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- <text id=94TT0525>
- <link 94TO0159>
- <title>
- May 02, 1994: "I Have Never Been a Quitter"
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- May 02, 1994 Last Testament of Richard Nixon
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 42
- "I HAVE NEVER BEEN A QUITTER"
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Despite all his gifts, Nixon spent his whole life falling and
- running and falling again
- </p>
- <p>BY OTTO FRIEDRICH
- </p>
- <p> Richard Nixon's first conscious memory was of falling--falling
- and then running. He was three years old, and his mother had
- taken him and his brother out riding in a horse-drawn buggy,
- and the horse turned a corner too fast on the way home. The
- boy fell out. A buggy wheel ran over his head and inflicted
- a deep cut. "I must have been in shock," Nixon recalled later,
- "but I managed to get up and run after the buggy while my mother
- tried to make the horse stop." The only aftereffect, Nixon said,
- was a scar, and that was why he combed his hair straight back
- instead of parting it on the side.
- </p>
- <p> In a sense, Nixon spent his whole life falling and running and
- falling again. A symbol of the politics of anger, he was one
- of the most hated figures of his time, and yet he was also the
- only man in U.S. history ever to be elected twice as Vice President
- and twice as President. In the White House, he achieved many
- major goals: the U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam, restored relations
- with China, the first major arms agreement with the Soviet Union
- and much more. But he will always be remembered, as he was at
- his death last week at 81, as the chief perpetrator--and chief
- victim--of the Watergate scandal, the only President ever
- to resign in disgrace.
- </p>
- <p> Despite all his gifts--his shrewd intelligence, his dedication
- and sense of public service, his mastery of political strategy--there was a quality of self-destructiveness that haunted
- Nixon. To an admiring aide he once acknowledged, "You continue
- to walk on the edge of the precipice because over the years
- you have become fascinated by how close to the edge you can
- walk without losing your balance."
- </p>
- <p> He kept losing it, tumbling to great depths, then grimly climbing
- back. After being defeated in the presidential race of 1960
- and then the California gubernatorial race of 1962, he bitterly
- told reporters, "You won't have Nixon to kick around anymore."
- Six years later, he fought his way to another Republican presidential
- nomination, which he spoke of as "the culmination of an impossible
- dream." But at his last meeting with his Cabinet in August 1974,
- after what seemed like the final defeat in a lifetime devoted
- to the idea of winning, he burst into tears. "Always remember,"
- he said, "others may hate you, but those who hate you don't
- win unless you hate them--and then you destroy yourself."
- </p>
- <p> From anyone else, that might have served as a public farewell,
- but the disgraced Nixon spent more than a dozen years in climbing
- once more out of the abyss and re-creating himself as an elder
- statesman. He wrote his memoirs in 1978, then eight more books
- largely devoted to international strategy. He moved to the wealthy
- suburb of Saddle River, New Jersey (where he stayed until 1990,
- moving a mile away to Park Ridge), and began giving discreet
- dinners for movers and shakers. President Reagan called to ask
- his advice. So did President Bush. In November 1989, he became
- the first important American to make a public visit to Beijing
- after the massacre at Tiananmen Square.
- </p>
- <p> The hallmark of Nixon's youth had been poverty--poverty and
- family illness and endless work. His father Frank, who had dropped
- out of school and run away from home after the fourth grade,
- was a combative and quarrelsome Ohioan. After running through
- a string of jobs, Frank moved to California in 1907, built a
- house in the desert-edge town of Yorba Linda and tried to grow
- lemons. There Frank's pious Quaker wife Hannah gave birth on
- Jan. 9, 1913, to a second son. She named him Richard, after
- the English King Richard the Lion-Hearted, plus Milhous, her
- own family name. The newborn baby, an attendant nurse later
- recalled, had a "powerful, ringing voice."
- </p>
- <p> His mother sent him to school every day in a starched white
- shirt and a black bow tie, and he worked hard for his good grades.
- He liked to recite long poems and play the piano. One of his
- favorite forms of competition was debating, which he did well.
