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thedrifter
12-27-06, 07:12 AM
Healed nation after Watergate

By Finlay Lewis
COPLEY NEWS SERVICE

December 27, 2006

WASHINGTON – Former President Gerald Rudolph Ford, who led the country out of the Watergate era but lost his own bid for election after pardoning President Nixon, died yesterday. He was 93.

“My family joins me in sharing the difficult news that Gerald Ford, our beloved husband, father, grandfather and great-grandfather, has passed away at 93 years of age,” Betty Ford said in a brief statement issued by her husband's office in Rancho Mirage. “His life was filled with love of God, his family and his country.”

He died at 6:45 p.m. at his home in Rancho Mirage, about 130 miles east of Los Angeles, his office said in a statement. No cause of death was released. Funeral arrangements were to be announced today.

Mr. Ford had battled pneumonia in January and underwent two heart treatments – including an angioplasty – in August at the Mayo Clinic.

President Bush called the late president a “great American” who helped heal the nation after Nixon resigned in disgrace.

“The American people will always admire Gerald Ford's devotion to duty, his personal character and the honorable conduct of his administration,” Bush said last night in a statement from his ranch in Crawford, Texas. “We mourn the loss of such a leader, and our 38th president will always have a special place in our nation's memory.

“On behalf of all Americans, Laura and I offer our deepest sympathies to Betty Ford and all of President Ford's family. Our thoughts and prayers will be with them in the hours and days ahead.”

Mr. Ford, the only U.S. president never elected on a national ticket, applied a healing balm to a nation badly wounded by scandal and war.

As of Nov. 12, he had lived longer than any previous president.

Leon Parma, a close friend and longtime San Diego businessman, first met Mr. Ford when Parma was chief of staff to then-Rep. Bob Wilson, R-San Diego.

“America has lost a compassionate leader,” Parma said. “Fifty-eight years of marriage of the president and Betty Ford is one of the great love stories of our time.

“There was no greater love than what was expressed by this couple for each other and for their family. For five decades, we were privileged to observe this romance. Our prayers are with Betty and the family today.”

Ascent to power
Mr. Ford was a creature of Congress, where he served for 25 years in the House, and had no higher political aspiration than to become speaker.

But Mr. Ford's goal became a victim of the Watergate scandal and other misdeeds that began destroying Nixon's presidency, including the forced resignation of Nixon's first vice president, Spiro Agnew.

Mr. Ford, then 60, was chosen by Nixon to replace Agnew in October 1973, confirmed by the Senate in November and the House in December, and immediately sworn in.

Responding moments later to the nation's most serious constitutional crisis since the Civil War, he offered the reassuring words, “Our long national nightmare is over.”

The morning after being sworn in, Mr. Ford, still in his bathrobe, called in photographers to show the country that he toasted his own English muffins, an effort to begin changing the public's negative perception of the presidency. The country quickly embraced this folksy career Republican congressman from Grand Rapids, Mich.

But the honeymoon ended abruptly a month later.

A fateful pardon
On Sept. 8, Mr. Ford, in a televised address, announced that he had pardoned Nixon for whatever his role in Watergate would turn out to be, though the disgraced president at that point had not been charged with any formal crimes.

All available evidence indicates that Mr. Ford granted the pardon not as the result of a secret deal with Nixon but to spare the country the agony of a possible prosecution of a former president.

He also acted in the hopes of ridding his presidency of a problem that threatened to distract him from the business of governing, but it turned out to be a colossal political misjudgment.

With his popularity plummeting because of the pardon, Mr. Ford never seemed to regain his political balance. Burdened as well by an ailing economy and a politically debilitating intraparty challenge from Ronald Reagan, Mr. Ford nonetheless was the GOP nominee in 1976.

But the country turned the presidency over to Jimmy Carter, the former Georgia governor and a Democrat, in one of the closest races ever.

Despite his political shortcomings, Mr. Ford restored a sense of civility to life at the summit of American politics. Few doubted his fundamental decency as a human being.

By projecting a sense of openness and honesty, he helped the country overcome the breach of faith associated with his predecessor, whose resignation forestalled a congressional impeachment vote that almost certainly would have resulted in Nixon's expulsion from the presidency.

A young football star
Born Leslie L. King Jr. in Omaha, Neb., on July 14, 1913, Mr. Ford barely knew and ultimately repudiated his ne'er-do-well and abusive father. As a young man, he legally adopted the name of his stepfather, who raised him in Grand Rapids, Mich., a small but growing city in America's heartland.

The future president was a hard-working youth who knew the pinch, but never the great want, of the Depression. Mr. Ford made his mark as a football player who won All-Big Ten honors as a center at the University of Michigan and attracted offers from the Green Pay Packers and Detroit Lions.

Instead, he accepted a job as an assistant football coach at Yale.

A good but not outstanding student as an undergraduate at Michigan, Mr. Ford then managed to wangle a spot at Yale Law School, despite the fact that he didn't quite measure up to its exacting admissions standards.

But by attacking the academic challenge with typical industry, Mr. Ford graduated in the top one-third of his law school class before joining the Navy in the immediate aftermath of Pearl Harbor.

As a junior officer on a small aircraft carrier, he saw combat in the Pacific during World War II.

Into the political arena
Returning home, Mr. Ford joined the leading law firm in Grand Rapids and began preparing for his entry into Republican politics.

Targeting a five-term GOP incumbent, Mr. Ford outhustled his overconfident opponent, winning the party primary in September 1948 and guaranteeing himself a seat in the U.S. House from the solidly Republican district.

A month later, he married Betty Warren, marching to the altar in a pair of shoes muddied by a morning's campaigning on a local farm.

Once in Washington, Mr. Ford quickly became acquainted with Nixon, then a California congressman. From the outset, Mr. Ford established himself as an internationalist who often sided with Democratic presidents on foreign affairs and as a fiscal conservative on matters of domestic policy.

Though he had been a congressional hawk on the war in Vietnam, he later found himself obliged as president to close the book on America's military involvement there.

Mr. Ford enthusiastically immersed himself in the often arcane but critically important details of the dizzying array of federal spending programs that came up annually for committee review.

Thanks to his subcommittee assignment on the powerful Appropriations Committee, he developed a special expertise in the area of military affairs.

This solid grounding in the intricacies of federal budgeting won him the bipartisan respect of his peers as a serious and fair-minded legislator. It also stood him in good stead once he arrived at the White House.

There, his command of spending issues strengthened his hand in dealing both with a sprawling federal bureaucracy and a strong-willed Congress.

But as demands on his time mounted in tandem with his ascent to the pinnacle of American politics, Betty Ford ended up paying a heavy price.

Left on her own to raise the couple's four children – Mike, Jack, Steven and Susan – she began a lifelong battle with alcoholism.

Later in life, she candidly acknowledged that liquor afforded her “pleasure and escape” from the pressures and loneliness of Washington. She also developed a dependency on painkillers prescribed to ease the discomfort of a pinched nerve in her back.

While not intimate friends in Congress, Mr. Ford and Nixon remained politically supportive over the years. Mr. Ford backed Nixon's controversial investigation in the late 1940s of Alger Hiss, the State Department official suspected of having ties to the Communist Party.

He also sided with Nixon against other powerful Republican figures who tried unsuccessfully to drive Nixon from the GOP ticket in 1952 over a slush-fund controversy. Nixon went on to serve as vice president under President Eisenhower.

Rising in the ranks
In a gesture that signified the high regard in which Mr. Ford was held, President Johnson asked him to serve on the Warren Commission, which investigated the assassination of President Kennedy in 1963. He was the last surviving member of that group.

A few years after that appointment, though, relations between Johnson and Mr. Ford became strained after Mr. Ford attacked the administration's Great Society programs as profligate and its Vietnam War policies as overly timid.

Clearly not content with a backbencher's role, Mr. Ford capitalized on the impatience of other younger moderates in 1962, when they helped him topple the aging chairman of the House Republican Conference.

Mr. Ford's victory vaulted him to the No. 3 spot in the party's House leadership hierarchy. Two years later, Mr. Ford, again aided by discontent among the party's Young Turks faction, was chosen minority leader by his GOP colleagues.

Running for re-election to the House in 1972, Mr. Ford told intimates that he intended to serve only one more term if the Republicans failed to win a majority that would elevate him to the speakership.

The GOP fell short, but fate forced him to put his retirement plans on hold.

Prosecutors had alerted the Nixon administration that they had compiled a compelling bribery and extortion case against Agnew stemming from his years as governor of Maryland and including evidence that he had accepted an envelope of cash in his White House office.

Agnew was forced to resign in October 1973. Two days later, Mr. Ford was tapped by Nixon to fill the vacancy.

After a massive FBI investigation, Mr. Ford was confirmed by the Senate and sworn in on Dec. 6. In a speech to the nation immediately afterward, Mr. Ford, striking a characteristically humble note, declared, “I am a Ford, not a Lincoln.”

Watergate alters fate
By then, Nixon was in the final throes of a losing battle to preserve his presidency against charges of Watergate complicity.

His administration was under siege from mounting evidence of a high White House effort to cover up Republican involvement in the June 17, 1972, arrests of men charged with the burglary and bugging of Democratic National Committee headquarters in the Watergate office-apartment-hotel complex.

Over the ensuing months, Mr. Ford moved from being a Nixon defender to a more nuanced position that allowed him to criticize the Watergate actions of White House operatives – and Nixon's own efforts to withhold evidence from investigators – while trying to protect the political interests of the Republican Party itself.

By August 1974, the evidence revealed that Nixon had engaged in an elaborate cover-up plot to obstruct justice, causing his defenses in Congress to crumble. The president, faced with a stark choice of impeachment or resignation, chose to relinquish the office to Mr. Ford.

Outwardly upbeat, Mr. Ford was struggling behind the scenes with the Nixon legacy. It soon became apparent to him that the scandal's aftermath would be prolonged and that he had to offer a definitive answer to Nixon's legal future before the Ford presidency could come into its own.

When an aide protested his decision to offer a pardon pre-empting a grand jury investigation that seemed certain to end in an indictment of Nixon, Mr. Ford snapped, “Damn it, I don't need polls to tell me whether I'm right or wrong!”

Less than a week after the pardon, Mr. Ford's approval ratings in public-opinion polls plunged from 71 percent to 50 percent, signifying that Americans suddenly began viewing him in a different light – just another politician who may have cut a deal with his predecessor in order to gain the presidency.

