Books > Biography > Historical, political & military
|
Buy Now
Archibald Cox - Conscience Of A Nation (Paperback)
Loot Price: R702
Discovery Miles 7 020
You Save: R69
(9%)
|
|
Archibald Cox - Conscience Of A Nation (Paperback)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
|
The jurist who gave Richard Nixon fits receives his due in a
satisfying biography. Gormley (Law/Duquesne Univ.) approaches Cox
as an exponent of a particularly tough, independent-minded, Yankee
kind of approach to the law. Born in 1912, Cox came of age in a
time when the legal profession was nearly universally respected and
when whole lineages devoted themselves to the practice of law
(Gormley notes that Cox's great-grandfather William Maxwell Evarts
defended Andrew Johnson when impeachment proceedings were
undertaken against him in 1868). After clerking for the eminent
federal judge Learned Hand, Cox became a government labor lawyer,
then a Harvard professor, and then entered politics somewhat
reluctantly as a speechwriter for presidential candidate John
Kennedy. Despite his solid resume, Cox was seemingly unprepared for
the scrutiny that would attach to his work as the government's
special prosecutor in the Watergate investigation of 1973. Gormley
examines Nixon's charge that Cox was a politically motivated hit
man who, with his staff, "bored like termites through the whole
executive branch," noting that Cox was in fact something of a legal
conservative who criticized such rulings as Roe v. Wade and who
found the whole business of turning up evidence against a sitting
president personally distasteful. Gormley gives a careful account
of the events leading up to Cox's dismissal at Nixon's orders; the
man who fired him was a federal judge named Robert Bork, whose role
as hatchet man would come back to haunt him more than a decade
later as a nominee for the Supreme Court. Students of the Watergate
years will find a few other gems in Gormley's pages, including an
admission from Nixon's chief of staff Alexander Haig that the
president "could well be guilty." Otherwise, this well-written
biography will be of most interest to students of law in the public
interest. (Kirkus Reviews)
By October 1973 special prosecutor Archibald Cox was tracing the
Watergate cover-up to the Oval Office. President Nixon demanded
that he stop. In the "Saturday Night Massacre" two heads of the
Justice Department quit before Nixon found a subordinate (Robert
Bork) willing to fire Cox. Immediately public opinion swung against
the president and turned Cox into a hero--seemingly Washington's
last honest man.Cox's life was distinguished well before that
Saturday night. He had been a clerk for the legendary judge Learned
Hand, a distinguished professor at Harvard Law School, and the
Solicitor General, arguing many Supreme Court cases. He exemplified
what we want lawyers to be. At its core "Archibald Cox "is the
story of a Yankee who went to Washington but refused to leave his
principles behind.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.