Richard Nixon was the thirty-seventh president of the United States of America and was the only president to resign from the position, which followed the Watergate scandal.
37th president of the United States of America, and the only President to resign from the position following the Watergate scandal.
Richard Nixon was the thirty-seventh president of the United States of America and was the only president to resign from the position, which followed the Watergate scandal.
Richard Milhous Nixon served as the 37ththirty-seventh Presidentpresident of the United States from January 20, 1969, to August 9, 1974, at which point he resigned from office following the Watergate scandal. The scandal and imminent impeachment whichthat led to the former president's resignation have colored the legacy of Nixon's time as president, and his legacy as a crook. Richard Nixon has been described as complex, inconsistencyinconsistent, and even contradictory; as a liar, a political monster, and a dangerous enemy; and as an introvert in an extroverted career, an intelligent man who relied on his own intelligence and the intelligence of others, and a champion of the "have-nots" in opposition to those he described as having everything and "sitting on their fat butts."
The legacy of Watergate, and its associated scandals, has left Nixon's legacy more concerned with that scandal rather than his establishment of domestic political agencies and his foreign policy, which, in part, eased international tensions. This legacy has also seen Nixon paired, in name or character, with later controversial political and presidential figures.
Born Richard Milhous Nixon on January 9, 1913, in Yorba Linda California, he was the second of five children born to Frank Nixon and Hannah Milhous Nixon. Frank Nixon was an owner of a service station and a small lemon farm, as well as a grocer, whileand Hannah Nixon was a Quaker who would exertexerted a strong influence on Richard Nixon. Nixon's family werewas poor, and; his father could be sometimes be abusive, whileand his mother was considered controlling,controlling—which are different characteristics that Nixon would later be considered to adopt in his career.
Further, someSome, including Nixon, considered his drive to succeed came as a result of his childhood, as well asand his belief that he had to pretend to be good while useusing any possible tactic to achieve his goal. He would havehad success in his school career, with good grades and while partaking in debates and elections.
Richard Nixon would attendattended Fullterton High School before transferingtransferring to Whittier High School, where he would runran for, and lose,lost student body president. He would earnearned a scholarship to Harvard University, but due to his family's financial situation, he would not be able to attend. Instead, in 1930, Nixon enrolled at Whittier College, where he pursued his interest in student government, drama, and football while working at his family's store. He won a scholarship to Duke University School of Law in 1934, where he would be president of the Student Bar Association and a member of the law review. He graduated in June 1937.
After graduation, Nixon returned to Whittier and joined a law firm, Wingert and Bewley. While there, he partook in a community play, andwhere wouldhe meetmet Thelma Catherine Ryan, nicknamed Pat, at a rehearsal for the play. Thelma Ryan was a teacher and amateur actress. Nixon pursued a relationship with her, and in 1940 the couple would be married.
The newnewly married couple would movemoved to Washington, D.C. in 1942 in order to pursue Richard Nixon's amibitionsambitions, which would not be satisfied with a career as a small-town lawyer. He would taketook a job in Franklin Roosevelt's Office of Price Administration, but wouldhe becomebecame disillusioned with the bureacraticbureaucratic red tape, and would leave theleft public service. He wouldthen joinjoined the U.S. Navy, despite his military exemption as a practicing Quaker. He wouldthen serveserved as an aviation ground officer in the Pacific, and, despite not seeing combat during his service, he would returnreturned to the United States with two service stars and commendations, and would riserose to the rank of lieutenant commander before resigning his commission in January 1946.
In 1946, Nixon would runran for and winwon an election to a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, representing his home state of California, and beatingbeat out a five-term incumbent, Democratic Congressman Jerry Voorhis, in a campaign whichthat relied on Nixon's use of innuendo to suggest Voorhis's alleged communistycommunist sympathies.
During this time, from 1948 to 1950, Nixon would participateparticipated as a member of the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAAC), during which time he would taketook a lead role in the investigation of Alger Hiss, who had previously worked at the State Department and was accused of spying for the Soviet Union. Hiss denied the charges and was convicted of perjury, and Nixon's hostile questioning of Hiss, who denied the charges but would be convicted of perjury, would beginbegan to build his national reputation as a fervent anticommunistanti-communist.
After his performance on the House Un-American Activities Committee, which many considered to have cemented his anti-communist outlook, he would receivereceived reelection in 1948. After two terms as a congressman, Nixon would stnadran for the senate, and campaigncampaigned against Democratic candidate Helen Gahagan Douglas. His campaign against Douglas would earnearned Nixon the nickname whichthat would follow the remainder of his political life, "Tricky Dick," earned for the application of courtroom experience which, in turn, served his political acumen. The campaign saw Nixon use Douglas's voting record, which mirrored that of another Democrat believed to have communist sympathies, to imply she would have the same sympathies. During this period of fervent anti-communist feeling across America, this wouldeasily handhanded Nixon the election easily.
Nixon would only serveserved a third of his senatorial term. This was due to hisHis support in California, with his anti-communist rhetoric and actions, which made him the ideal running mate for Dwight D. Eisenhower's presidential campaign. The ticket of Eisenhower's war hero status as acombined war hero, andwith Nixon's youth, as (he was only 39 at this point,) and his strong political rise created a powerful ticket. Despite a small controversy around Nixon's campaign expenses, the two would comecame to power in 1952.