In an effort to dispel that notion, Mr. Ford became the first president since Abraham Lincoln to offer personal testimony before a congressional committee.

Although he denied to the lawmakers giving Nixon any reason to expect a pardon upon leaving office, Mr. Ford never again enjoyed the kind of popular good will that characterized the pre-pardon period of his presidency.

When the nation voted in the 1974 elections less than a month after his appearance on Capitol Hill, Mr. Ford and the Republicans suffered a major political defeat in Congress.

Riding a vengeful public mood spawned by Watergate, the Democrats captured 43 House seats, three Senate seats and four additional governorships.

As if the official stresses of the presidency weren't enough, Mr. Ford soon found himself facing a family health crisis.

In September 1974, Betty Ford underwent a radical mastectomy after doctors discovered a malignancy in her right breast. The experience prompted her to join a public campaign to educate women about the importance of early cancer detection that preoccupied her well beyond the couple's White House years.

Meanwhile, other public problems were piling up on Mr. Ford's desk, including a rapidly deteriorating military situation in South Vietnam. Mr. Ford had to order the last-ditch evacuation of the remaining U.S. military and diplomatic personnel from that country in what he later described as the “saddest hour of my time in the White House.”

A close race in '76
Forced by Reagan's challenge to fight for the presidential nomination all the way to the GOP convention, Mr. Ford entered the fall general-election campaign against Carter in a weakened political condition.

When the votes were counted, Mr. Ford came up just shy, losing 49.9 percent to 47.9 percent.

Once out of office, Mr. Ford seemed to retire from public view. He and his wife took up residence in Rancho Mirage, and he played in charity golf tournaments and gave speeches for large fees.

His death brought many personal condolences last night.

“I was deeply saddened this evening when I heard of Jerry Ford's death,” former first lady Nancy Reagan said in a statement. “Ronnie and I always considered him a dear friend and close political ally.”

“Jerry Ford was the most personally beloved president of the modern era,” said Herb Klein, retired editor in chief of Copley Newspapers, parent company of The San Diego Union-Tribune. “He was a courageous leader and loyal friend I will never forget.”

Klein said he sent a Christmas card to Mr. Ford this year and included in it a recollection of a reporter who asked Klein which president he would most prefer to have a beer with. He responded that it would be Mr. Ford. “I thought it would cheer him up,” Klein said.

He said Mr. Ford was fun to be with. “You didn't feel like you were with a president. You felt like you were with a friend.”

Union-Tribune news services contributed to this report.

Rest In Peace

Ellie

thedrifter
12-27-06, 07:21 AM
Gerald R. Ford, 38th U.S. President and Nixon Successor, Dies

Steve Geimann

Dec. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Former U.S. President Gerald R. Ford, who pardoned his predecessor, Richard Nixon, and sought to restore faith in government after the Watergate scandal three decades ago, has died. He was 93.

President George W. Bush planned to make a live, televised statement on Ford's death at 8 a.m. Washington time.

``With his quiet integrity, common sense, and kind instincts, President Ford helped heal our land and restore public confidence in the presidency,'' Bush said late yesterday in a written statement.

Vice President Richard Cheney, who had served as Ford's chief of staff, said in a statement that Ford was a ``dear friend and mentor'' who ``embodied the best values of a great generation: decency, integrity and devotion to duty.''

Ford's death late yesterday, at his home in Rancho Mirage, California, was announced by his wife, former first lady Betty Ford. A cause of death wasn't given. Ford had been hospitalized several times in the past year. In October, he had tests at the Eisenhower Medical Center in California.

Ford became the 38th president on Aug. 9, 1974, immediately after Nixon's resignation under threat of impeachment. When Ford took office, he said: ``I assume the presidency under extraordinary circumstances. This is an hour of history that troubles our minds and hurts our hearts.''

Ford projected calm during a period of high inflation, looming energy shortages and a waning war in Southeast Asia. Ford, a Republican, lost his bid to win a full term in 1976 to Democrat Jimmy Carter. On Inauguration Day, Carter began his speech: ``For myself and for our nation, I want to thank my predecessor for all he has done to heal our land.''

Replaced Agnew

Ford was in his 13th term as a Michigan congressman and was the House Republican leader when Nixon appointed him in December 1973 as vice president. He replaced Spiro Agnew, who quit amid bribery charges stemming from his time in office as Maryland governor. It was the first use of the U.S. Constitution's 25th Amendment to fill a vice presidential vacancy, an amendment Ford helped get enacted.

Eight months later, Ford became president when Nixon resigned rather than face impeachment proceedings over White House attempts to obstruct an investigation into the 1972 burglary of Democratic Party headquarters at the Watergate complex in Washington. Ford was the first person to gain the presidency without winning a national election.

In his first speech as president, Ford said, ``our long national nightmare is over'' and pledged to rebuild confidence in government institutions and the struggling U.S. economy.

Pardoning Nixon

On Sept. 8, 1974, a month after taking the presidency, Ford pardoned Nixon for any crimes he might have committed as president, although no formal charges were pending.

Ford told the country in a speech that Watergate was ``an American tragedy.''

``It could go on and on and on, or someone must write the end to it,'' he said. ``I have concluded that only I can do that, and if I can, I must.''

While he was criticized at the time for undermining the inquiry into the Watergate burglary and its cover-up by issuing the pardon, his actions to overcome Watergate were later applauded.

Ford won the 2001 John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award for pardoning Nixon.

Moving to repair the damage of Nixon's resignation, Ford replaced all but three members of Nixon's Cabinet. In December 1974, congressional majorities backed his choice of former New York Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller as his vice president.

Belt-Tightening

A self-described fiscal conservative, Ford proposed tax cuts and spending limits to deal with a budget deficit. He also pushed through Congress legislative proposals to deregulate the railroad and securities industries.

Ford confronted the Democratic-controlled Congress by vetoing 39 spending-related measures in his first 14 months. The belt-tightening was aimed at ending a recession. Unemployment rose in his first year to 9 percent before falling to 7.8 percent as he left office -- higher than when he started his term. Meanwhile, gross domestic product swung from a minus 4.7 percent rate in the first quarter of 1975, to 9.3 percent a year later, when he campaigned to remain in office.

In foreign policy, Ford was dealt twin setbacks with the collapse of Cambodia and South Vietnam's pro-Western governments in 1975. His approval rating in 1975 rebounded after Marines retrieved a U.S. ship seized by the Cambodian government.

Middle East

Ford brokered a 1975 truce between Israel and Egypt that installed U.S. observers to separate the two armies. He pursued a policy of detente with China and the Soviet Union, agreeing with Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev to limit nuclear weapons.

He also signed an executive order to overhaul U.S. intelligence-gathering agencies, including limiting the Central Intelligence Agency's spying powers.

During his 1975 presidential campaign in California, Ford escaped two assassinations attempts in 17 days: by Lynette ``Squeaky'' Fromme in Sacramento on Sept. 5, and by Sara Jane Moore in San Francisco on Sept. 22.

Ford was born Leslie Lynch King Jr., in Omaha, Nebraska, on July 14, 1913. He was renamed for his stepfather, Gerald Ford, a paint salesman who married the former president's mother after her divorce.

Ford was the captain of his high school football team in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and a football scholarship took him to the University of Michigan, where he starred as varsity center and played on two national championship football teams. He graduated in 1935 and turned down offers to play professional football to attend Yale Law School, where he also was an assistant football coach. He graduated in the top third of his class in 1941.

Betty Ford

Ford returned to Grand Rapids to practice law, then joined the Navy in April 1942. He saw wartime service in the Pacific on the light aircraft carrier Monterey and was a lieutenant commander when he returned to Grand Rapids early in 1946 to resume law practice and dabble in politics.

Ford was a lawyer before winning election in Michigan's fifth congressional district in 1948, the same year he married Betty Bloomer Warren. The couple had four children.

Ford was re-elected 12 times on a platform of limited government.

In 1963, President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed Ford to the Warren Commission to investigate the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Two years later, Ford co-wrote a book, ``Portrait of the Assassin,'' on the commission's conclusion that Kennedy was killed in Dallas by a single gunman, Lee Harvey Oswald.

Wrote Books

Ford went on to write or co-write three books, including his post-Watergate autobiography, ``A Time to Heal,'' in 1979.

After leaving office, Ford was an adviser to American Express Co. and was on the board of Citigroup Inc., Travelers Group Inc. and the NASD.

He was the longest-lived former U.S. president, overtaking Ronald Reagan on Nov. 12. He spent three days in August 2006 at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, to get a heart pacemaker and stents in his coronary arteries to improve blood flow. He had a small stroke at the Republican National Convention in Philadelphia in 2000.

Ford's hobbies included skiing, tennis and golf.

He is survived by his wife and children, Michael, John, Steven and Susan.

To contact the reporter on this story: Steve Geimann in Washington at sgeimann@bloomberg.net .

Ellie

thedrifter
12-27-06, 08:35 AM
December 27, 2006
Gerald Ford, 38th President, Dies at 93
By JAMES M. NAUGHTON and ADAM CLYMER

Former President Gerald R. Ford, who was thrust into the presidency in 1974 in the wake of the Watergate scandal but who lost his own bid for election after pardoning President Richard M. Nixon, has died, according to a statement issued late last night by his wife, Betty Ford.

He was 93, making him the longest living former president, surpassing Ronald Reagan, who died in 2004, by just over a month.

The statement did not give a cause, place or time of death, but Mr. Ford, the 38th president, had been in and out of the hospital since January 2006 when he suffered pneumonia, most recently in October at the Eisenhower Medical Center in Rancho Mirage, Calif., for medical tests. He returned to his home in Rancho Mirage after five days of hospitalization.

“My family joins me in sharing the difficult news that Gerald Ford, our beloved husband, father, grandfather and great grandfather has passed away at 93 years of age,” Mrs. Ford said in a statement issued from her husband’s office in Rancho Mirage, also the location of the Betty Ford Center. “His life was filled with love of God, his family and his country.”

President Bush praised Mr. Ford for his contributions to the nation “in an hour of national turmoil and division,” in a statement released early today from his ranch in Texas.

“With his quiet integrity, common sense, and kind instincts, President Ford helped heal our land and restore public confidence in the presidency,” Mr. Bush said. “The American people will always admire Gerald Ford’s devotion to duty, his personal character, and the honorable conduct of his administration.”

