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Richard Nixon

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Richard Milhous Nixon (January 9, 1913 – April 22, 1994) was the 37th president of the United States, serving from 1969 until his resignation in 1974. A member of the Republican Party, he represented California in both houses of the United States Congress before serving as the 36th vice president under President Dwight D. Eisenhower from 1953 to 1961. His presidency saw the reduction of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War, détente with the Soviet Union and China, the Apollo 11 Moon landing, and the establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency and Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Nixon's second term ended early when he became the only U.S. president to resign from office, as a result of the Watergate scandal.

Nixon was born into a poor family of Quakers in Yorba Linda, Southern California. He graduated from Whittier College with a Bachelor of Arts in 1934 and from Duke University School of Law with a Juris Doctor in 1937, practiced law in California, and then moved with his wife Pat to Washington, D.C., in 1942 to work for the federal government. After serving in the Naval Reserve during World War II, he was elected to the House of Representatives in 1946. His work on the Alger Hiss case established his reputation as a leading anti-communist. In 1950, he was elected to the Senate. Nixon was the running mate of Eisenhower, the Republican Party's presidential nominee in the 1952 and 1956 elections. Nixon served for eight years as vice president, and his two terms saw an increase in the notability of the office. He narrowly lost the 1960 presidential election to John F. Kennedy. After his loss in the 1962 race for governor of California, he announced his retirement from politics. However, in 1968, he made another run for the presidency and defeated Vice President Hubert Humphrey, the sitting Democratic incumbent.

Seeking to bring the North Vietnamese to the negotiating table, Nixon ordered military operations and carpet bombing campaigns in Cambodia. He covertly aided Pakistan during the Bangladesh Liberation War in 1971 and ended American combat involvement in Vietnam in 1973, and the military draft the same year. His visit to China in 1972 led to diplomatic relations between the two nations, and he finalized the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty with the Soviet Union. During the course of his first term, he enacted many progressive environmental policy shifts, such as creating the Environmental Protection Agency and passing laws, including the Endangered Species and Clean Air Acts. In addition to implementing the Twenty-sixth Amendment that lowered the voting age from 21 to 18, he ended the direct international convertibility of the U.S. dollar to gold in 1971, effectively taking the United States off the gold standard. He also imposed wage and price controls for 90 days, launched the Wars on Cancer and Drugs, passed the Controlled Substances Act, and presided over the end of the Space Race by overseeing the Apollo 11 Moon landing. He was re-elected in 1972, when he defeated George McGovern in one of the largest landslide victories in American history.

In his second term, Nixon ordered an airlift to resupply Israeli materiel losses in the Yom Kippur War, a conflict which led to the oil crisis at home. From 1973, ongoing revelations from the Nixon administration's involvement in Watergate eroded his support in Congress and the country. The scandal began with a break-in at the Democratic National Committee office, ordered by administration officials, and escalated despite cover-up efforts by the Nixon administration, of which he was aware. On August 9, 1974, facing almost certain impeachment and removal from office, Nixon resigned. Afterward, he was issued a controversial pardon by his successor, Gerald Ford. During nearly 20 years of retirement, Nixon wrote nine books and undertook many foreign trips, rehabilitating his image into that of an elder statesman and leading expert on foreign affairs. On April 18, 1994, he suffered a debilitating stroke, and died four days later. Nixon is generally ranked as a below-average president, mainly due to his role in the Watergate scandal. Evaluations of his time in office have proven complex, with the successes of his presidency contrasted against the circumstances surrounding his departure from office.

Early life and education

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Nixon (second from right) makes his newspaper debut in 1916, contributing five cents to a fund for World War I orphans; his brother Donald is to his right.

Richard Milhous Nixon was born on January 9, 1913, in what was then the township precinct of Yorba Linda, California,[1] in a house built by his father, on his family's lemon ranch.[2][3][4] His parents were Francis A. Nixon and Hannah (Milhous) Nixon. His mother was a Quaker, and his father converted from Methodism to the Quaker faith. Through his mother, Nixon was a descendant of the early English settler Thomas Cornell.[5]

Nixon's upbringing was influenced by Quaker observances of the time, such as abstinence from alcohol, dancing, and swearing. He had four brothers: Harold, Donald, Arthur, and Edward.[6] Four of the five Nixon boys were named after British kings; Richard was named after Richard the Lionheart.[7]

Nixon's early life was marked by hardship, and he later quoted Dwight Eisenhower in describing his boyhood: "We were poor, but the glory of it was we didn't know it".[8] The Nixon family ranch failed in 1922, and the family moved to Whittier, California. In an area of East Whittier with many Quakers, Frank Nixon opened a grocery store and gas station at what is now the corner of Whittier Boulevard and Santa Gertrudes Avenue.[9][10] During this period, the Nixon family attended East Whittier Friends Church.[11] Richard's younger brother Arthur died in 1925 at the age of seven after a short illness.[12] Richard was 12 years old when a spot was found on his lung; with a family history of tuberculosis, he was forbidden to play sports. The spot turned out to be scar tissue from pneumonia.[13][14]

Primary and secondary education

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Nixon as a senior at Whittier High School in 1930

Nixon attended East Whittier Elementary School, where he was president of his eighth-grade class.[15] His older brother Harold had attended Whittier High School, which his parents thought resulted in a dissolute lifestyle. They decided to send Nixon to the larger Fullerton Union High School.[16][17] Though he had to ride a school bus an hour each way during his freshman year, he attained excellent grades. Later, he lived with an aunt in Fullerton during the week.[18] He played junior varsity football and seldom missed practice, though he rarely was used in games.[19] He had greater success as a debater, winning several championships and taking his only formal tutelage in public speaking from Fullerton's Head of English, H. Lynn Sheller. Nixon later mused on Sheller's words, "Remember, speaking is conversation...don't shout at people. Talk to them. Converse with them."[20] Nixon said he tried to use a conversational tone as much as possible.[20]

At the start of his junior year in September 1928, Nixon's parents permitted him to transfer to Whittier High School. At Whittier, Nixon lost a bid for student body president—his first electoral defeat. He often rose at 4 a.m. to drive the family truck to Los Angeles to purchase vegetables and then drove to the store to wash and display them before going to school. Harold was diagnosed with tuberculosis the previous year; when their mother took him to Arizona, hoping to improve his health, the demands on Nixon increased, causing him to give up football. Nevertheless, Nixon graduated from Whittier High third in his class of 207.[21]

College and law school

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Nixon was offered a tuition grant to attend Harvard University, but with Harold's continued illness requiring his mother's care until he died in 1933, Richard was needed at the store. He remained in his hometown and enrolled at Whittier College in September 1930. His expenses were met by his maternal grandfather.[2][22] Nixon played for the basketball team; he also tried out for football, and though he lacked the size to play, he remained on the team as a substitute and was noted for his enthusiasm.[23] Instead of fraternities and sororities, Whittier had literary societies. Nixon was snubbed by the only one for men, the Franklins, many of whom were from prominent families, unlike Nixon. He responded by helping to found a new society, the Orthogonian Society.[24] In addition to the society, his studies, and work at the store, Nixon engaged in several extracurricular activities; he was a champion debater and hard worker.[25] In 1933, he was engaged to Ola Florence Welch, daughter of the Whittier police chief, but they broke up in 1935.[26]

After graduating summa cum laude with a Bachelor of Arts in history from Whittier in 1934, Nixon was accepted at the new Duke University School of Law,[27][28] which offered scholarships to top students, including Nixon.[29] It paid high salaries to its professors, many of whom had national or international reputations.[30] The number of scholarships was greatly reduced for second- and third-year students, creating intense competition.[29] Nixon kept his scholarship, was elected president of the Duke Bar Association,[31] inducted into the Order of the Coif,[32] and graduated third in his class in June 1937.[27][33]

Early career and marriage

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Nixon's family: Julie and David Eisenhower, President Nixon, First Lady Pat Nixon, Tricia, and Edward Cox on December 24, 1971

After graduating from Duke, Nixon initially hoped to join the FBI. He received no response to his application and learned years later that he had been hired, but his appointment had been canceled at the last minute due to budget cuts.[34] He was admitted to the California bar in 1937, and began practicing in Whittier with the law firm Wingert and Bewley in the National Bank of Whittier Building.[27][35] His work concentrated on commercial litigation for local petroleum companies and other corporate matters, as well as on wills.[36] Nixon was reluctant to work on divorce cases, disliking frank sexual talk from women.[37] In 1938, he opened up his own branch of Wingert and Bewley in La Habra, California,[38] and became a full partner in the firm the following year.[39] In later years, Nixon proudly said he was the only modern president to have previously worked as a practicing attorney.[37] During this period, Nixon was also the president of the Citra-Frost Company, which attempted to produce and sell frozen orange juice, but the company went bankrupt after 18 months.[40]

In January 1938, Nixon was cast in the Whittier Community Players production of The Dark Tower in which he played opposite his future wife, a high school teacher named Thelma "Pat" Ryan.[27] In his memoirs, Nixon described it as "a case of love at first sight",[41] but apparently for Nixon only, since Pat Ryan turned him down several times before agreeing to date him.[42] Once they began their courtship, Ryan was reluctant to marry Nixon; they dated for two years before she assented to his proposal. They wed in a small ceremony on June 21, 1940. After a honeymoon in Mexico, the Nixons began their married life in Whittier.[43] They had two daughters: Tricia, born in 1946, and Julie, born in 1948.[44]

Military service

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Nixon as a lieutenant commander in the United States Navy, c. 1945

In January 1942, the couple moved to the Northern Virginia suburbs, where Nixon took a job at the Office of Price Administration in Washington, D.C.[27][45] In his political campaigns, Nixon suggested that this was his response to Pearl Harbor, but he had sought the position throughout the latter part of 1941. Both Nixon and his wife believed he was limiting his prospects by remaining in Whittier.[46] He was assigned to the tire rationing division, where he was tasked with replying to correspondence. He did not enjoy the role, and four months later applied to join the United States Navy.[47] Though he could have claimed an exemption from the draft as a birthright Quaker, or a deferral due to his government service, Nixon nevertheless sought a commission in the Navy. His application was approved, and he was appointed a lieutenant junior grade in the United States Naval Reserve on June 15, 1942.[48][49]

In October 1942, he was given his first assignment as aide to the commander of the Naval Air Station Ottumwa in Wapello County, Iowa, until May 1943. Seeking more excitement, he requested sea duty; on July 2, 1943, he was assigned to Marine Aircraft Group 25 and the South Pacific Combat Air Transport Command (SCAT), where he supported the logistics of operations in the South Pacific theater during World War II.[50][51][52]

On October 1, 1943, Nixon was promoted to lieutenant.[48] Nixon commanded the SCAT forward detachments at Vella Lavella, Bougainville, and finally at Nissan Island.[48][52] His unit prepared manifests and flight plans for R4D/C-47 operations and supervised the loading and unloading of the transport aircraft. For this service, he received a Navy Letter of Commendation, awarded a Navy Commendation Ribbon, which was later updated to the Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal, from his commanding officer for "meritorious and efficient performance of duty as Officer in Charge of the South Pacific Combat Air Transport Command". Upon his return to the U.S., Nixon was appointed the administrative officer of the Alameda Naval Air Station in Alameda, California.

In January 1945, he was transferred to the Bureau of Aeronautics office in Philadelphia, where he helped negotiate the termination of World War II contracts, and received his second letter of commendation, from the Secretary of the Navy[53] for "meritorious service, tireless effort, and devotion to duty". Later, Nixon was transferred to other offices to work on contracts, and he moved to Philadelphia, New York, and finally to Baltimore.[54][55] On October 3, 1945, he was promoted to lieutenant commander.[48][53] On March 10, 1946, he was relieved of active duty.[48] On June 1, 1953, he was promoted to commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve, and he retired from the U.S. Naval Reserve on June 6, 1966.[48]

While in the Navy, Nixon became a very good five-card stud poker player, helping finance his first congressional campaign with the winnings. In a 1983 interview, he described turning down an invitation to dine with Charles Lindbergh because he was hosting a game.[56][57]

U.S. House of Representatives (1947–1950)

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Nixon's 1946 congressional campaign flyer

Republicans in California's 12th congressional district were frustrated by their inability to defeat Democratic representative Jerry Voorhis, and they sought a consensus candidate who would run a strong campaign against him. In 1945, they formed a "Committee of 100" to decide on a candidate, hoping to avoid internal dissensions which had led to previous Voorhis victories. After the committee failed to attract higher-profile candidates, Herman Perry, manager of Whittier's Bank of America branch, suggested Nixon, a family friend with whom he had served on Whittier College's board of trustees before the war. Perry wrote to Nixon in Baltimore, and after a night of excited conversation with his wife, Nixon gave Perry an enthusiastic response,[58][59] confirming that he was registered to vote in California at his parents' Whittier residence.[60] Nixon flew to California and was selected by the committee. When he left the Navy at the start of 1946, Nixon and his wife returned to Whittier, where he began a year of intensive campaigning.[58][59] He contended that Voorhis had been ineffective as a representative and suggested that Voorhis's endorsement by a group linked to Communists meant that Voorhis must have radical views.[61] Nixon won the election, receiving 65,586 votes to Voorhis's 49,994.[62]

In June 1947, Nixon supported the Taft–Hartley Act, a federal law that monitors the activities and power of labor unions, and he served on the Education and Labor Committee. In August 1947, he became one of 19 House members to serve on the Herter Committee,[63] which went to Europe to report on the need for U.S. foreign aid. Nixon was the youngest member of the committee and the only Westerner.[64] Advocacy by Herter Committee members, including Nixon, led to congressional passage of the Marshall Plan.[65]

In his memoirs, Nixon wrote that he joined the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC) "at the end of 1947". However, he was already a HUAC member in early February 1947, when he heard "Enemy Number One" Gerhard Eisler and his sister Ruth Fischer testify. On February 18, 1947, Nixon referred to Eisler's belligerence toward HUAC in his maiden speech to the House. Also by early February 1947, fellow U.S. Representative Charles J. Kersten had introduced him to Father John Francis Cronin in Baltimore. Cronin shared with Nixon his 1945 privately circulated paper "The Problem of American Communism in 1945",[66] with much information from the FBI's William C. Sullivan who by 1961 headed domestic intelligence under J. Edgar Hoover.[67] By May 1948, Nixon had co-sponsored the Mundt–Nixon Bill to implement "a new approach to the complicated problem of internal communist subversion ... It provided for registration of all Communist Party members and required a statement of the source of all printed and broadcast material issued by organizations that were found to be Communist fronts." He served as floor manager for the Republican Party. On May 19, 1948, the bill passed the House by 319 to 58, but later it failed to pass the Senate.[68] The Nixon Library cites this bill's passage as Nixon's first significant victory in Congress.[69]

Nixon in Yorba Linda, California, c. April 1950

Nixon first gained national attention in August 1948, when his persistence as a House Un-American Activities Committee member helped break the Alger Hiss spy case. While many doubted Whittaker Chambers's allegations that Hiss, a former State Department official, had been a Soviet spy, Nixon believed them to be true and pressed for the committee to continue its investigation. After Hiss filed suit, alleging defamation, Chambers produced documents corroborating his allegations, including paper and microfilm copies that Chambers turned over to House investigators after hiding them overnight in a field; they became known as the "Pumpkin Papers".[70] Hiss was convicted of perjury in 1950 for denying under oath he had passed documents to Chambers.[71] In 1948, Nixon successfully cross-filed as a candidate in his district, winning both major party primaries,[72] and was comfortably reelected.[73]

U.S. Senate (1950–1953)

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Nixon's 1950 Senate campaign flyer
Nixon campaigning in Sausalito, California, during his 1950 U.S. Senate campaign

In 1949, Nixon began to consider running for the United States Senate against the Democratic incumbent, Sheridan Downey,[74] and entered the race in November.[75] Downey, faced with a bitter primary battle with Representative Helen Gahagan Douglas, announced his retirement in March 1950.[76] Nixon and Douglas won the primary elections[77] and engaged in a contentious campaign in which the ongoing Korean War was a major issue.[78] Nixon tried to focus attention on Douglas's liberal voting record. As part of that effort, a "Pink Sheet" was distributed by the Nixon campaign suggesting that Douglas's voting record was similar to that of New York Congressman Vito Marcantonio, reputed to be a communist, and their political views must be nearly identical.[79] Nixon won the election by almost twenty percentage points.[80] During the campaign, Nixon was first called "Tricky Dick" by his opponents for his campaign tactics.[81]

In the Senate, Nixon took a prominent position in opposing global communism, traveling frequently and speaking out against it.[82] He maintained friendly relations with Joseph McCarthy, a controversial U.S. Senate colleague from Wisconsin and fellow anti-communist, but was careful to keep some distance between himself and McCarthy's allegations.[83] Nixon criticized President Harry S. Truman's handling of the Korean War.[82] He supported statehood for Alaska and Hawaii, voted in favor of civil rights for minorities, and supported federal disaster relief for India and Yugoslavia.[84] He voted against price controls and other monetary restrictions, benefits for illegal immigrants, and public power.[84]

Vice presidency (1953–1961)

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Front cover of campaign literature for the Eisenhower–Nixon campaign in the 1952 presidential election
Nixon's official portrait as vice president, c. 1953–1961

General Dwight D. Eisenhower was nominated for president by the Republicans in 1952. He had no strong preference for a vice-presidential candidate, and Republican officeholders and party officials met in a "smoke-filled room" and recommended Nixon to the general, who agreed to the senator's selection. Nixon's youth (he was then 39), stance against communism, and political base in California—one of the largest states—were all seen as vote-winners by the leaders. Among the candidates considered along with Nixon were Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio, Governor Alfred Driscoll of New Jersey, and Senator Everett Dirksen of Illinois.[85][86] On the campaign trail, Eisenhower spoke of his plans for the country, and left the negative campaigning to his running mate.[87]