- Another was football. Too small and slow to make the starting
- team in Fullerton or Whittier High School or at Whittier College,
- he showed up every day for practice in the line. "We used Nixon
- as a punching bag," one of his coaches recalled. "What starts
- the process, really," Nixon later said of his lifelong passion
- for winning, "are the laughs and slights and snubs when you
- are a kid. But if...your anger is deep enough and strong
- enough, you learn that you can change those attitudes by excellence,
- personal gut performance."
- </p>
- <p> Nixon grew up in Whittier because his father had given up on
- citrus farming and found a new job there as an oil-field worker,
- then started a gas station, then expanded it into a general
- store. Hannah Nixon liked Whittier because it was largely a
- Quaker town where nobody drank or smoked or carried on. But
- life was not easy. All through high school, Nixon had to get
- up at 4 every morning and drive to the Seventh Street markets
- in Los Angeles to buy fresh vegetables for the family store.
- </p>
- <p> When Dick Nixon was 12, his younger brother Arthur, the fourth
- of the five boys, complained of a headache; a month later he
- was dead of meningitis. Nixon wrote later that he cried every
- day for weeks. When Harold, the eldest son, was stricken with
- tuberculosis, Hannah left the rest of the family to take him
- to the dryer air in Prescott, Arizona. She could pay for this
- only by operating a clinic where other TB patients waited out
- their last weeks of life. In the summers Dick found jobs nearby
- as a janitor, a chicken plucker, a carnival barker. After five
- years, Harold died. "We all grew up rather fast in those years,"
- Nixon recalled.
- </p>
- <p> Harold's illness was also a great financial drain. Nixon had
- to turn down a scholarship offer from Harvard (Yale was also
- interested in him) and save money by attending tiny Whittier
- College; Duke University Law School was just starting when it
- offered Nixon one of the 25 scholarships available to a class
- of 44. At first he lived in a $5-a-month room. Later he shared
- a one-room shack that had no plumbing or electricity; he shaved
- in the men's room of the library. In three years at Duke, he
- never once went out on a date. He finished third in the class
- of 1937.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon had shown an interest in politics since the age of six,
- when he began reading news of current events and talking about
- them with his father. When he was 11, the Teapot Dome scandal
- prompted him to announce to his mother, "I'll be a lawyer they
- can't bribe." The practice of law in Whittier was hardly so
- inspiring. Taken into the firm of a family friend, he spent
- his first day dusting the books in the office library, then
- bungled his first case, losing all his client's money in a real
- estate deal. But he persevered, began joining various clubs,
- making speeches. He even joined a local theater group, where
- he met a schoolteacher named Thelma ("Pat") Ryan.
- </p>
- <p> Driving her home from the theater, he said, "I'd like to have
- a date with you."
- </p>
- <p> "Oh, I'm too busy," she replied. An orphan, she was not only
- working but attending classes as well. The second time Nixon
- drove her home, he again asked for a date, again was shrugged
- off. The third time it happened, Nixon said, "Someday I'm going
- to marry you." It took two years of courtship before she agreed
- in 1940; she converted to the Quaker faith and used her own
- savings to buy the wedding ring.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon probably would not have been content to stay in Whittier
- forever, but Pearl Harbor uprooted his whole generation. He
- knew that if he was ever to have a political career, he would
- have to join the armed forces. So despite the Quaker belief
- in pacifism, he won a commission in the Navy in June 1942. He
- served creditably as a supply officer in New Caledonia, then
- the Solomon Islands. His most remarkable activity, though, was
- to become a master at bluffing in stud poker. By the end of
- the war, he had won and saved a stake estimated at as much as
- $10,000. He invested half of it the following year in launching
- his political career.
- </p>
- <p> Jerry Voorhis, a popular liberal Democrat, had won five straight
- elections in the 12th Congressional District east of Los Angeles,
- but a group of local businessmen hoped to unseat him. Nixon
- promised them "an aggressive and vigorous campaign." He began
- working up to 20 hours a day, making speeches about his war
- experiences, denouncing the New Deal. When Pat gave birth to
- their first daughter Patricia (Tricia), Nixon was out campaigning.
- (Confident of re-election, he stayed home when Julie was born
- two years later.)
- </p>
- <p> Nixon implied--falsely--that Voorhis was virtually a communist.
