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A Ford/Nixon Conspiracy? [VIDEO]

Posted by Evan Derkacz at 2:43 AM on December 28, 2006.


Ford may have promised to pardon Nixon in order to become president...
fordnixon

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Through the stench of Ford hagiographies comes this story from the memory of Nation publisher Victor Navasky.

Back when Ford penned his autobiography, the Nation got a hold of an early copy, re-publishing portions indicating that Ford may or may not have made a deal with Nixon to pardon or not pardon the disgraced president.

Navasky, an old-school New Yorker, tells the story peppered with remarks about Sandra Day O'Connor, Ford's football days, and of course the lawsuit against the Nation that went all the way up to the Supreme Court...

Transcript after the jump...

But we're going to turn now to another issue. We have Victor Navasky on the line with us. He's publisher emeritus of The Nation magazine, Chair of the Columbia University Journalism Review, and this is a case that involved The Nation magazine and former President Ford. Welcome to Democracy Now!, Victor Navasky.

VICTOR NAVASKY: Good to be here Amy.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about this case?

VICTOR NAVASKY: Sure. Let's see, in August of 1974, which was about a week before Nixon resigned, General Hague took Gerry Ford for a walk in the rose garden, and told him that Nixon was going bonkers and they had to get him out of there, and there were four possible ways to do that. The first three turned out to not realistic. But the fourth, he said, was if you would promise to pardon him after you become president, I think he would agree to resign.

Now, some years later Ford wrote about this in his memoir. And, someone, and his memoirs were being kept secret as they had sold publication rights and he had signed a contract saying he wouldn't talk about it until the book came out. And someone who had access to it asked me if I wanted to read it. And, I said not particularly, but I would, and it turned out that there was this one chapter that dealt with this conversation. And, the way Ford told the story, he put a gloss of innocence on it, and I’ll tell you what he said in a minute. But, we ran a story about the story, and subsequently we were sued by the publisher and it went all the way up to the Supreme Court, and here's what happened.

After Hague took Ford for a walk in the rose garden, Ford writes in his memoir that he came back to his office, and he mentioned this to an aide of his named, Bob Hartman, and the aide said, and then what did you say after you heard that? And, Ford said well, I didn't say anything. And, the aide said, gee, that's not good, silence implies assent. Because Ford had asked Hague well, is it possible to pardon someone before he is indicted? And Hague said yes, we checked it out with our lawyers and it is. So Ford says, he then went to sleep and he didn't say anything to Betty about it and the next morning he got up and he mentioned it to another aide, a fellow named Jack Marsh. And Marsh said, and then what did you say? And, Ford said, I didn’t say anything, and this aide said, gee, that could be a time bomb.

So, Ford then writes, that he then went and called General Hague and read him a statement, which he reprints in his book, and the statement said, nothing I did or didn't say yesterday should be taken to mean that I did or didn't agree to pardon or not to pardon Richard Nixon. And, he writes it as a kind of proforma thing, and the way I read it was it was a an attempt to put a gloss of innocence on a deal they had made. And this is a possible obstruction of justice, and that it’s something that he shouldn’t have done and against the law, and possibly, after he got nominated and confirmed, an impeachable offense, even.

In any event, we wrote the story and the--about a week or a couple of days later, I got a call from Herb Mitgang who was a reporter for The New York Times, saying, what’s your response to the telegram Harper sent you? I said what telegram? And they had sent it to The New York Times, but our copy didn't arrive until a day later. Threatening a lawsuit and telling us to cease and desist excerpting from the Ford memoirs, which of course we hadn’t done. Well the fact was, what had happened was, Time, which had agreed to excerpt from the book, canceled its excerpts because—cancelled its excerpts, because, the deal was that Ford wasn't - nothing was supposed to come out- about this conversation about the pardon until after they had run their story.

And we, of course, believed that the right of a public figure to keep his secrets while in office is fine, if he keeps them, and he certainly or she should be encouraged to write their memoirs so that the public gets the benefit of their thoughts about what happened. But, they have no right to copyright the news. They have no right—they have the right to protect their style, and of course The Nation wasn't interested in borrowing Ford's style. The reason that we quoted from his memoirs was only so that we couldn't be accused of distorting what he had to say, but the guy had written a book that ran about 110,000 words and we had quoted about 350 words. We quoted some others things which were very clearly public documents, but we also quoted correspondence and stuff that was part of the public's business.

And the case, it was a very interesting case because, Ford himself, chose not to be a plaintiff. The plaintiffs were Time, Inc., the Harper and Rowe and Readers Digest, which also had excerpts involved in the thing. And the amount of money at stake was only Time Inc.’s share of the $25,000 that was an issue, so it was $12,500, which barely qualified for a federal lawsuit. It went all the way up to the Supreme Court, and at the trial level, the Judge, a fellow named Richard Owen, was--had been a Nixon appointee, and he was a famous copyright protectionist Judge and he decided for Ford.

At the appeals level, the Judge was Kaufman, who had been the judge that sentenced the Rosenbergs to death, but Kaufman, about which The Nation had been very critical, but Kaufman, Irving Kaufman, was also a first amendment absolutist and a democrat, and he decided in The Nation's favor. And then the thing went on appeal to the Supreme Court and then it was very interesting, because then the Supreme Court ultimately, where we were defended by Floyd Abrams, a first amendment lawyer and the ACLU, and The New York Times, and the New York Review of Books, and a bunch of other periodicals came to our defense.