Mr. Ford, who was the only person to lead the country without having been elected as president or vice president, occupied the White House for just 896 days — starting from a hastily arranged ceremony on Aug. 9, 1974, and ending after his defeat by Jimmy Carter in the 1976 election. But they were pivotal days of national introspection, involving America’s first definitive failure in a war and the first resignation of a president.

After a decade of division over Vietnam and two years of trauma over the Watergate scandals, Jerry Ford, as he called himself, radiated a soothing familiarity. He might have been the nice guy down the street suddenly put in charge of the nation, and if he seemed a bit predictable, he was also safe, reliable and reassuring. He placed no intolerable intellectual or psychological burdens on a weary land, and he lived out a modest philosophy. “The harder you work, the luckier you are,” he said once in summarizing his career. “I worked like hell.”

Gerald Rudolph Ford was born on July 14, 1913, in Omaha to Leslie Lynch King and Dorothy Ayer King. He rose to House minority leader in 1963 and served in the House until 1973, when Vice President Spiro T. Agnew resigned, and President Nixon appointed Mr. Ford to succeed Mr. Agnew.

When Mr. Ford took the oath of president in 1974, the economy was in disarray, an energy shortage was worsening, allies were wondering how steadfast the United States might be as a partner and Mr. Nixon, having resigned rather than face impeachment for taking part in the Watergate cover-up, was flying to seclusion in San Clemente, Calif.

There was a collective sense of relief as Mr. Ford, in the most memorable line of his most noteworthy speech, declared that day, “Our long national nightmare is over.”

Two years later, as he accepted the Republican presidential nomination and began a campaign that would end in his first failure in an election, Mr. Ford scarcely seemed to be indulging in hyperbole as he recalled what it had been like to take office as Mr. Nixon’s heir.

“It was an hour in our history that troubled our minds and tore at our hearts,” he said. “Anger and hatred had risen to dangerous levels, dividing friends and families. The polarization of our political order had aroused unworthy passions of reprisal and revenge. Our governmental system was closer to stalemate than at any time since Abraham Lincoln took that same oath of office.”

The pardon, intensely unpopular at the time, came to be generally viewed as correct. In May 2001, Mr. Ford was honored with a “Profile in Courage” Award at the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston. Senator Edward M. Kennedy spoke and said he had originally opposed the pardon. “But time has a way of clarifying past events,” he said, “and now we see that President Ford was right.”

Mr. Ford’s decision to back the 1975 Helsinki Accords was furiously criticized in 1976 by both Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan. They complained that it had legitimized the post-World War II borders in Europe. But in his book “The Cold War: A New History” (Penguin, 2005), John Lewis Gaddis of Yale wrote that the pact’s commitment to “human rights and fundamental freedoms” became a trap for the Soviet Union, which was facing ever-bolder condemnations by dissidents.

“Thousands of people who lacked the prominence of Solzhenitsyn and Sakharov began to stand with them in holding the U.S.S.R. and its satellites accountable for human rights,” Mr. Gaddis wrote. The Helsinki process, he added, became “the basis for legitimizing opposition to Soviet rule.”

Mr. Ford also advanced negotiations for a new treaty to turn over control of the Panama Canal to Panama, though he slowed the process during the 1976 campaign and left it to Mr. Carter, his victorious Democratic opponent, to complete.

Both inflation and unemployment fell while he was in office. And he vigorously tried to control federal spending with vetoes of spending bills, starting his first week in office. In a matter of months, however, after the Democratic landslide in the 1974 elections, Congress began overriding his vetoes.

But that did not stop him from threatening to veto a measure, sought by Mayor Abraham D. Beame and Gov. Hugh Carey, offering a 90-day $1 billion line of credit to nearly bankrupt New York City in October 1975. “Ford to City: Drop Dead” was the front-page headline in The Daily News. The next month, the New York leaders went to Washington with a new plan with new controls on the city budget, and they got the short-term loans they needed.

Mr. Ford brought to his duties an indomitable self-assurance.

“I can recall no incident, either in the Congress, vice presidency or presidency, where I didn’t feel that I was prepared,” he said in retirement. “I felt more secure, more certain of myself in the presidency than at any other time.”

His steadiness showed through as a timely presidential attribute, but it was always that way with Gerald Rudolph Ford Jr. He was a man more fundamental than flashy, more immutable than immodest. He served undefeated through 13 elections to the House of Representatives and rose to be its Republican leader, yet in 25 years in Congress he did not write a major piece of legislation. He was overwhelmingly confirmed as vice president, the first to be appointed under the 25th Amendment, yet he owed his selection by Mr. Nixon to the likelihood that he would prove inoffensive in the job.

As president, he was quick to assert to Congress, in a play on words that nobody misunderstood, “I am a Ford, not a Lincoln.” If it was true, as was often said, that the Oval Office shaped the occupant, Mr. Ford resisted the temptation of the imperial. On an early trip as president to South Korea, he called American enlisted men “sir.” His prose was so pedestrian and his tongue so unreliable — he referred on one public occasion to the noble American “work ethnic” and on another to the disease of “sickle-cell Armenia” — that he became a favorite target of comedians.

Acts of Forgiveness

“I think it’s progress that the presidency has been humanized,” Mr. Ford remarked a few days before he left the White House. It might easily have been an epitaph.

He had sought to bind up the nation’s wounds as much by instinct as by design. One of his earliest acts, combining courage with forgiveness, was to announce before a convention of the Veterans of Foreign Wars that he favored leniency for Vietnam-era draft resisters.

When Congressional Democrats suggested that he had obtained Mr. Nixon’s resignation by promising to pardon him, Mr. Ford did something presidents do not do: he went to Capitol Hill and testified, telling a House subcommittee, “There was no deal, period, under no circumstances.”

He invited to the White House individuals who had been excluded as political “enemies” in the lists kept by the Nixon administration. When Mr. Ford heard, as a Republican in Congress, that Mr. Nixon kept such a list, he said to an aide, “Anybody who can’t keep his enemies in his head has too many enemies.”

His decision to grant a full and absolute pardon to his predecessor stunned the nation. After going to church the morning of Sept. 8, 1974, Mr. Ford went on national television to announce that there would be no formal judicial retribution against Mr. Nixon. Then, apparently untroubled by his decision, he played golf.

“I felt then, and I feel now, if I was going to do it, it had to be clean, sudden,” Mr. Ford said months after he had left office. “It was a part of the healing process.” He paused a moment, smiled, and added, “It didn’t turn out to be quite as much of a healing at the time.”

Revulsion and disillusion exploded in editorial comments and angry telegrams to the White House. Mr. Ford’s biographer and friend, J. F. terHorst, resigned as White House press secretary rather than defend the pardon. For the rest of his term, Mr. Ford had to do the defending.

Those who were critical of the pardon, he said, “haven’t thought through what would have happened over the next 18 months, 24 months, 36 months; that whole episode would have been on the front page.”

He had expected some public criticism, he said, but it proved “far worse than I anticipated.” He insisted, however, in his 1979 autobiography, “A Time to Heal” (Harper and Row), and in conversations in retirement, that had Mr. Nixon been required to face indictment and trial over the many months of the Ford presidency, “all of the healing process that I thought was so essential would have been much more difficult to achieve.”

Hard Work, Honesty, Punctuality

Mr. Ford’s early circumstances made him an unlikely future president. He was born July 14, 1913, in Omaha to Leslie Lynch King and Dorothy Ayer King. Not for 17 years was he to learn that he had been christened Leslie Lynch King Jr.

When he was 2 years old, his mother divorced Mr. King and moved to Grand Rapids, Mich. She remarried, and her husband, Gerald Rudolph Ford, a paint salesman with an eighth-grade education, gave the boy his name in formally adopting him.

Gerald considered his mother “a human dynamo in a womanly way” and said she “probably had more friends than any woman I ever knew.” He revered his stepfather. Later in life, even in the White House, he would confront difficulty by wondering, “Now, how would he have done this?” It was perhaps the ultimate symptom of Mr. Ford’s uncommon commonness that he would try to approach the presidency after the fashion of a Grand Rapids merchant. What he respected in his stepfather’s manner was common sense.

His closeness to his stepfather was deepened, if anything, by the discovery that he was adopted and in particular by a brief encounter with his father.

It occurred at the age of 17, when he was a star on the state champion South High School Trojans football team, a 6-foot, blue-eyed blond with a husky voice and an infectious laugh. His mother and stepfather had told Mr. Ford that he was the product of a broken home, and the information did not appear to disturb him unduly. Mr. Ford went on with his schooling and, because the Ford Paint and Varnish Company was struggling to survive the Depression, with a job waiting on tables at Bill Skougis’s Restaurant. One day a patron in the restaurant stared at him and then told him, “Leslie, I’m your father.”

He was stunned.

Nearly half a century later, recalling the episode in an interview, Mr. Ford’s words remained drenched in bitterness: “It was shocking, in that he would intrude on a happy family life after he had neglected my mother and me by his refusal to pay what the court ordered him to pay as child support.”

In his 1994 biography of Mr. Ford, “Time and Chance” (HarperCollins), James Cannon wrote that Mr. King never paid the monthly child support ordered by an Omaha court after it found that he had beaten his wife, but that Mr. King’s father did pay the money his son owed. Those payments stopped when the elder Mr. King died, Mr. Ford wrote in his autobiography.

His father, Mr. Ford said in the interview, had “abandoned me for 6, 8, 10 years — I have forgotten how long; then he would seek to intrude on my family life, which was a happy one with my stepfather.”

“I really never forgave my father in a sense of totally forgiving,” Mr. Ford said.

Traditional Values

The home in which the future president was brought up, along with his three stepbrothers, was imbued with the values of family loyalty, thrift and patriotism.

On May Day one year, Mr. Ford and other students at South High saw another group of youths painting anti-American slogans on the steps leading to the school building. The group Mr. Ford was in, mostly football players, dashed over, grabbed the paint cans and, by one account, splashed the paint on the others.

Mr. Ford ran for president of the senior class in 1931 on, as he later used to recall with a laugh, the Progressive ticket. He lost, but he was never to lose another election until he sought a different presidency 45 years later as more of a conservative.

His basic philosophy involved fiscal prudence, strong national defense, suspicion of alien lands and a belief that citizens should earn a living rather than be given one. This, he said, was a legacy “from both my stepfather and my mother — hard-working, typical Middle Western individuals who had themselves been brought up in families that had comparable philosophical views.”