The controversy around Nixon's campaign funds came from a New York Post report whichthat said he maintained a secret "slush fund" provided by contributions from California businessmen. Eisenhower gave Nixon a chance to clear himself, and in September 1952, Nixon delivered a national television address whichthat would come to be called the "Checkers" speech. The speech would gaingained its name in part for the rhetoric, in which Nixon stated his wife did not wear mink, but rather "respectable Republican cloth," and he had been given a cocker spaniel named Checkers with his campaign contributions, which he would not return because his daughters loved it. The isspeech then became oftento bestbe known for, in which Nixon would state his wife did notas wearthe mink, but rather "respectable Republican cloth" and that he had been given a cocker spaniel named "Checkers" with his campaign contributions which he would not return because his daughters loved it. The dog would give the speech his name. And it It was a success, with the public responding favorably, and the speech putting some of Eisenhower's concerns at rest.
During his two terms as a vice president, Nixon would makemade the role of vice president more prominent and enhance its constitutional importance. Although he had no formal power, he had the attention of the media and the Republican party, and demonstrated the office of the vice president could be a pathway to the presidency. Most vice presidents since Nixon have followed his path and sought the presidency after serving as vice president. Nixon was also the first vice president to assume power temporarily when Eisenhower was ill. This occurred three times: in 1955, when Eisenhower suffered a heart attack,; in 1956, when Eisenhower suffered ileitis; and in 1957, when Eisenhower sufferedhad a stroke. During his vice presidency, Nixon would also engage engaged in the profanity-filled "kitchen debate" with Nikita Krushchev over the merits of capitalism versus communism during the 1959 opening of the American National Exhibition in Moscow. The debate which would bring Nixon further notoriety.
During Eisenhower's illnesses, Nixon would bewas called to chair several cabinet sessions and National Security Council meetings through a formalized agreement between Nixon and Eisenhower. But the real power lay in Eisenhower's close circle of advisors, of which Nixon was not a part. Nixon would also taketook several publicized trips abroad, and he would havehad several arguments and clashes with Eisenhower that would leaveleft Eisenhower unsure of his support for Nixon when Nixon would run for president.
In the 1960 general election, Richard Nixon would winwon his party's presidential nomination and opposed Democrat John F. Kennedy. The campaign was considered a turning point in political campaigning based, in part,partially on the televised debates between the two, which were the first televised presidential debates. InDuring the theseseries of four debates, Kennedy was able to convey an image of youthfulness, energy, and physical poise, having spent his time relaxing before the debates. While Nixon maintained his hectic campaign schedule.
In the series of four debates, which were the first televised presidential debates, would see theKennedy's youthful and energetic Kennedyappearance acrosswas fromin contrast ato the pale and sweating Nixon, who had declined makeup and came across as nervous and had declined makeup. And, whileWhile some have suggested Nixon rhetorically won the series of debates, performing better especially in the third and fourth debatesrounds, the image of Kennedy and the confidence ithe inspiredconveyed led many to believe he won the debates.
The election wuoldwas bewon by one of the closest margins. Although Kennedy won the electoral vote, he only received 118,000 more votes than Nixon in the popular vote. There were some concerns around irregularities in Illinois and Texas, with some observers questioning the validity of Kennedy's wins in those states. Some Republicans, including Eisenhower, urged Nixon to contest the results. But Nixon chose not to and declared Kennedy the victor, which would winwon him praise from supporters and critics alike for the dignity and unselfishness with which he handled defeat.
Following his defeat to Kennedy, and the end of the Eisenhower presidency, Nixon decided to return to civilian life in California. He wrote a best sellingbestselling book, Six Crises, which was published in 1962. In that same year, he decided toreluctantly runran for governor of California, with some reported reluctance, and would loselost to incumbent Democrat Edmund G. Brown. In a post-election news conference, Nixon would announceannounced his retirement from politics, and attacked the press whobecause he felt they used Nixonhim as a whipping post. It was, at the time,then believed Nixon's politcalpolitical career was over.
Nixon would returnreturned to practisingpracticing law in California, before moving to New York City for his legal career. During this time, he would buildbuilt himself a reputation as an expert in foreign affairs, and as an individual and leader with appeal to both moderates and conservatives of the Republican party. This wouldled anticipateto one his,of sometimesthe calledmost remarkable, political comebackcomebacks, which would see Nixon win the Republican party's presidential nomination in 1968.
Nixon paired his ballot with Maryland Governor Spiro Agnew to campaign against Democrat Hubert H. Humphrey and third-party candidate George Wallace. His platform included a vague promise for an honorable peace in Vietnam, the restoration of law and order in the cities, a crackdown on illegal drugs, and an end to the draft. Humphrey, as former vice president to Lyndon B. Johnson, was burdened by Johnson's unpopular Vietnam policies, which included a large escalation of the war effort and the bombing of North Vietnam. Johnson would halt the bombing in late October to help Humphrey's chances, and in preparation for direct negotiations with Hanoi. Some have suggested that if this step had been taken earlier, Humphrey may have won the election. As it was, Nixon won the election by a narrow margin, 31.7 million popular votes to Humphrey's nearly 30.9 million, and with an electoral vote of 301 to 191.
Despite the cloud of the later scandal would place over Nixon's presidency, he made important steps in domestic policy, and enacted some unpopular policy, during his term as presidentpolicies. This began with his refusal to follow Eisenhower's pattern of consolidation of programs, and his preparation to make major departures to make changes. He also ascended to the presidency during a period of growing inflation and unemployment. Nixon would declare thatdeclared his goal was "to bring the American people together."
