February 11, 2009 5:34 PM

Nixon Pardon Defined Ford Presidency

(CBS/AP)  On a September Sunday in 1974, President Ford told the nation it was time to "shut and seal this book" of Watergate by pardoning his predecessor, Richard Nixon.

Ford's stunning announcement may also have sealed his political fate, since the nation's only president never elected to nationwide office — a Republican — lost the 1976 election to Democrat Jimmy Carter. Many said the unpopular pardon was a cause of Ford's defeat.

But years later, Ford's act of conscience was viewed differently. In 2001, Ford, who died Tuesday, received the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award named after the former Democratic president. He was chosen by a bipartisan committee of political and community leaders, who had the luxury of looking back at the fateful day of Sept. 8, 1974.

Ford was not known for his eloquence, but he was eloquent when he addressed the nation that day in the Oval Office.

He said his was a solitary decision. "There are no historic or legal precedents to which I can turn in this matter, none that precisely fit the circumstances of a private citizen who has resigned the presidency of the United States," he said.

The accusations of Nixon's Watergate misdeeds "hang like a sword over our former president's head, threatening his health," Ford said. But his primary concern was for the nation.

"My conscience tells me clearly and certainly that I cannot prolong the bad dreams that continue to reopen a chapter that is closed," he said. "My conscience tells me that only I, as president, have the constitutional power to firmly shut and seal this book.

"My conscience tells me it is my duty, not merely to proclaim domestic tranquility but to use every means that I have to insure it."

CBS News chief Washington correspondent Bob Schieffer told AP Radio News in 2003 that he asked Ford if he felt Nixon should have thanked him, and Ford replied, "It would've helped."

Schieffer pressed Ford and asked how he felt about Nixon not thanking him, and Ford chuckled and said, "Well, that's Nixon for you."

Schieffer said Ford believed that the pardon was "the major factor" in his later losing the presidential race to Carter.

Ford revisited the pardon during an exclusive interview in 1984 with CBS News correspondent Phil Jones.

"The political fallout was far more serious than I contemplated," Ford told Jones. "I knew it would have a downside politically, but I had to weigh the political ramification, which was obviously negative, with the benefit to the country, which was very significantly on the upside. And that's part of your job in the White House."

Watch Phil Jones' Interview With Gerald Ford In 1984.
Ford's interview with Jones, who covered the White House from 1974 to 1977 for CBS News, was conducted under the condition that it would not air until Ford died.

Asked if his pardon of Nixon was part of a deal he made with Nixon in order to become vice president, Ford vehemently denied the allegation. "It's pure speculation and total demagoguery because under no circumstances was there any discussion between myself and President Nixon in regards to that," Ford said.

Appearing on CBS' The Early Show, Ford's former Chief of Staff Alexander Haig also denied a deal was made for Nixon's pardon. "The president (Ford) was alone when he pardoned the president (Nixon). His staff was, to the man, against it," Haig said.

"I simply was not convinced that the country wanted to see an ex-president behind bars," he wrote in his autobiography. "We are not a vengeful people; forgiveness is one of the roots of the American tradition. And Nixon, in my opinion, had already suffered enormously."

And, Ford said, so had the nation.

"It was the state of the country's health at home and around the world that worried me," he said.

Nixon had not been indicted but stood accused of serious crimes that would take time — perhaps years — to sort out. A grand jury had voted 19-0 to name him an unindicted coconspirator in the cover-up of White House involvement in the 1972 break-in at Democratic headquarters in the Watergate office building.

Ford knew the pardon could damage his election chances.

"I'm aware of that," Ford recalled, snapping at a cautious aide. "It could easily cost me the next election, if I run again. But damn it, I don't need the polls to tell me whether I'm right or wrong."

Nixon held up the process when he balked at Ford's request for a public statement of contrition.

The final draft of Nixon's statement bore no acknowledgment of guilt.

"That the way I tried to deal with Watergate was the wrong way is a burden I shall bear for every day of the life that is left to me," Nixon wrote.

Before taking the statement back to Washington, Ford's aides asked to see Nixon.

Shuttered in his San Clemente, Calif., offices, Nixon was gaunt, shrunken and unresponsive. His handshake was weak, Ford's aides reported.

