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