- "Remember," said one of Nixon's ads, "Voorhis is a former registered
- Socialist and his voting record in Congress is more socialistic
- and communistic than Democratic." This kind of smear was to
- become a Nixon trademark. To one of Voorhis' supporters, Nixon
- later offered a very personal rationale: "Of course I knew Jerry
- Voorhis wasn't a communist, but I had to win. That's the thing
- you don't understand. The important thing is to win."
- </p>
- <p> Win he did, with 56% of the vote. This was part of the end-of-the-war
- landslide that gave the G.O.P. control of both houses for the
- first time since the election following the Great Crash of 1929.
- Nixon asked to be put on the Education and Labor Committee,
- which was going to rewrite the rules of labor relations through
- the Taft-Hartley Act. In return, he was asked to serve on an
- eccentric committee that devoted its time to noisy investigations
- of "un-American activities." It was to be the making of his
- career.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon began looking for experts on communist influence in labor
- unions. This led him to a Maryknoll priest whose report on the
- subject included the fact that a TIME senior editor named Whittaker
- Chambers had told the FBI that he had belonged to a communist
- cell in Washington, and that it included Alger Hiss. It seemed
- incredible. A lawyer who had once clerked for Justice Oliver
- Wendell Holmes, Hiss had served as a State Department adviser
- at the Yalta conference, had helped organize the United Nations
- and was being touted as perhaps its first Secretary-General.
- </p>
- <p> Hiss, then president of the Carnegie Endowment, denied ever
- having met anyone named Whittaker Chambers. Nixon had both men
- summoned before the committee to confront each other. Hiss finally
- admitted knowing Chambers slightly under a different name. Chambers
- insisted that they had been "close friends...caught in a
- tragedy of history." But nothing could be proved until Chambers
- produced the "pumpkin papers," microfilms of State Department
- documents that he said Hiss had given him for transmission to
- Moscow. Hiss was convicted of perjury in January 1950, served
- 44 months in prison and has spent the rest of his long life
- denying guilt.
- </p>
- <p> The Hiss case made Nixon a national figure and launched him
- into a run for the Senate in 1950 against Helen Gahagan Douglas,
- a former actress who had served six years in the House as an
- ardent New Dealer. Since red hunting was a national mania in
- these Korean War days, Douglas foolishly tried to accuse Nixon
- of being soft on communism, and invented the name that haunted
- him for the rest of his life: Tricky Dick. But when it came
- to mudslinging, she was up against a champion. He called her
- the "pink lady" and declared that she was "pink right down to
- her underwear." He won by the biggest plurality of any Senate
- candidate that year.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon had hardly begun serving in the Senate before the Republican
- leadership started fighting over whether the 1952 presidential
- nomination should go to conservative Senator Robert Taft or
- to the immensely popular General Dwight Eisenhower. The convention
- was in danger of deadlocking, in which case it might turn to
- California Governor Earl Warren. That was certainly Warren's
- plan, and all the California delegates, including Nixon, were
- pledged to back him. In some complicated maneuvering, though,
- the Eisenhower forces put forward a resolution that would give
- them a number of disputed Southern delegations. Nixon, who had
- already been sounded out as a running mate for Eisenhower, persuaded
- the California delegates to back this resolution, and so Eisenhower
- won. Warren never forgave Nixon for what he considered a betrayal.
- </p>
- <p> Once nominated as Vice President, Nixon was assigned to play
- hatchet man on "communism and corruption" while Eisenhower remained
- statesmanlike. Nixon was all too eager to comply. He described
- Democratic nominee Adlai Stevenson as one who "holds a Ph.D.
- from ((Secretary of State Dean)) Acheson's College of Cowardly
- Communist Containment."
- </p>
- <p> The Democrats got their revenge when the press discovered and
- trumpeted that Nixon had a secret slush fund of $18,000 provided
- by California businessmen to help finance his activities. Nixon
- insisted that the fund was perfectly legal and was used solely
- for routine political expenses, but the smell of scandal thickened.
- At Eisenhower's urging, Nixon went before a TV audience estimated
- at 58 million with an impassioned defense of his honesty. "Pat
- and I have the satisfaction that every dime we've got is honestly
- ours," he said. The only personal present he had received was
- "a little cocker spaniel dog in a crate. Black-and-white spotted.
