NIXON, RICHARD MILHOUS

1913–94, 37th President of the United States (1969–74), b. Yorba Linda, Calif.

Political Career to 1968

A graduate of Whittier College and Duke Univ. law school, he practiced law in Whittier, Calif., from 1937 to 1942, was briefly with the Office of Emergency Management, and served during World War II with the navy in the South Pacific. In 1946 he was elected to Congress as a Republican. In the House of Representatives he became nationally known for his work on the House Committee on Un-American Activities, where he was credited with forcing the famous confrontation between Alger Hiss and Whittaker Chambers, thus precipitating the perjury case against Hiss. In 1950 he was elected to the U.S. Senate after a particularly bitter electoral campaign. In the Senate, Nixon denounced President Truman's policy in Asia, supported Gen. Douglas MacArthur's proposal to expand the Korean War, and attacked the Democratic administration as favorable to socialism.

He was elected to the vice presidency on the Republican ticket with Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1952. He made frequent official trips abroad, notably in 1958 to South America, where he faced a hostile demonstration in Venezuela, and in 1959 to the USSR, where he engaged in a much-publicized informal debate with Premier Nikita Khrushchev. Nixon received the Republican presidential nomination in 1960 with only a minimum of opposition and campaigned in support of the Eisenhower administration policies. He was defeated but gained almost as much of the popular vote as the successful John F. Kennedy. Nixon returned to politics in 1962, winning the Republican nomination for governor of California. After losing the election he returned to the practice of law.

First Term

In 1968 Nixon again won the Republican nomination for president; Spiro T. Agnew was his running mate. In a low-key campaign, Nixon promised to bring peace with honor in Vietnam and to unite a nation deeply divided by the Vietnam War and the racial crisis. He defeated his two opponents, Hubert H. Humphrey and George C. Wallace, but won only a plurality of the popular vote.

As President, Nixon began the phased withdrawal of U.S. troops from South Vietnam. He achieved (1973) a cease-fire accord with North Vietnam, but only after he had ordered invasions of Cambodia (1970) and Laos (1971) and the saturation bombing of North Vietnam. In other areas of foreign policy, Nixon eased cold war tensions. He initiated strategic arms limitation talks with the Soviet Union in 1969 and visited (1972) the People's Republic of China.

At home, Nixon reversed many of the social and economic welfare policies of President Lyndon B. Johnson. He vetoed much new health, education, and welfare legislation and impounded congressionally approved funds for domestic programs that he opposed. Nixon's Southern strategy, through which he hoped to woo the South into the Republican party, led him to weaken the federal government's commitment to racial equality and to sponsor antibusing legislation in Congress. Nixon's first term in office was also beset by economic troubles. A severe recession and serious inflation brought about the imposition (1971) of a wide-reaching system of wage and price controls.

Despite these problems, Nixon and Agnew easily won reelection in 1972. Widespread popular distrust of his Democratic opponent, Senator George S. McGovern, brought Nixon a landslide victory. (Agnew was forced to resign in 1973, however, on charges of corruption that dated to when he was Baltimore co. executive, and Gerald R. Ford was nominated by Nixon and confirmed by Congress to succeed Agnew.)

Second Term: The Watergate Affair

Soon after his reelection Nixon's popularity plummeted as the growing revelations of the Watergate affair indicated pervasive corruption in his administration, and there was widespread criticism of the amount of government money spent on his private residences. Further problems ensued when the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) found that Nixon's donation of papers to the federal government, which had been taken as a deduction on his federal income tax returns, had been made after a law went into effect disallowing such deductions. The IRS assessed (1974) Nixon for the back taxes plus interest.

Many public officials and private citizens questioned Nixon's fitness to remain in office, and in 1974 the House of Representatives initiated impeachment proceedings. The House Committee on the Judiciary, which conducted the impeachment inquiry, subpoenaed Nixon's tape-recorded conversations relating to the Watergate affair and finally received (Apr. 30) transcripts of most, but not all, of the tapes. Nixon also released transcripts of these conversations to the public, continuing to profess noninvolvement in the Watergate coverup despite growing evidence to the contrary. Meanwhile, Watergate special prosecutor Leon Jaworski subpoenaed tapes that had been previously requested but that were not among those included in the transcripts. Nixon refused to relinquish these, basing his refusal on claims of "executive privilege," i.e., the confidentiality of executive communications whose release might endanger national security. On July 24, 1974, the Supreme Court ruled that President Nixon must surrender these tapes to Jaworski.