In order toTo approach the problems of the economy, Richard Nixon adopted a policy of monetary restraint, including restricting the growth of the money supply, which would come to be called "gradualism." But, as the name implied, it did not produce quick results, and Nixon found himself working against inflation. To bring down the rate, he would gowent through various schemes, including delaying pay raises to federal employees by six months, while some called for wage and price controls. This led to Nixon, in 1971, gathering his economic advisors to develop a New Economic Policy (NEP), which would violateviolated most of Nixon's long-held economic policies and was enormously popular. This included wage-and-price freezes, tax cuts, a temporary closure fo the "gold window" (which allowed other nations to demand American gold in exchange for American Dollars), and included a 10 percent import tax to improve the nation's balance of trade. He wouldwas also be the benficiarybeneficiary of an economic boom starting in late 1971 and lasting into 1972, thatwhich would crash in 1973. When Nixon left office, the economy was as bad, if not worse, than when he took office.
Nixon would also proposeproposed the Family Assistance Plan, which proposedaimed to replace the welfare program of the time with a guaranteed minimum income for families with children, and fix what Nixon saw as a failure of the United States' safteysafety net to combat poverty in America. And unlikeUnlike other welfare plans, the annual guaranteed income would bewas extended to all, not just the "non-working poor," and endingended the distinction between the working and non-working poor. The plan would not be passed by Congress, but. despiteDespite the defeat, it would leadled to support for incremental legislation supporting similar ideas, such as Supplemental Security Income (SSI), which provided guaranteed income for the elderly, blind, and disabled;, and automatic cost-of-living adjustments for social security recipients. It also prompted an expansion and improvement of existing programs, such as food stamps and health insurance for low-income families.
Another policy direction was the development of "New Federalism,", which largely describes a several changes in domestic programs to get towardstoward this plan, which includedincluding a revenue-sharing plan to return a percentage of federal tax revenues to state and local governments. Given in "block grants," the state or local governments were allowed to use the funds as they chose, rather than given a dictatedictation from the federal government guiding their use.
Nixon would overseeoversaw a series of domestic policies for the betterment of social and racial welfare. This included initiating and overseeing the desegregation of southern schools; lowering the voting age from twenty-one to eighteen, and extending the right to vote; and authorizing joint work between the FBI and Special Task Forces to work to eliminate organized crime, which saw over 2500 convinctionsconvictions by 1973;. heHe was the first Presidentpresident to give Native Americans the right to tribal self-determination by ending the policy of forced assimilation and returning their sacred lands;. inIn 1973, he would endended the military draft and movemoved the United States Military to an all-volunteer force;. inIn 1972, he would signsigned Title IX, which prevented gender bias at colleges and universities receiving Federalfederal aid, effectively opening the door for women in collegiate sports; he. wouldHe banbanned court-ordered busingbussing and leadled to the development of federal aid for school districts to dismantle segregated facilities and develop neighborhood schools;. andAnd he would proposeproposed initiatives and provisions to offer training and employment opportunities on federally funded projects, implementing the first example of "affirmitiveaffirmative action" with athe goal of ending segregation.
Nixon also developed other domestic policies, which includedincluding environmental legislation, such as the Clean Water Act, and the establishment ofestablished the Environmental Protection Agency to address concerns around the environment raised during the early 1970s. He would proposeproposed legislation that created the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), he would establishestablished the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and he would foundfounded the Drug Enforcement Administration while announcing the "war on drugs," which aimed to end illicit substance abuse and trade in the United States.
Following the successful Apollo XI mission to place astronuatsastronauts on the Moonmoon, started by John F. Kennedy, Nixon would greetgreeted the astronauts on their safe return to Earth. He would shortly thereafter be considered one of the fathers of NASA, as he would supportsupported the mission of NASA as a peaceful, and civilian enterprise in space, despite calls for NASA to adopt a more militaristic stance. And in 1972, he directed NASA to develop and build a reusable space transportation system, known as the space shuttle. While this was in partpartially in response to increasingly tight federal budgets, the reusability of the space shuttle was expected to provide more regular access to space while also reducing costs.
Nixon was probably best known for his foreign policy previousprior to his election, and, he would go on to lead a series of foreign affairs missions and pursue policies aimed at reducing tensions through the global community, while pursuing American interests, to lesser and greater success.
One of the initial aims of Nixon's presidency was to achieve "peace with honor" in the Vietnam War. This began with the policy of "Vietnamization," which aimed to reduce the role and number of United States military personnel in the Vietnam, while transferring those roles to South Vietnamese troops. Troops who remained heavily dependent on American supplies and air support. Meanwhile, Nixon resumed bombing of North Vietnam, and expanded the air and ground war to neighboring Cambodia and Laos. These expansions of the conflict cauasedcaused protests and demonstrations, including a demonstration at Kent University in May 1970 ending in the Ohio National Guard firing into the crowd of 2,000 protestors, killing four and wounding nine.
But during this period, there were negotiations between National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger and North Vietnamese Foreign Minister Le Duc Tho. The sides reached an agreement in October 1972, until the South Vietnamese raised objections, and the agreement would breakbroke down before an intensive 11 dayeleven-day bombing campaign of Hanoi and various North Vietnamese in late December of that year. A new agreement was reached in January 1973, which included an immediate cease-fire, the release of all prisoners of war, and the withdrawal of American military personnel.
Nixon's greatest foreign policy success may have come in the establishment of direct relations with the People's Republic of China, coming after a 21-yeartwenty-one-year estrangement. This occuredoccurred after a series of low-level diplomatic contacts in 1970, the lifting of U.S. trade and travel restrictions in 1971, and an inidicationindication from the Chinese that high-level discussions would be welcome. Nixon initialllyinitially sent Kissinger to talk, which resulted in the "ping-pong diplomacy" of multiple games between the American and Chinese table-tennis teams in reciprocal visits in 1971 and 1972.
