PRESIDENT RICHARD NIXON
G'day folks,
Welcome to some facts about a controversial President. Richard Milhous Nixon was the 37th President of the United States
from 1969 until 1974, when he resigned from office, the only U.S.
president to do so.
Richard Nixon (1913-94), the 37th U.S. president, is best
remembered as the only president ever to resign from office. Nixon stepped down
in 1974, halfway through his second term, rather than face impeachment over his
efforts to cover up illegal activities by members of his administration in the
Watergate scandal. A former Republican congressman and U.S. senator from
California, he served two terms as vice president under Dwight Eisenhower
(1890-1969) in the 1950s. In 1960, Nixon lost his bid for the presidency in a
close race with Democrat John F. Kennedy (1917-63). He ran for the White House
again in 1968 and won. As president, Nixon’s achievements included forging
diplomatic ties with China and the Soviet Union, and withdrawing U.S. troops
from an unpopular war in Vietnam. However, Nixon’s involvement in Watergate
tarnished his legacy and deepened American cynicism about government.
Education and Early Political Career
Richard
Milhous Nixon was born on January 9, 1913, in Yorba Linda, California.
He was the second of five sons of Francis Anthony Nixon (1878-1956), who
struggled to earn a living running a grocery store and gas station, and his
wife, Hannah Milhous Nixon (1885-1967). Nixon absorbed his parents’ discontent
with their working-class circumstances and developed a strong sense of
ambition.
He attended Whittier
College, where he excelled as a debater and was elected president of the
student body before graduating in 1934. Three years later, he earned a law
degree from Duke University, where he was head of the student bar association
and graduated near the top of his class. After Duke, he returned to Whittier,
California, and began working as an attorney. In 1940, Nixon married Thelma
Catherine “Pat” Ryan (1912-93), whom he met while participating in a local
theater group. The couple had two daughters, Patricia (1946-) and Julie
(1948-).
When America entered World War II (1939-45), Nixon joined the U.S.
Navy and served as an operations officer in the Pacific.
Nixon was re-elected to Congress in 1948 and two years later, in 1950, won a seat in the U.S. Senate.
An Unsuccessful Bid for the Presidency
Although
Nixon’s attacks on alleged Communists and political opponents alarmed some
people, they increased his popularity among conservative Republicans. In 1952,
General Dwight Eisenhower selected the 39-year-old first-term senator to be his
vice presidential running mate. A few months after accepting the nomination,
Nixon became the target of a negative campaign that raised questions about
money and gifts he allegedly received from industry lobbyists. Nixon answered
these charges in his famous “Checkers” speech, claiming that the only gift he
ever accepted was a puppy named Checkers for his young daughter. The speech
proved effective and preserved Nixon’s spot on the ticket.
The loss to Kennedy dealt a terrible blow to Nixon’s ego. He claimed that the media disliked him and had slanted campaign coverage in favor of his handsome and wealthy opponent. Nixon returned home to California, where he practiced law and launched a campaign for governor in 1962. When he lost this election as well, many observers believed that his political career was over. As a disgusted Nixon told reporters, “You won’t have Nixon to kick around anymore.”
Winning the White House
Six years
after losing the governorship in his home state, Nixon made a remarkable
political comeback and once again claimed his party’s presidential nomination.
He prevailed in the 1968 U.S. presidential election, defeating Democrat Hubert
Humphrey (1911-78) and third-party candidate George Wallace (1919-98). Nixon
took office at a time of upheaval and change in the U.S. The American people
were bitterly divided over the Vietnam War
(1954-75), while women marched for equal rights and racial violence rocked the
nation’s cities.
Declaring his
intention to achieve “peace with honor” in Vietnam, Nixon introduced a strategy
known as Vietnamization, which called for gradually
withdrawing American troops from the war while training South Vietnamese army
forces to take over their own defense. In January 1973, Nixon administration
officials reached a peace agreement with Communist North Vietnam. The last
American combat troops left Vietnam in March of that year. The hostilities
continued, however, and in 1975 North Vietnam conquered South Vietnam and
reunited the country under Communist rule.In addition to dealing with the
Vietnam War, Nixon made historic visits, in 1972, to China and the Soviet
Union. He reduced tensions between these Communist nations and the U.S.,
helping to set the stage for establishing formal diplomatic relations. Nixon
also signed important treaties to limit the production of nuclear weapons.
The Watergate Scandal and Beyond
While
Nixon was running for re-election in 1972, operatives associated with his
campaign broke into the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee at
the Watergate
complex in Washington,
D.C. Several members of Nixon’s administration had knowledge of the burglary
and while Nixon denied any involvement, secret tapes of White House
conversations later revealed that the president had participated in efforts to
cover up the criminal activity.
Facing impeachment
by Congress, Nixon resigned from office on August 9, 1974. He was replaced by
Vice President Gerald Ford
(1913-2006), who a month later pardoned Nixon for any wrongdoing. A number of
administration officials were eventually convicted of crimes related to the
Watergate affair.
After leaving the White House, Nixon retired to California
(he and his wife later moved to New Jersey) and quietly worked to rehabilitate
his image, writing books, traveling extensively and consulting with Democratic
and Republican presidents. By the time he died on April 22, 1994, at age 81 in New York City, after suffering a stroke, some
people viewed him as a respected elder statesman. Other Americans, however,
rejected efforts to paint him as anything but a disgraced criminal.
Clancy's comment: So often ego and ambition get in the way of achieving your dreams.
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