In mid-September, the Republican ticket faced a major crisis when the media reported that Nixon had a political fund, maintained by his backers, which reimbursed him for political expenses.[88][89] Such a fund was not illegal, but it exposed Nixon to allegations of a potential conflict of interest. With pressure building for Eisenhower to demand Nixon's resignation from the ticket, Nixon went on television to address the nation on September 23, 1952.[90] The address, later named the Checkers speech, was heard by about 60 million Americans, which represented the largest audience ever for a television broadcast at that point.[91] In the speech, Nixon emotionally defended himself, stating that the fund was not secret and that his donors had not received special favors. He painted himself as a patriot and man of modest means, mentioning that his wife had no mink coat; instead, he said, she wore a "respectable Republican cloth coat".[90] The speech was remembered for the gift which Nixon had received, but which he would not give back, which he described as "a little cocker spaniel dog ...sent all the way from Texas. And our little girl—Tricia, the 6-year-old—named it Checkers."[90] The speech prompted a huge public outpouring of support for Nixon.[92] Eisenhower decided to retain him on the ticket,[93] and the ticket was victorious in the November election.[87]

Eisenhower granted Nixon more responsibilities during his term than any previous vice president.[94] Nixon attended Cabinet and National Security Council meetings and chaired them in Eisenhower's absence. A 1953 tour of the Far East succeeded in increasing local goodwill toward the United States and gave Nixon an appreciation of the region as a potential industrial center. He visited Saigon and Hanoi in French Indochina.[95] On his return to the United States at the end of 1953, Nixon increased the time he devoted to foreign relations.[96]

Biographer Irwin Gellman, who chronicled Nixon's congressional years, said of his vice presidency:

Eisenhower radically altered the role of his running mate by presenting him with critical assignments in both foreign and domestic affairs once he assumed his office. The vice president welcomed the president's initiatives and worked energetically to accomplish White House objectives. Because of the collaboration between these two leaders, Nixon deserves the title, "the first modern vice president".[97]

American newspaper covers on May 9, 1958, covering student protests against Nixon at the National University of San Marcos in Lima, Peru

Despite intense campaigning by Nixon, who reprised his strong attacks on the Democrats, the Republicans lost control of both houses of Congress in the 1954 elections. These losses caused Nixon to contemplate leaving politics once he had served out his term.[98] On September 24, 1955, President Eisenhower suffered a heart attack, and his condition was initially believed to be life-threatening. Eisenhower was unable to perform his duties for six weeks. The Twenty-fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution had not yet been proposed, and the vice president had no formal power to act. Nonetheless, Nixon acted in Eisenhower's stead during this period, presiding over Cabinet meetings and ensuring that aides and Cabinet officers did not seek power.[99] According to Nixon biographer Stephen Ambrose, Nixon had "earned the high praise he received for his conduct during the crisis ... he made no attempt to seize power".[100]

His spirits buoyed, Nixon sought a second term, but some of Eisenhower's aides aimed to displace him. In a December 1955 meeting, Eisenhower proposed that Nixon not run for reelection and instead become a Cabinet officer in a second Eisenhower administration, to give him administrative experience before a 1960 presidential run. Nixon believed this would destroy his political career. When Eisenhower announced his reelection bid in February 1956, he hedged on the choice of his running mate, saying it was improper to address that question until he had been renominated. Although no Republican was opposing Eisenhower, Nixon received a substantial number of write-in votes against the president in the 1956 New Hampshire primary election. In late April, the President announced that Nixon would again be his running mate.[101] Eisenhower and Nixon were reelected by a comfortable margin in the November 1956 election.[102]

In early 1957, Nixon undertook another foreign trip, this time to Africa. On his return, he helped shepherd the Civil Rights Act of 1957 through Congress. The bill was weakened in the Senate, and civil rights leaders were divided over whether Eisenhower should sign it. Nixon advised the President to sign the bill, which he did.[103] Eisenhower suffered a mild stroke in November 1957, and Nixon gave a press conference, assuring the nation that the Cabinet was functioning well as a team during Eisenhower's brief illness.[104]

Nikita Khrushchev and Nixon speak as the press looks on at the Kitchen Debate on July 24, 1959; What's My Line? host John Charles Daly is on the far left.

On April 27, 1958, Richard and Pat Nixon reluctantly embarked on a goodwill tour of South America. In Montevideo, Uruguay, Nixon made an impromptu visit to a college campus, where he fielded questions from students on U.S. foreign policy. The trip was uneventful until the Nixon party reached Lima, Peru, where he was met with student demonstrations. Nixon went to the historical campus of National University of San Marcos, the oldest university in the Americas, got out of his car to confront the students, and stayed until forced back into the car by a volley of thrown objects. At his hotel, Nixon faced another mob, and one demonstrator spat on him.[105] In Caracas, Venezuela, Nixon and his wife were spat on by anti-American demonstrators and their limousine was attacked by a pipe-wielding mob.[106] According to Ambrose, Nixon's courageous conduct "caused even some of his bitterest enemies to give him some grudging respect".[107] Reporting to the cabinet after the trip, Nixon claimed there was "absolute proof that [the protestors] were directed and controlled by a central Communist conspiracy." Secretary of State John Foster Dulles and his brother, Director of Central Intelligence Allen Dulles, both concurred with Nixon.[108]

In July 1959, Eisenhower sent Nixon to the Soviet Union for the opening of the American National Exhibition in Moscow. On July 24, Nixon was touring the exhibits with Nikita Khrushchev when the two stopped at a model of an American kitchen and engaged in an impromptu exchange about the merits of capitalism versus communism that became known as the "Kitchen Debate".[109]

1960 presidential campaign

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1960 presidential election results
John F. Kennedy and Nixon before their first televised 1960 debate

In 1960, Nixon launched his first campaign for President of the United States, officially announcing on January 9, 1960.[110] He faced little opposition in the Republican primaries[111] and chose former Massachusetts senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. as his running mate.[112] His Democratic opponent was John F. Kennedy and the race remained close for the duration.[113] Nixon campaigned on his experience, but Kennedy called for new blood and claimed the Eisenhower–Nixon administration had allowed the Soviet Union to overtake the U.S. in quantity and quality of ballistic missiles.[114] While Kennedy faced issues about his Catholicism, Nixon remained a divisive figure to some.[115]

Televised presidential debates made their debut as a political medium during the campaign. In the first of four such debates, Nixon appeared pale, with a five o'clock shadow, in contrast to the photogenic Kennedy.[112] Nixon's performance in the debate was perceived to be mediocre in the visual medium of television, though many people listening on the radio thought Nixon had won.[116] Nixon narrowly lost the election, with Kennedy winning the popular vote by only 112,827 votes (0.2 percent).[112]

There were charges of voter fraud in Texas and Illinois, both states won by Kennedy. Nixon refused to consider contesting the election, feeling a lengthy controversy would diminish the United States in the eyes of the world and that the uncertainty would hurt U.S. interests.[117] At the end of his term of office as vice president in January 1961, Nixon and his family returned to California, where he practiced law and wrote a bestselling book, Six Crises, which included coverage of the Hiss case, Eisenhower's heart attack, and the Fund Crisis, which had been resolved by the Checkers speech.[112][118]

1962 California gubernatorial campaign

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1962 California gubernatorial campaign sticker

Local and national Republican leaders encouraged Nixon to challenge incumbent Pat Brown for governor of California in the 1962 gubernatorial election.[112] Despite initial reluctance, Nixon entered the race.[112] The campaign was clouded by public suspicion that Nixon viewed the office as a stepping stone for another presidential run, some opposition from the far-right of the party, and his own lack of interest in being California's governor.[112] Nixon hoped a successful run would confirm his status as the nation's leading active Republican politician and ensure he remained a major player in national politics.[119] Instead, he lost to Brown by more than five percentage points, and the defeat was widely believed to be the end of his political career.[112]

In an impromptu concession speech, the morning after the election, Nixon blamed the media for favoring his opponent, saying, "You won't have Nixon to kick around anymore because, gentlemen, this is my last press conference."[120] The California defeat was highlighted in the November 11, 1962, episode of Howard K. Smith's ABC News show, Howard K. Smith: News and Comment, titled "The Political Obituary of Richard M. Nixon".[121] Alger Hiss appeared on the program, and many members of the public complained that it was unseemly to give a convicted felon air time to attack a former vice president. The furor drove Smith and his program from the air,[122] and public sympathy for Nixon grew.[121]

Wilderness years

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Nixon shows his papers to an East German officer as he crosses between the sectors of divided Berlin in July 1963

In 1963, the Nixon family traveled to Europe, where Nixon gave press conferences and met with leaders of the countries he visited.[123] The family moved to New York City, where Nixon became a senior partner in the leading law firm Nixon, Mudge, Rose, Guthrie & Alexander.[112] On the morning of November 22, 1963, Nixon was in Dallas, staying at the Baker Hotel. He left the city via Love Field an hour before the arrival of Air Force One.[124] When announcing his California campaign, Nixon had pledged not to run for president in 1964; even if he had not, he believed it would be difficult to defeat Kennedy, or after his assassination, Kennedy's successor, Lyndon Johnson.[125]

In 1964, Nixon won write-in votes in the primaries, and was considered a serious contender by both Gallup polls[126][127] and members of the press.[128] He was even placed on a primary ballot as an active candidate by Oregon's secretary of state.[129] As late as two months before the 1964 Republican National Convention, however, Nixon fulfilled his promise to remain out of the presidential nomination process and instead endorsed Arizona senator Barry Goldwater, the eventual Republican nominee. When Goldwater won the nomination, Nixon was selected to introduce him at the convention. Nixon felt that Goldwater was unlikely to win, but campaigned for him loyally. In the 1964 general election, Goldwater lost in a landslide to Johnson and Republicans experienced heavy losses in Congress and among state governors.[130]

Nixon was one of the few leading Republicans not blamed for the disastrous results, and he sought to build on that in the 1966 congressional elections in which he campaigned for many Republicans and sought to regain seats lost in the Johnson landslide. Nixon was credited with helping Republicans win major electoral gains that year.[131]

In 1967, Nixon was approached by an associate at his firm in Leonard Garment about a case involving the press and perceived invasion of privacy. Garment suggested Nixon argue on behalf of the Hill family in Time, Inc. v. Hill at the Supreme Court of the United States. Nixon studied strenuously in the months before the oral argument before the Court. While the final decision was in favor of Time Inc., Nixon was encouraged by the praise he received for his argument. It was the first and only case he argued in front of the Supreme Court.[132][133]

1968 presidential campaign

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Nixon and President Lyndon B. Johnson meet at the White House before Nixon's nomination in July 1968
Nixon campaigning for president in Paoli, Pennsylvania, July 1968
Results of the 1968 presidential election; the popular vote split between Nixon and Democrat Hubert Humphrey was less than one percentage point.

At the end of 1967, Nixon told his family he planned to run for president a second time. Pat Nixon did not always enjoy public life,[134] being embarrassed, for example, by the need to reveal how little the family owned in the Checkers speech.[135] She still managed to be supportive of her husband's ambitions. Nixon believed that with the Democrats torn over the issue of the Vietnam War, a Republican had a good chance of winning, although he expected the election to be as close as in 1960.[134]

An exceptionally tumultuous primary election season began as the Tet Offensive was launched in January 1968. President Johnson withdrew as a candidate in March, after an unexpectedly poor showing in the New Hampshire primary. In June, Senator Robert F. Kennedy, a Democratic candidate, was assassinated just moments after his victory in the California primary. On the Republican side, Nixon's main opposition was Michigan governor George Romney, though New York governor Nelson Rockefeller and California governor Ronald Reagan each hoped to be nominated in a brokered convention. Nixon secured the nomination on the first ballot.[136] He was able to secure the nomination to the support of many Southern delegates, after he and his subordinates made concessions to Strom Thurmond and Harry Dent.[137] He selected Maryland governor Spiro Agnew as his running mate, a choice which Nixon believed would unite the party, appealing both to Northern moderates and to Southerners disaffected with the Democrats.[138]

Nixon's Democratic opponent in the general election was Vice President Hubert Humphrey, who was nominated at a convention marked by violent protests.[139] Throughout the campaign, Nixon portrayed himself as a figure of stability during this period of national unrest and upheaval.[139] He appealed to what he later called the "silent majority" of socially conservative Americans who disliked the hippie counterculture and the anti-war demonstrators. Agnew became an increasingly vocal critic of these groups, solidifying Nixon's position with the right.[140]

Nixon waged a prominent television advertising campaign, meeting with supporters in front of cameras.[141] He stressed that the crime rate was too high, and attacked what he perceived as a surrender of the United States' nuclear superiority by the Democrats.[142] Nixon promised "peace with honor" in the Vietnam War and proclaimed that "new leadership will end the war and win the peace in the Pacific".[143] He did not give specifics of how he hoped to end the war, resulting in media intimations that he must have a "secret plan".[143] His slogan of "Nixon's the One" proved to be effective.[141]

Johnson's negotiators hoped to reach a truce in Vietnam, or at least a cessation of bombings. On October 22, 1968, candidate Nixon received information that Johnson was preparing a so-called "October surprise", abandoning three non-negotiable conditions for a bombing halt, to help elect Humphrey in the last days of the campaign.[144] Whether the Nixon campaign interfered with negotiations between the Johnson administration and the South Vietnamese by engaging Anna Chennault, a fundraiser for the Republican party, remains a controversy.[144] It is not clear whether the government of South Vietnam needed encouragement to opt out of a peace process they considered disadvantageous.[145]

In a three-way race between Nixon, Humphrey, and American Independent Party candidate George Wallace, Nixon defeated Humphrey by only 500,000 votes, a margin almost as close as in 1960, with both elections seeing a gap of less than one percentage point of the popular vote. However, Nixon earned 301 electoral votes to 191 for Humphrey and 46 for Wallace, a majority.[139][146] He became the first non-incumbent vice president to be elected president.[147] In his victory speech, Nixon pledged that his administration would try to bring the divided nation together.[148] Nixon said: "I have received a very gracious message from the Vice President, congratulating me for winning the election. I congratulated him for his gallant and courageous fight against great odds. I also told him that I know exactly how he felt. I know how it feels to lose a close one."[149]

Presidency (1969–1974)

[edit]
Nixon is sworn in as the 37th president by Chief Justice Earl Warren. The new first lady, Pat, holds the family Bible.

Nixon was inaugurated as president on January 20, 1969, sworn in by his onetime political rival, Chief Justice Earl Warren. Pat Nixon held the family Bibles open at Isaiah 2:4, which reads, "They shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks." In his inaugural address, which received almost uniformly positive reviews, Nixon remarked that "the greatest honor history can bestow is the title of peacemaker"[150]—a phrase that found a place on his gravestone.[151] He spoke about turning partisan politics into a new age of unity:

In these difficult years, America has suffered from a fever of words; from inflated rhetoric that promises more than it can deliver; from angry rhetoric that fans discontents into hatreds; from bombastic rhetoric that postures instead of persuading. We cannot learn from one another until we stop shouting at one another, until we speak quietly enough so that our words can be heard as well as our voices.[152]

Foreign policy

[edit]

China

[edit]
President Nixon shakes hands with Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai upon arriving in Beijing, 1972
Nixon and Zhou Enlai toast during Nixon's 1972 visit to China

Nixon laid the groundwork for his overture to China before he became president, writing in Foreign Affairs a year before his election: "There is no place on this small planet for a billion of its potentially most able people to live in angry isolation."[153] Among the reasons that Nixon sought to improve relations with China was in the hope of weakening the Soviet Union and decreasing China's support to the North in the Vietnam War.[154] Nixon ultimately used the idea of gaining leverage against the Soviet Union through relations with China to obtain the support of key conservative figures including Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan.[155]

Assisting him in pursuing relations with China was Henry Kissinger, Nixon's national security advisor and future secretary of state. They collaborated closely, bypassing Cabinet officials. With relations between the Soviet Union and China at a nadir—border clashes between the two took place during Nixon's first year in office—Nixon sent private word to the Chinese that he desired closer relations. A breakthrough came in early 1971, when Chinese Communist Party (CCP) chairman Mao Zedong invited a team of American table tennis players to visit China and play against top Chinese players. Nixon followed up by sending Kissinger to China for clandestine meetings with Chinese officials.[153] On July 15, 1971, with announcements from Washington and Beijing, it was learned that the President would visit China the following February.[156] The secrecy had allowed both sets of leaders time to prepare the political climate in their countries for the visit.[157]

In February 1972, Nixon and his wife traveled to China after Kissinger briefed Nixon for over 40 hours in preparation.[158] Upon touching down, the President and First Lady emerged from Air Force One and were greeted by Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai. Nixon made a point of shaking Zhou's hand, something which then-secretary of state John Foster Dulles had refused to do in 1954 when the two met in Geneva.[159] More than a hundred television journalists accompanied the president. On Nixon's orders, television was strongly favored over printed publications, as Nixon felt that the medium would capture the visit much better than print. It also allowed him to snub the print journalists he despised.[159]