“It was that environment plus, I think, my own instincts, which go back, I believe, to the fact that I always felt you had to work like hell,” he continued. “I did. Whether I worked in the restaurant, whether I worked in scouting or whether I worked in school, I was always very conscientious.”

He did well enough to win a scholarship to the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. He applied himself with equal diligence to his studies and to football, and he worked as a dishwasher at the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity to help pay his room and board.

To Law School, Then to War

In those days, both his professional and athletic ambitions were mixed. He said decades later that “one of my great ambitions was to be captain of the Michigan football team,” the Wolverines, in his senior year. But someone else was chosen as captain. Mr. Ford, a center, was instead selected by his teammates as the most valuable player; he was gratified, though he often joked of having been named most valuable member of a losing team.

After he graduated in 1935 from the University of Michigan, he had offers to play professional football for either the Detroit Lions or the Green Bay Packers (at $110 per game). Mr. Ford remained fascinated with sports, but he chose the law, a subject that had appealed to him since high school. He enrolled at Yale Law School.

Political opponents would ultimately fasten on Mr. Ford’s sports background as a source of ridicule. President Lyndon B. Johnson, angered at a legislative development inspired by Representative Ford, cracked once that he had played football too long without a helmet. And despite his real skill at skiing and golf, a tumble on the slopes or a tee shot drive into a golf gallery would be seized on by the comedy show “Saturday Night Live” as a metaphor for a clumsy presidency.

If Mr. Ford’s mental cast was more often instinctive than imaginative and his approach to issues more tactical than conceptual, he was no intellectual slouch. At Yale, Prof. Myres MacDougal wrote in interview notes on the young student: “Very mature, wise person of good judgment. Informational background not the best but interesting, mature and serious of purpose.”

Initially, because he needed the income he earned as an assistant football coach and as a head boxing coach, Mr. Ford was so busy that he was not allowed to take law classes full time. He kept insisting he was capable of the dual schedule and was so persistent that he was allowed to become student and coach simultaneously in 1938. He finished in the top third of the class of 1941, with a B average.

He returned to Grand Rapids, and with a friend, Philip W. Buchen, who would later become his White House legal counsel, he set about establishing a practice specializing in labor-management matters. Shortly after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, he joined the Navy as an ensign.

The war, more than anything else, was responsible for altering his outlook and inspiring him to pursue a career in public life.

At first, the Navy assigned him as a physical training officer to work with recruits on the grounds of the University of North Carolina. Mr. Ford kept applying for a transfer to a combat zone and kept being refused. Ever persistent, he applied anew and after a year of rejection was sent to the Pacific as a physical education officer on the U.S.S. Monterey, a light aircraft carrier.

By war’s end he had risen to lieutenant commander and won 10 battle stars for participating in engagements at places including Okinawa, Wake, Taiwan, the Philippines and the Gilbert Islands. Just before Christmas in 1944, he nearly lost his life when a typhoon struck the Third Fleet and, topside on the carrier, he came within inches of being swept off the deck.

An Internationalist Takes Office

Mr. Ford never adopted the domestic liberalism of a Roosevelt or, later, a Johnson. But the war experience broadened his view, changing him “from a passive isolationist to an ardent internationalist,” as he put it.

Having re-established himself in a comfortable law practice in Grand Rapids, Mr. Ford had a limited ambition at first. “I was 33, single, working and having a great time, playing lots of golf,” he said later. “All I was interested in was enjoying life and getting on with my law practice.”

But he kept reading a new magazine, World Report, to which he was a charter subscriber, and became an ever firmer advocate of the Marshall Plan of postwar assistance to Europe and an internationalist in a community of Dutch-origin conservative isolationists. He came to the attention of two forces: Republican reformers bent on taking control of the local party, and internationalists allied with Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg, the Republican leader, who was also from Grand Rapids.

The incumbent representative from the Fifth District of Michigan was Bartel J. Jonkman, who seemed tailored to the district — of Dutch descent, Republican, conservative, isolationist.

“I knew I was meeting a formidable incumbent,” Mr. Ford later recalled, “who for many reasons should have won. And I shouldn’t have expected to win.” Typically, Mr. Ford did expect to win, though, and with but a smidgen of apprehension that the challenge might be taken up, he dared Mr. Jonkman to debate. “Fortunately, he did not,” Mr. Ford said.

Aided by President Harry S. Truman’s disputes with Congress, which kept Mr. Jonkman in Washington, Mr. Ford worked tirelessly and won the Republican primary in 1948 by nearly 10,000 votes. Then he easily won his first term in the House. He never received less than 60 percent of the vote during a quarter-century as the Representative from Michigan’s Fifth District.

A Candid Helpmate

Shortly before the 1948 election, Mr. Ford paused from his campaigning to march down the aisle of Grace Episcopal Church in Grand Rapids — by local legend, wearing one black shoe and one brown shoe — with Elizabeth Bloomer Warren, who had been divorced and was generally regarded as the most attractive single woman in the city.

Betty Ford had been a model and a fashion coordinator. For two years, in New York City, she had danced in Martha Graham’s troupe. She was, and remained throughout Mr. Ford’s public career, a remarkably open and candid woman, given to strong opinions on abortion, feminism and other issues and willing to talk about the radical mastectomy she underwent while in the White House. She encouraged the same outspokenness in the four Ford children: Michael Gerald, John Gardner, Steven Meigs and Susan Elizabeth.

Mrs. Ford also battled drug dependency, which began in the 1960s with prescriptions for pills to relieve pain from a neck injury, and alcoholism, which grew with her loneliness during Mr. Ford’s increasingly heavy travel schedule. In 1978, her family confronted her about her addictions, and, after initial denials, she finally admitted herself for treatment. Four years later, she helped dedicate the Betty Ford Center for Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation in Rancho Mirage, Calif., on the campus of Eisenhower Medical Center.

While Mrs. Ford reared their children, Mr. Ford rose doggedly from the obscurity of the House to the leadership of its minority. In his second term he won assignment to the Appropriations Committee, where he and other fiscal conservatives worked to curb government spending. By 1953 he was on such influential subcommittees as those dealing with funds for foreign aid and national defense; throughout the Korean and Vietnam Wars he was a stalwart supporter of American military intervention in Asia.

In the House

Bud Vestal, a reporter for The Grand Rapids Press, distressed Mr. Ford by noting in a biography that Mr. Ford “never authored a major program of legislation on his own.”

Mr. Ford’s explanation was that as a member of the Appropriations Committee, he “was pretty preoccupied with very important matters” and “didn’t have time, just as a pragmatic thing, to get involved in all the other pieces of legislation that others were writing or sponsoring or working for.”

His legislative activity more often than not involved fealty to Republican Presidents Eisenhower and Nixon or obstruction of the liberal New Frontier and Great Society proposals of Democratic Presidents Kennedy and Johnson. For instance, Mr. Ford voted against a major housing assistance act in 1961 and fostered opposition to the Medicare program in 1965.

In a Congress that often seemed akin to a fraternity, he was nearly everyone’s friend. He was thus an ideal prospect for minority leadership. When younger Republicans were casting about in 1963 for a point man in their rebellion against their aging leaders, they settled on Jerry Ford.

The group installed Mr. Ford as chairman of the House Republican Conference, the third-ranking post in the minority hierarchy. His name came to more prominent attention later that year when President Johnson appointed Mr. Ford to the Warren Commission to investigate the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. In 1965, after the huge loss that came with Senator Barry Goldwater’s landslide defeat for the presidency the year before, the younger Republicans deposed Charles A. Halleck of Indiana as their House leader, supplanting him with Mr. Ford.

‘I Need Your Vote’

With the exception of an ill-conceived effort in 1970 to impeach Associate Justice William O. Douglas, a liberal member of the Supreme Court, after Senate Democrats had twice rejected President Nixon’s nominations of Southern conservatives to the court, Mr. Ford generally enlarged his circle of friends by establishing an amicable style of leadership.

When one or another Republican voted against the leadership’s wishes, some party stalwarts sought to persuade Mr. Ford to discipline the offender. There were methods that might have been used: transfer to a minor committee, elimination of funds for overseas travel, loss of campaign money. Mr. Ford said no.

“That’s counterproductive,” he insisted. “That person knows that he disappointed you. To rub it in makes it, the next time, literally impossible to get his cooperation. You can lose one battle, but the most important thing is to win the war.”

A leading House Democrat of the era, Representative Joe D. Waggoner Jr. of Louisiana, confirmed the technique’s success. “It’s the damnedest thing,” Mr. Waggoner said. “Jerry just puts his arm around a colleague or looks him in the eyes and says, ‘I need your vote,’ and gets it.”

An Elusive Dream

Visionary or not, Mr. Ford, as Republican House leader, worked to enlarge the minority, always pursuing the elusive dream of a Republican majority and, with it, the realization of his greatest political ambition, to be speaker of the House.

Asked in his retirement why he had coveted the speaker’s post, he replied:

“I thought, as a member of Congress, that would be the ultimate achievement. To sit up there and be the head honcho of 434 other people and have the responsibility, aside from the achievement, of trying to run the greatest legislative body in the history of mankind, I think, in an efficient and effective way, to tend to the people’s business, both domestic and foreign, to make sure, whatever legislation was required, to see that it was done. I think I got that ambition within a year or two after I was in the House of Representatives.”

For a decade he crisscrossed the country, downing chicken dinners in 200 or so cities each year, extolling this or that prospect for a House seat and trying diligently to build a majority. But the closest the Republicans came in his years as leader was the 192 seats they held after the 1968 elections. That was still 16 short of the majority that would have made him speaker.

Apparently destined to be the perennial leader of a minority, Mr. Ford promised his wife in 1973 that he would make one more effort, however forlorn, in 1974 at winning a majority and would then retire from politics in 1976.

“I don’t want to be a minority leader in perpetuity,” he told friends.

‘A Nice Conclusion’

On the night of Oct. 10, 1973, a few hours after Vice President Spiro T. Agnew rose in a federal courtroom in Baltimore to plead no contest to a charge of federal income tax evasion and simultaneously resigned the vice presidency, Mr. Ford was at his home in Alexandria, Va., trying to relax. The telephone rang; it was his old House ally Melvin Laird, now a White House counselor. Would Mr. Ford be interested in the vice presidency if it could be arranged, Mr. Laird asked.

“I suspect if I was asked, I would accept it,” Mr. Ford replied.