Nixon would officially visitvisited China in 1972, the first visit by an American president while in office. The trip signaled a shift to a more cooperative relationship between the United States and China, and, for some observers, concluded the Cold War in East Asia, leading to an altering of the international balance of power. The trip included dialogue on various differences between China and the United States, leading to the Shanghai Communique, which outlined individual and common interests, including the "One-China" policy, which redefined cross-strait and U.S.US and Taiwan relationships, while China and the U.S.US worked towards normalization of diplomatic relations between the countries.
The steps taken in China waswere partially taken in part to take advantage of what was a growing Sino-Soviet rift, which grew in the late 1960s. This rift gave Nixon more leverage in his dealings with the SovietySoviet Union. Further, by 1971, the Soviet Union was more interested in talks with the United States, and improved relations between the two countries. Nixon would visitvisited Moscow in May 1972 where heand signed 10ten formal agreements. The most important of these agreements were the nuclear arms limitation treaties, known as SALT I (based on the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks), and a memorandum, the Basic Principles of U.S.-Soviet Relations, which summarized the new relationship between the two countries.
The foreign policy efforts of Nixon in the Middle East during his presidency were less successful. The administration had developed a comprehensive plan for peace, known as the Rogers Plan, which was rejected by both the Israelis and the Soviet Union. Following the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, Nixon sent Kissinger to broker disengagement agreements, which were successful in easing tensions, but did little to help U.S.US and Arab relations.
Whereas, inIn Latin America, in fear of a possible communist revolution, the Nixon administration worked to undermine the coalition government of Chile's Marxist President Salvador Allende, who had been elected in 1970 and had nationalized American-ownedAmerica-owned mining companies. The administration would restrict restricted Chile's access to international financial assistance and would discouragediscourageed private investment. At the same time, the administration increased aid to the Chilean military, cultivated contacts with anti-Allende policy and military officials, and increased activities to destabilize the region, such as funneling covert money to Chilean opposition groups from 1970 to 1973. Allende was overthrown, in partpartially due to the activities of the Nixon administration, during a military coup d'etat led by General Augusto Pinochet.
In 1972, Nixon and Agnew would winwon reelection in a landslide victory, defeating his Democratic challenger Senator George S. McGovern, with 46.7 million to 28.9 million in the popular vote, and 520 to 17 in the electoral vote. Despite this victory, Nixon would bewas forced to resign in disgrace a year later in what has been described as one of the worst political scandals in United States Historyhistory. The scandal came from illegal activities by Nixon and his aides related to the burglary and wiretapping of the Democratic Party's national headquarters at the Watergate office complex in Washington, D.C. It would come to encompass allegations of related crimes committed before and after the break-in.
Five men, hired by the Republican PartParty's Committee to Re-elect the President, woul dbewere arrested and charged in June of 1972. Following the arrests, Nixon would directdirected White House counsel John Dean to conceal the administrationsadministration's involvement, while Nixon himself engaged in obstructing the FBI and its inquiry, while authorizing cash payments to the Watergate five to prevent them from implicating the administration.
Several newspapers, lead by The Washington Post would pursue the possible involvement of the White House in the burglary, based on information from an unnamed source called "Deep Throat." The mysterious Deep Throat would become its own story, while in February 1973 a special Senate committee, the Select Committe on Presidential Campaign Activities, was established to look into the Watergate affair, which would go on to accuse Nixon of involvement in a cover-up. Others would testify to illegal activities on the part of the administration and campaign staff, such as the use of federal agencies to harass Nixon's perceived enemeis, and engaged in acts of espionage. The committee would learn that in 1969 Nixon had installed a recording system in the Oval Office, recording the conversations of the president. These would be subpoenaed by Archibald Cox, a special prosecutor appointed to investigate the affair. Nixon refused, and instead offered summary transcripts, wich Cox rejected.
Several newspapers, led by The Washington Post, pursued possible involvement of the White House in the burglary, based on information from an unnamed source called "Deep Throat." The mysterious Deep Throat became its own story. In February 1973, a special Senate committee, the Select Committee on Presidential Campaign Activities, was established to look into the Watergate affair, and it went go on to accuse Nixon of involvement in a cover-up. Others testified to illegal activities on the part of the administration and campaign staff, such as the use of federal agencies to harass Nixon's perceived enemies, and engaged in acts of espionage. The committee would learn that in 1969, Nixon had installed a recording system in the Oval Office, recording the conversations of the president. These were subpoenaed by Archibald Cox, a special prosecutor appointed to investigate the affair. Nixon refused, and instead offered summary transcripts, which Cox rejected.
In an event that would come to be called the Saturday Night Massacre, Nixon would orderordered Attorney General Elliot Richardson to fire Cox. Richardson resigned rather than comply. Nixon would then firefired Richardson's assistant, William Ruckelshaus, who also refused to fire Cox. Cox wouldwas eventually be removed by Solicitor General Robert Bork. The action would be subsequently deemed illegal by a federal district court.
After this series of firings, in part prompted by Nixon's own paranoia, he would agreeagreed to another special prosecutor, Leon Jaworski, and promised not to fire him without congressoinalcongressional consent. He would then utteruttered his famous lines in a news conference, where he said "I am not a crook." Nixon subsequently released seven of the nine tapes requested by Cox. One of these tapes included a gap of 18 and a halfeighteen-and-a-half minutes. The tapes were damning, but did not include evidence that the president ordered the break-in or attempted to obstruct justice. Jaworksi would subpoena 64sixty-four more tapes, which Nixon attempted to withhold on grounds of "executive privilege." The Supreme Court would ruleruled in 1974 that Nixon's claim for this privilege was invalid.