- And our little girl--Tricia, the six-year-old--named it
- Checkers. And you know, the kids love that dog." Hundreds of
- thousands of listeners cabled or wrote their support of Nixon,
- and Eisenhower settled his future by saying publicly, "You're
- my boy!"
- </p>
- <p> Eisenhower won 55% of the vote, and the freshman Senator from
- California, still only 39, found himself the second youngest
- Vice President. He also found that a President and Vice President
- rarely like each other very much, because the latter's only
- real job is to wait for the former's death. Nixon faced the
- great test of this uneasy relationship when Eisenhower suffered
- a heart attack in September 1955. It was up to Nixon to chair
- Cabinet meetings and generally run the White House machinery
- without ever seeming to covet the power that lay just beyond
- his fingertips. He did the job tactfully and skillfully throughout
- the weeks of Eisenhower's recovery.
- </p>
- <p> One major function of modern Vice Presidents is to travel, and
- Nixon turned himself into a latter-day Marco Polo: nine trips
- to 61 countries. Everywhere he went, he conferred, orated, debated,
- press-conferenced. In Moscow to open a U.S. trade exhibit in
- 1959, Nixon got into a finger-pointing argument on communism
- with Soviet Party Secretary Nikita Khrushchev in the kitchen
- of an American model home.
- </p>
- <p> To some extent, Vice Presidents' tasks are defined by their
- own skills and experiences. Nixon knew more about politics than
- almost anyone else in Eisenhower's Administration, so he became
- the G.O.P.'s chief campaigner. When Eisenhower's second term
- expired, Nixon was the inevitable successor; he was nominated
- to run against the Democrats' John F. Kennedy.
- </p>
- <p> Eisenhower and others warned Nixon not to accept Kennedy's challenge
- to a televised debate--Nixon was the Vice President, after
- all, and far better known than the junior Senator from Massachusetts--but Nixon took pride in his long experience as a debater.
- He also ignored advice to rest up for the debate and went on
- campaigning strenuously until the last minute. So what a record
- 80 million Americans saw on their TV screens was a devastating
- contrast. Kennedy looked fresh, tanned, vibrant; Nixon looked
- unshaven, baggy-eyed, surly. The era of the politics of TV imagery
- had begun, and the debates were a major victory for Kennedy.
- </p>
- <p> The vote was incredibly close, with Kennedy winning 50.4% of
- the popular vote and Nixon 49.6%. He accepted the bitter defeat
- and returned to California. Then Nixon's legendary political
- shrewdness abandoned him. He let himself be talked into running
- for Governor of California against the popular Edmund G. ("Pat")
- Brown, and tried to imply that Brown was a dangerous leftist.
- It was after his crushing defeat that Nixon blew up at reporters
- and announced that this was his "last press conference."
- </p>
- <p> Still only 49, he decided to move to New York City and make
- some money by practicing corporate law. He joined a prosperous
- Wall Street firm, which thereupon became Nixon, Mudge, Rose,
- Guthrie and Alexander. But he never really retired from politics.
- He was just biding his time. He thought Jack Kennedy would be
- unbeatable in 1964, and Lyndon Johnson soon appeared almost
- as much so. Nixon played elder statesman, letting Barry Goldwater
- and Nelson Rockefeller fight for the G.O.P. nomination. Nixon
- stumped loyally for Goldwater, and when that campaign ended
- in disaster, he became the logical man to reunite the splintered
- party in 1968.
- </p>
- <p> Following the advice of a young advertising man named H.R. Haldeman,
- he finally learned how to make effective use of television:
- not in speeches or press conferences but answering questions
- from "typical voters" and then carefully editing the results.
- If that was artificial, so in a way was the whole 1968 campaign.
- Democratic candidate Hubert Humphrey dared not repudiate Johnson's
- doomed Vietnam policy and talked instead about "the politics
- of joy." Nixon, who had agreed with Johnson's escalation of
- the war and hoped to court segregationist votes in the South,
- spoke mainly in code words about "peace with honor" in Vietnam
- and "law and order" at home. In a year of assassinations and
- ghetto riots, Nixon sounded reassuring, or enough so to defeat
- Humphrey and the war-torn Democrats. But it was close: 43.4%
- for Nixon, 42.7% for Humphrey, 13.5% for George Wallace.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon's first term included sweeping innovations, often surprisingly
- liberal. He was the first President in years to cut military
- spending; the first to tie Social Security increases to the
- cost of living. He instituted "revenue sharing" to funnel $6
- billion a year in federal tax money back to the states and cities.
