Friday, December 29, 2006

Remembering President Ford

With the recent death of President Gerald R. Ford, the media has done a lot of examination of Ford's pardon of Richard Nixon and how it saved the country a lot of turmoil that would have resulted from a trial. Interestingly there is little comparison to all the problems caused by the investigations into President Clinton.

More than 30 years after Watergate many Americans still are a little troubled about what Nixon did, yet may be now willing to accept that the country was better off with the pardon. As Ford said when he took office, "Our long national nightmare is over." Yet merely five years after the 1998-99 impeachment hearings there was hardly a peep in the media and the public to note this anniversary. In addition, one only has to look at how impeachment is only an afterthought to any discussions regarding Hillary Clinton's potential run for the presidency in 2008, 10 years after the hearings.

In 1974 Gerry Ford took one for the country and pardoned Nixon because he placed the country over his personal interests. By comparison the GOP placed its personal interests about in 1998 was going after President Clinton. And while the investigations cost them at the ballot box in 1998, their harping on it may have provided the margin that allowed them to be in the lead in Florida in 2000 when the vote counting was halted.

An important part of Democracy is participants understanding and willingness to lose and turn over power following elections. Ford made a tough choice and lost a close election and probably had to think that the pardon was responsible for the slim margin of defeat. Years later, President Clinton conferred on Ford the Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor for his service.

While President Jimmy Carter was a fine man, the nation may have been better off with Ford in office. Unfortunately this scenario repeated itself in 2000 when the Clinton impeachment probably contributed to Vice President Al Gore's loss. In this case there is no doubt that the country would have been much better off if Bush hadn't been placed in the White House.

It's hard to believe that the party of Lincoln and Ford is now the party of Bush.

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