By the time the Supreme Court had comecame to this decision, the House Judiciary CommitteCommittee had already voted to recommend three articles of impeachment, relating to obstruction of justice, abuse of power, and failure to comply with congressional subpoenas. Nixon would comply complied with the Supreme Court's ruling, and submitted transcripts of a conversation tape from June 1972, in which he discussed plans to use the Central Intelligence Agency to block the FBI's investigation of the Watergate break-in. Facing near-certain impeachment by the House and conviction in the Senate, Nixon would announceannounced his resignation on August 8, 1974, effective at noon the next day.
HeNixon was succeeded by Gerald Ford, who had previously succeeded Spiro Agnew as vice president following Agnew's own resignation from office amid charges of bribery, extortion, and tax evasion from his time as governor of Maryland. President Ford would pardon Richard Nixon a month later, on September 8, 1974, freeing him from the potential of facing prosecution.
Richard Nixon would retireretired with his wife to his estate in San Clemente, California., therewhere he would rightwrote several books on international affairs and American foreign policy, along with RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon which would be, published in 1978. These would, in small part, rehabilitate some of his public image, and would later earn him a role as an elder statesman and foreign-policy expert. He would later campaigncampaigned for American political support and financial aid for Russia and other former Soviet republics. In April 1994, Nixon would diedied of a massive stroke in New York City. His death came 10ten months after his wife died from lung cancer. He would receive posthumous praise from President Bill Clinton and other dignatoriesdignataries for his diplomatic achievements.
37th president of the united states of america
37th president of the United States of America, and the only President to resign from the position following the Watergate scandal.
Richard Milhous Nixon (January 9, 1913 – April 22, 1994) was the 37th president of the United States, serving from 1969 to 1974. He was a member of the Republican Party who previously served as a representative and senator from California and was the 36th vice president from 1953 to 1961. His five years in the White House saw the end of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War, détente with the Soviet Union and China, the first manned moon landings, and the establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency. Nixon's second term ended early, when he became the only president to resign from office, following the Watergate scandal.
Richard Milhous Nixon served as the 37th President of the United States from January 20, 1969 to August 9, 1974, at which point he resigned from office following the Watergate scandal. The scandal and imminent impeachment which led to the former president's resignation have colored the legacy of Nixon's time as president, and his legacy as a crook. Richard Nixon has been described as complex, inconsistency, and even contradictory; as a liar, a political monster, and a dangerous enemy; an introvert in an extroverted career, an intelligent man who relied on his own intelligence and the intelligence of others, and a champion of the "have-nots" in opposition to those he described as having everything and "sitting on their fat butts."
The legacy of Watergate, and its associated scandals, has left Nixon's legacy more concerned with that scandal rather than his establishment of domestic political agencies and his foreign policy, which, in part, eased international tensions. This legacy has also seen Nixon paired, in name or character, with later controversial political and presidential figures.
Born Richard Milhous Nixon on January 9, 1913 in Yorba Linda California, he was the second of five children born to Frank Nixon and Hannah Milhous Nixon. Frank Nixon was an owner of a service station and a small lemon farm, as well as a grocer, while Hannah Nixon was a Quaker who would exert a strong influence on Richard Nixon. Nixon's family were poor, and his father could be sometimes abusive while his mother was considered controlling, different characteristics Nixon would later be considered to adopt in his career.
Further, some, including Nixon, considered his drive to succeed came as a result of his childhood, as well as his belief he had to pretend to be good while use any possible tactic to achieve his goal. He would have success in his school career, with good grades and while partaking in debates and elections.
Richard Nixon would attend Fullterton High School before transfering to Whittier High School, where he would run for, and lose, student body president. He would earn a scholarship to Harvard University, but due to his family's financial situation he would not be able to attend. Instead, in 1930 Nixon enrolled at Whittier College where he pursued his interest in student government, drama, and football while working at his family's store. He won a scholarship to Duke University School of Law in 1934, where he would be president of the Student Bar Association and a member of the law review. He graduated in June 1937.
After graduation, Nixon returned to Whittier and joined a law firm, Wingert and Bewley. While there, he partook in a community play, and would meet Thelma Catherine Ryan, nicknamed Pat, at a rehearsal for the play. Thelma Ryan was a teacher and amateur actress. Nixon pursued a relationship with her, and in 1940 the couple would be married.
The new married couple would move to Washington, D.C. in 1942 in order to pursue Richard Nixon's amibitions, which would not be satisfied with a career as a small-town lawyer. He would take a job in Franklin Roosevelt's Office of Price Administration, but would become disillusioned with the bureacratic red tape, and would leave the public service. He would join the U.S. Navy, despite his military exemption as a practicing Quaker. He would serve as an aviation ground officer in the Pacific, and, despite not seeing combat during his service, he would return to the United States with two service stars and commendations, and would rise to the rank of lieutenant commander before resigning his commission in January 1946.
In 1946, Nixon would run for and win an election to a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, representing his home state of California, and beating out a five-term incumbent, Democratic Congressman Jerry Voorhis in a campaign which relied on Nixon's use of innuendo to suggest Voorhis's alleged communisty sympathies.
During this time, from 1948 to 1950, Nixon would participate as a member of the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAAC), during which time he would take a lead role in the investigation of Alger Hiss, who had previously worked at the State Department and was accused of spying for the Soviet Union. Nixon's hostile questioning of Hiss, who denied the charges but would be convicted of perjury, would begin to build his national reputation as a fervent anticommunist.
After his performance on the House Un-American Activities Committee, which many considered to have cemented his anti-communist outlook, he would receive reelection in 1948. After two terms as a congressman, Nixon would stnad for the senate, and campaign against Democratic candidate Helen Gahagan Douglas. His campaign against Douglas would earn Nixon the nickname which would follow the remainder of his political life, "Tricky Dick," earned for the application of courtroom experience which in turn served his political acumen. The campaign saw Nixon use Douglas's voting record, which mirrored that of another Democrat believed to have communist sympathies, to imply she would have the same sympathies. During this period of fervent anti-communist feeling across America, this would hand Nixon the election easily.