He turned from the phone, he later recalled, and told Mrs. Ford that “well, that would be a nice conclusion” for his career.

The next night President Nixon was the one who telephoned Mr. Ford’s home. He offered the vice presidency.

It was the first time that anyone had been nominated for the office under the terms of the 25th Amendment, which made the appointment subject to confirmation by both the Senate and the House. Much as Republicans had fixed on Mr. Ford as leader in 1965 because of his general acceptability, so Mr. Nixon chose him in 1973 to be vice president.

At the time, in late 1973, Mr. Nixon was locked in a legal duel with the Watergate special prosecutor and the Senate Watergate committee, refusing to yield documents and tape recordings that had been subpoenaed. Indeed, a few days after Mr. Ford was nominated for the vice presidency, Mr. Nixon dismissed Archibald Cox, the first special prosecutor, for insisting on pursuing legal remedies to gain access to the White House evidence, and accepted the resignation of Attorney General Elliot L. Richardson, who declined to carry out the order to dismiss the prosecutor.

‘I Believed What I Was Told’

There were Nixon allies who thought Mr. Ford might, as vice president, serve as a buffer against the efforts to impeach Mr. Nixon that were precipitated by the events of that “Saturday night massacre” in October 1973. Mr. Nixon remarked once to former Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York, “Can you see Gerald Ford sitting in this chair?”

Mr. Ford accepted the nomination. “I thought,” he later reminisced, “well, if I could be helpful, I knew I could be confirmed. And it was a nice way to end a career. I wasn’t going to be speaker.”

He took it on faith, because he had been told privately by Mr. Nixon and others that the president was innocent of any involvement in the burglary at the Democratic Party offices in the Watergate complex on June 17, 1972, or of complicity in the attempt to cover up the extent of the conspiracy.

Three days after the break-in, Mr. Ford had asked John N. Mitchell, the former attorney general and the 1972 Nixon campaign chairman, if the break-in had been authorized. As Mr. Ford recalled it, Mr. Mitchell “looked me right in the eye and said neither he nor the White House was involved.”

“I believed what I was told,” Mr. Ford once said, referring to the belief that Mr. Nixon was not involved in Watergate wrongdoing, “so my whole conduct as vice president was predicated on that personal trust.”

Because it was the first such occasion, Mr. Ford’s vice-presidential nomination prompted an extensive investigation of his background by as many as 400 agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. His nomination was confirmed, 92 to 3 in the Senate and 387 to 35 in the House. At dusk on Dec. 6, 1973, to the thunderous applause of those with whom he had served in Congress, he strode down the center aisle in the House of Representatives to stand at the lectern, not as speaker but as vice president.

Mr. Ford took it upon himself as the heir apparent to try, initially, to make certain that Mr. Nixon would remain in office. In the eight months of his vice presidency he traveled more than 130,000 miles to speak up for Mr. Nixon.

As the House Judiciary Committee painstakingly assembled evidence on which its members would ultimately recommend three articles of impeachment, Mr. Ford proclaimed confidence in Mr. Nixon’s blamelessness, but privately he grew increasingly uncertain.

Growing Skepticism

The doubt was slow to take hold. In January 1974 Mr. Ford told an audience in Atlantic City that the impeachment movement was the work of “extreme partisans” who were trying to “crush the president” and in the process increase the Democratic majority in the Congress.

Alarmed, Mr. Buchen, Mr. Ford’s old friend from Michigan, and Senator Robert P. Griffin, another longtime Michigan ally, privately counseled Mr. Ford to be careful lest his faith be unrewarded and his loyalty further divide the country.

Thereafter, Mr. Ford loyally defended the president, but in his own words. The Nixon staff kept sending proposed texts to Mr. Ford’s office, but Mr. Ford’s aides toned them down.

Instinctively, too, Mr. Ford continuously and openly urged the president to demonstrate his innocence by yielding to Congress and the courts the Watergate tape recordings and documents that were being sought. When Mr. Nixon continued to “stonewall,” as the resistance came to be known, “it certainly began to raise some reservations” in Mr. Ford’s mind, he said, although he kept them to himself.

Gradually, even Mr. Ford’s defense of Mr. Nixon began to take a skeptical tone. At a Republican Party conference in Chicago, Mr. Ford explicitly attacked for the first time the attitude of the 1972 Nixon campaign organization, saying it had been led by “an arrogant, elite guard of political adolescents.”

‘A Good Night’s Sleep’

At the end of July 1974, Gen. Alexander M. Haig Jr., then the White House chief of staff, made an urgent call to the vice president. General Haig advised him that a tape recording under subpoena by the special prosecutor — one of several that the Supreme Court had ruled could not be withheld by Mr. Nixon — would show conclusively that Mr. Nixon had tried to curb the Watergate investigation as early as June 23, 1972, six days after the break-in.

“That was the first concrete evidence that I had contrary to the assurances I’d had before,” Mr. Ford remembered.

For three days, as Mr. Nixon’s aides sought to persuade the president to make public the transcript of the June 23 tape, Mr. Ford continued to travel, saying nothing of the evidence.

The president did publish it. Although Mr. Ford was unaware that Mr. Buchen and others had begun making secret preparations for a Ford presidential transition, he began to wonder in the first days of August 1974 how soon he might be president.

On Aug. 6, Mr. Nixon assembled his Cabinet at the White House and declared that he would not resign. Mr. Ford, seated opposite the president across the massive Cabinet table, told Mr. Nixon, “I no longer can publicly defend you.” It was, for Mr. Ford, the loyal friend of the president, one of the most difficult things he had ever done, but, he told an interviewer, “with the development of the evidence, I had no other choice.”

Two nights later Mr. Nixon announced on national television that he would resign the presidency at noon on Aug. 9.

Mr. Ford and his wife watched the Nixon statement on the television set in the family room of their home in Alexandria. Then, despite the looming accumulation of pressures, Mr. Ford went to sleep.

That he could do so, with no particular difficulty, on the eve of the nation’s most unusual presidential transition, was illustrative. “My feeling is you might as well get to sleep” whatever the circumstances, Mr. Ford had said. “You’ll feel better the next day. If you’ve got a problem, you are better prepared to deal with it tomorrow. You sure can’t do much about it that night. It’s a blessing, really.”

The nation’s torment was on his mind as he spoke that next day, Aug. 9, 1974, of the import of his sudden inauguration as the 38th president of the United States, the first person never elected president or vice president to become president.

“I am acutely aware that you have not elected me as your president by your ballots,” he said to the dignitaries in the East Room of the White House and to the millions of Americans watching on television. “I have not sought this enormous responsibility, but I will not shirk it.”

With an empathy that came as a relief after months of White House aloofness, the new president said: “This is an hour of history that troubles our minds and hurts our hearts. Therefore, I feel it my first duty to make an unprecedented compact with my countrymen. Not an inaugural address. Not a fireside chat. Not a campaign speech. Just a little straight talk among friends.”

He urged his countrymen to help him “bind up the internal wounds of Watergate” and then added:

“My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over. Our Constitution works. Our great republic is a government of laws and not of men. Here, the people rule.”

The Man in the White House

Mr. Ford’s presidency was an extension of his own political personality: reactive rather than activist, instinctive instead of intellectual, humanistic but within the fiscal limits of conservative dogma.

Mr. terHorst, the biographer, puzzled over the seeming contradiction between the president’s personal and professional philosophies: “The problem with him — he doesn’t like to be kidded about it — but the fact is, this guy would, if he saw a schoolkid in front of the White House who needed clothing, if he was the right size, he’d give him the shirt off his back, literally. Then he’d go right in the White House and veto the school lunch bill.”

John Hersey, after spending a week in close observation of the president, wrote in The New York Times Magazine of April 20, 1975: “What is it in him?”

“Is it an inability to extend compassion far beyond the faces directly in view?” Mr. Hersey wrote. “Is it a failure of imagination? Is it something obdurate he was born with, alongside the energy and serenity?”

The answer seemed to be a belief — one Mr. Ford was schooled in if not born with — in the essential dignity of human struggle. “Everything didn’t turn to gold just because I did it,” he remarked. “I had this foundation, and I had been brought up with the training that — and this is an oversimplification, but I think it’s indicative — the harder you work, the luckier you are. And whether it was in such things as the Boy Scouts or athletics or academics, I worked like hell.”

There were those who contended, as did Richard Reeves, the author of a critical biography, that Mr. Ford had a “tragic gap” in his understanding of such crucial matters as the Vietnam War and the Watergate scandal. More common was the assessment of Mr. Ford as “innately decent.”

Executive Decisions

Mr. Ford disputed the notion that it required forceful, even harsh, character to meet the tests of the White House. He was asked once if a nice guy should be president, and answered: “Those who allege that you’ve got to be a mean, sinister, devious person to be president are just dead wrong. I don’t see how a president in his conscience could be that.”

He, too, could be forceful. He resented the accident of fate that had made him president as the nation watched South Vietnam and Cambodia — where so much of America’s human and economic treasure had been spent by three predecessors — fall to the Communists in 1975. Rebuffed by Congress when he sought a last-minute $972 million in aid to Saigon, Mr. Ford made it possible for 130,000 or more refugees to come to the United States.

When the Cambodian Communists seized the American merchant ship Mayaqüez in May 1975, Mr. Ford reacted with uncharacteristic emotion, sending United States military forces to recapture the ship.

The order was motivated in part by concern for national image. “We had just pulled out of Vietnam, out of Cambodia,” Mr. Ford said later, “and here the United States was being challenged by a group of leaders who were bandits and outlaws, in my opinion, and I think their subsequent record has pretty well proved it. And it was an emotional decision to tell the Defense Department we had to go in there and do something.”

Mr. Ford’s economic policies were traditional for Republican conservatives. He proclaimed, amid considerable White House ballyhoo, a campaign to “Whip Inflation Now,” complete with “WIN” buttons. Scarcely had it begun than mounting joblessness and the worst recession since the 1930s caused Mr. Ford to abandon the anti-inflation program and propose tax cuts to stimulate the economy instead of tax increases to dampen it.

Congress, meanwhile, reflected its dominance by the Democratic Party in a steadily increasing number of spending programs and expansion of the federal deficit.

Difficult Dismissals

In what may have been his most difficult personal decision — because it went against the grain of his personality — the genial man from Michigan also acted forcefully in his dismissal of Secretary of Defense James R. Schlesinger.