- He signed the act lowering the voting age to 18. And he benefited
- from Kennedy's decision to go to the moon. When Neil Armstrong
- landed there in 1969, Nixon somewhat vaingloriously declared
- that "this is the greatest week in the history of the world
- since the Creation."
- </p>
- <p> His imaginative measures were shadowed, however, by Vietnam.
- Nixon, who had supported each previous escalation--and indeed
- repeatedly demanded more--had campaigned on a promise to end
- the war "with honor," meaning no surrender and no defeat. He
- called for a cease-fire and negotiations, but the communists
- showed no interest. And while U.S. casualties continued at a
- rate of about 400 a month, protests against the war grew in
- size and violence.
- </p>
- <p> To quiet antiwar demonstrators, Nixon announced that he would
- gradually withdraw U.S. forces, starting with 25,000 in June
- 1969. From now on, the war would be increasingly fought by the
- Vietnamese themselves. When, from their sanctuaries in Cambodia,
- the North Vietnamese began harassing the retreating Americans
- in the spring of 1970, Nixon ordered bombing raids and made
- a temporary "incursion" into the country. The main effect of
- this expansion of the war was an explosion of new antiwar outcries
- on college campuses.
- </p>
- <p> These were fiercely contentious times, and Nixon was partly
- to blame for that. He had always been the fighter rather than
- the conciliator, and though he had millions of supporters among
- what he liked to call "the Silent Majority" in "middle America,"
- the increasing conflicts in American politics made it difficult
- to govern at all. Nixon, as the nation learned later when it
- heard the Watergate tapes, brought to the White House an extraordinarily
- permanent anger and resentment. His staff memos were filled
- with furious instructions to fire people, investigate leaks
- and "knock off this crap."
- </p>
- <p> Together with this chronic anger, the mistrustful Nixon had
- a passion for secrecy. He repeatedly launched military operations
- without telling his own Defense Secretary, Melvin Laird, and
- major diplomatic initiatives without telling his Secretary of
- State, William Rogers. All major actions went through his White
- House staff members, particularly National Security Adviser
- Henry Kissinger and Nixon's two chief domestic aides, Bob Haldeman
- and John Ehrlichman.
- </p>
- <p> Just as he loved secrecy, Nixon hated leaks to the press (though
- he himself was a dedicated leaker to favored reporters). And
- so when he first ordered an unannounced air raid against communist
- bases in Cambodia in April 1969, he was furious to read about
- it in a Washington dispatch in the New York Times. FBI chief
- J. Edgar Hoover told the President that the only way to find
- the leaker was to start tapping phones. When Nixon entered the
- White House and dismantled the elaborate taping system that
- Johnson had installed, Hoover told him that the FBI, on Johnson's
- orders, had bugged Nixon's campaign plane. Now Nixon started
- down the same path, getting Attorney General John Mitchell to
- sign the orders for 17 taps.
- </p>
- <p> When a series of secret Vietnam documents known as the Pentagon
- Papers began appearing in the New York Times in June 1971, Kissinger
- persuaded Nixon that the leaker, Daniel Ellsberg, "must be stopped
- at all costs." The FBI turned balky at extralegal activities,
- so Nixon told Ehrlichman, "Then by God, we'll do it ourselves.
- I want you to set up a little group right here in White House."
- </p>
- <p> Thus was born the team of "plumbers." Its only known job involving
- Ellsberg was to break into his psychiatrist's office that September
- in search of evidence against him. But once such a team is created,
- other uses for it tend to be found. The following June, seven
- plumbers (five of them wearing surgical rubber gloves) were
- arrested during a burglary of Democratic national headquarters
- in the Watergate office and apartment complex.
- </p>
- <p> They admitted nothing, and nobody connected them with Nixon.
- The White House itself was already doing its best to block any
- FBI investigation, but it formally denied any involvement in
- what press secretary Ron Ziegler dismissed as "a third-rate
- burglary attempt." Nobody has ever disclosed exactly what the
- burglars were looking for or what they found, if anything.