The House Judiciary Committee had already completed its investigations and subsequently recommended (July 27–30) three articles of impeachment against the President. These charged him with obstruction of justice in the investigation of the break-in at the Democratic national headquarters in the Watergate apartment complex; abuse of power through misuse of the Internal Revenue Service for political purposes, illegal wiretapping, establishment of a private investigative unit that engaged in unlawful activities, and interference with the lawful activities of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Central Intelligence Agency, the Dept. of Justice, and other government bodies; and failure to comply with subpoenas issued by the House Judiciary Committee.

On Aug. 5, Nixon made public the transcripts of three conversations covered by the Supreme Court ruling, and the tapes indicated that he had, six days after the Watergate break-in, ordered the FBI to halt its investigation of the burglary. Nixon's revelation provoked widespread calls for his resignation; finally, responding to pressure from his closest advisers, he resigned on Aug. 9, the first U.S. President ever to do so. He left the White House immediately and returned to his estate in San Clemente, Calif. His successor, Gerald Ford, granted him a full pardon for any illegal acts that he might have committed while President, thus quashing the possibility of criminal proceedings against the former President. Subsequently, four of his close associates, including John Mitchell, H. R. Haldeman, and John Ehrlichman, were convicted (Jan. 1, 1975) on charges arising from the affair. In retirement Nixon continued to comment, often influentially, on foreign affairs, writing several books on the topic, as well as his memoirs.

Bibliography

See his Six Crises (1962) and his memoirs (1978); biographies by F. Mankiewicz (1973), S. Ambrose (3 vol., 1987–91), C. L. Sulzberger (1987), and R. Morris (1990); W. Safire, Before the Fall (1975, repr. 1988); F. Schurmann, The Foreign Politics of Richard Nixon (1987); B. Woodward and C. Bernstein, The Final Days (1987); J. McGinnis, The Selling of the President (1988); T. Wicker, One of Us (1991); I. Gellman, The Contender (1999); A. Summers (with R. Swan), The Arrogance of Power (2000); R. Reeves, President Nixon (2001); D. Greenberg, Nixon's Shadow (2003).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Nixon Richard Milhous  - 185 results

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...index. 1. Nixon, Richard M. Richard Milhous , 1913 2...tuition for the Nixon boys at Whittier...Grandfather Milhous. And Richard had to pay...Quaker theme. Nixon as president...Grandmother Milhous, "What thee...understand, Richard, is that the...
...presidential race between Richard Milhous Nixon and John Fitzgerald Kennedy...Less than a month later, Richard Milhous Nixon was sworn in as the thirty-seventh...July 27, 1974, as President Richard Milhous Nixon was getting dressed after...
...0-313-26108-3 lib. bdg.: alk. paper 1. Nixon, Richard M. Richard Milhous , 1913---Oratory. 2. Political oratory--Political...demise, was the effect that obtained when Richard Milhous Nixon addressed the American people. What to write...
...index. ISBN 0-275-97915-6 (alk. paper) 1. Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-Relations with journalists. 2. Nixon, Richard M. (Richard Milhous), 1913-Public opinion. 3. Watergate Affair...
...0-313-27653-6 lib. bdg. : alk. paper 1. Nixon, Richard M. Richard Milhous , 1913- --Congresses. 2. United States--Politics...they wished to gain insight into the mind of Richard Milhous Nixon, they would do well to read Robert Blakes...
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journal articles on: Nixon Richard Milhous  - 6 results