There were no known policy differences of consequence between Mr. Ford and Mr. Schlesinger. But their styles and characters never quite proved compatible, and the defense secretary, a bookish and occasionally dogmatic intellectual who later became secretary of energy to President Jimmy Carter, got on the president’s nerves.

“There was a tension,” Mr. Ford acknowledged later. “There was a personality problem.” Mr. Schlesinger, he emphasized, “is an honorable, decent person, but our chemistry doesn’t fit.” He did not need to add but did, “I’m not one that likes to fire people.”

Nonetheless, Mr. Ford did make another central personnel decision that troubled him: jettisoning Vice President Rockefeller from his 1976 campaign ticket. Mr. Ford did so even though he had declared, in nominating the former New York governor to be his vice president, that there was no one else in the country so well equipped to stand next in the line of presidential succession.

Mr. Ford eventually decided to seek a full term as president, something he had intimated in his testimony to Congress as nominee for vice president that he would be loath to do. He decided that a lame-duck president could not be effective in a political role. Besides, although he did not like to admit it, Mr. Ford and his wife, Betty, had grown to like the perquisites of the White House.

As a candidate to succeed himself — and, he hoped, thus legitimize his accidental presidency — Mr. Ford grew politically timid. It was apparent that he would be challenged for the Republican nomination by Mr. Reagan, the former governor of California and a politician far more conservative than Mr. Ford.

On the Campaign Trail Again

Mr. Ford responded by becoming ever more conservative in his political statements and by undertaking the same sort of aggressive, energetic campaigning as an incumbent that had marked his campaigns as a member of the House of Representatives. From early 1975 until the summer of 1976, Mr. Ford traveled from one corner of the country to another. Even two attempts on his life by unbalanced women in California in 1975 did not deter him.

On one of those trips, to Sacramento on Sept. 5, he narrowly escaped an assassination attempt by Lynette (Squeaky) Fromme, who had been a follower of the convicted killer Charles Manson. Mr. Ford was moving through a crowd in Capitol Park, shaking hands and waving, when a Secret Service agent saw Ms. Fromme’s arm and the pistol. She was subdued, and it turned out that while the gun was loaded there was no bullet in the chamber. She was convicted of attempted murder and sentenced to life in prison.

The other attempt, by Sara Jane Moore, took place in San Francisco. A former Marine, Oliver W. Sipple, knocked a pistol out of Ms. Moore’s hand as she fired.

By the time Mr. Ford narrowly won the Republican nomination in Kansas City, Mo., in August 1976, he seemed to many of his political advisers to have diminished the value of his incumbency by traveling so extensively as to seem only another candidate. He was more than 25 percentage points behind the Democratic nominee, Mr. Carter, in the opinion polls. The economy was improving but not good. The Republicans’ identification with Mr. Nixon remained.

Mr. Ford reassessed the situation with his advisers. Together they altered his political strategy and style. He spent most of the campaign period hunched over his desk or greeting guests in the Rose Garden of the White House, trying to reinforce the image of incumbency and to stress his claims to having achieved “peace, prosperity and trust.”

Strides, Then a Stumble

In one of the most remarkable political comebacks in presidential campaign history, Mr. Ford nearly overcame adversity and odds. One late stumble, insisting in a debate that “there is no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe” and that Poland was not “dominated by the Soviet Union,” halted the Ford surge.

In the end, his loss to Mr. Carter, the former Georgia governor, was narrow, by only 1,682,970 votes. Mr. Ford had 48 percent and Mr. Carter 50.1 percent.

But neither Poland nor a last-minute bit of bad economic news was central to his defeat. The Nixon pardon was.

Stuart Spencer, his campaign manager, said that polling data about the pardon had made it clear that “it cost him the election.” He said 7 percent of Republicans had either voted for Mr. Carter or stayed home because of the pardon, and it hurt with Democrats and independents, too.

Robert S. Strauss, who was Democratic National Chairman in 1976, agreed. He said Mr. Ford “was never forgiven for it.”

“People always assumed there was a deal, even though there was no evidence of one,” Mr. Strauss said.

Even so, Mr. Ford’s political recovery, although incomplete, reflected a positive aspect of his brief presidency. It indicated the extent to which he seemed to have re-established a sense of trustworthiness in the nation’s most visible and symbolic office.

One political aide said of those who voted for Mr. Ford, “They’re voting for something solid — a simple, honest, decent man.”

After the White House

In the years after he left the White House, Mr. Ford took on two new roles, senior statesman and newly arrived millionaire, with his characteristic easygoing manner and energy. He had become something of a one-man academic, political and business enterprise, and by 1983 his income was estimated to be more than $1 million a year.

Mr. Ford frequently criticized President Carter on economic and defense matters, but the attacks on his successor never grew bitter or personal. On some foreign policy issues, like the Panama Canal treaties, which his own administration had quietly sought, he supported his successor.

For three years Mr. Ford contemplated another race for the presidency. In 1975, he had told aides in the White House that “Reagan would be a disaster” as president. After Mr. Reagan won the 1980 New Hampshire primary, Mr. Ford told The New York Times that it would be “impossible” for Mr. Reagan to win a general election, and he cautiously invited Republicans to ask him to run again.

But the draft he invited never came, and Mr. Reagan cruised to the nomination. When the Republicans gathered in Detroit in 1980 to nominate Mr. Reagan, he asked Mr. Ford to be his running mate.

For hours, representatives of the two men, with former Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger acting for Mr. Ford, negotiated the outlines of a possible Reagan-Ford Administration, in which Mr. Ford would have been given extensive authority in making appointments and managing the executive branch. But the negotiators were unable to reach a formula that satisfied Mr. Ford’s desire to be more than a traditional vice president while also giving Mr. Reagan a free hand to govern as chief executive.

Mr. Ford nevertheless worked on the 1980 campaign trail for Mr. Reagan and his running mate, George Bush. Two months after the inauguration, Mr. Reagan sent Mr. Ford as his representative to China to reassure leaders there that Washington wished to continue improving relations.

The next October, after President Anwar el-Sadat of Egypt was assassinated, Mr. Ford represented the United States at the funeral along with the two other living former presidents, Mr. Carter and Mr. Nixon.

For many years after he left office, Mr. Ford campaigned for Republican candidates. In the first few years, those appearances had to be accompanied by hefty charitable donations to his library and museum. He also continued to warn, “If we get way over on the hard right of the political spectrum, we will not elect a Republican President,” as he put it in a Times interview in 1998. He singled out the abortion issue, saying he was disappointed that his own “strongly pro-choice” views no longer seemed welcome in his party.

In August 2000, Mr. Ford appeared at the Republican convention in Philadelphia but was hospitalized for a week after a stroke.

As a result of Mr. Ford’s new income, the Fords enjoyed a way of life that contrasted with their modest existence when he was a congressman, establishing homes in Rancho Mirage, in the California desert, and at Vail, in the Colorado mountains.

In addition to attending fund-raising functions, teaching at the University of Michigan and giving 30 paid speeches a year, Mr. Ford bought interests in two Colorado radio stations and served on the boards of at least eight corporations.

He also supervised and participated in sporting events, mostly golf, including an invitational golf tournament bearing his name in Vail; promoted a Southern California real estate development; and helped advertise a commercially minted coin set commemorating the presidency. He even made his acting debut at the age of 70, portraying himself on an episode of the nighttime television soap opera “Dynasty.”

Asked in a 1978 interview about his life in retirement, Mr. Ford said that he was having trouble with chipping and putting in his golf game, but otherwise, “everything is wonderful.”

Ellie

thedrifter
12-28-06, 07:37 AM
Posted on Thu, Dec. 28, 2006

GERALD FORD 1913-2006

A legacy built on decency
As 38th president, he ended our 'long national nightmare'
By Frank Greve And William Douglas
MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE


It took the earnest integrity of an Eagle Scout from Grand Rapids, Mich., to help Americans recuperate from the devious evils of the Watergate affair.

Gerald Rudolph Ford Jr., who died Tuesday night, was the nation's only un-elected president, radiant with decency, successful without seeming ambitious, "an ordinary man," according to biographer James Cannon, "called to serve America in extraordinary circumstances."

He was known for pardoning Richard Nixon, wearing Whip Inflation Now buttons and losing one of the closest presidential elections in history.

But later, historians recognized a different legacy for former President Gerald Ford: as a founding father of the human rights movement, for supporting the 1975 Helsinki Final Act.

Ford backed the Helsinki accord even though political conservatives at the time claimed that it was a land giveaway to the Soviet Union. The pact in essence recognized territorial gains that the USSR had made in Eastern Europe after World War II. But it also had a provision that the Soviet Union grudgingly agreed to: recognizing human and religious rights.

Experts and analysts who were remembering Ford yesterday said that clause provided a hammer that dissidents such as Poland's Lech Walesa, Russia's Andrei Sakharov and the Czech Republic's Vaclav Havel used to chip away at the Soviet Union until it crumbled.

Nobody's fool -- Ford graduated in the top third of his Yale Law School class -- he profited all his life from people who underestimated him. But Ford was a wooden speaker, more consensus-builder than leader, and, in the closest presidential election in 60 years, he lost in 1976 to Jimmy Carter.

It was the only election America's 38th president ever lost. But it was also his only campaign outside Michigan's 5th District, the optimistic, entrepreneurial, moderate Republican stronghold that Ford represented in Congress for nearly 25 postwar years.

Ford, then House minority leader, intended to retire in 1974 and had promised his wife, Betty, that he would. But Richard Nixon picked him in October 1973 as his second vice president. Nixon's first, Spiro Agnew, had been forced to resign in a plea bargain after Justice Department investigators determined that Agnew had taken kickbacks from Maryland contractors.

"Well, it would be a good way to end my career," Ford responded with characteristic, slightly ungainly modesty. He was the consensus choice, Nixon had determined, of Democratic and Republican congressional leaders. Ford succeeded Nixon on Aug. 9, 1974, after irrefutable, taped evidence showed that Nixon had, despite his denials, participated in the cover-up of a break-in at Democratic Party headquarters.

"My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over," said Ford as he took office. Ford had argued with his speechwriter that the phrase "long national nightmare" was too hard on Nixon, but it was just the right chord to strike, as were Ford's first White House days. After two weeks on the job, his Gallup Poll approval rating had soared to 71 percent.