Mao Zedong and Nixon

Nixon and Kissinger immediately met for an hour with CCP Chairman Mao Zedong and Premier Zhou at Mao's official private residence, where they discussed a range of issues.[160] Mao later told his doctor that he had been impressed by Nixon's forthrightness, unlike the leftists and the Soviets.[160] He said he was suspicious of Kissinger,[160] though the National Security Advisor referred to their meeting as his "encounter with history".[159] A formal banquet welcoming the presidential party was given that evening in the Great Hall of the People. The following day, Nixon met with Zhou; the joint communique following this meeting recognized Taiwan as a part of China and looked forward to a peaceful solution to the problem of reunification.[161] When not in meetings, Nixon toured architectural wonders, including the Forbidden City, the Ming tombs, and the Great Wall.[159] Americans took their first glance into everyday Chinese life through the cameras that accompanied Pat Nixon, who toured the city of Beijing and visited communes, schools, factories, and hospitals.[159]

The visit ushered in a new era of US–China relations.[139] Fearing the possibility of a US–China alliance, the Soviet Union yielded to pressure for détente with the United States.[162] This was one component of triangular diplomacy.[163]

Vietnam War

[edit]
Nixon delivers an address to the nation about the incursion in Cambodia

When Nixon took office, about 300 American soldiers were dying each week in Vietnam,[164] and the war was widely unpopular in the United States, the subject of ongoing violent protests. The Johnson administration had offered to suspend bombing unconditionally in exchange for negotiations, but to no avail. According to Walter Isaacson, Nixon concluded soon after taking office that the Vietnam War could not be won, and he was determined to end it quickly.[165] He sought an arrangement that would permit American forces to withdraw while leaving South Vietnam secure against attack.[166]

Nixon approved a secret B-52 carpet bombing campaign of North Vietnamese and Khmer Rouge positions in Cambodia beginning in March 1969 and code-named Operation Menu, without the consent of Cambodian leader Norodom Sihanouk.[167][168][169] In mid-1969, Nixon began efforts to negotiate peace with the North Vietnamese, sending a personal letter to their leaders, and peace talks began in Paris. Initial talks did not result in an agreement,[170] and in May 1969, he publicly proposed to withdraw all American troops from South Vietnam, provided North Vietnam did so, and suggested South Vietnam hold internationally supervised elections with Viet Cong participation.[171]

Nixon visits American troops in South Vietnam, July 30, 1969

In July 1969, Nixon visited South Vietnam, where he met with his U.S. military commanders and President Nguyễn Văn Thiệu. Amid protests at home demanding an immediate pullout, he implemented a strategy of replacing American troops with Vietnamese troops, known as "Vietnamization".[139] He soon instituted phased U.S. troop withdrawals,[172] but also authorized incursions into Laos, in part to interrupt the Ho Chi Minh trail passing through Laos and Cambodia and used to supply North Vietnamese forces. In March 1970, at the explicit request of the Khmer Rouge and negotiated by Pol Pot's then-second-in-command, Nuon Chea, North Vietnamese troops launched an offensive and overran much of Cambodia.[173] Nixon announced the ground invasion of Cambodia on April 30, 1970, against North Vietnamese bases in the east of the country,[174] and further protests erupted against perceived expansion of the conflict, which resulted in Ohio National Guardsmen killing four unarmed students at Kent State University.[175] Nixon's responses to protesters included an impromptu, early morning meeting with them at the Lincoln Memorial on May 9, 1970.[176][177][178] Nixon's campaign promise to curb the war, contrasted with the escalated bombing, led to claims that Nixon had a "credibility gap" on the issue.[172] It is estimated that between 50,000 and 150,000 people were killed during the bombing of Cambodia between 1970 and 1973.[168]

In 1971, excerpts from the "Pentagon Papers", which had been leaked by Daniel Ellsberg, were published by The New York Times and The Washington Post. When news of the leak first appeared, Nixon was inclined to do nothing; the Papers, a history of the United States' involvement in Vietnam, mostly concerned the lies of prior administrations and contained few real revelations. He was persuaded by Kissinger that the Papers were more harmful than they appeared, and the President tried to prevent publication, but the Supreme Court ruled in favor of the newspapers.[179]

As U.S. troop withdrawals continued, conscription was phased out by 1973, and the armed forces became all-volunteer.[180] After years of fighting, the Paris Peace Accords were signed at the beginning of 1973. The agreement implemented a ceasefire and allowed for the withdrawal of remaining American troops without requiring the withdrawal of the 160,000 North Vietnam Army regulars located in the South.[181] Once American combat support ended, there was a brief truce, before fighting resumed, and North Vietnam conquered South Vietnam in 1975.[182]

Latin American policy

[edit]
Nixon with Mexican president Gustavo Díaz Ordaz (to his right); motorcade in San Diego, California, September 1970

Nixon had been a firm supporter of Kennedy during the 1961 Bay of Pigs Invasion and 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis. On taking office in 1969, he stepped up covert operations against Cuba and its president, Fidel Castro. He maintained close relations with the Cuban-American exile community through his friend, Bebe Rebozo, who often suggested ways of irritating Castro. The Soviets and Cubans became concerned, fearing Nixon might attack Cuba and break the understanding between Kennedy and Khrushchev that ended the missile crisis. In August 1970, the Soviets asked Nixon to reaffirm the understanding, which he did, despite his hard line against Castro. The process was not completed before the Soviets began expanding their base at the Cuban port of Cienfuegos in October 1970. A minor confrontation ensued, the Soviets stipulated they would not use Cienfuegos for submarines bearing ballistic missiles, and the final round of diplomatic notes was exchanged in November.[183]

The election of Marxist candidate Salvador Allende as President of Chile in September 1970 spurred a vigorous campaign of covert opposition to him by Nixon and Kissinger.[184]: 25  This began by trying to convince the Chilean congress to confirm Jorge Alessandri as the winner of the election, and then messages to military officers in support of a coup.[184] Other support included strikes organized against Allende and funding for Allende opponents. It was even alleged that "Nixon personally authorized" $700,000 in covert funds to print anti-Allende messages in a prominent Chilean newspaper.[184]: 93  Following an extended period of social, political, and economic unrest, General Augusto Pinochet assumed power in a violent coup d'état on September 11, 1973; among the dead was Allende.[185]

Soviet Union

[edit]
Nixon with Brezhnev during the Soviet leader's trip to the U.S., 1973

Nixon used the improving international environment to address the topic of nuclear peace. Following the announcement of his visit to China, the Nixon administration concluded negotiations for him to visit the Soviet Union. The President and First Lady arrived in Moscow on May 22, 1972, and met with Leonid Brezhnev, the general secretary of the Communist Party; Alexei Kosygin, the Chairman of the Council of Ministers; and Nikolai Podgorny, the Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet, among other leading Soviet officials.[186]

Nixon engaged in intense negotiations with Brezhnev.[186] Out of the summit came agreements for increased trade and two landmark arms control treaties: SALT I, the first comprehensive limitation pact signed by the two superpowers,[139] and the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, which banned the development of systems designed to intercept incoming missiles. Nixon and Brezhnev proclaimed a new era of "peaceful coexistence". A banquet was held that evening at the Kremlin.[186]

Nixon and Kissinger planned to link arms control to détente and to the resolution of other urgent problems through what Nixon called "linkage". David Tal argues:

The linkage between strategic arms limitations and outstanding issues such as the Middle East, Berlin, and, foremost, Vietnam thus became central to Nixon's and Kissinger's policy of détente. Through the employment of linkage, they hoped to change the nature and course of U.S. foreign policy, including U.S. nuclear disarmament and arms control policy, and to separate them from those practiced by Nixon's predecessors. They also intended, through linkage, to make U.S. arms control policy part of détente ... His policy of linkage had, in fact, failed. It failed mainly because it was based on flawed assumptions and false premises, the foremost of which was that the Soviet Union wanted the Strategic Arms Limitation Agreement much more than the United States did.[187]

Seeking to foster better relations with the United States, China and the Soviet Union both cut back on their diplomatic support for North Vietnam and advised Hanoi to come to terms militarily.[188] Nixon later described his strategy:

I had long believed that an indispensable element of any successful peace initiative in Vietnam was to enlist, if possible, the help of the Soviets and the Chinese. Though rapprochement with China and détente with the Soviet Union were ends in themselves, I also considered them possible means to hasten the end of the war. At worst, Hanoi was bound to feel less confident if Washington was dealing with Moscow and Beijing. At best, if the two major Communist powers decided that they had bigger fish to fry, Hanoi would be pressured into negotiating a settlement we could accept.[189]

In 1973, Nixon encouraged the Export-Import Bank to finance in part a trade deal with the Soviet Union in which Armand Hammer's Occidental Petroleum would export phosphate from Florida to the Soviet Union, and import Soviet ammonia. The deal, valued at $20 billion over 20 years, involved the construction of two major Soviet port facilities at Odessa and Ventspils,[190][191][192] and a pipeline connecting four ammonia plants in the greater Volga region to the port at Odessa.[192] In 1973, Nixon announced his administration was committed to seeking most favored nation trade status with the USSR,[193] which was challenged by Congress in the Jackson-Vanik Amendment.[194]

During the previous two years, Nixon had made considerable progress in U.S.–Soviet relations, and he embarked on a second trip to the Soviet Union in 1974.[195] He arrived in Moscow on June 27 to a welcome ceremony, cheering crowds, and a state dinner at the Grand Kremlin Palace that evening.[195] Nixon and Brezhnev met in Yalta, where they discussed a proposed mutual defense pact, détente, and MIRVs. Nixon considered proposing a comprehensive test-ban treaty, but he felt he would not have time to complete it during his presidency.[195] There were no significant breakthroughs in these negotiations.[195]

Middle Eastern policy

[edit]

Nixon with Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir, June 1974.
Nixon with Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir, June 1974
Nixon with President Anwar Sadat of Egypt, June 1974

As part of the Nixon Doctrine, the U.S. avoided giving direct combat assistance to its allies and instead assisted them to defend themselves. During the Nixon administration, the U.S. greatly increased arms sales to the Middle East, particularly Israel, Iran, and Saudi Arabia.[196] The Nixon administration strongly supported Israel, an American ally in the Middle East, but the support was not unconditional. Nixon believed Israel should make peace with its Arab neighbors and that the U.S. should encourage it. The president believed that—except during the Suez Crisis—the U.S. had failed to intervene with Israel, and should use the leverage of the large U.S. military aid to Israel to urge the parties to the negotiating table. The Arab-Israeli conflict was not a major focus of Nixon's attention during his first term—for one thing, he felt that no matter what he did, American Jews would oppose his reelection.[a]

On October 6, 1973, an Arab coalition led by Egypt and Syria, supported with arms and materiel by the Soviet Union, attacked Israel in the Yom Kippur War. Israel suffered heavy losses, and Nixon ordered an airlift to resupply Israeli losses, cutting through inter-departmental squabbles and bureaucracy and taking personal responsibility for any response by Arab nations. More than a week later, by the time the U.S. and Soviet Union began negotiating a truce, Israel had penetrated deep into enemy territory. The truce negotiations rapidly escalated into a superpower crisis; when Israel gained the upper hand, Egyptian president Sadat requested a joint U.S.–USSR peacekeeping mission, which the U.S. refused. When Soviet Premier Brezhnev threatened to unilaterally enforce any peacekeeping mission militarily, Nixon ordered the U.S. military to DEFCON3,[197] placing all U.S. military personnel and bases on alert for nuclear war. This was the closest the world had come to nuclear war since the Cuban Missile Crisis. Brezhnev backed down as a result of Nixon's actions.[198]

Because Israel's victory was largely due to U.S. support, the Arab OPEC nations retaliated by refusing to sell crude oil to the U.S., resulting in the 1973 oil crisis.[199] The embargo caused gasoline shortages and rationing in the United States in late 1973, but was eventually ended by the oil-producing nations as peace in the Middle East took hold.[200]

After the war, and under Nixon's presidency, the U.S. reestablished relations with Egypt for the first time since 1967. Nixon used the Middle East crisis to restart the stalled Middle East Peace Negotiations; he wrote in a confidential memo to Kissinger on October 20:

I believe that, beyond a doubt, we are now facing the best opportunity we have had in 15 years to build a lasting peace in the Middle East. I am convinced history will hold us responsible if we let this opportunity slip by ... I now consider a permanent Middle East settlement to be the most important final goal to which we must devote ourselves.[201]

Nixon made one of his final international visits as president to the Middle East in June 1974, and became the first president to visit Israel.[202]

South Asia policy

[edit]
Nixon with Pakistani president Yahya Khan at the White House, October 1970

Since the 1960s, the United States has perceived Pakistan as an integral bulwark against global communism in the Cold War. Nixon was fond of Pakistani president Yahya Khan and, according to American journalist Gary Bass, "Nixon liked very few people, but he did like General Agha Muhammad Yahya Khan."[203]

During the Bangladesh Liberation War, the United States stood by Pakistan against Bengali nationalists in terms of diplomacy and military threats.[204] Nixon urged President Khan multiple times to exercise restraint,[205] fearing an Indian invasion of Pakistan that would lead to Indian domination of the subcontinent and strengthen the position of the Soviet Union.[206] In the wake of the Third India–Pakistan War, Nixon issued a statement blaming Pakistan for starting the conflict and blaming India for escalating it while personally favoring a ceasefire.[207] The United States used the threat of an aid cut-off to force Pakistan to back down, while its continued military aid to Islamabad prevented India from launching incursions deeper into the country. Nixon denied getting involved in the situation, saying that it was an internal matter of Pakistan, but when Pakistan's defeat seemed certain, he sent the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise to the Bay of Bengal.[208]

Domestic policy

[edit]

Economy

[edit]
Nixon at the Washington Senators' 1969 Opening Day with team owner Bob Short (arms folded) and Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn (hand on mouth). Nixon's aide, Major Jack Brennan, sits behind them in uniform

At the time Nixon took office in 1969, inflation was at 4.7 percent—its highest rate since the Korean War. The Great Society had been enacted under Johnson, which, together with the Vietnam War costs, was causing large budget deficits. Unemployment was low, but interest rates were at their highest in a century.[209] Nixon's major economic goal was to reduce inflation; the most obvious means of doing so was to end the war.[209] This was not done in Nixon's first term, and the U.S. economy continued to struggle through 1970, contributing to a lackluster Republican performance in the midterm congressional elections (Democrats controlled both Houses of Congress throughout Nixon's presidency).[210] According to political economist Nigel Bowles in his 2011 study of Nixon's economic record, the new president did little to alter Johnson's policies through the first year of his presidency.[211]

Nixon was far more interested in foreign affairs than domestic policies, but he believed that voters tend to focus on their own financial condition and that economic conditions were a threat to his reelection. As part of his "New Federalism" philosophy, he proposed greater local autonomy in the allocation of domestic spending through grants to the states. These proposals were, for the most part, lost in the congressional budget process. However, Nixon gained political credit for advocating them.[210] In 1970, Congress had granted the president the power to impose wage and price freezes, though the Democratic majorities, knowing Nixon had opposed such controls throughout his career, did not expect Nixon to actually use the authority.[211] With inflation unresolved by August 1971, and an election year looming, Nixon convened a summit of his economic advisers at Camp David. Nixon's options were to limit fiscal and monetary expansionist policies that reduced unemployment or end the dollar's fixed exchange rate; Nixon's dilemma has been cited as an example of the Impossible trinity in international economics.[212][213] He then announced temporary wage and price controls, allowed the dollar to float against other currencies, and ended the convertibility of the dollar into gold.[214] Bowles points out,

by identifying himself with a policy whose purpose was inflation's defeat, Nixon made it difficult for Democratic opponents ... to criticize him. His opponents could offer no alternative policy that was either plausible or believable, since the one they favored was one they had designed but which the president had appropriated for himself.[211]

Nixon's policies dampened inflation through 1972, although their aftereffects contributed to inflation during his second term and into the Ford administration.[214] Nixon's decision to end the gold standard in the United States led to the collapse of the Bretton Woods system. According to Thomas Oatley, "the Bretton Woods system collapsed so that Nixon might win the 1972 presidential election."[212]

After Nixon won re-election, inflation was returning.[215] He reimposed price controls in June 1973. The price controls became unpopular with the public and businesspeople, who saw powerful labor unions as preferable to the price board bureaucracy.[215] The controls produced food shortages, as meat disappeared from grocery stores and farmers drowned chickens rather than sell them at a loss.[215] Despite the failure to control inflation, controls were slowly ended, and on April 30, 1974, their statutory authorization lapsed.[215]

Governmental initiatives and organization

[edit]
Nixon gives the 1971 State of the Union Address
Official Nixon portrait by James Anthony Wills, c. 1984

Nixon advocated a "New Federalism", which would devolve power to state and local elected officials, though Congress was hostile to these ideas and enacted few of them.[216] He eliminated the Cabinet-level United States Post Office Department, which in 1971 became the government-run United States Postal Service.[217]

Nixon was a late supporter of the conservation movement. Environmental policy had not been a significant issue in the 1968 election, and the candidates were rarely asked for their views on the subject. Nixon broke new ground by discussing environmental policy in his State of the Union speech in 1970. He saw that the first Earth Day in April 1970 presaged a wave of voter interest on the subject, and sought to use that to his benefit; in June he announced the formation of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).[218] He relied on his domestic advisor John Ehrlichman, who favored protection of natural resources, to keep him "out of trouble on environmental issues."[219] Other initiatives supported by Nixon included the Clean Air Act of 1970 and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), and the National Environmental Policy Act required environmental impact statements for many Federal projects.[219][218] Nixon vetoed the Clean Water Act of 1972—objecting not to the policy goals of the legislation but to the amount of money to be spent on them, which he deemed excessive. After Congress overrode his veto, Nixon impounded the funds he deemed unjustifiable.[220]

In 1971, Nixon proposed health insurance reform—a private health insurance employer mandate,[b] federalization of Medicaid for poor families with dependent minor children,[221] and support for health maintenance organizations (HMOs).[222] A limited HMO bill was enacted in 1973.[222] In 1974, Nixon proposed more comprehensive health insurance reform—a private health insurance employer mandate[b] and replacement of Medicaid by state-run health insurance plans available to all, with income-based premiums and cost sharing.[223]

