Dec. 27, 2006
COMMENTARY: Gerald R. Ford: The ‘Positive President’
By Arthur I. Cyr
Scripps Howard News Service
"The right sort of sports fan" is how McGeorge Bundy in 1974 described
newly-installed President Gerald Ford, immediately after the
resignation of
Richard Nixon.
Bundy at the time was president of the Ford Foundation, a major target
of
the political right, and previously had been national security adviser
to
presidents Kennedy and Johnson. He appeared on the very long "enemies
list"
maintained by the Nixon White House, and personified the Eastern
seaboard
elitists who used to run foreign policy and particularly galled the
now-disgraced former president.
Gerald Ford, a star football player at the University of Michigan,
turned
down more than one offer from the pros. Congressman Ford's regular-guy
demeanor personified the classic American athlete. Perhaps that was one
reason Nixon made him vice president after the resignation of the
disgraced
Spiro Agnew. Nixon, by that time drowning in Watergate, may have sensed
what
the country would need to recover from his own political demise.
Nixon seemed to personify how seeking national political office could
become
distorting torture. In the 1960 presidential campaign, working
reporters in
the field on balance clearly favored Democrat John F. Kennedy over
Nixon.
Unfair jibes included the point that the athletic Kennedy was sports
minded,
in contrast to Nixon.
In reaction, relentless Richard became an expert on big-time sports,
knowledgeable about teams and players -- especially football. After
each
Super Bowl, he would phone the winning team (Ronald Reagan would call
both
teams). When massive numbers of anti-Vietnam War protesters came to
Washington, the White House announced that the president was
unconcerned,
and planned to watch a football game.
By contrast, Gerald Ford, the positive president, ran an open and
upfront
White House. He was willing to testify before Congress, as Lincoln had
done.
He avoided recrimination against his own political opponents -- who
were
never viewed as "enemies".
Ford even took the risk of formally pardoning Richard Nixon, avoiding
the
spectacle of the resigned president on trial and perhaps in prison.
Many
observers believe the ensuing controversy was one factor in Jimmy
Carter's
victory in the 1976 presidential election, which rendered Ford our only
president not elected to national office.
Time, however, has confirmed Ford's judgment. An informal AOL online
poll
immediately after his death indicates about two-thirds of respondents
believes pardoning Nixon was the right thing to do.
Without the mandate of popular election, and assuming office in the
shadow
of Nixon's resignation, Ford was never able to assert presidential
strength.
A large proportion of his legislative vetoes were overturned. Congress
tried
to run foreign policy through the War Powers Act. That law is now
defunct,
but the atmosphere of the time prevented the Ford administration from
intervening effectively when South Vietnam was overrun by North
Vietnamese
troops in 1975.
Unavoidably, any discussion of the Ford presidency involves Nixon, in
ways
that go beyond policy. Each man seemed to represent the average
American,
far removed from East Coast elitists who led us into Vietnam. Ronald
Reagan's election to the White House in 1980 dramatically confirmed
this
popular reaction.
Meanwhile, Gerald Ford remains the right president at one particular
moment
in history.
Arthur I. Cyr is Clausen Distinguished Professor at Carthage College in
Wisconsin and author of 'After the Cold War'; he can be reached at
acyr@carthage.edu
Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service.