Pardon that shocked America

Then, from his absolute conviction that it was "the right thing to do," Ford forfeited much of his popularity and his political future in a single stroke: He pardoned Nixon unconditionally. While Ford denied his pardon had been part of the bargain that induced Nixon to step down, that suspicion was widespread and persistent.

The political price was certifiably permanent. Ford lost to Carter by 49.9 percent to 47.9 percent in 1976. Six percent of voters interviewed in exit polls said Ford's pardoning of Nixon had made it impossible for them to vote for him.

Was there a deal? Ford's standing in history depends largely on the answer. Rep. Peter Rodino, D-N.J., who'd been chairman of the House Judiciary Committee investigating the Watergate affair, tried to clarify the ambiguous situation in an interview 17 years later with Ford biographer Cannon: "Nixon, being the kind of manipulator he was, knew that Ford was a feeling, humane and decent guy," Rodino reasoned, "and might have felt that a pardon was something he could count on from Ford. But Jerry Ford is not the man who would ever make a deal like that. Jerry was like a Boy Scout -- the truth is the truth. Any number of people felt there had to be a deal, but they didn't know Jerry Ford."

Rodino, who knew Ford, accepted his explanation that only a pardon could avert years of sordid, distracting humiliation that the trials of Nixon and his henchmen would have produced.

None of the other ups and downs of Ford's 895-day presidency -- the final helicopter withdrawal of U.S. Marines from Saigon, the big Whip Inflation Now lapel buttons, the beginnings in Helsinki of successful arms reduction measures -- defined the man as clearly as his pardon of Nixon did.

The early years

Over a lifetime, Grand Rapids defined him. Born Leslie Lynch King Jr. in Omaha, Neb., on July 14, 1913, he adopted his stepfather's name after his parents divorced and his mother moved to Grand Rapids and married Gerald R. Ford Sr.

He was handsome as a teen and popular in the city of 169,000, a Boy Scout in fact and values; his mother, a good Episcopalian and member of the Daughters of the American Revolution. The Depression had squeezed his stepfather, a varnish salesman to local furniture makers, however, to the point that college looked impossible for him. Thanks largely to a scholarship fund created from bookstore profits at South High School, where he'd been an all-state center on the football team, Ford graduated from the University of Michigan in 1935.

Although Saturday Night Live caricatured Ford as a klutz, and TV news clips showed him hitting his head on two aircraft doorjambs, Ford was, among presidents, the most accomplished athlete. The Green Bay Packers and Detroit Lions offered him post-college professional football contracts, Detroit's the better offer at $200 a game. Instead, he coached football and boxing at Yale for two years, and, on the second try, won admission to its law school.

The day after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor, Ford shuttered his thriving Grand Rapids law practice and volunteered for the Navy. He served as a gunnery, and later navigation, officer on a carrier that won 11 battle stars in 13 months in the Pacific. A year after the war, at age 35, he defeated Grand Rapids' five-term House Republican incumbent. In 1948, he married Betty Bloomer Warren, a divorced former John Robert Powers model, two weeks after the primary. She'd been a Martha Graham dancer in New York, then fashion coordinator for Herpolsheimer's, a local department store.

Ford was the last living member of the Warren Commission, which concluded in 1964 that Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone in assassinating President Kennedy.

Life after politics

The Fords retired to Rancho Mirage, Calif., and a home alongside the 13th hole at the Thunderbird Golf Club. A $1 million deal as an NBC commentator, a $1.5 million deal for his-her memoirs, and numerous corporate consultancies and board memberships made the Fords multimillionaires in their retirement. They built a summer home in Beaver Creek in the Colorado Rockies. Mrs. Ford co-founded the non-profit Betty Ford Center for substance abusers in 1982.

In later years, Ford often appeared at charitable events, particularly those requiring a bag of golf clubs. He swam twice daily well into his 80s.

In 1999, Clinton bestowed on Ford the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor, for his handling of the Nixon resignation and the end of the Vietnam War

Ellie

thedrifter
12-28-06, 07:52 AM
When Greatness Isn't Called For
By Paul Beston
Published 12/28/2006 12:09:21 AM

During the 1976 presidential campaign, out in the streets of the Midwestern suburb where I grew up, kids would say (no doubt parroting the political views of their parents) that President Ford "may not be great, but at least he's honest." Even back then, that sense of Ford's integrity seems to have been fairly widespread, even though it coexisted with suspicions about his pardon of Richard Nixon. Greeted at the time with howls of outrage, the Nixon pardon is now widely regarded as an act of integrity and political courage on Ford's part. In the intervening years, and now in the obituaries marking his death at 93, Ford's integrity has been lauded as a defining trait.

At the same time, Ford was also a creature of Capitol Hill who knew how to play ball from many years serving in the House of Representatives. "His background is non-doctrinaire conservative," William F. Buckley wrote of Ford not long after he assumed the presidency, "but his most conspicuous overtures have been doctrinaire liberal." Therein lay Ford's reputation for bipartisanship (and if the background and the overtures were reversed, it would be called something else).

Ford was a Midwestern conservative in many respects, opposing the liberal spending policies of President Lyndon Johnson and supporting the Vietnam War. But he maintained touches of Eastern liberalism on social issues, had a typical politician's misunderstanding of economics, and generally adhered to the detente policies that were put in place by Nixon and pursued through Jimmy Carter's tenure.

Ford was certainly nobody's idea man. In another country's political culture, he might have been seen as a party apparatchik, exactly the kind that tends to be standing in the wings when a higher-up is ousted and a steady hand of continuity is needed.

Steadiness: that's another word you hear often about Ford. Having assumed the presidency under terrible circumstances and with a significant portion of the country wondering if he was up to the job, Ford proved his competence, and his modest demeanor must have had a calming effect. Indeed, to a young kid, it seemed that the mysterious Nixon had been succeeded by somebody's grandfather. In a nation that prizes vigor and identifiable achievements among its chief executives, steadiness is an odd thing to be remembered for, but then Ford came along at a very odd time.

In his remarks on Ford's passing, President Bush evoked that steadiness among other traits: "He was a true gentleman who reflected the best in America's character....For a nation that needed healing, and for an office that needed a calm and steady hand, Gerald Ford came along when we needed him most."

Bush also called Ford "a great man who devoted the best years of his life in serving the United States."

Steadiness and greatness are not usually thought of together, and thinking of Gerald Ford as a great man is more than a bit of a stretch. President Bush's well-meaning praise seems driven by personal sentiment as well as a recent tendency to laud the service of our public officials, especially our chief executives, regardless of the significance of their contributions. This tendency is symbolized by President's Day, the replacement for what were once holidays for Washington and Lincoln.

It is likely that President Bush would use the word "great" to describe at least one other former president -- his own father, with whom Gerald Ford shared several traits. Both Ford and George H.W. Bush exemplified a commitment to service and a gentlemanliness that is pretty much gone from our politics.

Ford was a more inside the Beltway version of the first President Bush, though perhaps without the same degree of political dexterity and certainly without the vast international rolodex. Bush the Elder did not have the extensive Washington legislative experience of Ford, but he did have his famously broad resume. Had he had been born a little earlier and attained the requisite seniority, it could have been he, not Ford, assuming the vice presidency in 1973 and then succeeding Nixon in 1974.

Both Bush and Ford were loyal Republican Party soldiers when the core of the party was not yet Reaganite. Both conducted what were in essence managerial presidencies. It was Bush the Elder's good fortune that the process he was called upon to manage was a momentous, and much happier, historical development than what fell upon Ford. Bush the Elder managed the Cold War's end skillfully, just as Ford managed to convince a nation that a presidential resignation was not the end of the Republic. These were worthy, but custodial, achievements by men who lacked vision but had the ability and character to make a contribution.

Sometimes a nation needs a break from greatness (both good and bad greatness) to catch its breath. A greater man preceded Gerald Ford, and a greater man than most other American presidents preceded George H.W. Bush.

Now the ex-presidents club has dwindled to three. How odd it will be if two years from now it is a foursome, with a father and son as bookends to a man who seems to haunt them both in different ways. But that is another story.

Ellie

SuNmAN
12-28-06, 09:12 AM
Its easy to rip on a President all day for their decisions and policies but it is definitely one of the most difficult jobs in the world today.

I betcha George Bush isn't getting more than 4 hours of sleep a day tops in recent years.

thedrifter
12-30-06, 07:21 AM
December 30, 2006
Recent Flexing of Presidential Powers Had Personal Roots in Ford White House
By SCOTT SHANE

WASHINGTON, Dec. 29 — This year’s annual gathering of Gerald R. Ford administration alumni took place in June at the National Archives, where graying former officials socialized near a display of the Constitution.

Mingling with the retirees were two men still very much in power: Dick Cheney and Donald H. Rumsfeld, each of whom had served under Mr. Ford as White House chief of staff.

The setting had an apt symbolism. Since taking office as part of the Bush administration in 2001, both Vice President Cheney and Mr. Rumsfeld, who stepped down as defense secretary this month, have consciously sought to restore what they see as the constitutional powers of the presidency, which they believe were severely eroded under President Richard M. Nixon and President Ford. Some of their colleagues from three decades ago — evidently including Mr. Ford — have wondered if they have gone too far.

In the 1970s, reacting to the upheavals of Vietnam and Watergate, a Democratic-controlled Congress acted repeatedly to curb the executive, passing the War Powers Resolution, which requires consultation with Congress before entering into hostilities; approving amendments expanding the Freedom of Information Act and probing deeply and publicly into intelligence agency secrets.

Mr. Ford, a 25-year veteran of Congress, fought back, despite his conciliatory personal style and sense that his presidency in the wake of the Watergate scandal, was, in the title he would give to his memoir, “a time to heal.” He used his veto power 66 times in his two and half years in office, the highest rate among modern presidents, and Congress responded with override votes 12 times.

“He was an unelected president coming in a horrible time and facing a Democratic House and Senate,” said Max L. Friedersdorf, Mr. Ford’s top liaison to Congress. “In Congressional relations, the main job we had was trying to sustain those vetoes.”

In other ways, too, Mr. Ford tried to exercise his presidential powers. He pardoned Nixon without consulting Congress. He ordered the Marines to retake the American merchant ship Mayagüez after it was seized by Cambodian forces, informing Congress only afterward.

“Ford dug in his heels as best he could to stop the erosion of presidential power,” said John Robert Greene, a Ford biographer and historian at Cazenovia College.