Nixon was concerned about the prevalence of domestic drug use in addition to drug use among American soldiers in Vietnam. He called for a war on drugs and pledged to cut off sources of supply abroad. He also increased funds for education and for rehabilitation facilities.[224]

As one policy initiative, Nixon called for more money for sickle-cell research, treatment, and education in February 1971[225] and signed the National Sickle Cell Anemia Control Act on May 16, 1972.[226][227][c] While Nixon called for increased spending on such high-profile items as sickle-cell disease and for a war on cancer, at the same time he sought to reduce overall spending at the National Institutes of Health.[228]

Civil rights

[edit]
Graph of increases in U.S. incarceration rate

The Nixon presidency witnessed the first large-scale integration of public schools in the South.[229] Nixon sought a middle way between the segregationist Wallace and liberal Democrats, whose support of integration was alienating some Southern whites.[230] Hopeful of doing well in the South in 1972, he sought to dispose of desegregation as a political issue before then. Soon after his inauguration, he appointed Vice President Agnew to lead a task force, which worked with local leaders—both white and black—to determine how to integrate local schools. Agnew had little interest in the work, and most of it was done by Labor Secretary George Shultz. Federal aid was available, and a meeting with President Nixon was a possible reward for compliant committees. By September 1970, less than ten percent of black children were attending segregated schools. By 1971, however, tensions over desegregation surfaced in Northern cities, with angry protests over the busing of children to schools outside their neighborhood to achieve racial balance. Nixon opposed busing personally but enforced court orders requiring its use.[231]

Some scholars, such as James Morton Turner and John Isenberg, believe that Nixon, who had advocated for civil rights in his 1960 campaign, slowed down desegregation as president, appealing to the racial conservatism of Southern whites, who were angered by the civil rights movement. This, he hoped, would boost his election chances in 1972.[232][233]

In addition to desegregating public schools, Nixon implemented the Philadelphia Plan in 1970—the first significant federal affirmative action program.[234] He also endorsed the Equal Rights Amendment after it passed both houses of Congress in 1972 and went to the states for ratification.[235] He also pushed for African American civil rights and economic equity through a concept known as black capitalism.[236] Nixon had campaigned as an ERA supporter in 1968, though feminists criticized him for doing little to help the ERA or their cause after his election. Nevertheless, he appointed more women to administration positions than Lyndon Johnson had.[237]

Space policy

[edit]
Nixon visiting the Apollo 11 astronauts in quarantine aboard the aircraft carrier USS Hornet

After a nearly decade-long national effort, the United States won the race to land astronauts on the Moon on July 20, 1969, with the flight of Apollo 11. Nixon spoke with Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin during their moonwalk. He called the conversation "the most historic phone call ever made from the White House".[238]

Nixon was unwilling to keep funding for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) at the high level seen during the 1960s as NASA prepared to send men to the Moon. NASA Administrator Thomas O. Paine drew up ambitious plans for the establishment of a permanent base on the Moon by the end of the 1970s and the launch of a crewed expedition to Mars as early as 1981. Nixon rejected both proposals due to the expense.[239] Nixon also canceled the Air Force Manned Orbital Laboratory program in 1969, because uncrewed spy satellites were a more cost-effective way to achieve the same reconnaissance objective.[240] NASA cancelled the last three planned Apollo lunar missions to place Skylab in orbit more efficiently and free money up for the design and construction of the Space Shuttle.[241]

On May 24, 1972, Nixon approved a five-year cooperative program between NASA and the Soviet space program, culminating in the 1975 joint mission of an American Apollo and Soviet Soyuz spacecraft linking in space.[242]

Reelection, Watergate scandal, and resignation

[edit]

1972 presidential campaign

[edit]
Results of the 1972 presidential election. Nixon won 520 electoral college votes (60.7% of the popular vote) to George McGovern's 17.

Nixon believed his rise to power had peaked at a moment of political realignment. The Democratic "Solid South" had long been a source of frustration to Republican ambitions. Goldwater had won several Southern states by opposing the Civil Rights Act of 1964 but had alienated more moderate Southerners. Nixon's efforts to gain Southern support in 1968 were diluted by Wallace's candidacy. Through his first term, he pursued a Southern Strategy with policies, such as his desegregation plans, that would be broadly acceptable among Southern whites, encouraging them to realign with the Republicans in the aftermath of the civil rights movement. He nominated two Southern conservatives, Clement Haynsworth and G. Harrold Carswell, to the Supreme Court, but neither was confirmed by the Senate.[243]

Nixon entered his name on the New Hampshire primary ballot on January 5, 1972, effectively announcing his candidacy for reelection.[244] Virtually assured the Republican nomination,[245] the President had initially expected his Democratic opponent to be Massachusetts senator Ted Kennedy (brother of the late president), who was largely removed from contention after the July 1969 Chappaquiddick incident.[246] Instead, Maine senator Edmund Muskie became the front runner, with South Dakota senator George McGovern in a close second place.[244]

On June 10, McGovern won the California primary and secured the Democratic nomination.[247] The following month, Nixon was renominated at the 1972 Republican National Convention. He dismissed the Democratic platform as cowardly and divisive.[248] McGovern intended to sharply reduce defense spending[249] and supported amnesty for draft evaders as well as abortion rights. With some of his supporters believed to be in favor of drug legalization, McGovern was perceived as standing for "amnesty, abortion and acid". McGovern was also damaged by his vacillating support for his original running mate, Missouri senator Thomas Eagleton, dumped from the ticket following revelations that he had received electroshock treatment for depression.[250][251] Nixon was ahead in most polls for the entire election cycle, and was reelected on November 7, 1972, in one of the largest landslide election victories in American history. He defeated McGovern with over 60 percent of the popular vote, losing only in Massachusetts and D.C.[252]

Watergate

[edit]
Nixon takes questions at 1973 press conference

The term Watergate has come to encompass an array of clandestine and often illegal activities undertaken by members of the Nixon administration. Those activities included "dirty tricks", such as bugging the offices of political opponents, and the harassment of activist groups and political figures. The activities were brought to light after five men were caught breaking into the Democratic Party headquarters at the Watergate complex in Washington, D.C., on June 17, 1972. The Washington Post picked up on the story; reporters Carl Bernstein and Bob Woodward relied on an informant known as "Deep Throat"—later revealed to be Mark Felt, associate director at the FBI—to link the men to the Nixon administration. Nixon downplayed the scandal as mere politics, calling news articles biased and misleading. A series of revelations made it clear that the Committee to Re-elect President Nixon, and later the White House, were involved in attempts to sabotage the Democrats. Senior aides such as White House Counsel John Dean faced prosecution; in total 48 officials were convicted of wrongdoing.[139][253][254]

Demonstrator demands impeachment, October 1973
On November 17, 1973, President Nixon held a press conference at Disney's Contemporary Resort and famously said "I'm not a crook"

In July 1973, White House aide Alexander Butterfield testified under oath to Congress that Nixon had a secret taping system and recorded his conversations and phone calls in the Oval Office. These tapes were subpoenaed by Watergate Special Counsel Archibald Cox; Nixon provided transcripts of the conversations but not the actual tapes, citing executive privilege. With the White House and Cox at loggerheads, Nixon had Cox fired in October in the "Saturday Night Massacre"; he was replaced by Leon Jaworski. In November, Nixon's lawyers revealed that a tape of conversations held in the White House on June 20, 1972, had an 18+12 minute gap.[254] Rose Mary Woods, the President's personal secretary, claimed responsibility for the gap, saying that she had accidentally wiped the section while transcribing the tape, but her story was widely mocked. The gap, while not conclusive proof of wrongdoing by the President, cast doubt on Nixon's statement that he had been unaware of the cover-up.[255]

Though Nixon lost much popular support, even from his own party, he rejected accusations of wrongdoing and vowed to stay in office.[254] He admitted he had made mistakes but insisted he had no prior knowledge of the burglary, did not break any laws, and did not learn of the cover-up until early 1973.[256] On October 10, 1973, Vice President Agnew resigned for reasons unrelated to Watergate: he was convicted on charges of bribery, tax evasion, and money laundering during his tenure as governor of Maryland. Believing his first choice, John Connally, would not be confirmed by Congress,[257] Nixon chose Gerald Ford, Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, to replace Agnew.[258] One researcher suggests Nixon effectively disengaged from his own administration after Ford was sworn in as vice president on December 6, 1973.[259]

On November 17, 1973, during a televised question-and-answer session[260] with 400 Associated Press managing editors, Nixon said, "People have got to know whether or not their president is a crook. Well, I'm not a crook. I've earned everything I've got."[261]

Nixon announces the release of edited transcripts of the Watergate tapes, April 29, 1974

The legal battle over the tapes continued through early 1974, and in April Nixon announced the release of 1,200 pages of transcripts of White House conversations between himself and his aides. The House Judiciary Committee opened impeachment hearings against the President on May 9, 1974, which were televised on the major TV networks. These hearings culminated in votes for impeachment.[256] On July 24, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that the full tapes, not just selected transcripts, must be released.[262]

The scandal grew to involve a slew of additional allegations against the President, ranging from the improper use of government agencies to accepting gifts in office and his personal finances and taxes; Nixon repeatedly stated his willingness to pay any outstanding taxes due, and later paid $465,000 (equivalent to $3 million in 2024) in back taxes in 1974.[263]

Nixon Oval Office meeting with H. R. Haldeman: the "Smoking Gun" Conversation, June 23, 1972 (Full Transcript)

Even with support diminished by the continuing series of revelations, Nixon hoped to fight the charges. But one of the new tapes, recorded soon after the break-in, demonstrated that Nixon had been told of the White House connection to the Watergate burglaries soon after they took place, and had approved plans to thwart the investigation. In a statement accompanying the release of what became known as the "Smoking Gun Tape" on August 5, 1974, Nixon accepted blame for misleading the country about when he had been told of White House involvement, stating that he had had a lapse of memory.[264] Senate Minority Leader Hugh Scott, Senator Barry Goldwater, and House Minority Leader John Jacob Rhodes met with Nixon soon after. Rhodes told Nixon he faced certain impeachment in the House. Scott and Goldwater told the president that he had, at most, only 15 votes in his favor in the Senate, far fewer than the 34 needed to avoid removal from office.[265]

Resignation

[edit]
Nixon leaving the White House on Marine One shortly before his resignation became effective on August 9, 1974
President Nixon's resignation speech

On August 8, 1974, facing a loss of political support and it being increasingly certain that he would be impeached and removed from office, Nixon addressed the nation on television, announcing that he would resign the presidency the following day, on August 9.[256] His resignation speech was delivered from the Oval Office and was carried live on radio and television. Nixon said he was resigning for the good of the country and asked the nation to support the new president, Gerald Ford. Nixon went on to review the accomplishments of his presidency, especially in foreign policy.[266] In defending his presidency, Nixon quoted "Citizenship in a Republic", a 1910 speech by Theodore Roosevelt:

Sometimes I have succeeded and sometimes I have failed, but always I have taken heart from what Theodore Roosevelt once said about the man in the arena, "whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs and comes up short again and again because there is not effort without error and shortcoming, but who does actually strive to do the deed, who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself in a worthy cause, who at the best knows in the end the triumphs of high achievements and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly".[267]

Nixon's speech received generally favorable initial responses from network commentators, with only Roger Mudd of CBS News criticizing it for failing to admit wrongdoing.[268] Conrad Black, a Nixon biographer, labeled the resignation speech "a masterpiece", saying, "What was intended to be an unprecedented humiliation for any American president, Nixon converted into a virtual parliamentary acknowledgement of almost blameless insufficiency of legislative support to continue. He left while devoting half his address to a recitation of his accomplishments in office."[269]

Post-presidency (1974–1994)

[edit]

Pardon and illness

[edit]
President Ford announcing his decision to pardon Nixon, September 8, 1974, in the Oval Office

Following his resignation, the Nixons flew to their home La Casa Pacifica in San Clemente, California.[270] According to his biographer, Jonathan Aitken, "Nixon was a soul in torment" after his resignation.[271] Congress had funded Nixon's transition costs, including some salary expenses, though reducing the appropriation from $850,000 to $200,000. With some of his staff still with him, Nixon was at his desk by 7:00 a.m. with little to do.[271] His former press secretary, Ron Ziegler, sat with him alone for hours each day.[272]

Nixon's resignation had not put an end to the desire among many to see him punished. The Ford White House considered a pardon of Nixon, even though it would be unpopular in the country. Nixon, contacted by Ford emissaries, was initially reluctant to accept the pardon, but then agreed to do so. Ford insisted on a statement of contrition, but Nixon felt he had not committed any crimes and should not have to issue such a document. Ford eventually agreed and, on September 8, 1974, he granted Nixon a "full, free, and absolute pardon", which ended any possibility of an indictment. Nixon then released a statement:

I was wrong in not acting more decisively and more forthrightly in dealing with Watergate, particularly when it reached the stage of judicial proceedings and grew from a political scandal into a national tragedy. No words can describe the depth of my regret and pain at the anguish my mistakes over Watergate have caused the nation and the presidency, a nation I so deeply love, and an institution I so greatly respect.[273][274]

In October 1974, Nixon fell ill with phlebitis. Told by his doctors that he could either be operated on or die, a reluctant Nixon chose surgery, and President Ford visited him in the hospital. Nixon was under subpoena for the trial of three of his former aides—Dean, Haldeman, and John Ehrlichman—and The Washington Post, disbelieving his illness, printed a cartoon showing Nixon with a cast on the "wrong foot". Judge John Sirica excused Nixon's presence despite the defendants' objections.[275] Congress instructed Ford to retain Nixon's presidential papers—beginning a three-decade legal battle over the documents that was eventually won by the former president and his estate.[276] Nixon was in the hospital when the 1974 midterm elections were held, and Watergate and the pardon were contributing factors to the Republican loss of 49 seats in the House and four in the Senate.[277]

Return to public life

[edit]
President Jimmy Carter and ex-presidents Gerald Ford and Nixon meet at the White House before former vice president Hubert Humphrey's funeral, 1978

In December 1974, Nixon began planning his comeback despite the considerable ill will against him in the country. He wrote in his diary, referring to himself and Pat,

So be it. We will see it through. We've had tough times before, and we can take the tougher ones that we will have to go through now. That is perhaps what we were made for—to be able to take punishment beyond what anyone in this office has had before, particularly after leaving office. This is a test of character, and we must not fail the test.[278]

By early 1975, Nixon's health was improving. He maintained an office in a Coast Guard station 300 yards (270 m) from his home, at first taking a golf cart and later walking the route each day; he mainly worked on his memoirs.[279] He had hoped to wait before writing his memoirs; the fact that his assets were being eaten away by expenses and lawyer fees compelled him to begin work quickly.[280] He was handicapped in this work by the end of his transition allowance in February, which compelled him to part with many of his staff, including Ziegler.[281] In August of that year, he met with British talk-show host and producer David Frost, who paid him $600,000 (equivalent to $3.5 million in 2024) for a series of sit-down interviews, filmed and aired in 1977.[282] They began on the topic of foreign policy, recounting the leaders he had known, but the most remembered section of the interviews was that on Watergate. Nixon admitted he had "let down the country" and that "I brought myself down. I gave them a sword, and they stuck it in. And they twisted it with relish. And, I guess, if I'd been in their position, I'd have done the same thing."[283] The interviews garnered 45–50 million viewers, becoming the most-watched program of its kind in television history.[284]

The interviews helped improve Nixon's financial position—at one point in early 1975, he had had only $500 in the bank—as did the sale of his Key Biscayne property to a trust set up by wealthy friends of Nixon, such as Bebe Rebozo.[285] In February 1976, Nixon visited China at the personal invitation of Mao. Nixon had wanted to return to China but chose to wait until after Ford's own visit in 1975.[286] Nixon remained neutral in the close 1976 primary battle between Ford and Reagan. Ford won, but was defeated by Georgia governor Jimmy Carter in the general election. The Carter administration had little use for Nixon and blocked his planned trip to Australia, causing the government of Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser to withhold its official invitation.[287]

In 1976, Nixon was disbarred by the New York State Bar Association for obstruction of justice in the Watergate affair. He chose not to present any defense.[288] In early 1978, he visited the United Kingdom; there, he was shunned by American diplomats, most ministers of the James Callaghan government, and two former prime ministers, Harold Macmillan and Edward Heath. He was welcomed, however, by the Leader of the Opposition, Margaret Thatcher, and former prime ministers Lord Home and Sir Harold Wilson. Nixon addressed the Oxford Union regarding Watergate:

[Some people] felt that, on this matter that I had not handled it properly, and they were right. I screwed it up, and I paid the price.[289][290]

Author and elder statesman

[edit]
President Ronald Reagan meets with his three immediate predecessors, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter and Nixon, at the White House, October 1981; the three former presidents would represent the United States at the funeral of Egyptian president Anwar Sadat.