Nixon would only serve a third of his senatorial term. This was due to his support in California, with his anti-communist rhetoric and actions, which made him the ideal running mate for Dwight D. Eisenhower's presidential campaign. The ticket of Eisenhower's status as a war hero, and Nixon's youth, as he was only 39 at this point, and his strong political rise created a powerful ticket. Despite a small controversy around Nixon's campaign expenses, the two would come to power in 1952.
The controversy around Nixon's campaign funds came from a New York Post report which said he maintained a secret "slush fund" provided by contributions from California businessmen. Eisenhower gave Nixon a chance to clear himself, and in September 1952 Nixon delivered a national television address which would come to be called the "Checkers" speech. The speech would gain its name in part for the rhetoric, which it is often best known for, in which Nixon would state his wife did not wear mink, but rather "respectable Republican cloth" and that he had been given a cocker spaniel named "Checkers" with his campaign contributions which he would not return because his daughters loved it. The dog would give the speech his name. And it was a success, with the public responding favorably, and the speech putting some of Eisenhower's concerns at rest.
During his two terms as a vice president, Nixon would make the role of vice president more prominent and enhance its constitutional importance. Although he had no formal power, he had the attention of the media and the Republican party, and demonstrated the office of the vice president could be a pathway to the presidency. Most vice presidents since Nixon have followed his path and sought the presidency after serving as vice president. Nixon was also the first vice president to assume power temporarily when Eisenhower was ill. This occurred three times: in 1955 when Eisenhower suffered a heart attack, in 1956 when Eisenhower suffered ileitis; and in 1957 when Eisenhower suffered a stroke. During his vice presidency, Nixon would also engage in the profanity-filled "kitchen debate" with Nikita Krushchev over the merits of capitalism versus communism during the 1959 opening of the American National Exhibition in Moscow which would bring Nixon further notoriety.
During Eisenhower's illnesses, Nixon would be called to chair several cabinet sessions and National Security Council meetings through a formalized agreement between Nixon and Eisenhower. But the real power lay in Eisenhower's close circle of advisors, of which Nixon was not a part. Nixon would also take several publicized trips abroad and he would have several arguments and clashes with Eisenhower that would leave Eisenhower unsure of his support for Nixon when Nixon would run for president.
In the 1960 general election, Richard Nixon would win his party's presidential nomination and opposed Democrat John F. Kennedy. The campaign was considered a turning point in political campaigning based, in part, on the televised debates between the two. In these debates, Kennedy was able to convey an image of youthfulness, energy, and physical poise, having spent his time relaxing before the debates. While Nixon maintained his hectic campaign schedule.
In the series of four debates, which were the first televised presidential debates, would see the youthful and energetic Kennedy across from a pale and sweating Nixon, who came across as nervous and had declined makeup. And, while some have suggested Nixon rhetorically won the series of debates, performing better especially in the third and fourth debates, the image of Kennedy and the confidence it inspired led many to believe he won the debates.
The election wuold be one of the closest margins. Although Kennedy won the electoral vote, he only received 118,000 more votes than Nixon in the popular vote. There were some concerns around irregularities in Illinois and Texas, with some observers questioning the validity of Kennedy's wins in those states. Some Republicans, including Eisenhower, urged Nixon to contest the results. But Nixon chose not to and declared Kennedy the victor, which would win him praise from supporters and critics alike for the dignity and unselfishness with which he handled defeat.
Following his defeat to Kennedy, and the end of the Eisenhower presidency, Nixon decided to return to civilian life in California. He wrote a best selling book, Six Crises which was published in 1962. In that same year, he decided to run for governor of California, with some reported reluctance, and would lose to incumbent Democrat Edmund G. Brown. In a post-election news conference, Nixon would announce his retirement from politics, and attacked the press who he felt used Nixon as a whipping post. It was, at the time, believed Nixon's politcal career was over.
Nixon would return to practising law in California, before moving to New York City for his legal career. During this time, he would build himself a reputation as an expert in foreign affairs, and as an individual and leader with appeal to both moderates and conservatives of the Republican party. This would anticipate one his, sometimes called remarkable, political comeback which would see Nixon win the Republican party's presidential nomination in 1968.
Nixon paired his ballot with Maryland Governor Spiro Agnew to campaign against Democrat Hubert H. Humphrey and third-party candidate George Wallace. His platform included a vague promise for an honorable peace in Vietnam, the restoration of law and order in the cities, a crackdown on illegal drugs, and an end to the draft. Humphrey, as former vice president to Lyndon B. Johnson, was burdened by Johnson's unpopular Vietnam policies, which included a large escalation of the war effort and the bombing of North Vietnam. Johnson would halt the bombing in late October to help Humphrey's chances, and in preparation for direct negotiations with Hanoi. Some have suggested that if this step had been taken earlier, Humphrey may have won the election. As it was, Nixon won the election by a narrow margin, 31.7 million popular votes to Humphrey's nearly 30.9 million, and with an electoral vote of 301 to 191.
Despite the cloud the later scandal would place over Nixon's presidency, he made important steps in domestic policy, and enacted some unpopular policy, during his term as president. This began with his refusal to follow Eisenhower's pattern of consolidation of programs, and his preparation to make major departures to make changes. He also ascended to the presidency during a period of growing inflation and unemployment. Nixon would declare that his goal was "to bring the American people together."
