Alexander Hague Alexander Hague of the Watergate Incident was a director of the White House office under the guidance of Nixon at the climax of the Watergate incident in May 1973. Haig took over the position of Hardman who resigned at the pressure of Watergate scandal. Alexander Haig did not participate directly in the Watergate scandal. He joined the end of the scandal. When Nixon participated in the Watergate case, Higue claimed to have the government continue the activity. Heigly persuaded Nixon to resign as president.
In 1973, with the exposure of the Watergate incident, Nixon accepted the resignation of Minister of Justice Richard Klein Ernst, the successor of Holderman, Eric Mann and Mitchell. Hurdman was handed over to Alexander The Hague and in the last few months of President Nixon's post he became increasingly concerned about the Watergate incident, so Nixon became the dominant figure of the White House. When Watergate scandal intensified in mid-1973, Vice President Spiro Agnew became a civil servant and architect in Baltimore County, Maryland, and projects and paving contractors were not involved in corruption investigation. He was accused of accepting kickbacks in exchange for contracts when he served as Baltimore County executive and then Maryland Governor and Vice President. On 10th October 1973, Agnew became the second vice president to resign (after John C. Calhoun in 1832). On the same day, he defended tax evasion in 1967 was $ 13,551.47.
Five men invaded the United States from the Democratic National Committee (DNC) headquarters of the Watergate Office in Washington, DC on 17th June 1972, and it was a major political scandal in the United States in the early 1970s. And then the President of Richard Nixon's government later tried to hide his participation. After five thieves were captured, the Watergate case was investigated by the US Congress after a conspiracy was discovered, primarily through the work of several journalists, Congressional staff, elected financial inspectors. At the same time, the Nixon government boycotted the investigation, which led to a constitutional crisis.