In 1978, Nixon published his memoirs, RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon, the first of nine books he was to author in his retirement.[270] John A. Farrell deemed it one of the better presidential memoirs, candid and capturing its author's voice; he deemed its rise up the bestseller lists justified.[291] Nixon visited the White House in 1979, invited by Carter for the state dinner for Chinese Vice Premier Deng Xiaoping. Carter had not wanted to invite Nixon, but Deng had said he would visit Nixon in California if the former president was not invited. Nixon had a private meeting with Deng and visited Beijing again in mid-1979.[292]

On August 10, 1979, the Nixons purchased a 12‐room condominium occupying the seventh floor of 817 Fifth Avenue New York City[293] after being rejected by two Manhattan co-ops.[294] When the deposed Shah of Iran died in Egypt in July 1980, Nixon defied the State Department, which intended to send no U.S. representative, by attending the funeral. Though Nixon had no official credentials, as a former president, he was seen as the American presence at its former ally's funeral.[295] Nixon supported Ronald Reagan for president in 1980, making television appearances portraying himself as, in biographer Stephen Ambrose's words, "the senior statesman above the fray".[296] He wrote guest articles for many publications both during the campaign and after Reagan's victory.[297] After 18 months in the New York City townhouse, Nixon and his wife moved in 1981 to Saddle River, New Jersey.[270][298]

Throughout the 1980s, Nixon maintained an ambitious schedule of speaking engagements and writing,[270] traveled, and met with many foreign leaders, especially those of Third World countries. He joined former presidents Ford and Carter as representatives of the United States at the funeral of Egyptian president Anwar Sadat.[270] On a trip to the Middle East, Nixon made his views known regarding Saudi Arabia and Libya, which attracted significant U.S. media attention; The Washington Post ran stories on Nixon's "rehabilitation".[299] Nixon visited the Soviet Union in 1986 and on his return sent President Reagan a lengthy memorandum containing foreign policy suggestions and his personal impressions of Soviet general secretary Mikhail Gorbachev.[270] Following this trip, Nixon was ranked in a Gallup poll as one of the ten most admired men in the world.[300]

Nixon with President Bill Clinton in the residence of the White House, March 1993

In 1986, Nixon addressed a convention of newspaper publishers, impressing his audience with his tour d'horizon of the world.[301] At the time, political pundit Elizabeth Drew wrote, "Even when he was wrong, Nixon still showed that he knew a great deal and had a capacious memory, as well as the capacity to speak with apparent authority, enough to impress people who had little regard for him in earlier times."[301] Newsweek ran a story on "Nixon's comeback" with the headline "He's back".[302]

On July 19, 1990, the Richard Nixon Library and Birthplace in Yorba Linda, California opened as a private institution with the Nixons in attendance. They were joined by a large crowd of people, including Presidents Ford, Reagan, and George H. W. Bush, as well as their wives, Betty, Nancy, and Barbara.[303] In January 1994, the former president founded the Nixon Center (today the Center for the National Interest), a Washington policy think tank and conference center.[304][305]

Pat Nixon died on June 22, 1993, of emphysema and lung cancer. Her funeral services were held on the grounds of the Richard Nixon Library and Birthplace. Former president Nixon was distraught throughout the interment and delivered a tribute to her inside the library building.[306]

Death and funeral

[edit]
Five U.S. presidents (then-incumbent president Bill Clinton, George H. W. Bush, Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter, and Gerald Ford) and their wives attending Nixon's funeral, April 27, 1994

Nixon suffered a severe stroke on April 18, 1994, while preparing to eat dinner in his home at Park Ridge, New Jersey.[307] A blood clot resulting from the atrial fibrillation he had suffered for many years had formed in his upper heart, broken off, and traveled to his brain.[308] He was taken to NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital in Manhattan, initially alert but unable to speak or to move his right arm or leg.[307] Damage to the brain caused swelling (cerebral edema) and Nixon slipped into a deep coma. He died at 9:08 p.m. on April 22, 1994, with his daughters at his bedside. He was 81 years old.[307]

Nixon's funeral took place on April 27, 1994, in Yorba Linda, California. Eulogists at the Nixon Library ceremony included President Bill Clinton, former secretary of state Henry Kissinger, Senate Minority Leader Bob Dole, California governor Pete Wilson, and the Reverend Billy Graham. Also in attendance were former presidents Ford, Carter, Reagan, George H. W. Bush, and their wives.[309]

Richard Nixon was buried beside his wife Pat on the grounds of the Nixon Library. In keeping with his wishes, his funeral was not a full state funeral, though his body did lie in repose in the Nixon Library lobby from April 26 to the morning of the funeral service.[310] Mourners waited in line for up to eight hours in chilly, wet weather to pay their respects.[311] At its peak, the line to pass by Nixon's casket was three miles long with an estimated 42,000 people waiting.[312]

John F. Stacks of Time magazine said of Nixon shortly after his death,

An outsized energy and determination drove him on to recover and rebuild after every self-created disaster that he faced. To reclaim a respected place in American public life after his resignation, he kept traveling and thinking and talking to the world's leaders ... and by the time Bill Clinton came to the White House [in 1993], Nixon had virtually cemented his role as an elder statesman. Clinton, whose wife served on the staff of the committee that voted to impeach Nixon, met openly with him and regularly sought his advice.[313]

Tom Wicker of The New York Times noted that Nixon had been equalled only by Franklin Roosevelt in being five times nominated on a major party ticket and, quoting Nixon's 1962 farewell speech, wrote,

Richard Nixon's jowly, beard-shadowed face, the ski-jump nose and the widow's peak, the arms upstretched in the V-sign, had been so often pictured and caricatured, his presence had become such a familiar one in the land, he had been so often in the heat of controversy, that it was hard to realize the nation really would not "have Nixon to kick around anymore".[314]

Ambrose said of the reaction to Nixon's death, "To everyone's amazement, except his, he's our beloved elder statesman."[315]

The graves of Nixon and his wife Pat

Upon Nixon's death, the news coverage mentioned Watergate and the resignation, but much of the coverage was favorable to the former president. The Dallas Morning News stated, "History ultimately should show that despite his flaws, he was one of our most farsighted chief executives."[316] This offended some; columnist Russell Baker complained of "a group conspiracy to grant him absolution".[317] Cartoonist Jeff Koterba of the Omaha World-Herald depicted History before a blank canvas, his subject Nixon, as America looks on eagerly. The artist urges his audience to sit down; the work will take some time to complete, as "this portrait is a little more complicated than most".[318] Hunter S. Thompson wrote a scathing piece denouncing Nixon for Rolling Stone, entitled "He Was a Crook" (which also appeared a month later in The Atlantic).[319] In his article, Thompson described Nixon as "a political monster straight out of Grendel and a very dangerous enemy".[319]

Legacy

[edit]
Richard Nixon's Presidential Library and Museum located in Yorba Linda, California

Historian and political scientist James MacGregor Burns asked of Nixon, "How can one evaluate such an idiosyncratic president, so brilliant and so morally lacking?"[320] Evaluations of his presidency have proven complex, contrasting his presidency's domestic and foreign policy successes with the acrimonious circumstances of his departure.[320] According to Ambrose, "Nixon wanted to be judged by what he accomplished. What he will be remembered for is the nightmare he put the country through in his second term and for his resignation."[321] Irwin Gellman, who chronicled Nixon's congressional career, suggests, "He was remarkable among his congressional peers, a success story in a troubled era, one who steered a sensible anti-Communist course against the excess of McCarthy."[322] Aitken feels that "Nixon, both as a man and as a statesman, has been excessively maligned for his faults and inadequately recognised for his virtues. Yet even in a spirit of historical revisionism, no simple verdict is possible."[323]

Nixon saw his policies on Vietnam, China, and the Soviet Union as central to his place in history.[196] Nixon's onetime opponent George McGovern commented in 1983, "President Nixon probably had a more practical approach to the two superpowers, China and the Soviet Union, than any other president since World War II ... With the exception of his inexcusable continuation of the war in Vietnam, Nixon really will get high marks in history."[324] Political scientist Jussi Hanhimäki disagrees, saying that Nixon's diplomacy was merely a continuation of the Cold War policy of containment by diplomatic, rather than military, means.[196] Historian Christopher Andrew concludes that "Nixon was a great statesman on the world stage as well as a shabby practitioner of electoral politics in the domestic arena. While the criminal farce of Watergate was in the making, Nixon's inspirational statesmanship was establishing new working relationships both with Communist China and with the Soviet Union."[325]

Nixon's stance on domestic affairs has been credited with the passage and enforcement of environmental and regulatory legislation. In a 2011 paper on Nixon and the environment, historian Paul Charles Milazzo points to Nixon's creation of the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and to his enforcement of legislation such as the 1973 Endangered Species Act, stating that "though unsought and unacknowledged, Richard Nixon's environmental legacy is secure".[326] Nixon himself did not consider the environmental advances he made in office an important part of his legacy; some historians contend that his choices were driven more by political expediency than any strong environmentalism.[219] Some historians say Nixon's Southern Strategy turned the Southern United States into a Republican stronghold, while others deem economic factors more important in the change.[243] Throughout his career, Nixon moved his party away from the control of isolationists, and as a Congressman, he was a persuasive advocate of containing Soviet communism.[327]

Historian Keith W. Olson has written that Nixon left a legacy of fundamental mistrust of government, rooted in Vietnam and Watergate.[328] During the impeachment of Bill Clinton in 1998, both sides tried to use Nixon and Watergate to their advantage: Republicans suggested that Clinton's misconduct was comparable to Nixon's, while Democrats contended that Nixon's actions had been far more serious than Clinton's.[329] For a time, there was a decrease in the power of the presidency as Congress passed restrictive legislation in the wake of Watergate. Olson suggests that legislation in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks restored the president's power.[328]

According to his biographer Herbert Parmet, "Nixon's role was to steer the Republican party along a middle course, somewhere between the competitive impulses of the Rockefellers, the Goldwaters, and the Reagans."[330]

A self-described "progressive conservative,"[331][332] Nixon presided over a number of activist governmental initiatives during the course of his presidency. As one speechwriter said of Nixon, "His heart was on the right, and his head was, with FDR, 'slightly left of center.'"[333]

Commenting on Nixon's progressive conservative approach to government, one historian has argued that

Nixon's progressive conservatism gave his administration's policies a distinctive cast that defied easy categorization. Nixon worked hard to find a middle ground between the hyperactivism of the growth liberals JFK and LBJ and the sort of minimalist government championed by Barry Goldwater and the Republican right. Driven by his own predilections and by the object lesson of growth liberalism's implosion, Nixon moved as president to scale back government undertakings abroad and at home while still honoring basic international and domestic commitments.[334]

Personality and public image

[edit]

Nixon's career was frequently dogged by his persona and the public's perception of it. Editorial cartoonists and comedians often exaggerated his appearance and mannerisms to the point where the line between the human and the caricature became increasingly blurred. He was often portrayed with unshaven jowls, slumped shoulders, and a furrowed, sweaty brow.[335]

Nixon with Elvis Presley in December 1970

Nixon had a complex personality, both very secretive and awkward, yet strikingly reflective about himself. He was inclined to distance himself from people and was formal in all aspects, wearing a coat and tie even when home alone.[336] Nixon biographer Conrad Black described him as being "driven" though also "uneasy with himself in some ways".[337] According to Black, Nixon

thought that he was doomed to be traduced, double-crossed, unjustly harassed, misunderstood, underappreciated, and subjected to the trials of Job, but that by the application of his mighty will, tenacity, and diligence, he would ultimately prevail.[338]

1960 campaign button

Nixon sometimes drank alcohol to excess, especially in 1970. He was also prescribed sleeping pills. According to Ray Price, Nixon sometimes took them in together. Nixon also took dilantin, recommended by Jack Dreyfus. That medicine is usually prescribed to treat and prevent seizures, but in Nixon's case, it was for depression. His periodic overindulgences, especially during stressful times such as during Apollo 13, concerned Price and others, including then-advisor Ehrlichman and long-time valet Manolo Sanchez.[339] Author David Owen deemed Nixon an alcoholic.[340][341]

Biographer Elizabeth Drew summarized Nixon as a "smart, talented man, but most peculiar and haunted of presidents".[342] In his account of the Nixon presidency, author Richard Reeves described Nixon as "a strange man of uncomfortable shyness, who functioned best alone with his thoughts".[343] Nixon's presidency was doomed by his personality, Reeves argues:

He assumed the worst in people, and he brought out the worst in them ... He clung to the idea of being "tough". He thought that was what had brought him to the edge of greatness. But that was what betrayed him. He could not open himself to other men, and he could not open himself to greatness.[344]

In October 1999, a volume of 1971 White House audio tapes was released, which contained multiple statements by Nixon deemed derogatory toward Jews.[345] In one conversation with H. R. Haldeman, Nixon said that Washington was "full of Jews" and that "most Jews are disloyal", making exceptions for some of his top aides.[346] He then added, "But, Bob, generally speaking, you can't trust the bastards. They turn on you. Am I wrong or right?"[346] Elsewhere on the 1971 recordings, Nixon denies being antisemitic, saying, "If anybody who's been in this chair ever had reason to be antisemitic, I did ... And I'm not, you know what I mean?"[346]

Nixon believed that putting distance between himself and other people was necessary for him as he advanced in his political career and became president. Even Bebe Rebozo, by some accounts his closest friend, did not call him by his first name. Nixon said of this,

Even with close friends, I don't believe in letting your hair down, confiding this and that and the other thing—saying, "Gee, I couldn't sleep ..." I believe you should keep your troubles to yourself. That's just the way I am. Some people are different. Some people think it's good therapy to sit with a close friend and, you know, just spill your guts ... [and] reveal their inner psyche—whether they were breast-fed or bottle-fed. Not me. No way.[347]

When Nixon was told that most Americans felt they did not know him even at the end of his career, he replied, "Yeah, it's true. And it's not necessary for them to know."[347]

Books

[edit]
External videos
video icon Part One of Booknotes interview with Nixon on Seize the Moment, February 23, 1992
video icon Part Two of Booknotes interview, March 1, 1992
  • Nixon, Richard M. (1960). Six Crises. Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-00125-0.
  • Nixon, Richard M. (1978). RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-70741-5.
  • Nixon, Richard M. (1980). The Real War. Sidgwick & Jackson Ltd. ISBN 978-0-283-98650-5.
  • Nixon, Richard M. (1982). Leaders. Random House ISBN 978-0-446-51249-7.
  • Nixon, Richard M. (1984). Real Peace. Sidgwick & Jackson Ltd. ISBN 978-0-283-99076-2.
  • Nixon, Richard M. (1987). No More Vietnams. Arbor House Publishing. ISBN 978-0-87795-668-6.
  • Nixon, Richard M. (1988). 1999: Victory Without War. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-62712-6.
  • Nixon, Richard M. (1990). In the Arena: A Memoir of Victory, Defeat, and Renewal. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-72318-7.
  • Nixon, Richard M. (1992). Seize the Moment: America's Challenge in a One-Superpower World. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-74343-7.
  • Nixon, Richard M. (1994). Beyond Peace. Random House. ISBN 978-0-679-43323-1.

See also

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Notes

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References

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Further reading

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Richard Milhous Nixon (January 9, 1913 – April 22, 1994) was an American statesman and lawyer who served as the 37th president of the United States from 1969 until his resignation in 1974, and previously as the 36th vice president from 1953 to 1961 under Dwight D. Eisenhower.[1][2] A Republican with a career rooted in congressional service—including as a U.S. representative and senator from California—Nixon gained prominence for his aggressive anti-communist stance during the early Cold War, notably through investigations of suspected Soviet infiltration in government.[1] Nixon's presidency featured landmark foreign policy initiatives, including his 1972 visit to the People's Republic of China that initiated normalization of relations after decades of isolation, and strategic détente with the Soviet Union culminating in arms control agreements like SALT I.[3][4] He pursued "Vietnamization" to reduce direct U.S. combat involvement in the Vietnam War, ended the military draft, enacted anticrime legislation, and created the Environmental Protection Agency to address pollution amid growing ecological concerns.[2][5] Reelected in 1972 with a massive electoral mandate, his second term collapsed due to the Watergate scandal, involving a 1972 break-in at Democratic headquarters and subsequent White House efforts to obstruct justice through cover-ups, wiretaps, and misuse of federal agencies, leading to his unprecedented resignation on August 9, 1974, to forestall likely impeachment and removal.[6][7] Nixon's legacy endures as a figure of geopolitical realism whose pragmatic maneuvers reshaped global alignments, tempered by the domestic ethical breaches that eroded public trust in executive power.[3][7]

Early Life and Education

Childhood and Family Background

Richard Milhous Nixon was born on January 9, 1913, in a modest frame house on his parents' citrus ranch in Yorba Linda, California, to Francis Anthony "Frank" Nixon (1878–1956), a Pennsylvania native who had migrated west, and Hannah Milhous Nixon (1885–1967), descended from a long line of Irish Quakers.[1][8] He was the second of five sons—Harold (1909–1930), Donald (1914–1987), Arthur (1918–1925), and Edward (1930–2019)—in a household shaped by Hannah's devout Quaker faith, which Frank adopted after their 1908 marriage.[9] The family's religious practices included regular Bible readings, silent worship at East Whittier Friends Church, and adherence to principles of simplicity, pacifism, honesty, and abstinence from alcohol, dancing, and swearing.[10] The Yorba Linda ranch, focused on lemons and other citrus, faced persistent economic challenges due to poor soil, market fluctuations, and Frank's limited farming experience, culminating in its failure and sale in 1922 when Nixon was nine years old.[1] The family then relocated about ten miles east to Whittier, California, to be closer to Hannah's relatives, where Frank opened a combination gas station and grocery store that provided a modest livelihood amid ongoing financial strains.[9] Nixon assisted with farm chores like tending groves and livestock before the move, and later stocked shelves, pumped gas, rose at 4 a.m. to drive to Los Angeles markets for produce, experiences that reinforced habits of diligence and frugality in a working-class environment marked by scarcity.[11] Tragedy compounded these difficulties: younger brother Arthur died on June 24, 1925, at age seven from tubercular encephalitis, and older brother Harold succumbed to tuberculosis on June 28, 1930, at age 21 after years of illness that required Hannah's prolonged nursing care away from home.[9] These losses, alongside the family's emphasis on self-reliance through manual labor and open discussions of current events at the dinner table, fostered Nixon's early traits of perseverance and introspection within the disciplined Quaker framework.[12]

Education and Formative Influences

Nixon enrolled at Whittier College in 1930, majoring in history, and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1934, finishing second in his class.[9] During his time there, he demonstrated strong leadership and analytical abilities through involvement in student government, where he won every election he contested, including as student body president; he also founded the Orthogonian society for students outside the elite Franklins group, excelled on the varsity debate team, and served as a reserve on the football team.[12] These experiences honed his skills in argumentation, strategy, and persuasion, as evidenced by his success in debate competitions and campus organizing.[13] In 1934, Nixon entered Duke University School of Law on a full scholarship, earning a Juris Doctor in 1937 and ranking third in his class based on academic performance.[14] He applied to the FBI on April 23, 1937, providing strong references and undergoing a positive interview and physical exam requested by J. Edgar Hoover, with initial approval for hire as a special agent, but the appointment was canceled due to timing conflicts with his California bar exam preparation and the FBI's training schedule. Despite these accomplishments, he faced rejections from prestigious law firms in New York City, Boston, and Los Angeles, which he attributed to the economic constraints of the Great Depression and his lack of influential connections, experiences that reinforced a sense of being an outsider in elite circles.[14] Nixon's education fostered an early interest in international affairs through extensive reading in history and self-directed study, developing a strategic mindset independent of formal military training.[15] At Whittier, exposure to historical texts and professors emphasizing American foundational principles, such as limited government, shaped his analytical approach to policy and power dynamics, though he later critiqued progressive influences like Woodrow Wilson while drawing on broader republican ideals.[16] These formative elements built a rigorous, first-principles-oriented intellect geared toward long-term geopolitical reasoning rather than ideological conformity.

