Gerald Ford
Lots of love fests on the internet & in the media today for President Ford & rightly so. He was a good person. He brought some honesty and integrity back to the office of the Presidency. He was in it for the country, not for himself. He expressed a kind of humility we have not seen in an American president since. Contrast:
“I am acutely aware that you have not elected me as your President by your ballots, so I ask you to confirm me with your prayers.”
vs.
“And it’s one of the wonderful — it’s like earning capital. You asked, do I feel free. Let me put it to you this way: I earned capital in the campaign, political capital, and now I intend to spend it. It is my style. That’s what happened in the — after the 2000 election, I earned some capital.”
That ought to get you feeling nostalgic.
But Atrios has a pretty important point. I can’t guess what Ford’s motivation for pardoning Nixon was - cravenness or bold hopefulness. I can’t even say for certain that it was the wrong thing to do. I can say it didn’t rise to the level of heroic, and as Atrios points out, it led to the rehabilitation of the images of so many corrupt Nixon insiders (not necessarily to the rehabilitation of their character), and left dirty hands in places of power even to the present day.
I don’t know if he is right - Atrios guesses that this was the precedent that let the Iran/Contra fiends off the hook. I really don’t know. But little irks me more than the fact that one of the American officials behind the rape and murder of innocent Catholic nuns in service of a coupe against an elected government in Nicaraugua - rather than being made a pariah as is deserved - is hosting a show on Fox News and shaping opinion in Red America today. Little irks me more that this man who sold our country out to the Iranians is making hay out of his situation rather than repaying his debt.
To let Nixon repay his debt - some people say it would have “divided” the country further. I don’t think so. There would have been dead-enders who would have defended Nixon to the end - just as there are dead-enders who will now do the same for Bush. The rest of us, I think, would feel that the presidency is strengthened when the office-holder is held to the standards of the office and to the same standards as every other citizen with regard to the law.
Anyway, right or wrong on that, rest in peace Gerry. May your party one day regain the stature you have shown.



Sowell got it right back in 1998. Pardoning Nixon the wrong thing to do. http://www.jewishworldreview.com/cols/sowell100898.asp