In order to approach the problems of the economy, Richard Nixon adopted a policy of monetary restraint, including restricting the growth of the money supply, which would come to be called "gradualism." But, as the name implied, it did not produce quick results, and Nixon found himself working against inflation. To bring down the rate, he would go through various schemes, including delaying pay raises to federal employees by six months, while some called for wage and price controls. This led to Nixon in 1971 gathering his economic advisors to develop a New Economic Policy (NEP) which would violate most of Nixon's long-held economic policies and was enormously popular. This included wage-and-price freezes, tax cuts, a temporary closure fo the "gold window" (which allowed other nations to demand American gold in exchange for American Dollars), and included a 10 percent import tax to improve the nation's balance of trade. He would also be the benficiary of an economic boom starting in late 1971 and lasting into 1972, that would crash in 1973. When Nixon left office, the economy was as bad, if not worse, than when he took office.
Nixon would also propose the Family Assistance Plan which proposed to replace the welfare program of the time with a guaranteed minimum income for families with children, and fix what Nixon saw as a failure of the United States saftey net to combat poverty in America. And unlike other welfare plans, the annual guaranteed income would be extended to all, not just the "non-working poor" and ending the distinction between the working and non-working poor. The plan would not be passed by Congress, but despite the defeat, it would lead to support for incremental legislation supporting similar ideas, such as Supplemental Security Income (SSI) which provided guaranteed income for the elderly, blind, and disabled; and automatic cost-of-living adjustments for social security recipients. It also prompted an expansion and improvement of existing programs, such as food stamps and health insurance for low-income families.
Another policy direction was the development of "New Federalism", which largely describes a several changes in domestic programs to get towards this plan, which included a revenue-sharing plan to return a percentage of federal tax revenues to state and local governments. Given in "block grants" the state or local governments were allowed to use the funds as they chose, rather than given a dictate from the federal government guiding their use.
Nixon would oversee a series of domestic policies for the betterment of social and racial welfare. This included initiating and overseeing the desegregation of southern schools; lowering the voting age from twenty-one to eighteen, and extending the right to vote; authorizing joint work between the FBI and Special Task Forces to work to eliminate organized crime, which saw over 2500 convinctions by 1973; he was the first President to give Native Americans the right to tribal self-determination by ending the policy of forced assimilation and returning their sacred lands; in 1973 he would end the draft and move the United States Military to an all-volunteer force; in 1972 he would sign Title IX which prevented gender bias at colleges and universities receiving Federal aid, effectively opening the door for women in collegiate sports; he would ban court-ordered busing and lead to the development of federal aid for school districts to dismantle segregated facilities and develop neighborhood schools; and he would propose initiatives and provisions to offer training and employment opportunities on federally funded projects, implementing the first example of "affirmitive action" with a goal of ending segregation.
Nixon also developed other domestic policies, which included environmental legislation such as the Clean Water Act and the establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency to address concerns around the environment raised during the early 1970s. He would propose legislation that created the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), he would establish the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, and he would found the Drug Enforcement Administration while announcing the "war on drugs" which aimed to end illicit substance abuse and trade in the United States.
Following the successful Apollo XI mission to place astronuats on the Moon, started by John F. Kennedy, Nixon would greet the astronauts on their safe return to Earth. He would shortly thereafter be considered one of the fathers of NASA, as he would support the mission of NASA as a peaceful, and civilian enterprise in space, despite calls for NASA to adopt a more militaristic stance. And in 1972, he directed NASA to develop and build a reusable space transportation system, known as the space shuttle. While this was in part in response to increasingly tight federal budgets, the reusability of the space shuttle was expected to provide more regular access to space while also reducing costs.
Nixon was probably best known for his foreign policy previous to his election, and, would go on to lead a series of foreign affairs missions and pursue policies aimed at reducing tensions through the global community, while pursuing American interests, to lesser and greater success.
One of the initial aims of Nixon's presidency was to achieve "peace with honor" in the Vietnam War. This began with the policy of "Vietnamization" which aimed to reduce the role and number of United States military personnel in the Vietnam, while transferring those roles to South Vietnamese troops. Troops who remained heavily dependent on American supplies and air support. Meanwhile, Nixon resumed bombing of North Vietnam, and expanded the air and ground war to neighboring Cambodia and Laos. These expansions of the conflict cauased protests and demonstrations, including a demonstration at Kent University in May 1970 ending in the Ohio National Guard firing into the crowd of 2,000 protestors, killing four and wounding nine.
But during this period there were negotiations between National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger and North Vietnamese Foreign Minister Le Duc Tho. The sides reached an agreement in October 1972, until the South Vietnamese raised objections, and the agreement would break down before an intensive 11 day bombing campaign of Hanoi and various North Vietnamese in late December of that year. A new agreement was reached in January 1973, which included an immediate cease-fire, the release of all prisoners of war, and the withdrawal of American military personnel.
Nixon's greatest foreign policy success may have come in the establishment of direct relations with the People's Republic of China, coming after a 21-year estrangement. This occured after a series of low-level diplomatic contacts in 1970, the lifting of U.S. trade and travel restrictions in 1971, and an inidication from the Chinese that high-level discussions would be welcome. Nixon initiallly sent Kissinger to talk, which resulted in the "ping-pong diplomacy" of multiple games between the American and Chinese table-tennis teams in reciprocal visits in 1971 and 1972.
Nixon would officially visit China in 1972, the first visit by an American president while in office. The trip signaled a shift to a more cooperative relationship between the United States and China, and, for some observers, concluded the Cold War in East Asia, leading to an altering of the international balance of power. The trip included dialogue on various differences between China and the United States, leading to the Shanghai Communique which outlined individual and common interests, including the "One-China" policy which redefined cross-strait and U.S. and Taiwan relationships, while China and the U.S. worked towards normalization of diplomatic relations between the countries.
