gerald r. ford

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Gerald R. Ford VP- Nelson Rockefeller Dates in office: 1974-1977 Comes from Michigan PP: Republican Born: July 14, 1913 – Died December 26, 2006

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VP- Nelson Rockefeller Dates in office: 1974-1977. Gerald R. Ford. Comes from Michigan PP: Republican. Born: July 14, 1913 – Died December 26, 2006. Political Background. 1948-73 U.S. Representative from Michigan 1965-73 U.S. House Minority Leader - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Gerald R. Ford

Gerald R. Ford

VP- Nelson Rockefeller

Dates in office: 1974-1977

Comes from Michigan PP: Republican

Born: July 14, 1913 – Died December 26, 2006

Page 2: Gerald R. Ford

Political Background

1948-73 U.S. Representative from Michigan1965-73 U.S. House Minority Leader1973 Appointed vice president by Richard Nixon1974-77 Thirty-eighth U.S. president following the resignation of Richard Nixon1976 Loses presidential election to Jimmy Carter

Page 3: Gerald R. Ford

I was born September 4, 1975 in Orlando, Florida

(you can tell by my deep dark Florida tan!!)

Page 4: Gerald R. Ford

Ford’s Vice Presidential Appointment

a. Appointed by Nixon and confirmed by congress after the resignation of VP Spiro Agnew under the terms of the 25th Amendment to the Constitution

b. Sworn in as VP on December 6, 1973

Page 5: Gerald R. Ford

(1)Terms of Acquisition to the Presidency a. August 9, 1974 – Ford took the

presidential oath of office after Nixon resigned due to the Watergate scandal ( …with not a single vote)

b. “My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over.” He Asked the American public to pray for Nixon and his family.

Page 6: Gerald R. Ford

c. Ford selected New York governor Nelson

Rockefeller as his VP and kept Nixon’s cabinet in place

d.(2)Ford and Rockefeller are the only president and VP never elected to their

positions serving at the same time

Page 7: Gerald R. Ford

(3) Pardon of Nixon a.Proclamation 4311, Granting a Pardon to

Richard Nixonb.“Someone must write an end to an

American tragedy”c. Once Nixon was pardoned (the

forgiveness of a crime and the penalty associated with it) Ford’s approval rating nosedived – 71% to 49% in less than a week

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Speech Pardoning Nixon d. Critics believed a Republican “deal” allowed him to become president if he pardoned Nixon

… what do you think?

Page 9: Gerald R. Ford

V. Domestic Policya. Vietnam Era Reconciliation Program

1. (4) Clemency plan for draft-dodgers- to give them leniency/compassion/

forgiveness for avoiding to go to Vietnam (controversial because Ford had draft-dodger sons… and what about the guys who did go fight for our country!)

Page 10: Gerald R. Ford

b. Economic Troubles1. Inflation continued to increase –

called by Ford “domestic enemy number one”

2. (6)“Whip Inflation Now” (WIN) – program designed to reduce federal spending and created a national volunteer organization to find ways to keep prices down

Page 11: Gerald R. Ford

(8)1975 State of the Union address

• Ford’s First Address to Congress and the Nation ... “my motto toward the Congress is communication, conciliation, compromise, and cooperation. ...”

Page 12: Gerald R. Ford

VI. Foreign Affairsa. Presided over the official

end to the Vietnam War Cease fire 1973

(7) South Vietnam falls to communism with the fall of Saigon, April 30, 1975 to North Vietnam control

Page 13: Gerald R. Ford

b. Approved several million dollars in aid for war in Angola – area trying to fight communist guerrillas

c. Approved aid to Israel and Egypt – helped leaders of the warring nations to agree to interim peace proposals

d. Negotiated an arms-reduction agreement with the Soviet Union

Page 14: Gerald R. Ford

e. Authorized a successful military response to a seizing of an American merchant ship by Cambodian Khmer Rouge forces

f. Reorganized the CIA after reviewing involvement Cuba and Watergate (other problems as well)

Page 15: Gerald R. Ford

(5) Helsinki Accords• the Helsinki Accords were pretty

broad, but the one issue that was important to the United States, was the elevation of Human Rights, ...signed by US, USSR, 33 others -

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h. Aid to South Vietnam and Cambodia

•The most important aid offered to these two countries after the withdrawal of American involvement was helping refugees escape

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VII. Random Information about Forda. Oldest living president…

nevermind. He died

b. Asked the Marine Band to play the University of Michigan fight song rather than Hail to the Chief every time he made a public entrance

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b. Two assassination attempts1. Lynette Alice “Squeaky” Frome –

follower of Charles Manson, approached Ford in a Sacramento hotel with her hand extended (had a gun – Ford thought she wanted to shake hands!)

2. Sara Jane Moore – identified as a radical, fired at Ford across the street from his hotel in San Francisco, California

Page 19: Gerald R. Ford

Squeaky Frome and Ford Escaping an Assassination Attempt

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Sara Jane Moore3. Both are serving

life sentences (1965 law making the attempt to assassinate a president a federal crime)

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c. Press began to highlight Ford’s mishaps after LBJ commented that Ford had played football too long without a helmet1. One network newscast

replayed footage of him (11 times) falling down Air Force One

Page 22: Gerald R. Ford

Ford Falling Down Air Force One Stairs

Page 23: Gerald R. Ford

VIII. President during the (9)Bicentennial Celebration1. “Never in my wildest dreams

had I imagined that I would be President of the United States on its 200th birthday” July 4, 1776

2. Celebrated the day in NYC

Page 24: Gerald R. Ford

(10) Aid to South Vietnam: Approved several million dollars in aid for war in Angola – area

trying to fight communist guerrillasAid to Cambodia: Authorized a military

response trying to defeat Cambodian Khmer Rouge forces ***The Khmer Rouge is remembered mainly for the deaths of an estimated 1.5 million people (estimates range from 850,000 to two million) under its regime, through execution, starvation and forced labor. Following their leader Pol Pot, the Khmer Rouge imposed an extreme form of social engineering on Cambodian society—a radical form of agrarian communism where the whole population had to work in collective farms or forced labor projects (est. 7.5 million people dead , as of 1975),

Page 25: Gerald R. Ford