It’s just one of scores of examples of the sclerotic intransigence that gripped the Nixon White House in its final days. At the center of it is White House Chief of Staff Alexander Haig, the man in charge of the sinking ship, and White House special counsels for Watergate James D. But the President would not even accept the meaning of the words on the tapes and refused to believe that his lawyers were acting in his interest,” they write. He only wanted the President to understand how dire things were, to recognize the hard choices fast closing in on him. Nixon’s presidency is a master telling of the slog of a White House staff who knows that time is running out. A denser, complicated, multi-layered, sad descent into resignation, both literal and figurative, the recounting of the last few months of President Richard M. If “All The President’s Men” is about the chase, the follow-up by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, “The Final Days” is about the long, slow, bleeding out and death of the hunted.
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