Today in 1913, Gerald R. Ford, the 38th president of the United States, was born. Happy birthday President Ford!
Ford was appointed Nixon’s vice president in 1973 when the original VP, Spiro Agnew, resigned upon the discovery that he had been receiving bribes from construction firms both as Maryland governor and as the vice president. Nixon had stepped down as president after multiple articles of impeachment had been placed against him (read about it here: Losing Faith). Once president, Ford named Nelson Rockefeller his vice president, making it the first time in history that both offices were held by people for whom no one had voted.
Within one month of becoming president, Ford pardoned Nixon. He did this with the hope of putting the Watergate scandal behind him and moving the nation first. However, the action immediately backfired, the public’s cynicism of its government increased. Ford also refused to pardon the draft resisters of the Vietnam War, half-heartedly offering conditional amnesty after a review by a government panel. For the president to pardon the man who many considered a crook but refuse to offer the same treatment for those who resisted fighting what was now an overwhelmingly unpopular war, made him a difficult leader for many to like or respect.
In the two years Ford served as president, little was done domestically. The economy fell into a recession, inflation diminished the savings and wages of Americans, and unemployment climbed ten percent, exceeding nine percent at the national level for the first time since the Great Depression.
Internationally, Ford’s administration watched the collapse of South Vietnam in 1975 and continued the Nixon policy of détente. Also, under Ford’s presidency American diplomats joined with the Soviet Union and thirty other nations to sign the Helenski Accords. The agreements called for increased commerce between the Eastern and Western bloc and for guarantees of human rights.
In 1976, Ford attempted to run for the office he had inherited and lost to Jimmy Carter. Carter had easily one by representing an alternative to “party hacks and Washington insiders.” Ford left Washington as one of the most unpopular American presidents.
Today in 1972, the Watergate scandal began. A group known as the Plumbers broke into the Democratic Party headquarters in Washington, D.C., beginning a series of events that revealed the corruption that was plaguing the federal government.