Early Career

Military Service

Nixon received his commission as a lieutenant junior grade in the United States Naval Reserve on June 15, 1942, following completion of naval officer training at Quonset Point, Rhode Island.[17] Initially assigned to stateside duties, including aviation ground crew training at Ottumwa, Iowa, and administrative roles at the Alameda Naval Air Station in California, he requested overseas deployment and joined the South Pacific Combat Air Transport (SCAT) unit in August 1943.[18] In this logistical role, Nixon oversaw cargo handling, personnel assignments, and supply coordination for amphibious and air transport operations supporting Allied advances in the region.[1] Promoted to full lieutenant on October 1, 1943, Nixon commanded forward SCAT detachments at Vella Lavella and Bougainville in the Solomon Islands chain, where his unit facilitated the movement of troops, equipment, and supplies amid ongoing Japanese air raids and guerrilla threats.[19] By early 1944, he had risen to officer-in-charge of the SCAT depot on Bougainville, demonstrating efficiency in managing high-volume logistics under austere conditions, including the rapid turnaround of aircraft for combat support missions.[20] To supplement limited unit funds, Nixon organized high-stakes poker games among officers, using his winnings—estimated at several thousand dollars—to finance recreational facilities, such as an officers' club dubbed "Nick's Place," which earned him the moniker "Nick" for his shrewd, patient play.[21] These games highlighted his resourcefulness in resource-scarce environments but involved no frontline combat exposure, as his duties remained administrative and rear-echelon.[22] Nixon received a Letter of Commendation from the Secretary of the Navy for "meritorious and efficient performance of duty" as officer-in-charge at Bougainville and later Green Island, recognizing his contributions to operational readiness without personal claims of heroism or injury.[23] His service emphasized crisis management and organizational acumen in coordinating complex supply chains for amphibious assaults, skills later noted in naval evaluations for enhancing unit morale and efficiency amid tropical hardships.[17] Nixon was honorably discharged on January 1, 1946, at the rank of lieutenant, returning to civilian life with combat service ribbons but no battle stars, reflecting a non-combat logistical specialization throughout his wartime tenure.[1] Following his honorable discharge from the U.S. Navy on March 10, 1946, Nixon returned to Whittier, California, and rejoined the local law firm Wingert, Bewley & Nixon, where he had previously worked before entering military service.[17] [24] The firm specialized in general civil matters suited to a small community, including commercial disputes, probate administration, and real estate transactions.[25] Nixon's post-war legal practice was brief and unremarkable, constrained by Whittier's limited population and clientele base, which precluded major cases or courtroom prominence; he avoided divorce cases, finding the explicit discussions of marital and sexual details, often by emotional female clients, uncomfortable.[14] [26] He handled routine local work that generated modest income, sufficient to support his family—including his wife Pat Ryan, whom he had married on June 21, 1940, and their newborn daughter Patricia, born February 21, 1946—but offered no pathway to elite legal networks or financial windfalls.[1] This period highlighted Nixon's roots as a self-made attorney from a modest Quaker background, distant from the prestige of urban or Ivy League firms. Nixon maintained peripheral ties to family enterprises rooted in his upbringing, such as the Nixon family's earlier grocery and service station operations in Whittier, though he did not pursue independent business investments during this interval.[14] His legal earnings underwrote emerging political interests without yielding entrepreneurial breakthroughs, reinforcing a pragmatic focus on professional stability amid postwar readjustment.[1]

Entry into Politics

First Congressional Campaign

Following his discharge from the Navy in January 1946, Richard Nixon was recruited by the Committee of 100, a group of local Republican businessmen in California's 12th congressional district, to challenge five-term Democratic incumbent Jerry Voorhis.[27] The district, encompassing parts of Los Angeles and Orange counties, had historically favored Democrats, but post-World War II economic frustrations and opposition to New Deal policies created an opening for Republicans. Nixon, a 33-year-old attorney with no prior elected experience, filed as the Republican nominee under California's cross-filing system, which allowed candidates to appear on both party primaries.[27] Nixon's platform centered on promoting free enterprise and individual initiative against what he portrayed as excessive government control and bureaucratic overreach under Voorhis's long tenure.[28] He criticized Voorhis's endorsements from the CIO-PAC, highlighting alleged corruption and ties to radical groups to underscore concerns over labor union influence without claiming personal communist affiliation for the incumbent. Campaign tactics included five public debates, radio broadcasts to reach voters, and intensive grassroots organizing, with Nixon and his wife Pat conducting door-to-door canvassing to build personal connections in a district spanning urban and rural areas. Nixon personally financed half the campaign costs, investing $5,000 from his savings to sustain the effort against a better-known opponent.[28] The campaign aligned with a national Republican surge driven by voter backlash against Democratic control amid inflation and reconversion challenges, as the GOP gained 55 House seats to secure a majority for the first time since 1930. On November 5, 1946, Nixon defeated Voorhis in the general election, securing victory in a district where Democrats had previously held a registration edge.[29] He was sworn into the 80th Congress on January 3, 1947, transitioning from local legal practice to the federal stage.[28]

Alger Hiss Investigation

Richard Nixon, as a member of the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), interrogated Whittaker Chambers during hearings in August 1948 regarding alleged Communist infiltration in the State Department. On August 3, 1948, Chambers testified that Alger Hiss, a former high-ranking State Department official, had been a Communist Party member in the 1930s while employed in government.[30] Nixon, chairing a subcommittee with members including Robert McDowell, Karl Mundt, and others, met privately with Chambers on August 7, 1948, in New York to probe the claims further, focusing on Chambers' reluctance to initially allege espionage and emphasizing inconsistencies in Hiss's potential denials.[31] Nixon's assessment of Chambers' credibility, based on his detailed recollections and emotional testimony, contrasted with skepticism from some committee members toward the accusations absent physical proof. Hiss testified before HUAC on August 17, 1948, vehemently denying Chambers' allegations of Communist affiliation and prompting a face-to-face confrontation where both men sparred over personal details, such as Hiss's ownership of a pet canary.[32] Nixon, unconvinced by Hiss's composed demeanor—which he later described as overly polished—and persuaded by Chambers' consistency under pressure, advocated continued investigation despite pressure to drop the case. This persistence led to the discovery of corroborating documents: on November 17, 1948, during a libel suit filed by Hiss against Chambers, the latter produced microfilm strips—dubbed the "Pumpkin Papers" after their hiding place in a hollowed-out pumpkin on Chambers' Maryland farm—containing images of 65 State Department documents typed on a Woodstock machine owned by the Hisses, including four pages of notes in Hiss's handwriting dated 1938.[30][33] Forensic analysis confirmed the typewriter match, directly contradicting Hiss's prior testimony that he had not provided confidential papers to Chambers.[34] The Pumpkin Papers evidence prompted a federal grand jury to indict Hiss on two counts of perjury on December 15, 1948, for falsely denying under oath the transfer of documents and his espionage-related contacts with Chambers.[34] Hiss's first trial in May-July 1949 ended in a hung jury, but the second trial resulted in conviction on both counts on January 21, 1950, with a five-year prison sentence; he served 44 months after appeals failed.[35] The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit upheld the conviction in United States v. Hiss, 185 F.2d 822 (2d Cir. 1950), ruling the evidence sufficient to prove perjury beyond reasonable doubt, and the U.S. Supreme Court denied certiorari on June 25, 1951.[35] Chambers' testimony, initially limited to party membership, gained empirical validation through the documents, which demonstrated Hiss's access and transmission of classified materials during a period of Soviet espionage activity, though Hiss maintained innocence and attributed the evidence to forgery—a claim rejected by the courts.[30] Nixon's role in sustaining the probe amid institutional hesitancy was pivotal in unearthing this proof.

Senate Election and Red Scare Context

In the 1950 U.S. Senate election in California, Richard Nixon, the incumbent Republican congressman from the 12th district, secured the Republican nomination in the June primaries and faced Democratic nominee Helen Gahagan Douglas, a liberal representative known for her support of New Deal policies and civil rights initiatives.[36] The campaign unfolded against the backdrop of escalating Cold War tensions, including the Soviet atomic bomb test in 1949 and the outbreak of the Korean War on June 25, 1950, when North Korean forces invaded South Korea, fueling widespread fears of global communist expansion and domestic subversion. Nixon capitalized on these anxieties by emphasizing his record from the Alger Hiss case and portraying himself as an unwavering defender against communist influence, while highlighting Douglas's voting alignments with far-left figures such as Vito Marcantonio, the only House member who consistently opposed anti-subversion measures.[1] Nixon's strategy included distributing campaign literature printed on pink paper that documented Douglas's legislative record paralleling Marcantonio's, a tactic that led supporters and media to dub her the "pink lady," implying sympathies with communist-adjacent ideologies amid the era's second Red Scare.[37] Douglas countered by accusing Nixon of "McCarthyism" and character assassination, but her defense focused more on personal attacks than rebutting the specific vote alignments, which reflected genuine ideological differences in a period when Soviet espionage cases, such as those involving Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, underscored real security threats.[38] On November 7, 1950, Nixon won in a landslide, securing 1,173,245 votes (59.2 percent) to Douglas's 808,816 (40.8 percent), a margin exceeding 18 percentage points or approximately 364,000 votes, reflecting voter preference for his anti-communist stance in a state with a growing Republican base wary of Democratic ties to organized labor and Hollywood figures suspected of leftist leanings.[39] Following his victory, Nixon resigned his House seat on December 1, 1950, and was sworn in as California's junior senator on December 4, 1950, a maneuver that granted him seniority over senators elected in the same cycle who took office in January 1951.[40] During his brief Senate tenure from December 1950 to January 1953, Nixon prioritized internal security legislation, co-sponsoring measures like the McCarran Internal Security Act of 1950, which mandated registration of communist organizations and authorized detention of subversives during emergencies, thereby solidifying his national profile as a leading voice in the fight against domestic communism amid ongoing Korean War hostilities and Senator Joseph McCarthy's investigations.[1] This focus aligned with empirical evidence of Soviet infiltration in U.S. institutions, as later declassified Venona Project decrypts confirmed multiple espionage rings active in the 1940s, validating the era's heightened vigilance despite criticisms of overreach from academic and media sources often sympathetic to progressive causes.

Vice Presidency

Selection as Eisenhower's Running Mate

At the 1952 Republican National Convention in Chicago, held from July 7 to 11, Dwight D. Eisenhower secured the presidential nomination on the first ballot, after which party leaders nominated Richard Nixon, the 39-year-old junior U.S. Senator from California, as his running mate to balance the ticket.[41] Eisenhower, viewed as a centrist military hero with broad appeal, sought a partner who could counterbalance his moderate image by emphasizing staunch anti-communism amid Cold War tensions, a role Nixon filled through his prominent congressional role in exposing alleged Soviet spy Alger Hiss in 1948.[42] Nixon's selection also provided geographic leverage, tapping California's growing electoral influence with its 32 votes, while his relative youth injected energy to contrast the Democratic ticket's older candidates.[1] The choice reflected intraparty dynamics, as Eisenhower's supporters aimed to unify conservatives wary of his internationalist leanings by aligning with Nixon's record of aggressive opposition to perceived communist infiltration in government.[42] Initial vetting focused on Nixon's rapid ascent from House member to Senator in 1950, where he had built a reputation for partisan vigor without the scandals plaguing some rivals.[14] However, on August 5, 1952, the New York Times reported allegations of a secret $18,000 fund from California business supporters to cover Nixon's senatorial expenses, raising ethical concerns about potential influence peddling and prompting Eisenhower to privately consider dropping him from the ticket.[41] The controversy, amplified by Democratic attacks, threatened to fracture the Republican coalition just as the general election campaign accelerated, with some polls showing dips in ticket strength until Nixon's subsequent public accounting.[42] Ultimately, Nixon's retention solidified Western support, evidenced by Eisenhower's decisive California victory and overall gains in voter turnout among anti-communist Republicans.[1]

Checkers Speech and Political Survival

On September 23, 1952, Richard Nixon delivered a half-hour nationally televised and radio-broadcast address from Los Angeles, reaching an estimated audience of 60 million Americans, the largest for a political speech up to that time.[43][44] In response to allegations of impropriety regarding a supporter-contributed expense fund, Nixon provided a detailed financial disclosure, itemizing his modest assets—including a $10,000 inheritance from his parents spent on his first congressional campaign, no personal life insurance beyond a $10,000 GI policy, a $20,000 equity in his Washington home, and an old "Oldsmobile" automobile—while noting his Senate salary of $12,000 annually after taxes and family living expenses exceeding income.[43] He emphasized that the fund, totaling about $18,000 from contributors, was used solely for legitimate political and legal expenses such as travel and countersuing accusers, underwent independent audits showing no personal benefit, and rejected any characterization as a "slush fund" or secret account for undue influence.[44] To humanize his defense, Nixon recounted a personal anecdote about a black-and-white cocker spaniel puppy named Checkers, gifted anonymously to his daughter Tricia amid the controversy; he declared that, despite pressure to return it as an improper gift, "the kids love that dog" and he intended to keep it, underscoring that it represented the only non-political item he accepted.[43][45] Nixon explicitly refused to resign from the Republican ticket, stating he would not step down voluntarily and instead urged the public to contact his running mate, Dwight D. Eisenhower, with their views on whether he should remain; he pledged full cooperation with any Republican Party investigation and affirmed his loyalty to Eisenhower as the candidate best positioned to address national challenges.[44] The speech elicited an immediate and overwhelming public response, with the Republican National Committee reporting receipt of over 300,000 letters and telegrams—equivalent to signatures from about one million people—favoring Nixon's retention at a ratio of 350 to 1.[46] This deluge of support, including millions of additional calls and wires nationwide, shifted momentum decisively; Eisenhower, who had initially sought an independent probe into the allegations without committing to Nixon's future, publicly endorsed him the following day on September 24, 1952, affirming the ticket's unity and crediting the address for clarifying Nixon's integrity.[47][45] By circumventing party leadership and media intermediaries to appeal directly to voters via emerging television technology, the broadcast exemplified the efficacy of unfiltered mass communication in overriding elite skepticism and sustaining a political candidacy amid crisis.[48]

Duties and 1960 Defeat

As vice president, Nixon assumed an expanded role under President Eisenhower, who delegated significant responsibilities including attendance at National Security Council meetings and representation on foreign goodwill missions.[28][49] Nixon undertook numerous international trips, such as his May 1958 tour of Latin America, during which a mob in Caracas, Venezuela, attacked his motorcade on May 13, pelting the vehicle with rocks and attempting to overturn it amid anti-American protests.[50][51] Domestically, Nixon advocated for stronger civil rights enforcement, playing a key role in shepherding the Civil Rights Act of 1957 through Congress—the first such federal legislation since Reconstruction—which aimed to protect voting rights and established the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.[28][52] In 1960, Nixon secured the Republican presidential nomination on the first ballot at the party's convention and campaigned against Democratic Senator John F. Kennedy.[53] The campaign featured four televised debates, with the first on September 26 from Chicago drawing an audience of about 70 million; Nixon, recovering from illness and appearing pale without makeup on television, was perceived as less vigorous than the rested and tanned Kennedy, though radio listeners favored Nixon.[54][55] On November 8, Kennedy won the popular vote by 112,827 ballots (0.17 percentage points, 49.72% to 49.55%) and the Electoral College 303–219.[53][56] Nixon privately suspected irregularities, particularly in Illinois (where he trailed by 8,858 votes) and Texas (by 46,257 votes), citing reports of voter fraud involving deceased registrants and ballot stuffing in Chicago precincts controlled by Mayor Richard Daley.[57][58] Despite entreaties from Republican leaders for recounts that could have flipped those states' 51 electoral votes, Nixon declined to pursue legal challenges, prioritizing national stability and transition over prolonged dispute.[59] He publicly conceded on November 9 in Los Angeles, expressing regret over the outcome but affirming the process.[60] In a January 1961 farewell press interaction as his vice presidency ended, Nixon voiced bitterness toward the media, accusing biased coverage of contributing to his defeat, though he left office without further contesting the results.[61]

