president gave an order to pay the burglars money so they
would not tell the truth about the break-in. In summer 1973 it was
revealed that Nixon secretly taped private conversations that he
had in the Oval Office. One year later, the tapes were given to
Congress and they proved Nixons guilt. Congress discussed
the impeachment of Nixon. Rather than face that, Nixon resigned.
He announced his decision to leave office in a television address
on August 8, 1974. The next day he left the White House. Vice President
Gerald Ford was sworn in as president and later pardoned Nixon so
that the nations healing could begin.
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