Richard Nixon Government Intervention Essay

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Nixon’s Circumvention After a series of heightening events, Richard Nixon forced himself to resign as President of the U.S to evade impeachment and further complications. These events all occurred after burglars connected with Nixon were found at Watergate, the Democrat National Committee headquarters. Nixon devised a speech to cleverly evade and divert the public from his indignities, in which his speech’s syntax, diction, and use of logos helped portray him as a diligent president. Aware of the grave situation he was in, Nixon realized he needed to persuade the public that he did not commit any crime with regard to the Watergate Scandal. He attempted to do so by using effective syntax, as he highlighted his achievements, …show more content…

By highlighting the fact that he had never quit before, he suggested that by resigning he wasn’t quitting but he was helping the nation resolve the issue so the nation could focus on other important issues. Evidently, a trait of a diligent president would be to care for the nation, and Nixon fulfilled this by helping resolve a national issue in his perspective. Furthermore, Nixon segregated the sentence “there is one cause above all to which I have been devoted and to which I shall always be devoted for as long as I live,” to underline that he had been pursuing the goals he formed at the beginning of his presidency and that he will continue to. However, it was evident that without support from the public Nixon was not able to pursue his goals after resignation, since he didn’t have any authority. Nevertheless, the impact of segregating his achievement of sustaining his goals in his speech was that it diverted the audience from his accused indignities. As Nixon concluded his speech, he listed what his goals were for his presidency. He then incorporated anaphora to highlight and summarize that “this, more than anything, is what [he] hoped to achieve when [he] sought presidency. He further repeated the phrase “this …show more content…

Nixon was certain many despised him for his involvement in the Watergate Scandal, hence he needed to persuade the public that he had reluctantly resigned “to put the interests of the nation first” but not to evade accusation by the Supreme Court. By doing so, Nixon would achieve his aim of portraying himself as a diligent president since by putting the interests of the nation first he would depict the caring intent trait of a diligent president. Nixon persuaded the public by mentioning that “to leave office before [his] term is completed is abhorrent to every instinct in [his] body.” Nixon’s use of the word “abhorrent” depicted his faux reluctance, and it showed the public that the situation demanded his resignation, but not

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