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...to George Schultz(1) As Richard Milhous Nixon perceived it, the bureaucracys...Regnery, 1993); Roger Morris, Richard Milhous Nixon: The Rise of an American Politician...NA-PSR. (15.) Morris, Richard Milhous Nixon, pp. 266-70. (16.) A review...
...connotation. RICHARD MILHOUS NIXON (1913-1994...treated Richard Nixon, is reported...related to Richard Milhous Nixons childhood...that Hannah Milhous ever criticized her son Richard for joining...was a way for Nixon to try to fill...
...directly, "What is your opinion of the character of Richard Milhous Nixon?" Delirious with the opportunity to vent my own rather...McGovern, but I firmly concurred with your view that Nixon did not have a character suitable to be the President...
...Random House. Wills, Gary. 1982. The Kennedy Imprisonment: A Meditation on Power. Boston: Little, Brown. --. 1993. "Richard Milhous Nixon." In Oxford Companion to Politics of the World, ed. Joel Kreiger. New York: Oxford University Press. Wilson, John...
...noted that the President who promulgated more environmental protection statutes than any other in history was ... Richard Milhous Nixon. See ZYGMUNT J.B. PLATER ET AL., FEDERAL ENVIRONMENTAL STATUTES: A CHRONOLOGICAL COMPILATION OF SELECTED RELEVANT...
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magazine articles on: Nixon Richard Milhous  - 17 results

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...morning by a call from BBC radio. Richard Milhous Nixon had met his terminal crisis peacefully...Metternich. So John Kennedy and Richard Nixon (Congress, class of 1946) are...case, as I wrote in 1983, "We are Nixon; he is us." Much is now being...
...assessment in the strange case of Richard Milhous Nixon. The "Retrospective on the Nixon...major academic conference on Richard Nixon. The scholars found in Mr. Nixons...the Liberals on Welfare" and "Richard Nixon Reconsidered: The Conservative...
...helped make Watergate. Roger Morris, former member of the staff of the National Security Council and author of Richard Milhous Nixon: The Rise of an American Politician, says Ehrlichman and other Watergate figures deeply "re-sent Kissinger" and...
...excellent Broadway production Frost/Nixon, "I did something I never expected to do in my life. I shed a tear for Richard Milhous Nixon." Indeed, with Bushs presidency stirring up such unexpected passions about Nixon, a spate of books provides a...
...the very worst of our presidential Johnsons has suffered that fate, along with the Clintons old hobgoblin, Mr. Richard Milhous Nixon. Phew! The Clintons in the same boat with RMN? But the month also brought the Boy President reason to exult. His...
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newspaper articles on: Nixon Richard Milhous  - 24 results

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...new book that former President Richard Milhous Nixon took mind-altering drugs and hit...of Power: The Secret World of Richard Nixon" is 544 pages. The two rumors...incessantly repeated things like "Nixon took drugs, beat wife," sometimes...
...submerged himself in research. He read piles of books and watched all manner of videos and films that featured Richard Milhous Nixon. What he was looking for was ways of finding the key to the American politicians mannerisms. The actor stresses...
...as Through the Keyhole. On May 29, 2005 he presented his final Breakfast with Frost after 500 editions. Richard Nixon Richard Milhous Nixon was born to quaker parents in Yorba Linda, California in 1913. He became infamous as Tricky Dicky the first...
...three-and-a-quarter hours effort by telling you that NIXON DID IT! Oliver Stone turns his conspiracy theories from JFK to RMN - Richard Milhous Nixon- the man who had everything taped except how to stay President after Watergate. Oscar-nominated Anthony Hopkins...
...guess). NO LONGER SILENT Its been 26 years since Richard Milhous Nixon, his political career tarnished by the Watergate...eulogy. "To tens of millions of his countrymen, Richard Nixon was an American hero, a hero who shared and honored...
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encyclopedia articles on: Nixon Richard Milhous  - 2 results

 
 
NIXON, RICHARD MILHOUS 1913 94, 37th President of the United States (1969 74), b. Yorba...the Fall (1975, repr. 1988); F. Schurmann, The Foreign Politics of Richard Nixon (1987); B. Woodward and C. Bernstein, The Final Days (1987); J...
...Johnson Lyndon Baines Johnson Democratic 1963 69 (no Vice President, 1963 65) Hubert H. Humphrey, 1965 69 Richard Milhous Nixon Republican 1969 74 Spiro T. Agnew, 1969 73 (no Vice President, Oct. 10, 1973 Dec. 6, 1973) Gerald R. Ford...


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