The administration of President Ulysses S. Grant is notorious for its level of corruption. Grant himself was not the culprit, but he remained fiercely loyal and tolerant of the crooked dealings of his friends in power.
Harding Administration
Harding
Yes, President Warren G. Harding's administration was plagued by scandals caused by dishonest associates involved in activities like the Teapot Dome scandal, which involved the illegal leasing of government-owned oil reserves. These scandals damaged Harding's reputation and administration.
scalawags
He was not plagued with any scandals of immorality that I know of.
"Harding corruption" is a term used to describe unethical or fraudulent practices carried out by individuals within the government or administration of Warren G. Harding, the 29th President of the United States. The Harding administration was plagued by scandals such as the Teapot Dome scandal, where government officials accepted bribes from oil companies in exchange for exclusive drilling rights on federal land.
corruption. I assume this is for the crossword puzzle homework right?
Both of these presidents were plagued by serious corruption scandals concerning members of their cabinets.
While unarguably a great soldier and general, Ulysses S. Grant was not necessarily a great judge of character or intention. He was gullible to the rich, smooth political tricksters that populate the Washington, DC political landscape. He named friends who were either corrupt or incompetent to key positions. He created lax policies that allowed corruption and he was forced to face one embarrassing scandal after another. After his former personal assistant was implicated in being a member of a ring that defrauded the government of millions and the economy deteriorated after the panic of 1873, Grant no longer had the support he had once enjoyed as a war hero.
Harding died after only 2 1/2 years in office and his administration was plagued by scandal, so he does not have much of a legacy to pass on.
President Jimmy Carter's presidency was abysmal from the beginning. He was considered a Washington outsider. He had no support in Congress and could accomplish very little. His public support was nearly as bad. His energy plans backfired and sent the U.S. economy into a free fall. Family scandals plagued him. Other than his success with the 1978 Camp David Accords, his foreign relations were as unpopular as any other issue during his administration.
This cold has plagued me for two weeks!