Path to the Presidency

1962 Gubernatorial Loss and Wilderness Years

Nixon sought the California governorship in 1962 as a means to rebound from his narrow 1960 presidential defeat, challenging incumbent Democratic Governor Edmund G. "Pat" Brown.[62] The campaign centered on economic issues, crime, and critiques of Brown's administration, with Nixon positioning himself as a seasoned national figure against Brown's local record.[63] On November 6, 1962, Brown secured re-election with 3,037,109 votes (51.89%) to Nixon's 2,740,351 (46.82%), a margin of approximately 296,758 votes or 5.07 percentage points.[62] In the morning after the election, on November 7, 1962, Nixon delivered what he termed his "last press conference," lambasting the media for biased coverage that he argued had unfairly portrayed him while shielding Brown.[64] He declared, "You won't have Nixon to kick around anymore, because, gentlemen, this is my last press conference," attributing his loss partly to reporters' focus on personal attacks and scandals rather than substantive policy.[65] This outburst reflected Nixon's longstanding frustration with press scrutiny, which he viewed as systematically slanted against conservative candidates—a pattern evident in selective emphasis on unverified rumors over verified achievements.[64] Following the defeat, Nixon published Six Crises in 1962, a memoir detailing his perspectives on pivotal events including the Hiss case, the 1952 fund controversy, and the 1960 election, emphasizing lessons in resilience and crisis management.[66] The book, released by Doubleday, served as both catharsis and strategic self-defense, countering narratives of political exhaustion by showcasing his analytical approach to adversity.[67] In early 1963, facing family financial pressures and doubting California's political viability, Nixon relocated to New York City, joining the law firm Mudge, Stern, Baldwin & Todd as a partner effective June 1.[68] [69] This shift allowed him to rebuild professionally amid personal strains, including his wife Pat's health issues and the demands on their daughters, yet he adhered to a disciplined routine of legal work and selective political engagement.[69] During the 1963–1966 "wilderness years," Nixon practiced corporate law in Manhattan, handling international clients and leveraging his foreign policy expertise, which provided financial stability and distance from West Coast media hostility.[1] Politically, he maintained low visibility while cultivating Republican networks; in 1964, he endorsed Senator Barry Goldwater's presidential bid after the California primary, delivering a unifying speech at the Republican National Convention despite initial neutrality amid party factionalism.[70] By 1966, Nixon shifted support toward more moderate figures like New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller in key contests and actively campaigned for GOP candidates nationwide, including Ronald Reagan's successful California gubernatorial run, helping to reverse Republican midterm setbacks through targeted endorsements and fundraising.[70] These efforts refuted perceptions of him as a "loser" by demonstrating sustained influence, as evidenced by private assessments of his viability among party insiders, rather than relying on public opinion polls skewed by recent losses.[71]

1968 Campaign Strategy

Nixon secured the Republican presidential nomination on the first ballot at the party's national convention in Miami Beach, Florida, concluding on August 8, 1968, after amassing sufficient delegates through victories in key primaries such as New Hampshire on March 12 and Indiana and Nebraska in May.[72][73] His primary challengers, including Nelson Rockefeller—who entered the race late on April 30 without contesting early primaries—and Ronald Reagan, faded as Nixon positioned himself as a seasoned leader tempered by prior defeats, dubbing this iteration the "New Nixon" to underscore renewed vigor and foreign policy expertise from his vice presidential tenure.[71][74] Central to Nixon's general election strategy was an appeal to the "silent majority" of Americans—middle-class voters alienated by urban riots following the April 4 assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., which sparked violence in over 100 cities, and the chaotic protests outside the Democratic National Convention in Chicago from August 26 to 29, where police clashed with antiwar demonstrators.[75][76] He emphasized "law and order" in speeches and advertisements, framing unrest as a failure of Democratic governance without endorsing excessive force, thereby tapping public frustration with disorder amid 1968's 21,000 homicides and rising crime rates reported by the FBI.[77][72] On Vietnam, Nixon pledged "peace with honor" but deliberately withheld operational details of his purported secret plan, citing risks of undermining negotiations; this vagueness allowed him to court hawks favoring escalation while reassuring doves weary of Lyndon Johnson's policies, as polls indicated majority support for withdrawal yet opposition to outright defeat.[78][79] To consolidate Southern support, he cultivated endorsement from Senator Strom Thurmond on May 17, who influenced delegates to back Spiro Agnew over perceived liberal alternatives like George Romney for vice president, focusing rhetoric on states' rights and anti-busing stances rather than overt racial appeals.[71][79] This approach aligned with empirical shifts in voter sentiment, where Gallup surveys from mid-1968 showed Nixon leading among white Southerners disillusioned with federal civil rights enforcement.[71]

Election and Transition

On November 5, 1968, Richard Nixon defeated Democratic incumbent Vice President Hubert Humphrey in the presidential election, securing 301 electoral votes to Humphrey's 191 and independent candidate George Wallace's 46.[80] Nixon received 31,783,783 popular votes, or 43.4 percent of the total, compared to Humphrey's 31,271,839 votes at 42.7 percent, with Wallace capturing 9,899,557 votes at 13.5 percent.[81] The race was the closest since 1916 in popular vote margin, at under 1 percentage point between the top two candidates, but Nixon's electoral edge stemmed from victories in key states outside the Deep South, where Wallace's segregationist appeal drew disproportionate support from disaffected white Democrats, preventing Humphrey from recapturing the Solid South and enabling Nixon to win five Southern states.[82] Allegations surfaced that Nixon's campaign, through intermediary Anna Chennault, urged South Vietnam to delay participation in Paris peace talks on the Vietnam War until after the election, potentially sabotaging President Lyndon B. Johnson's late October bombing halt announcement intended to aid Humphrey.[83] Declassified tapes from Johnson's administration captured aides discussing Republican contacts with South Vietnamese officials, and Chennault later confirmed relaying messages to hold off for a better deal under Nixon, but direct evidence of Nixon's personal authorization remains circumstantial, with historians debating its occurrence and, even if true, its causal role in the narrow victory given other factors like urban unrest and Humphrey's late surge.[84] South Vietnamese leaders, wary of a Democrat-led settlement, leaned toward delay independently, undermining claims of decisive Nixon interference.[85] Following the win, Nixon's transition emphasized assembling a team of experts over political loyalists, with Maryland Governor Spiro Agnew certified as vice president-elect.[86] He appointed Harvard professor Henry Kissinger as National Security Advisor to handle foreign policy coordination, prioritizing Kissinger's academic expertise in nuclear strategy and international relations over ideological alignment.[87] Nixon was inaugurated as the 37th president on January 20, 1969, at the U.S. Capitol, delivering an address calling for national reconciliation amid division.[88]

Presidency (1969–1974)

Domestic Agenda and Reforms

Nixon's domestic agenda emphasized pragmatic reforms in environmental protection, workplace safety, economic stabilization, welfare restructuring, civil rights enforcement, and federalism, often through executive action and legislation amid rising inflation and social pressures. In response to growing public concern over pollution following the first Earth Day in 1970, he established the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) via Reorganization Plan No. 3, signed on July 9, 1970, consolidating federal environmental functions; the agency became operational on December 2, 1970.[89] He also signed the Clean Air Amendments of 1970 on December 31, which set national air quality standards and required states to develop implementation plans, though Nixon had initially favored less stringent measures before congressional overrides shaped the final law.[90] Complementing these, the Occupational Safety and Health Act, signed December 29, 1970, created the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to enforce workplace standards and reduce occupational hazards, marking the first comprehensive federal safety legislation.[91] Economically, Nixon addressed stagflation through the New Economic Policy announced August 15, 1971, imposing a 90-day freeze on wages and prices to combat inflation that had reached 5.8% annually, followed by phased controls via the Cost of Living Council; these measures temporarily stabilized prices but distorted markets and contributed to shortages.[92] Unemployment, which peaked at 6.1% in late 1971 amid a mild recession, declined to 4.9% by 1973 as recovery took hold prior to the 1973 oil crisis.[93] In welfare reform, Nixon proposed the Family Assistance Plan in August 1969, offering a guaranteed minimum income of $1,600 for a family of four plus $300 per additional child, coupled with work requirements and supplements to earnings, aiming to replace fragmented Aid to Families with Dependent Children programs; though it passed the House in 1970, Senate opposition led to its failure, influencing later earned-income tax credits.[94] On civil rights, Nixon's administration enforced school desegregation aggressively in the South, with the percentage of black students in majority-black schools dropping from 68% in 1968–69 to 14.1% by 1970–71 through Justice Department lawsuits and HEW guidelines, achieving more integration in two years than under prior presidents despite his preference for voluntary plans over busing.[95] He initiated the "War on Drugs" on June 17, 1971, declaring illicit drugs "public enemy number one" and establishing the Special Action Office for Drug Abuse Prevention with $155 million in funding to coordinate treatment and enforcement, targeting heroin epidemics linked to Vietnam veterans and urban crime. To devolve power, Nixon signed the State and Local Fiscal Assistance Act on October 20, 1972, initiating general revenue sharing that distributed over $30 billion without categorical restrictions, enabling states and localities to prioritize spending and reducing federal micromanagement.[96]

Foreign Policy Innovations

Nixon's foreign policy, crafted with National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger, prioritized pragmatic balance-of-power strategies over ideological crusades, leveraging triangular diplomacy to exploit Sino-Soviet tensions and pursue détente with the USSR. This realpolitik approach aimed to extricate the United States from costly entanglements while curbing nuclear escalation, as evidenced by declassified records showing deliberate linkage between regional initiatives and superpower negotiations.[97][98] Amid these initiatives, internal military challenges emerged to the administration's secretive decision-making. During 1970-1971, Admiral Thomas Moorer, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, orchestrated an espionage operation using Navy Yeoman Charles Radford, assigned to Henry Kissinger's National Security Council staff, to pilfer and transmit classified documents to the Joint Chiefs. This was done to monitor and circumvent the secretive foreign policy processes of President Nixon and Kissinger, particularly regarding Vietnam and détente with China and the Soviet Union. The affair was discovered internally by the Nixon administration in December 1971 during an investigation into leaks published by columnist Jack Anderson, but the [Moorer-Radford Affair](/page/Pentagon spying operation) itself was publicly exposed in January 1974 by reporters Dan Thomasson and Jim Squires.[99] Nixon, aware of the breach, opted not to prosecute Moorer and others to avoid further public embarrassment to the military amid the ongoing Vietnam War and other crises.[100] In Vietnam, Nixon implemented Vietnamization to transfer combat responsibilities to South Vietnamese forces, reducing U.S. troop levels from 549,500 in 1969 to 69,000 by May 1972, thereby diminishing direct American involvement amid domestic pressure.[101] This policy, outlined in National Security Decision Memorandum 9 on March 28, 1969, combined phased withdrawals with intensified air campaigns to compel North Vietnamese concessions. The strategy culminated in the Paris Peace Accords, signed on January 27, 1973, which mandated a ceasefire, U.S. withdrawal within 60 days, and release of prisoners, effectively ending American combat operations despite subsequent North Vietnamese violations leading to Saigon's 1975 collapse.[102][102] The opening to China marked a pivotal shift, initiated through "ping-pong diplomacy" when the U.S. table tennis team visited Beijing in April 1971, paving the way for secret Kissinger talks in July 1971 and Nixon's summit with Mao Zedong from February 21-28, 1972. This breakthrough, detailed in the Shanghai Communiqué of February 28, 1972, acknowledged the People's Republic's position on Taiwan while committing to normalization, strategically isolating the USSR and altering Cold War dynamics without immediate ideological concessions.[97][97] Détente with the Soviet Union advanced through the Moscow Summit of May 22-30, 1972, where Nixon and Leonid Brezhnev signed the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT I) interim agreement and Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) Treaty on May 26, capping offensive missile deployments and limiting defensive systems to two sites each. These accords, verified by mutual inspections and compliance metrics, froze superpower nuclear arsenals at roughly 2,300 U.S. and 2,600 Soviet strategic launchers, empirically reducing escalation risks as subsequent data showed stabilized arms races until the late 1970s.[98][98] Following the 1973 Yom Kippur War, Kissinger's shuttle diplomacy—beginning with trips between Jerusalem, Cairo, and Damascus in November 1973—secured initial disengagement accords, such as the Israel-Egypt agreement on January 18, 1974, withdrawing Israeli forces from the Suez Canal's west bank in exchange for Egyptian buffers. Under Nixon's oversight, this incremental approach prevented broader Arab-Soviet alignment and nuclear alerts, with U.S. airlifts of 22,000 tons of supplies to Israel sustaining defenses while diplomatic gains stabilized the Sinai front.[103][103]

1972 Re-Election and Landslide

Nixon faced negligible opposition in the Republican primaries, securing victories in all 16 contests where his name appeared on the ballot from March to June 1972, with token challengers like Representative John Ashbrook and Representative Pete McCloskey failing to mount serious threats.[104] The Republican National Convention in Miami Beach from August 20-23 proceeded with unity, renominating Nixon and Vice President Spiro Agnew by acclamation amid a platform emphasizing foreign policy successes such as the opening to China and progress toward ending the Vietnam War, alongside domestic economic stability. In contrast, the Democratic primaries devolved into disarray, with frontrunner Edmund Muskie withdrawing after poor showings and scandals, Alabama Governor George Wallace sidelined by an assassination attempt on May 15 that left him paralyzed, paving the way for Senator George McGovern's nomination on a platform critical of Nixon's war policies but perceived by many as overly left-leaning. The Committee for the Re-Election of the President (CREEP), established in early 1971 and led by figures like John Mitchell, orchestrated a highly efficient operation focused on fundraising—amassing over $60 million, much from large donors—and voter mobilization through targeted advertising and get-out-the-vote efforts, though it exhibited early overreach in aggressive tactics against opponents.[105] Nixon's campaign strategy centered on the theme of "peace with honor," leveraging incumbency advantages and avoiding direct debates, while McGovern's selection of Sergeant Shriver as running mate after two prior choices faltered further eroded Democratic cohesion. On November 7, 1972, Nixon defeated McGovern in a landslide, capturing 520 electoral votes to McGovern's 17 (from Massachusetts and the District of Columbia) and 60.7% of the popular vote (47,168,710 votes to McGovern's 29,173,222), with voter turnout reaching 55.2% of the voting-age population.[106] [107] Nixon solidified support in the South, winning every state—marking a continuation of the Republican realignment there—while the newly enfranchised 18-20-year-old voters, expected to favor McGovern heavily post-26th Amendment, split with Nixon securing a majority among them through dedicated outreach via the "Young Voters for the President" initiative.[108] The scale of victory stemmed primarily from incumbency benefits, including a robust economy with GDP growth near 5% and unemployment below 6%, which overshadowed McGovern's anti-war messaging and the nascent Watergate scandal's limited public resonance before the election; polls showed Nixon leading by 20-30 points by summer, reflecting voter preference for stability over perceived Democratic extremism.[109] [110] This outcome represented the widest popular vote margin since 1936 and electoral margin since 1932, underscoring causal factors like economic performance and opponent weaknesses rather than campaign improprieties, which gained traction only post-vote.[111]

Watergate Break-In and Escalation

On the night of June 17, 1972, five men—James W. McCord Jr., Virgilio R. Gonzalez, Bernard L. Barker, Eugenio R. Martinez, and Frank A. Sturgis—were arrested by Washington, D.C., police while attempting to bug the offices of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) at the Watergate complex.[112] The burglars carried wiretapping equipment, cameras, and door lock-picking tools, and were later found to have connections to the Committee for the Re-Election of the President (CREEP), including cash payments traceable to CREEP funds.[113] McCord, CREEP's security coordinator, and the others had previously worked with E. Howard Hunt, a former White House consultant involved in the "Plumbers" unit formed to plug leaks of sensitive information.[114] Efforts to contain the scandal began almost immediately, involving obstruction of justice through payments of hush money to the defendants to ensure their silence and discourage cooperation with investigators.[115] Over $400,000 in unreported campaign funds was funneled to the burglars and their associates between June and September 1972, with White House counsel John Dean later confirming the administration's role in coordinating these payments to buy time during the presidential campaign.[116] Nixon administration officials, including chief of staff H.R. Haldeman and domestic affairs adviser John Ehrlichman, participated in discussions to limit FBI inquiries, falsely portraying the break-in as a rogue operation by Cuban exiles rather than a politically motivated espionage attempt.[117] A pivotal revelation came from the White House taping system, installed by Nixon in 1971 to record Oval Office conversations. On June 23, 1972—just six days after the break-in—a tape captured Nixon instructing Haldeman to direct the CIA to impede the FBI's investigation by claiming national security concerns, marking the earliest documented evidence of presidential involvement in the cover-up.[118] This "smoking gun" conversation demonstrated Nixon's intent to obstruct federal probes, contradicting his public denials of White House knowledge.[119] The Senate Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities, established unanimously on February 7, 1973, under S. Res. 60 and chaired by Sen. Sam Ervin, conducted televised hearings starting May 17, 1973, which uncovered the conspiracy's scope.[113] Dean testified beginning June 24, 1973, detailing a "cancer on the presidency" from the cover-up, including perjury, payoffs exceeding $1 million in potential liabilities, and White House orchestration of the burglary to gather intelligence on DNC chairman Lawrence O'Brien.[120] The committee's subpoena of Nixon's tapes in July 1973 led to the discovery of an 18.5-minute gap in a June 20, 1972, recording of Nixon and Haldeman, attributed by Nixon's secretary Rose Mary Woods to an accidental erasure during transcription, though forensic analysis suggested multiple deliberate erasures.[121] While the Watergate break-in and cover-up involved illegal activities under Nixon's administration, such political espionage was not unprecedented; for instance, President Lyndon B. Johnson authorized FBI wiretaps on 1964 Republican nominee Barry Goldwater's campaign and aides, including surveillance of phone calls to track strategy and leaks.[122] Congressional investigations, rather than initial media reporting, proved decisive in exposing the full extent of the obstruction, as the Senate committee's subpoenas and witness testimonies compelled disclosures that FBI probes alone had not yielded.[123] The events escalated amid the 1972 election, where Nixon secured a landslide victory, but revelations of the hush money and tape obstructions intensified scrutiny through 1973.[117]