"His attention span was short," Ford wrote. "What few remarks he made were left incomplete, in mid-sentence."

"I was taking one hell of a risk, and he didn't seem to be responsive at all," Ford wrote.

Still, he accepted the statement and made his way to the Oval Office. Ford turned to face the cameras and the nation.

"Finally, it was done," Ford wrote in his book. "It was an unbelievable lifting of a burden from my shoulders. I felt very certain that I had made the right decision, and I was confident that I could now proceed without being harassed by Nixon or his problems anymore."

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment See all 20 Comments
by missamerica4 December 28, 2006 9:58 AM EST
RandalDS

You are such a sick puppy...

""Bush is a mass murderer on a historic scale.""

LIAR.

""Like he's about to have a nervous breakdown or something. Well, we can hope. ""

Sounds like you are the unstable one.Full of vile venom and hate will kill you. You cannot address any subject without spewing poison. Pathetic little man , drowning in your own excrement.

"I still say he'll be carried out strapped to a gurney screaming psychotically. ""

Like your self undoubtedly.
You have been "screaming psychotically" for weeks. You need a rest... a long one.
Reply to this comment
by randalds December 28, 2006 5:08 AM EST
Oh, just to clarify my comments on pardoning Nixon. I do believe that that's what the country needed at the time. However that feeling does not extend to the murderous chimp in the White House now. As much as I hated Nixon I hate Bush an infinitely more number of times. Bush is a mass murderer on a historic scale. Along the lines of some of the very worst in the past 100 years. He does not deserve to be pardoned, he deserves to hang or to be sent to Sadr City unarmed and alone. After a fair international trial of course.

By the way, did anyone else notice he looks like cr*ap these days. Like he's about to have a nervous breakdown or something. Well, we can hope. I still say he'll be carried out strapped to a gurney screaming psychotically.
Reply to this comment
by dblclik December 27, 2006 8:55 PM EST
Wow! Some people actually agree here.
I also agree with Randal.
Reply to this comment
by bellal-2009 December 27, 2006 8:39 PM EST
At the time he pardoned Nixon I couldn't believe it and was very angry. Over time I came to realize that it was what needed to be done.
Posted by RandalDS at 01:15 PM : Dec 27, 2006

Exactly, Randal, I agree.
Reply to this comment
by bluestardad December 27, 2006 8:09 PM EST
superdem: based on our policies in the Middle East and elsewhere we have earned the hatred of many people there. You cannot blame them for hating us if we deal dishonorably with them.
Reply to this comment
by bluestardad December 27, 2006 8:06 PM EST
elgraz: what did you wager?
Reply to this comment
by superdem December 27, 2006 6:16 PM EST
Some of these posts here are so ignorant I just had to chime in. The Shah still in power if Ford had won in 76 ? What are you smoking ? The Shah was as hated by the Iranian people as Saddam was. The Ayatollah Khomeini returned to Iran a hero only after the revolution forced the Shah and his family to flee. Carter had absolutely nothing to do with it. If Ford had been president, he could never have stopped the Islamic Republic in Iran, the result of many years of U.S. support for a dictator. We have earned the hatred of the Iranians many times over.

Hmmm...justice for Saddam - good ! Justice for the Shah - no way. We are hippocrites, as usual.

Carter was the only American president to finally force the Israelis to return illegally captured arab land, leading to the first peace treaty between Israel and an arab country. The Nobel Peace Prize was awarded for this - and you ignorantly criticize Carter.

Get to a library and study some history.
Reply to this comment
by annabanana-1 December 27, 2006 5:48 PM EST
In regards to the pardon:
If he had not pardoned Nixon, and had allowed justice to take its course, Rumsfeld and Cheney would not have been allowed back into The People's House.
Reply to this comment
by bluestardad December 27, 2006 5:32 PM EST
rest in peace
Reply to this comment
by ademeyer December 27, 2006 5:17 PM EST
It was interesting to read that Ford's biological father abandoned him as a baby and that he was raised with his stepfather's name. Years later, Ford to met his biological father, a well to do man, and realized how little the man cared for him. Perhaps he first learned the power of forgiveness by forgiving that man and moving on...its odd how often our leaders childhood experiences shape their adult behavior...
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