By Alan Caruba
Forty
years ago, on August 9, 1974, Richard Nixon resigned the office of President; the
first and only President to do so.
I was just
into my thirties in 1968, the year Richard Nixon was elected the 37th
President of the United States. What I recall most of that year was the way the
Chicago police, after enduring an onslaught of name-calling and insults from
anti-war protesters aggressively drove them away from their effort to disrupt
the Democratic Party convention that would nominate Hubert Humphrey.
His
opponent would be Nixon. George Wallace, a segregationalist, ran as an
independent that year as well. I wasn’t particularly interested in politics at
the time. My focus was on my career where I had transitioned from having been a
journalist to positions with the New York State Housing Finance Agency and the
New Jersey Institute of Technology. Looking back, I now know I should have been
paying more attention because, in the end, whoever is President affects the
lives of not just Americans, but others throughout the world.
Like
millions of Americans I had turned against the Vietnam War and, in a seminal
way, it would influence my movement toward conservatism. For many people Nixon
was instrumental, not just in rejuvenating the Republican Party, but for giving
a voice to the “silent majority” who didn’t like the war in general and Lyndon
Baines Johnson in particular. In 1968, LBJ announced he would not seek
reelection.
In the
years since the Watergate scandal whose cover-up forced Nixon to resign in
1974, subsequent generations know him only for that historic event. Patrick J.
Buchanan has done us all a favor by writing “The Greatest Comeback: How Richard
Nixon Rose from Defeat to Create the New Majority.” ($34.00, Crown Publishing)
and it is a special treat for anyone who loves history in general and politics
in particular.
As much as
today’s media may have loved Obama when he was nominated the Democratic Party’s
candidate, in Nixon’s day he was loathed by them for his strong anti-communist
stance when he served in the House of Representatives and Senate, and
thereafter throughout the Cold War. After having been Eisenhower’s Vice
President for two terms, Nixon would lose to John F. Kennedy in 1960 and in a race
to become the Governor of California in 1962. Few would have ever imagined that
he would be elected President in 1968. In 1972 he was reelected in a landslide.
Labeled by
his political enemies “Tricky Dick”, Nixon was a politician of prodigious talent,
but mostly he was a man who, through sheer determination overcame defeat,
revived the Republican Party, and, while devoted to conservative principles,
was also pragmatic enough to be open to new ideas and events. His circle of
advisors shared his principles, but diverged among each other as to tactics and
issues. Nixon wanted that. He would choose what advice he thought best.
Buchanan
was a member of Nixon’s inner circle, a writer of superb talent and one with a
keen eye for the political times in which he lived and which Nixon would shape.
As he notes in his book, “The years that followed that 1969 inaugural would be
a time of extraordinary accomplishment. By the spring of 1973, all U.S. troops
were out of Vietnam, the POWs were home, every provincial capital was in
Saigon’s (South Vietnam) hands.”
“Nixon had
negotiated SALT I and the ABM treaty, the greatest arms-limitation treaties
since the Washington Naval Agreement” in 1922. Significantly, “he had ended
decades of hostility between the United States and the People’s Republic of
China, dating to Mao’s revolution and the Korean War. He had put an end to the
draft, signed into law the eighteen-year-old vote, put four justices on the
Supreme Court including Chief Justice Warren Burger and future chief justice William
Rehnquist.”
Those of
us who lament Big Government must acknowledge that Nixon created the
Environmental Protection Agency, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration,
and on the plus side the National Cancer Institute. He would “rescue Israel
from defeat in the Yom Kippur War (and) end Soviet domination of Egypt.”
What I
recall about the 1960s was how volatile and violent that decade was. There were
riots in many of our largest cities which engendered Nixon’s “law and order” message
that was widely embraced. There were anti-war protests and there were
assassinations that took the lives of JFK, his brother Robert, and Martin
Luther King, Jr.
The
greatest contrast between now and then is a general feeling of apathy that does
not manifest itself in marches on Washington, D.C. anymore and a very distinct
breakdown in social mores that includes the embrace of same-sex marriage and
the push to legalize marijuana in some states.
The al
Qaeda attack on 9/11 generated a massive intelligence program and the creation
of the Department of Homeland Security. It made Americans angry enough at first
to endorse the invasion of Afghanistan and later Iraq.
Later
Americans would watch the chaos the “Arab Spring” and these days the threat of
the Islamic State, a self-declared caliphate that intends to control the whole
of the Middle East and then destroy Israel and the U.S. The greatest threat of
our times is Iran’s intention to build its own nuclear weapons.
Nixon
brought about change on the basis of his vast knowledge of history, foreign
affairs, and his judgment regarding the American people. By contrast, President
Obama does not seem to like the American people or America.
© Alan
Caruba, 2014
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