Impeachment Crisis and Resignation

On July 24, 1974, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled in United States v. Nixon that President Nixon must surrender subpoenaed White House tapes to the Watergate special prosecutor, rejecting claims of absolute executive privilege as there was no basis for shielding evidence in a criminal proceeding.[124][125] The 8-0 decision, with Justice Rehnquist recused, compelled the release of recordings that included the June 23, 1972, "smoking gun" tape revealing Nixon's early efforts to obstruct the FBI investigation, further damaging his position amid ongoing congressional probes.[126] The House Judiciary Committee, holding televised hearings from May to July 1974, approved three articles of impeachment by late July. Article I, charging obstruction of justice for interfering with the Watergate inquiry, passed 27–11 on July 27, with six Republicans joining all 21 Democrats.[127] Article II, alleging abuse of power through misuse of agencies like the IRS and FBI for political ends, was adopted 28–10 on July 29, gaining seven GOP votes.[128] Article III, for defying congressional subpoenas including the tapes, cleared 21–17 on July 30, supported by one Republican.[129] These votes reflected eroding Republican support, intensified by fallout from the October 20, 1973, Saturday Night Massacre—Nixon's abrupt firing of special prosecutor Archibald Cox and two top Justice Department officials—which sparked public outrage and early impeachment calls by prompting mass resignations and bipartisan resolutions.[130] Faced with the Committee's near-certain full House approval and Senate trial, Nixon consulted Republican leaders on August 7, 1974; Senator Barry Goldwater and House Minority Leader John Rhodes informed him that only about 15 senators would vote for acquittal, dooming conviction by the required two-thirds margin.[131] This bipartisan collapse, driven by tape evidence overriding earlier party loyalty despite Democratic congressional majorities (House 243 Democrats to 192 Republicans; Senate 56–42), was compounded by domestic pressures including stagflation and the 1973 oil crisis eroding public approval to a low of 24% in a Gallup poll conducted August 2–5, 1974.[132] This nadir, tied to Watergate's escalation and the August 5 release of the "smoking gun" tape revealing Nixon's early cover-up involvement, intensified impeachment pressures leading to his August 9 resignation. Nixon announced his resignation in a televised address on August 8, effective at noon August 9—the first by a U.S. president—averting full impeachment proceedings and a Senate vote that would have likely removed him.[133] Vice President Gerald Ford was sworn in that afternoon, with no immediate criminal charges pursued against Nixon due to his departure from office.[130]

Post-Presidency

Immediate Aftermath and Ford's Pardon

Nixon resigned the presidency on August 9, 1974, amid the Watergate scandal, departing the White House by helicopter for Andrews Air Force Base before flying to his private residence, La Casa Pacifica, in San Clemente, California.[134] His public approval rating had plummeted to 24% in a Gallup poll conducted August 2–5, 1974, reflecting widespread disillusionment driven by revelations of executive misconduct.[135] Upon arrival in California, Nixon faced immediate health challenges, including an exacerbation of chronic phlebitis in his left leg, which had previously troubled him during his tenure but worsened post-resignation, leading to hospitalization on September 24, 1974, for treatment including anticoagulant therapy and tests for deep vein thrombosis.[136] This condition, involving inflammation and impaired circulation in leg veins, required ongoing management and contributed to his physical frailty during the transition period.[137] On September 8, 1974, President Gerald Ford announced a full, free, and absolute pardon for Nixon, covering all federal offenses committed or potentially committed from January 20, 1969, to August 9, 1974, thereby preempting any criminal indictments or trials.[138] Ford justified the action as necessary to facilitate national healing and avoid a prolonged spectacle that could further divide the country, though it explicitly did not extend to state-level offenses or civil liabilities.[139] Public reaction was largely negative, with a Gallup poll showing 53% of Americans believing Ford should not have issued the pardon if Nixon were found guilty, compared to 38% in favor, highlighting perceptions of leniency toward executive power.[140] The decision contributed to a 21-point drop in Ford's own approval rating, from 71% to around 50% in subsequent polls, underscoring the political cost.[141] The pardon shielded Nixon from prosecution, unlike several subordinates—such as H.R. Haldeman, John Ehrlichman, and John Mitchell—who faced convictions for Watergate-related crimes, including obstruction of justice and perjury, demonstrating that resignation alone did not preclude legal accountability without clemency.[130] Nixon's family provided crucial emotional support during this period of isolation and scrutiny; his wife, Pat, and daughters, Tricia and Julie, remained steadfast, with the family unit helping him navigate the immediate psychological strain without public displays of self-pity.[142] This familial backing, rooted in longstanding closeness amplified by the scandal's pressures, aided his initial stabilization in California as he contemplated future endeavors, including preliminary steps toward documenting his experiences.[143] In July 1980, Nixon traveled to Cairo, Egypt, to attend the funeral of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the Shah of Iran, exemplifying his continued engagement with international allies post-resignation.[144]

Intellectual Rehabilitation and Writings

Following his resignation on August 9, 1974, Richard Nixon pursued intellectual rehabilitation through extensive writing and private diplomacy, producing nine books that defended his presidential record and articulated foreign policy visions.[145] His first major post-presidency work, RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon, published in May 1978 by Grosset & Dunlap, became a national bestseller, reaching number two on the New York Times nonfiction list and generating over $2 million in advance royalties that supported his financial recovery.[145][146] In the memoirs, Nixon detailed his administration's achievements, including the opening to China and détente with the Soviet Union, while attributing Watergate's escalation to aggressive media coverage that amplified unverified allegations and overlooked contextual factors like national security concerns.[145] Nixon's subsequent books expanded on geopolitical strategy, critiquing isolationist impulses post-Vietnam and advocating sustained U.S. engagement abroad. In The Real War (1980), Leaders (1982), and Real Peace: A Strategy for the West (1983), he analyzed Cold War dynamics, emphasizing the need for military strength and diplomatic realism against Soviet expansionism.[147] His 1985 book No More Vietnams, published by Arbor House, argued that the Vietnam War was winnable under proper rules of engagement but undermined by congressional funding cuts in 1973 and restrictive tactics that limited U.S. air power; Nixon contended this failure taught lessons for future limited wars, not withdrawal from global commitments, as isolationism would invite aggression elsewhere.[148][149] These writings facilitated Nixon's restoration as an elder statesman, enabling private counsel to successors on foreign affairs. He advised President Gerald Ford on maintaining détente and South Vietnam's support amid the 1975 fall, and later urged President Ronald Reagan to prioritize arms control negotiations over economic sanctions against the USSR, influencing Reagan's approach to summits with Mikhail Gorbachev.[150][151] Nixon undertook at least six foreign trips in the 1980s, including visits to China in 1984 and the Soviet Union in 1986, where he met Gorbachev and reinforced U.S. policy continuity on arms reduction.[145] This output shaped Republican foreign policy thinking, positioning Nixon as a GOP expert whose realist framework—balancing power projection with negotiation—countered dovish critiques and informed anti-isolationist stances.[145]

Final Years and Death

In the year following the death of his wife, Pat Nixon, on June 22, 1993, from lung cancer at age 81 in their Park Ridge, New Jersey home, Richard Nixon continued his post-presidential intellectual pursuits.[152] [153] He published his final book, Beyond Peace, in early 1994, which outlined a vision for U.S. foreign policy in the post-Cold War era, emphasizing strategic engagement over isolationism.[147] In this period, Nixon advocated for increased American economic and technical aid to Russia to bolster democratic reforms and prevent a resurgence of authoritarianism, criticizing existing U.S. support levels as insufficient—totaling around $1.5 billion annually—as "pathetic" compared to the Marshall Plan's scale adjusted for inflation.[154] [155] [156] Nixon suffered a severe stroke on April 18, 1994, at his Park Ridge residence while preparing dinner, resulting in paralysis of his right arm and leg; he was rushed to New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center, where he lapsed into a coma.[157] [158] [159] He died there on April 22, 1994, at 9:08 p.m., at the age of 81, from complications of the stroke.[160] A state funeral was held on April 27, 1994, at the Richard Nixon Library and Birthplace in Yorba Linda, California, attended by all four living former U.S. presidents—Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, and George H. W. Bush—along with President Bill Clinton.[161] [162] Eulogies were delivered by Clinton, who praised Nixon's resilience; Ford, emphasizing reconciliation; and Bush, highlighting foreign policy achievements.[161] Nixon was buried on the library grounds alongside Pat Nixon, marking the first presidential burial at a private library site.[163] Posthumously, public and scholarly assessments of Nixon showed signs of improving approval in certain metrics; for instance, in the 1999 C-SPAN Historians Survey of Presidential Leadership, his overall ranking rose to 25th out of 41 presidents, reflecting a partial rehabilitation in evaluations of his international relations expertise despite persistent criticism of domestic scandals.[164]

Legacy

Enduring Achievements

Nixon's 1972 visit to China initiated a diplomatic thaw that facilitated substantial long-term growth in bilateral trade, with two-way goods trade expanding from $95.9 million in 1972 to trillions annually by the 21st century, driven by subsequent normalization and China's economic reforms.[165] This opening countered Soviet influence through realist realignment and laid the foundation for U.S. exports to China surging from negligible levels—under $50 million in 1972—to over $100 billion by 2010, reflecting enduring economic integration despite later tensions.[166] The Strategic Arms Limitation Talks (SALT I), signed on May 26, 1972, marked the first mutual agreement to restrain strategic offensive nuclear arms, freezing the number of intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) and submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) launchers for both superpowers at approximately 2,400 total, thereby curbing escalation risks without direct warhead limits.[167] In Vietnam, Nixon's policy of Vietnamization reduced U.S. troop levels from 543,000 in 1969 to 24,000 by 1972, contributing to minimal additional casualties post-1969—total U.S. military deaths reached 58,220, with over 80% occurring before his inauguration, as annual fatalities dropped sharply from 1968's peak of 16,899.[168][169] Domestically, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), established by executive order on December 2, 1970, enforced Clean Air Act standards that drove a 94% reduction in ambient lead levels from 1980 to 1999, building on 1970s regulations phasing out leaded gasoline and industrial emissions, with blood lead levels in the U.S. population declining over 90% by the 1990s.[170] The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), created under the 1970 act effective April 28, 1971, correlated with a 40% decline in the occupational injury rate from 1971 levels by the 2000s, alongside reductions in workplace fatalities through enforced standards on hazards like machinery and chemicals.[171] School desegregation advanced significantly under Nixon, with the percentage of black students in the South attending majority-white schools rising from 18.4% in 1968 to 39.1% by 1970, peaking national integration progress via Justice Department enforcement of Brown v. Board of Education without widespread northern busing mandates.[95] Economically, real GDP growth averaged approximately 2.7% annually during Nixon's term through 1973, preceding the oil shock, supported by fiscal policies amid low unemployment below 6%.[172] These outcomes underscore a pragmatic focus on measurable policy efficacy over ideological posturing, aligning with Nixon's view that greatness in presidential leadership emerges from enduring tests, knocks, and disappointments that foster resilience and character, as evidenced by his strategic foresight in initiatives like the opening to China and détente with the USSR, alongside pragmatic balancing of conservative and liberal policies despite complicating scandals.

Key Controversies and Defenses

Nixon's administration faced intense scrutiny over the Watergate scandal, primarily for its role in obstructing justice following the June 17, 1972, break-in at the Democratic National Committee headquarters, though no direct evidence links Nixon to ordering the operation itself.[116] Critics, often from left-leaning media and academic sources, portrayed the incident as stemming from Nixon's personal paranoia and abuse of power, emphasizing the subsequent cover-up that involved hush money payments and FBI interference orders recorded on the "smoking gun" tape of June 23, 1972.[173] Defenses, including those from revisionist historians, argue the break-in was a low-level campaign security measure amid fears of foreign leaks similar to those in prior elections, comparable to FBI's COINTELPRO program under Kennedy and Johnson administrations, which involved widespread domestic surveillance and subversion without comparable outrage.[174] [175] Nixon's resignation on August 9, 1974, resulted from the tapes' revelation eroding congressional support and impeachment momentum, not media pressure alone, as leaks and judicial subpoenas drove the process; claims of press heroism, amplified in mainstream narratives, overstate journalism's causal role against institutional accountability.[116] [130] Allegations that Nixon's 1968 campaign sabotaged Lyndon Johnson's Paris peace talks by urging South Vietnam to delay participation persist, based on intercepted communications and Anna Chennault's contacts with Saigon, prompting Johnson's private treason accusation on November 3, 1968.[83] Evidence includes Nixon associate John Mitchell's instructions to intermediaries, potentially prolonging the war for electoral gain, though South Vietnamese Ambassador Bui Diem denied any binding deals, attributing Thieu's stance to distrust of Hanoi's commitments.[85] [176] Defenses highlight Johnson's own delays in halting bombings despite Hanoi's signals, and North Vietnam's documented bad faith, including renewed offensives during negotiations and violations post-1973 accords, suggesting mutual intransigence rather than unilateral sabotage; empirical records show Hanoi exploited talks propagandistically while advancing militarily.[177] [178] Domestic controversies included the "enemies list," a 1971 compilation of about 20 core names—expanded to hundreds in internal records—targeting perceived opponents like journalists, politicians, and activists for IRS audits and surveillance, reflecting Nixon's view of institutional bias against conservatives.[179] Left critiques framed this as authoritarian overreach, contributing to a second impeachment article in July 1974 for abusing agencies against critics.[180] Defenses contextualize it as a response to "deep state" resistance, including leaks from career officials echoing Cuba Missile Crisis-era threats, with actions limited compared to prior executives' wiretaps on figures like Martin Luther King Jr.; no widespread illegal prosecutions ensued, and the list's exposure stemmed from internal memos rather than proven vendettas.[181] Claims of a stolen 1960 election, particularly in Illinois and Texas, fueled Nixon's early distrust of electoral integrity but lack conclusive proof of outcome-altering fraud; Nixon conceded on November 9, 1960, without contesting results, despite irregularities like Chicago vote counts exceeding registered voters by thousands.[182] [58] Empirical analyses estimate potential discrepancies under 8,000 votes in key areas, insufficient to reverse Kennedy's 118,000-vote Illinois margin or national popular lead, underscoring no verified theft despite partisan suspicions.[58]

Modern Reassessments

In the 2020s, historians and policy analysts have increasingly framed Nixon's downfall as resulting from a confluence of stagflation triggered by the 1973 oil embargo, inherited Vietnam commitments, and opposition from a Democratic Congress, rather than Watergate alone as the singular cause.[183] This contextual approach, evident in reassessments like the Nixon Foundation's 2024 Grand Strategy Summit, prioritizes causal factors such as economic shocks and legislative gridlock over scandal-centric narratives.[184] Nixon's handling of Vietnam receives renewed attention as an inherited quagmire managed toward an orderly exit, with 2024 scholarship portraying his retrenchment—via Vietnamization and the 1973 Paris Accords—as one of the few purposeful U.S. withdrawals in modern history, averting deeper entanglement despite South Vietnam's later collapse.[185][186] Declassified National Security Council files released in August 2024 offer granular insights into these Southeast Asia decisions, underscoring Nixon's reliance on structured diplomatic channels.[187] Environmental accomplishments stand out in contemporary evaluations, with Nixon's 1970 establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency and signing of the Clean Air Act cited as bipartisan benchmarks that imposed regulations on industry despite resistance from his Republican base.[188] Russell Train, Nixon's second EPA administrator, described these as the administration's paramount domestic success, a view echoed in 2020s analyses highlighting their long-term impact on pollution controls.[188] Civil rights enforcement under Nixon surpassed rhetorical conservatism, as federal appropriations escalated from $75 million in 1969 to $2.6 billion by 1972, facilitating school desegregation in the South at rates exceeding prior administrations' pace—53,000 fewer black students in segregated schools by 1972—countering portrayals of inaction with data on expanded Equal Employment Opportunity Commission actions.[189][190] Reexaminations of Watergate diminish media-driven myths, attributing Nixon's resignation primarily to judicial rulings like the Supreme Court's 1974 tapes decision and congressional investigations, rather than investigative journalism's outsized role.[191] Historian surveys reflect this nuance: the 2021 C-SPAN poll placed Nixon 31st overall, an uptick from 1980s lows near the bottom tier, signaling mid-level consensus on his policy substance amid scandal fixation.[192] Nixon's foreign policy realism—balancing détente with the Soviets and China opening—serves as a template in 2020s discussions for pragmatic power politics, paralleling elements of Trump-era deal-making without ideological overreach.[193] Additionally, in a 1994 interview, Nixon predicted that Russia would view an independent Ukraine aligned with the West as a threat and would not tolerate it, stating, "Russia will never let go of Ukraine"; this assessment proved prescient with Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, triggered in part by Ukraine's NATO and EU aspirations.[194] The Nixon Foundation's ongoing analyses, while institutionally sympathetic, align with broader scholarly shifts toward evaluating geopolitical outcomes over domestic controversies.[184]

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