The steps taken in China was taken in part to take advantage of what was a growing Sino-Soviet rift which grew in the late 1960s. This rift gave Nixon more leverage in his dealings with the Soviety Union. Further, by 1971, the Soviet Union was more interested in talks with the United States, and improved relations between the two countries. Nixon would visit Moscow in May 1972 where he signed 10 formal agreements. The most important of these agreements were the nuclear arms limitation treaties, known as SALT I (based on the Strategic Arms Limitation Talks) and a memorandum, the Basic Principles of U.S.-Soviet Relations, which summarized the new relationship between the two countries.
The foreign policy efforts of Nixon in the Middle East during his presidency were less successful. The administration had developed a comprehensive plan for peace, known as the Rogers Plan, which was rejected by both the Israelis and the Soviet Union. Following the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, Nixon sent Kissinger to broker disengagement agreements, which were successful in easing tensions, but did little to help U.S. and Arab relations.
Whereas, in Latin America, in fear of a possible communist revolution, the Nixon administration worked to undermine the coalition government of Chile's Marxist President Salvador Allende, who had been elected in 1970 and had nationalized American-owned mining companies. The administration would restrict Chile's access to international financial assistance and would discourage private investment. At the same time, the administration increased aid to the Chilean military, cultivated contacts with anti-Allende policy and military officials, and increased activities to destabilize the region, such as funneling covert money to Chilean opposition groups from 1970 to 1973. Allende was overthrown, in part due to the activities of the Nixon administration, during a military coup d'etat led by General Augusto Pinochet.
In 1972, Nixon and Agnew would win reelection in a landslide victory, defeating his Democratic challenger Senator George S. McGovern with 46.7 million to 28.9 million in the popular vote, and 520 to 17 in the electoral vote. Despite this victory, Nixon would be forced to resign in disgrace a year later in what has been described as one of the worst political scandals in United States History. The scandal came from illegal activities by Nixon and his aides related to the burglary and wiretapping of the Democratic Party's national headquarters at the Watergate office complex in Washington, D.C. It would come to encompass allegations of related crimes committed before and after the break-in.
Five men, hired by the Republican Part's Committee to Re-elect the President, woul dbe arrested and charged in June of 1972. Following the arrests, Nixon would direct White House counsel John Dean to conceal the administrations involvement, while Nixon himself engaged in obstructing the FBI and its inquiry, while authorizing cash payments to the Watergate five to prevent them from implicating the administration.
Several newspapers, lead by The Washington Post would pursue the possible involvement of the White House in the burglary, based on information from an unnamed source called "Deep Throat." The mysterious Deep Throat would become its own story, while in February 1973 a special Senate committee, the Select Committe on Presidential Campaign Activities, was established to look into the Watergate affair, which would go on to accuse Nixon of involvement in a cover-up. Others would testify to illegal activities on the part of the administration and campaign staff, such as the use of federal agencies to harass Nixon's perceived enemeis, and engaged in acts of espionage. The committee would learn that in 1969 Nixon had installed a recording system in the Oval Office, recording the conversations of the president. These would be subpoenaed by Archibald Cox, a special prosecutor appointed to investigate the affair. Nixon refused, and instead offered summary transcripts, wich Cox rejected.
In an event that would come to be called the Saturday Night Massacre, Nixon would order Attorney General Elliot Richardson to fire Cox. Richardson resigned rather than comply. Nixon would then fire Richardson's assistant, William Ruckelshaus, who also refused to fire Cox. Cox would eventually be removed by Solicitor General Robert Bork. The action would be subsequently deemed illegal by a federal district court.
After this series of firings, in part prompted by Nixon's own paranoia, he would agree to another special prosecutor, Leon Jaworski, and promised not to fire him without congressoinal consent. He would then utter his famous lines in a news conference, where he said "I am not a crook." Nixon subsequently released seven of the nine tapes requested by Cox. One of these tapes included a gap of 18 and a half minutes. The tapes were damning, but did not include evidence that the president ordered the break-in or attempted to obstruct justice. Jaworksi would subpoena 64 more tapes, which Nixon attempted to withhold on grounds of "executive privilege." The Supreme Court would rule in 1974 that Nixon's claim for this privilege was invalid.
By the time the Supreme Court had come to this decision, the House Judiciary Committe had already voted to recommend three articles of impeachment, relating to obstruction of justice, abuse of power, and failure to comply with congressional subpoenas. Nixon would comply with the Supreme Court's ruling, and submitted transcripts of a conversation tape from June 1972 in which he discussed plans to use the Central Intelligence Agency to block the FBI's investigation of the Watergate break-in. Facing near-certain impeachment by the House and conviction in the Senate, Nixon would announce his resignation on August 8, 1974, effective at noon the next day.
He was succeeded by Gerald Ford, who had previously succeeded Spiro Agnew as vice president following Agnew's own resignation from office amid charges of bribery, extortion, and tax evasion from his time as governor of Maryland. President Ford would pardon Richard Nixon a month later, on September 8, 1974, freeing him from the potential of facing prosecution.
Richard Nixon would retire with his wife to his estate in San Clemente, California. there he would right several books on international affairs and American foreign policy, along with RN: The Memoirs of Richard Nixon which would be published in 1978. These would, in small part, rehabilitate some of his public image, and would later earn him a role as an elder statesman and foreign-policy expert. He would later campaign for American political support and financial aid for Russia and other former Soviet republics. In April 1994, Nixon would die of a massive stroke in New York City. His death came 10 months after his wife died from lung cancer. He would receive posthumous praise from President Bill Clinton and other dignatories for his diplomatic achievements.