- </p>
- <p> The Watergate burglary quickly faded from the front pages. Nixon
- was campaigning hard for re-election, portraying himself as
- a global peacemaker. In February 1972 he had reversed nearly
- 30 years of American policy by flying to Beijing, ending restrictions
- on trade with China and supporting China's entry into the U.N.
- In May he had signed the first arms-control agreements with
- Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev, placing sharp restrictions on
- antiballistic missiles. And although Kissinger's protracted
- secret negotiations with the Vietnamese communists had not yet
- brought a truce agreement, Nixon pulled out the last U.S. combat
- troops in August.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon trounced Senator George McGovern that fall, capturing
- nearly 61% of the vote. Then, after one last spasm of belligerence
- in the carpet bombing of Hanoi at Christmas, Nixon announced
- in January 1973, "We today have concluded an agreement to end
- the war and bring peace with honor to Vietnam."
- </p>
- <p> But the Watergate mystery remained. In court, five of the burglars
- pleaded guilty in January 1973 (the other two were quickly convicted),
- but they still admitted nothing. Federal Judge John Sirica angrily
- sentenced them to long prison terms (up to 40 years) and indicated
- that he might reduce the punishment if they confessed more fully.
- One of the seven, James McCord, wrote Sirica on March 20 that
- "others involved in the Watergate operation were not identified
- during the trial." In two secret sessions with Watergate committee
- counsel Sam Dash, he later named three top Nixon officials:
- Attorney General Mitchell; Mitchell's deputy, Jeb Stuart Magruder;
- and White House counsel John Dean.
- </p>
- <p> Caught lying--but still denying any wrongdoing--Nixon said
- he was ordering a new investigation of the situation. Two federal
- grand juries were also investigating. So was the press. Though
- a lot of this probing was only loosely connected to the burglary,
- the term Watergate began to apply to a whole series of misdeeds
- that seriously tainted Nixon's great election victory. Not only
- did more than $100,000 donated to Nixon's campaign end up in
- the bank account of one of the plumbers, but the entire fund-raising
- operation was marked by illegalities, irregularities and deceptions.
- Congress decided to investigate all this too. It chose a select
- committee to be headed by North Carolina's folksy Senator Sam
- Ervin.
- </p>
- <p> Two and a half weeks before the committee was scheduled to open
- televised hearings in May 1973, Nixon made a stunning announcement:
- his two chief White House aides, Haldeman and Ehrlichman, were
- resigning, as were Attorney General Richard Kleindienst (who
- had succeeded Mitchell) and White House attorney Dean. "There
- can be no whitewash at the White House," Nixon said.
- </p>
- <p> The Senate hearings soon showed otherwise. Magruder testified
- that Mitchell and Dean had been deeply involved. Then the dismissed
- Dean took the stand in June and testified that Nixon himself
- had been lying, that he had known about the White House cover-up
- attempts since at least September 1972. He also disclosed that
- the White House kept hundreds of names on an "enemies list"
- and used tax investigations and other methods to harass them.
- But how could anyone prove such charges? That question received
- an astonishing answer a month later when a former White House
- official named Alexander Butterfield almost offhandedly told
- the committee that Nixon had installed voice-activated recorders
- that secretly taped all his White House conversations.
- </p>
- <p> When the Senate committee promptly demanded the tapes, Nixon
- refused, claiming Executive privilege. The new Attorney General,
- Elliot Richardson, had appointed Harvard law professor Archibald
- Cox as a special prosecutor on the whole case, and Cox sent
- a subpoena for tapes he wanted to hear. Nixon refused him too.
- Judge Sirica upheld Cox's demand, so Nixon resisted him in the
- U.S. Court of Appeals, which backed Sirica.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon then offered to produce an edited summary of the tapes.
- When Cox rejected that idea, Nixon on Oct. 20 angrily told Richardson
- to fire Cox. Richardson refused and resigned instead. Nixon
- told Deputy Attorney General William Ruckelshaus to fire Cox;
- he too refused and resigned. General Alexander Haig, Haldeman's
- successor as White House chief of staff, finally got Solicitor
- General Robert Bork to do the job, and so the "Saturday Night
- Massacre" ended, leaving the Nixon Administration a shambles.
- (In the midst of all this, it was almost incidental that Vice
- President Spiro Agnew resigned under fire for having taken graft
- and that he was replaced by Michigan Congressman Gerald Ford.)
