IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.
  • UP NEXT

    GOP Rep. pushes back on Bannon and Musk: ‘Hyperpartisanship does not work’

    12:45
  • Why targeting the FDIC would mean economic disaster

    04:29
  • How Syria’s civil war drove a refugee crisis still unsolved today

    08:52
  • ‘A form of un-freedom’: How the omission of public data becomes propaganda

    12:51
  • CFPB Director: Wall Street wants a lap dog, not a watchdog

    09:56
  • Rep. Crockett to Speaker Mike Johnson: Don’t expect ‘any favors’ from Dems in new Congress

    07:06
  • ‘You have to have a battle plan going in’: Maria Ressa on how the press must prepare for Trump 2.0

    12:00
  • Velshi Banned Book Club: ‘The Girl on the Train’ by Paula Hawkins

    11:46
  • ‘Smorgasbord approach to the law’: Effects of rollbacks in trans protections will be ‘wide-ranging’

    08:14
  • Donald Trump thinks he can end birthright citizenship. History suggests otherwise

    05:59
  • GOP escalates its war on women with abortion travel bans

    05:18
  • Biden Energy Secretary: ‘We are re-industrializing America’

    06:53
  • ‘We are facing an epic battle’: Journalists prepare for second Trump term

    10:50
  • How the trans rights case at SCOTUS could ‘undermine’ equal protection laws

    08:05
  • ‘We are facing an onslaught’: How the NAACP and civil rights lawyers are prepping for new Trump era

    09:28
  • Trump ‘firehoses’ people with ‘nutty rhetoric’ – and it’s meant to wear people out

    07:29
  • ‘Asbestos with better PR and a bigger checkbook’: Big tech goes unchecked in U.S.

    10:20
  • ‘The way to do the work is slowly, surely, and over time’: Corporate America and DEI

    11:56
  • ‘No safe place’: People of Sudan ‘dying from neglect’

    08:08
  • The modern history Israeli-Lebanese relations

    06:55

Velshi: Watergate Proved a Pardon is No Solution 

05:13

It was Sunday, September 8th 1974, and the new Republican president had decided to grant a pardon to his predecessor, Richard Nixon. Ford spoke of the magnitude of his decision and expressed a desire to move on from the Watergate scandal that had consumed the country for more than two years. "It could go on and on and on,” he said, “or someone must write the end to it. I have concluded that only I can do that, and if I can, I must." While Ford’s decision to pardon Nixon may have effectively ended the Watergate saga, it didn’t provide a neat resolution or a sense of closure. The pardon also pre-empted further action from the Special Prosecutor’s office and prevented it from issuing an indictment against Nixon. Ford’s approval rating plummeted, and never fully recovered. But in recent years, public opinion has flipped, with the majority of Americans now looking favorably upon Ford's decision. But that pardon was a bandage for a wound that required sutures, and Trump has reopened that wound. We like to say that in the U.S., no one is above the law, but the history of Watergate proves that not to be entirely true. We have a chance to course-correct now. Let the process play out.

test MSNBC News - Breaking News and News Today | Latest News
IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.
test test