The Washington Post’s commentary section yesterday presented a rundown about five “most persistent” myths of Watergate.
Trouble is, the article unaccountably ignored the scandal’s most prominent and tenacious myth — that the Post’s reporting brought down Richard Nixon’s corrupt presidency.
Instead, the article addressed hackneyed claims such as “Watergate was politics as usual; Nixon just got caught” or obscure arguments such as “Nixon could have quieted the scandal by firing employees.” The sort of stuff few people find especially compelling.

Washington Post illustration
What many people do embrace is a claim often repeated in the news media in America and abroad.
And that is the heroic-journalist interpretation of Watergate, the mythical go-to narrative that the Post and its intrepid reporters, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, unearthed the incriminating evidence that forced Nixon to resign in disgrace in August 1974.
It’s a hardy, media-centric trope that pops up frequently in news outlets both prominent and relatively obscure.
It’s also a narrative rejected by those who ran the Post as the scandal unfolded from 1972-74.
For example, Katharine Graham, the newspaper’s publisher at the time, insisted that the Post did not topple Nixon. “Sometimes people accuse us of bringing down a president, which of course we didn’t do,” she said in 1997. “The processes that caused [Nixon’s] resignation were constitutional.”
Woodward has concurred, if in earthier terms, telling an interviewer in 2004:
“To say that the press brought down Nixon, that’s horseshit.”
As I point out in my media-mythbusting book, Getting It Wrong (an expanded second edition of which is out now), credit for bringing down Nixon belongs to the federal investigators, federal judges, federal prosecutors, bipartisan congressional panels, the Supreme Court, and others who investigated the scandal and compelled the testimony and uncovered the evidence that led to Nixon’s resignation.
Against that tableau, I write in Getting It Wrong, “the contributions of Woodward and Bernstein were at best modest, and certainly not decisive.”
The “myths of Watergate” article published yesterday made its nearest approach to the heroic-journalist narrative in addressing the notion that Woodward’s high-level secret source, code-named “Deep Throat,” was “pivotal to Nixon’s downfall.”
Of course he wasn’t.
“Deep Throat” was self-revealed in 2005 as W. Mark Felt who, for a time, had been second in command at the FBI.
Felt conferred with Woodward periodically in 1972 and 1973, sometimes in a parking garage in the Washington suburb of Rosslyn, Virginia. Typically, “Deep Throat” passed on to Woodward, or confirmed for him, piecemeal evidence about the scandal as it unfolded. At least that’s the version Woodward offered in The Secret Man, his book about Felt.
A far more prominent Watergate myth about “Deep Throat” is that he advised Woodward to “follow the money” in unlocking the intricacies of Watergate.
“Follow the money” may be the single best-known quotation associated with Watergate (rivaled, perhaps, by Nixon’s statement in November 1973 that he was “not a crook”).
“Follow the money” was born of dramatic license, a line written into the screenplay of All the President’s Men, the cinematic version of Woodward and Bernstein’s eponymous book about their Watergate reporting.
“Follow the money” was memorably uttered by the actor Hal Holbrook, who in the movie was outstanding in playing a conflicted, twitchy, and tormented “Deep Throat.”
Holbrook delivered his “follow the money” lines with such assurance and confidence that it seemed to offer a roadmap to understanding and unraveling Watergate.
But even if Woodward had been counseled in real life to “follow the money,” the advice would have taken him only so far.
It wouldn’t have led him to Nixon.
What forced Nixon from office was not the mishandling of funds raised for his presidential reelection campaign but evidence of his plotting to cover up the signal crime of Watergate, the break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters in June 1972.
That evidence was contained in one of the many audiotapes Nixon secretly made of his conversations at the White House from 1971 to 1973. The existence of the tapes was disclosed not by Woodward and Bernstein but by a former White House official, Alexander Butterfield, in testimony before a U.S. Senate select committee in July 1973.
Twelve months later, the Supreme Court ordered Nixon to surrender the tell-tale “Smoking Gun” tape to the Watergate special prosecutor, precipitating the president’s resignation.
More from Media Myth Alert:
- The heroic-journalist myth and its applications
- WaPo ‘broke the Watergate scandal’? No way
- WaPo ‘played pivotal role’ in Watergate? Think again
- No, Politico: WaPo didn’t bring down Nixon
- NYTimes mag and the heroic-journalist myth of Watergate
- A trope that knows few bounds: The hero-journalist interpretation of Watergate
- The hero-journalist trope: Watergate’s go-to mythical narrative
- Always ‘follow the money’ — even if it’s made up
- Why is he biopic worthy? Movie planned about Watergate’s ‘Deep Throat’ source
- ‘Deep Throat’ garage marker errs about Watergate source disclosure
- Mythmaking in Moscow: Biden says WaPo brought down Nixon
- Why Trump-Russia still is not Watergate redux
- Media myths, the ‘junk food of journalism’
- ‘Getting It Wrong’ wins SPJ award for Research about Journalism
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