- </p>
- <p> The House began on Oct. 30 to look into the possibilities of
- impeachment. Inside the besieged White House, Nixon raged like
- a trapped animal. There were unconfirmed reports that he was
- drinking heavily, that he couldn't sleep, that he even wandered
- around late at night and spoke to the paintings on the walls.
- To a meeting of Associated Press editors, he piteously declared,
- "I am not a crook."
- </p>
- <p> Special prosecutor Cox had by now been replaced by a conservative
- Texas attorney, Leon Jaworski, who appeared no less determined
- to get the tapes. Still resisting inch by inch, Nixon released
- 1,254 pages of edited transcripts. They were a revelation of
- the inner workings of the Nixon White House, a sealed-off fortress
- where a character designated as P in the transcripts talked
- endlessly and obscenely about all his enemies. "I want the most
- comprehensive notes on all those who tried to do us in," P said
- to Haldeman at one point, for example. "We have not used...the Justice Department, but things are going to change now."
- The edited tapes still left uncertainties about Nixon's involvement
- in the Watergate cover-up, however, so Jaworski insisted on
- the unedited originals of 64 specific tapes, transcripts and
- other documents. Nixon refused. Jaworski filed suit. The Supreme
- Court ruled unanimously that a President cannot withhold evidence
- in a criminal case (Mitchell, Haldeman, Ehrlichman and others
- were by now under indictment, and Nixon himself had been named
- by the grand jury as an "unindicted co-conspirator").
- </p>
- <p> During all this, the House Judiciary Committee, headed by New
- Jersey's Democratic Congressman Peter Rodino, had been conducting
- hearings on impeachment. It soon decided to impeach Nixon on
- three counts: obstruction of justice, abuse of presidential
- powers and defiance of the committee's subpoenas.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon meanwhile sat out in his beach house in San Clemente,
- California, reading a biography of Napoleon and staring at the
- ocean. But he had also been listening to some of the disputed
- tapes, and he had found one--the "smoking gun"--that threatened
- to destroy his whole case. It was a talk with Haldeman on June
- 23, 1972, a time when Nixon had long pretended to know virtually
- nothing about the Watergate break-in just six days earlier.
- This tape recorded Nixon talking with Haldeman about Mitchell's
- involvement, ordering a cover-up, planning to use the FBI and
- CIA to protect himself. For good measure, the tape also included
- presidential slurs on Jews, women, homosexuals, Italians and
- the press. The reaction to the new tape, when Nixon finally
- released it, was disastrous. Even conservatives like Ronald
- Reagan and Barry Goldwater demanded Nixon's resignation, as
- did G.O.P. chairman George Bush. A congressional delegation
- told the President he had no more than 15 votes in the Senate,
- about the same in the House. Shortly after, Nixon told his family,
- "We're going back to California." His daughters burst into tears;
- his wife did not.
- </p>
- <p> Two days later, on Aug. 8, 1974, Nixon made his last televised
- statement from the White House: "I have never been a quitter.
- To leave office before my term is completed is abhorrent to
- every instinct in my body. But as President I must put the interests
- of America first...Therefore, I shall resign the presidency
- effective at noon tomorrow." There remained then only a series
- of farewells. He spoke once again of winning and losing. "We
- think that when we suffer a defeat, that all is ended. Not true.
- It is only a beginning, always."
- </p>
- <p> And so it was, once again, for Nixon. When he left Washington,
- there was a chance he might yet be prosecuted. Gerald Ford fixed
- that a month later by issuing a presidential pardon protecting
- Nixon from legal penalties for anything he had done in connection
- with Watergate. But Nixon's health was poor, his psychic shock
- obvious. An attack of phlebitis nearly killed him. He later
- told friends that he heard voices calling, "Richard, pull yourself
- back." And so he did.
- </p>
- <p> His first public appearance came in 1978, and then the long,
- slow process of self-rehabilitation. Perhaps, in his last years,
- having regained a certain amount of public respect and even
- some grudging admiration, having acquired four grandchildren
- and all the comforts of leisurely wealth, Nixon finally found
- a little peace, finally got over that mysterious anger that
- had fueled his ambition throughout his long life. Perhaps.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-