NIXON PARDON: For Friendship, Not Country
29 December 2006 5:11 pm by Taylor Marsh
When I wrote the post I
Can\’t Forgive Ford, all hell broke loose in some quarters. Some wouldn\’t
talk about it, ignored it completely, with some comments unprintable. Being
proved correct in my assessment is not really important, because my feelings ran deep on this issue. But today\’s article by Bob Woodward
does illuminate why I felt the way I have for all of these years.
As the corporate hack pack continue blabbering on about how the pardon was
the right thing to do, I remain so totally unconvinced, that when I saw Woodward\’s
article much earlier today all I could do was smile and think what a good one Mr. Ford pulled on us all, well, almost all. See, I have an instinct about
these things, which goes back a very long time. I was immersed in politics at a very
young age, through my older brother\’s care and schooling, and have cultivated my senses over decades.
Read Woodward\’s piece for yourself, which I believe is as important an historical document to add to the Ford legacy as it is to Nixon\’s, as well as this country\’s. For decades, people
have talked about how the pardon was Nixon\’s way of admitting his guilt, and
Ford\’s way of forcing him into it, for the country\’s sake. Nothing could have
been further from the truth, as most readers around here understood, from Johnathan
to JimR to Mash (one of my guest bloggers) to katymine to Cujo359 to NorthBay
and many more in emails.
Woodward finishes the debate. No, actually, it was Ford himself that gave us closure. It\’s about time.
Months before Richard M. Nixon set a relatively unknown Michigan congressman
named Gerald R. Ford on the path to the White House, Nixon turned to Ford,
who called himself the embattled president\’s \”only real friend,\”
to get him out of trouble.During one of the darkest days of the Watergate scandal, Nixon secretly confided
in Ford, at the time the House minority leader. He begged for help. He complained
about fair-weather friends and swore at perceived rivals in his own party.
\”Tell the guys, goddamn it, to get off their ass and start fighting back,\”
Nixon pleaded with Ford in one call recorded by the president\’s secret taping
system.And Ford did. \”Anytime you want me to do anything, under any circumstances,
you give me a call, Mr. President,\” he told Nixon during that May 1,
1973, conversation. \”We\’ll stand by you morning, noon and night.\”This and other previously unpublished transcripts of their calls, documents
and personal letters provide a portrait of an intensely personal friendship
dating to the late 1940s but so hidden that few others were even aware of
it. Until now, the relationship between the two presidents has been portrayed
largely as a matter of political necessity, with Nixon tapping Ford for the
vice presidency in late 1973 because he was a confirmable choice on Capitol
Hill.But the tapes, documents and two lengthy recent interviews with Ford before
his death this week, conducted for a future book and embargoed until after
his death, show that the close political alliance between the two men seriously
influenced Ford\’s eventual decision to pardon Nixon, the most momentous decision
of his short presidency and almost certainly the one that cost him any chance
of winning the White House in his own right two years later. Ford became president
on Aug. 9, 1974; he pardoned Nixon just a month later. \”I think that
Nixon felt I was about the only person he could really trust on the Hill,\”
Ford said during the 2005 interview.Ford returned the feeling.
\”I looked upon him as my personal friend. And I always treasured
our relationship. And I had no hesitancy about granting the pardon, because
I felt that we had this relationship and that I didn\’t want to see my real
friend have the stigma,\” Ford said in the interview. …
Obviously, this does not make Gerald R. Ford a bad person, but it certainly does reveal the foundational motives behind the pardon of Richard M. Nixon. In doing so, especially with the shiv Ford put in Mr. Bush\’s back this week on Iraq, posthumously, it says a whole lot about President Ford. He may be known as the \”accidental president,\” but there was nothing accidental about his calculations throughout his political life.
The pardon had absolutely nothing to do with this country. It was strictly personal. It also pushes the door back open on Gerald R. Ford and his actual legacy, which I believe will broaden, if only with more questions to be asked. Just think of what we\’ve learned this week.