Ringside seats for this constitutional combat went to Mr. Rumsfeld, a former Illinois congressman whom Mr. Ford chose as chief of staff in 1974 at age 42, and Mr. Cheney, a former political science graduate student who served as his deputy. When Mr. Rumsfeld was named defense secretary the next year, Mr. Cheney, just 34, took the top White House job.

“Ford treated Cheney and Rumsfeld in effect as his students, eager young men willing to learn the art of government at his side,” Mr. Greene said.

Just days after arriving at the White House, those pupils saw Mr. Ford suffer an important defeat. At the urging of a Justice Department official named Antonin Scalia, who would later join the Supreme Court, Mr. Ford vetoed the Freedom of Information Act amendments, which he believed infringed the secrecy of the intelligence agencies and the F.B.I.

Newspaper editorials denounced what they said was a violation of Mr. Ford’s pronounced policy of openness. A defiant Congress overrode the veto, by a vote of 371 to 31 in the House and 65 to 27 in the Senate.

“I think Ford, Cheney and Rumsfeld felt like Gulliver being held down by the Lilliputians,” said Thomas S. Blanton, executive director of the National Security Archive at George Washington University, who helped edit a collection of documents on the episode.

After leaving office in 1977, Mr. Ford kept up the battle, devoting his first major public addresses to a critique of the War Powers Resolution, which he called an unconstitutional and impractical invasion of presidential power. He said it had been passed amid the “boiling passions of Vietnam and Watergate,” which he said had encouraged “too much tampering with the basic machinery by which the United States government has run successfully for the past 200 years.”

That theme would be picked up repeatedly in later years by Mr. Cheney, who laid out his constitutional theories in the Republican minority report on the Iran-contra affair in 1987, and by Mr. Rumsfeld, who testified to Congress in 1995 about the problem of “legislative micromanagement of the executive branch.”

After President Bush took office, they could put such views into action. Mr. Cheney took a stand on the secrecy of his consultations with industry officials on energy policy. Mr. Rumsfeld expanded the Pentagon’s authority at home and abroad. Mr. Bush would cite his powers as commander in chief to justify the first eavesdropping on American soil without warrants since the 1970s.

Mr. Cheney has most explicitly linked such actions to a historic reassertion of presidential power. “In 34 years, I have repeatedly seen an erosion of the powers and the ability of the president of the United States to do his job,” he said in an interview on ABC’s “This Week” in 2002, referring to several 1970s laws.

In December 2005, after the disclosure of the National Security Agency’s eavesdropping without warrants, Mr. Cheney told reporters that the program was a proper assertion of the president’s authority. While the “the nadir of the modern presidency” had come in the 1970s, he said, “I do think that to some extent now, we’ve been able to restore the legitimate authority of the presidency.”

In all the intervening years, Mr. Ford maintained close and friendly relations with both his former chiefs of staff. When Mr. Bush selected Mr. Cheney as his running mate in 2000, Mr. Ford lauded the vice-presidential candidate in an Op-Ed article in The New York Times for “a towering intelligence and probity, razor-sharp judgment and a seriousness of purpose that is the antithesis of modern political spin.”

This year, when Mr. Rumsfeld came under fire from senior retired generals for his conduct of the war in Iraq, Mr. Ford issued a rare public statement defending his “creativity, vision and courage” and rebuking his critics.

But a private disillusionment appears to have been taking shape. In a 2004 interview with Bob Woodward, reported for the first time in The Washington Post this week, Mr. Ford singled out Mr. Rumsfeld and Mr. Cheney by name and sharply criticized the decision to go to war in Iraq.

“I don’t think I would have gone to war,” Mr. Ford said.

Of Mr. Cheney, he said, “He was an excellent chief of staff. First class.” But as vice president, he said, “I think Cheney has become much more pugnacious.”

Mr. Ford’s remarks echoed those of some of his former aides. Brent Scowcroft, Mr. Ford’s national security adviser, expressed puzzlement at his former colleagues in an interview last year with New Yorker magazine, declaring, “Dick Cheney I don’t know anymore.”

Carla A. Hills, Mr. Ford’s secretary of housing and urban development, said Friday that “many of the travails of this administration could have been avoided with more transparency and collegiality, which were hallmarks of the Ford administration.”

Some officials seem deeply torn. In an interview Friday, Mr. Friedersdorf, the former Congressional liaison, described his joy in speaking with both Mr. Rumsfeld and Mr. Cheney — “wonderful guys” — at the National Archives alumni gathering in June.

“I talked to the vice president about what a great place it was to get together — you could walk right up to the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution,” Mr. Friedersdorf recalled.

But he added, “When I see them supporting the foreign policy of this president, the deficit spending, the eavesdropping, Guantánamo, I don’t recognize them.”

Ellie

thedrifter
12-30-06, 07:10 PM
Washington Remembers Gerald Ford
Ceremonies Begin In Nations Capital To Honor 38th President

(CBS/AP) With the thunder of cannon and the whistle of a bos'n pipe, the nation's capital honored Gerald R. Ford's memory Saturday in funeral ceremonies recalling the touchstones of his life, from combat in the Pacific to a career he cherished in Congress to a presidency he did not seek.

Lights bathed the granite arch of the World War II memorial commemorating the Pacific theater as Ford's nighttime funeral procession, bearing his wife, Betty, and the casket of the 38th president, stopped there in tribute to his years as an ensign and gunnery officer. The other arch, representing the Atlantic theater, stood in darkness.

An aircraft from the White House fleet brought Ford's body to Andrews Air Force Base from services near his adopted California home, where mourners streamed past his casket in quiet remembrance of the even-keeled man summoned to the presidency in a time of national trauma 34 years ago.

Vice President Dick Cheney, Ford's chief of staff long ago and an honorary pallbearer now, stood silently among the dignitaries attending the brief arrival ceremony, which was punctuated by cannon fire. The arrival opened the Washington portion of Ford's state funeral, with procession that took his casket from Maryland to Virginia and then over the Memorial Bridge — dressed in flags and funeral bunting — to the memorial, past the White House without pausing and on to the U.S. Capitol for the first service and a lying in state that continues until Tuesday morning.

Mrs. Ford sat stoically in the snaking line of gleaming limousines, clutching a tissue and dabbing her face on occasion, then walked slowly up the steps of the Capitol in the arm of her military escort, soon followed by the casket bearing her husband of 58 years. Another round of cannon fire rang out.

On the way to Capitol Hill, World War II veterans and Boy Scouts gathered by the memorial and saluted at the brief, poignant stop. Mrs. Ford waved through the window. A bos'n mate stepped forward to render "Piping Ashore," a piercing whistle heard for centuries to welcome officers aboard a ship and now to honor naval service.

The event, unfolding without words, recalled Ford's combat service aboard the aircraft carrier USS Monterey. In December 1944, when a typhoon struck the Third Fleet, Ford led the crew that battled a fire sparked by planes shaken loose in the storm, taking actions that some credited with saving the ship and many lives. He sought no award, and received none.

The Capitol commemorated a man whose highest ambition, never realized in an era of Democratic control of Congress, was to become House speaker.

History intervened; he became vice president when Spiro Agnew resigned in scandal, then president when Watergate shattered Richard Nixon's presidency. "A funny thing happened to me on the way to becoming speaker," he once cracked.

In Palm Desert, Calif., a 13-hour period of public viewing ended just as the sun rose over the resort community where Ford and his wife settled nearly 30 years ago. People waited up to three hours to pay their respects at St. Margaret's Episcopal Church.

When the doors were opened after a private service Friday, mourners started flowing in and filed past the casket all through the night and continued to come to pay their respects, reports CBS News correspondent Bill Whitaker.

Buses brought people to St. Margaret's from a gathering point at a tennis center five miles away. Mourners ranging from children to the elderly walked through quickly and then reboarded their buses — a process taking less than two minutes.

"It's so moving, especially with someone like Ford, who had such an important place in history," said Michelle Dhami, who came with her two young children.

Ford lied in repose for public viewing of the closed casket until late Saturday morning, when former first lady Betty Ford boarded a Boeing 747 and accompanied her husband's body to Washington. Two services were planned in Washington, and Ford was to be buried in Grand Rapids, Mich., on Jan. 3.

The emphasis for the ceremonies will be on simplicity, very much in keeping with Ford's style, reports CBS News chief Washington correspondent Bob Schieffer

Thus the funeral procession to the Capitol lacked the full trappings, by the design of Ford and his family. A motorcade was arranged instead of the horse-drawn caisson most familiar to Americans from the funerals of Ronald Reagan in 2004 and John Kennedy in 1963.

Ford, a man of modest character whose short presidency lacked the historic drama of JFK's and Reagan's, also was mourned without the riderless horse customarily included in the procession.

The thundering military flyover that is also part of a full-throttle state funeral in Washington will happen instead in Grand Rapids, Mich., where Ford will be entombed Wednesday on a hillside near his presidential museum. Ford represented the city in the House for 25 years.

Ford died Tuesday at age 93. He became president when Nixon resigned in August 1974 and then was defeated by Jimmy Carter in the 1976 election.

Six days of national mourning began Friday with military honors and a simple family prayer service at St. Margaret's, where the Ford family has worshipped for many years.

Barbara Veith, 69, said Ford's "everyman" persona drew her to the viewing.

"There is something personal about his passing even though we didn't really know him," Veith said. "He just kind of had an everyman quality to him though he was far from it — he was the president."

During his weekly radio address on Saturday, President Bush called Ford a "courageous leader, a true gentleman and a loving father and husband."

"Gerald Ford distinguished himself as a man of integrity and selfless dedication," Bush said. "He always put the needs of his country before his own, and did what he thought was right, even when those decisions were unpopular. Only years later would Americans come to fully appreciate the foresight and wisdom of this good man."

Bush was referring obliquely to Ford's decision to pardon Nixon, a step so divisive it was widely thought to have contributed to his defeat in 1976. In the years since, some critics of the pardon, as well as a number of historians, have come to see it as a wise move that spared the nation further pain from Watergate.

When they return to Washington from their Texas vacation on Monday, Bush and first lady Laura Bush plan to pay their respects to Ford while he lies in state at the Capitol. On Tuesday, the president will speak at Ford's funeral service at Washington National Cathedral before Ford's remains are taken to Grand Rapids.

The private family service on Friday was followed by a visitation for invited friends, including former Secretary of State George Shultz, former New York Congressman Jack Kemp and former California Gov. Pete Wilson.


Ellie