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Gerald Ford “My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over.” August 9, 1974

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Gerald Ford. “My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over.” August 9, 1974. What to do with Nixon?. Ford Pardoned Nixon September 8, 1974. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Gerald Ford

Gerald Ford

“My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is

over.”

August 9, 1974

Page 2: Gerald Ford

What to do with Nixon?

Page 3: Gerald Ford

Ford Pardoned NixonSeptember 8, 1974

“Now, therefore, I, Gerald R. Ford, President of the United States . . . do grant a full, free, and absolute pardon unto

Richard Nixon . . .”

Page 4: Gerald Ford

Ford’s Pardon and Pen

Page 5: Gerald Ford

Why Pardon Nixon?• Publically: Ford felt that Nixon had suffered

enough– Threat of prosecution was damaging Nixon’s health– Trial would reignite bitter and divisive passions and

prevent the country from moving forward• Privately: Ford felt the trial would hinder his ability

to govern– Hoped a pardon would bring closure to the issue

• Speaks before a congressional committee to answer questions regarding the pardon– First President since Lincoln to do so– States there was never a prearranged pardon

agreement

Page 6: Gerald Ford

Ford’s Approval Rating

Fell from 72% to 49%

Page 7: Gerald Ford

Economy

• High inflation and unemployment

• Nixon faced similar problem– Chose to implement wage and price freezes

• Ford proposed a tax hike and reduction in federal spending but call for more individual spending

• WIN: “Whip Inflation Now” buttons– Big failure, no public interest/support

Page 8: Gerald Ford

Presidential Vetoes

• Vetoed 66 bills in 2.5 years

(FDR 635 vetoes)

• Had 12 vetoes overturned

(2nd most)

Page 9: Gerald Ford

Protecting President Ford

Page 10: Gerald Ford

Sacramento, California September 5, 1975

Page 11: Gerald Ford

Lynette “Squeaky” Fromme

-wanted to bring fame to Charles Mansion “family”

Page 12: Gerald Ford

“Squeaky” Fromme’s Gun

Page 13: Gerald Ford

Sara Jane Moore

Page 14: Gerald Ford

San Francisco, California September 22, 1975

Page 15: Gerald Ford

Sara Jane Moore

December 30, 1975

“Although part of me regrets not being

successful in the task, I am very thankful I

did not kill another human being.”

May 28, 2009 (NBC’s Today Show)"I am glad that I didn't kill [Ford], but I don't

regret trying."

Page 16: Gerald Ford

Busing • Summer of 1974, judge ordered the city school system to

integrate immediately. – All black buses came to all white schools and vise versa

• Mobs of students met the buses and fights broke out• Violence culminated in a white student being stabbed and

a riot

Page 17: Gerald Ford

Ford’s Foreign Policy

Strong Commander-in-Chief and Revive Détente

Page 18: Gerald Ford

Ho Chi Minh OffensiveNVA / VC Attack

December 13, 1974 – April 30, 1975

Vietnam and Southeast Asia

Page 19: Gerald Ford

Ford Asked for $722 million in aid for South Vietnam

NO

"...large sums for evacuation, but not one nickel for military aid"

Page 20: Gerald Ford

Operation Frequent WindApril 30, 1975

Almost 7,000 Americans and Vietnamese are evacuated in a 24 hour period

Page 21: Gerald Ford

USS MayaguezCaptured May 12, 1975

• 39 American naval personnel were captured by the Cambodian military

Page 22: Gerald Ford

USS Mayaguez Rescued

May 15, 1975

• 39 Americans rescued

• 41 Americans were killed in

the rescue

Page 23: Gerald Ford

Gerald Ford Museum

Page 24: Gerald Ford

Soviet Union and Détente

• Wanted to continue Nixon’s détente policy with Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev

Page 25: Gerald Ford

SALT II (1974)(Strategic Arms Limitation Talks II)

• Attempted further cuts in nuclear arsenals• Did not pass

Page 26: Gerald Ford

Helsinki Agreements (1975)

• Soviets wanted: WWII borders recognized (YES)• US wanted: Soviet emigration (NO)

Page 27: Gerald Ford

Ended Yom Kippur War (September 1, 1975)

Page 28: Gerald Ford

Yom Kippur War

• Fought: October 6-25, 1973 between Israel and Arab coalition led by Egypt/Syria

• A surprise attack on Israel on Yom Kippur-the holiest day in Judaism

• Initial success for Arab coalition was later overrun by Israeli forces

• The war humiliated the Arab coalition and showed the Israeli’s impressive operational and tactical abilities

Page 29: Gerald Ford

Gerald Ford’s Domestic Legacy

• Not elected as President (or VP) by American people

• Wanted Nixon’s pardon to heal country but instead reopened the issue/ended honeymoon

• Faced a difficult economy, the likely collapse of Vietnam, and public mistrust of its leaders

• Democrats controlled Congress and were never convinced of Ford’s legislative program – led to a lot of vetos and overriding of vetos

Page 30: Gerald Ford

Gerald Ford’s Foreign Legacy

• Solid but unremarkable record

• Continued to pursue détente – Signed Helsinki pact but failed to agree on

major arms control agreement

• Vietnam War officially ended on his watch– However, the Communists ultimately became victors

• Mayaguez was captured– Successful military operation to save the crew

Page 31: Gerald Ford

Final Analysis• Most Americans believed Gerald Ford was a

decent and good man and that he did bring/restore honor to the White House

• However, the failing economy and his inability to navigate the political game with Congress led to his defeat for reelection in 1976 to Jimmy Carter

Page 32: Gerald Ford

Gerald Ford:

A Time to Heal