But, to make it brief, the Supreme Court decided 6:3 against us and the decision was rendered by Sandra Day O'Connor, who these days is celebrated as, you know, a fair-minded balancer, etc., but she was a republican appointee. And the fact was, and Byron was a right, and voted on our side. So it was weirdly a playing out of the realist critique of jurisprudence where the democrats were voting one way and the republicans the other. And the--in Justice O’Conner's decision, she actually misstated some of the facts of the case. It was one of the technical things that is bedeviling to me is when a case is decided against you, but they get the facts wrong at the Supreme Court level, how do you get that corrected? Because there is no appeal at the Supreme Court. Anyway, that's what happened with this sort of sideline of this Gerry Ford case.

AMY GOODMAN: Finally, Victor Navasky, your thoughts today on President Ford's legacy.

VICTOR NAVASKY: Well, I think he--the most important thing he did was he pardoned Richard Nixon. And he--if that was, indeed, the result of a deal, rather than this he's being credited, and maybe properly so, with trying to heal the nation. But, if he--his attempt to heal the nation was a result of a deal he made while he was Vice President of the United States, that's an important missing piece of history. So he'll be celebrated because he's a nice guy and he was a football player and all of that stuff for the next week or two. But if it turns out that this deal was made then history is going to have a harsher judgment about him.

AMY GOODMAN: And, the fact that he also, not only pardoned Richard Nixon, but granted amnesty to draft era resisters, the significance of that.

VICTOR NAVASKY: Well, I think you have to credit him for that. Time passes, and he was--he was in the healing business, on the one hand. On the other hand, what you mentioned earlier in the program about his attempt to impeach Justice Douglass for publishing in the Evergreen Review, which was an experimental, sort of hippie, avant-garde, very good, and serious literary magazine, was outrageous. And so he's a complicated guy who came across as a nice guy.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, I want to thank you, very much, Victor Navasky, Publisher Emeritus of The Nation magazine, Chair of the Columbia University Journalism Review, for joining us today.

VICTOR NAVASKY: Thank you Amy.

AMY GOODMAN: Thank you for being with us.

Digg!

Tagged as: ford, the nation

Evan Derkacz is an AlterNet editor. He writes and edits PEEK, the blog of blogs.


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"...complicated...?"
Posted by: Plexius on Dec 28, 2006 6:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"And so he's a complicated guy who came across as a nice guy."

No. He was just another Nixon Whitehouse corrupt politician like Tricky Dicky, Spiro Agnew, James Watt, Coulson, Dean and all the other "plumbers" that did their dirty work from lies to break-ins. Ford wasn't complicated; he was just another criminal "who came across as a nice guy." Hopefully, history will crucify him, since he didn't get his just desserts while he lived. We should urinate on his grave.

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all and all...
Posted by: andrewstromotich on Dec 28, 2006 6:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
not very interesting. it really adds up to nothing, as i'm sure it did when the story originally broke. no-one's getting impeached, that's just how the system works. Bush's are war criminals, reagan was a criminal, most of em are. Most of US foreign policy is criminal in nature (whatcha call the Bay of Pigs). In Canada there is a joke about the Torries and the Whigs (dems and repubs), and it has to do with their public spats, which of course are accompanied with backroom understanding that there will only be slaps, no fists, as noone want to up the standard because that would just complicate things for everyone...

the only interesting thing for me was this:
"And we, of course, believed that the right of a public figure to keep his secrets while in office is fine, if he keeps them, and he certainly or she should be encouraged to write their memoirs so that the public gets the benefit of their thoughts about what happened. But, they have no right to copyright the news."

that is exactly what has happened. News has become copyrighted. CNN virtually owns it's version of the war on Iraq, and since most americans rely on CNN, it becomes history (hence the title of my film History©: the manufacture and control of common experience ). Never in modern history has media been less accountable to the general public. Newspapers have always had to keep a record of their positions. Any citizens could research the history of the NYT's position on anything by simply going to any public libraries archive. With digital media it is different. Shows are broadcast and then gone to the public unless they have recorded them. Never before have we been so reliant on media to monitor media, and look where we are. History clearly has been copyrighted...

Andrew Stromotich
Dropframe Communications
www.dropframe.ca

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» US is mentioned Posted by: andrewstromotich
» My friend Dahr Posted by: andrewstromotich
Sssoooooo why is this coming out now???
Posted by: Prophit on Dec 28, 2006 7:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Who asked the emeritus chair of Nation for the interveiw and who selected the subject and why wasn't it asked while he was a live and could be prosecuted????

I love all these people who turn a blind eye to crimes if they are committed in the White House. I think I will rename my house to "White House" and do what ever I damn well please and just say, I am exempt from accountability. Think that will fly??? LOL

Seriously, why do we have to wait til they die to push the envelope? Mr. Derkacz, did you dream this one up before he died and just waited until he did to persue it?? I would love to know.

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Reason for Coverup so deep it stinks
Posted by: azelb on Dec 28, 2006 7:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The coverup for Nixon continues. By redirecting the discussion from the actions that lead to the impeachment of Nixon the press is covering the most destructive period in our government's history. The 'Operation Chaos' of the Nixon administration was the largest domestic crime wave perpetrated by the federal governemnt against innocent people of the organizations in the peace and civil rights struggle. That was the true story which is even now being covered up. John Tower Commission Report on the Nixon Administration partial expose has been ignored by all reports of the era in the press.

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» RE: reason for Coverup so deep it stinks Posted by: andrewstromotich
Rich M
Posted by: rjm02 on Dec 28, 2006 7:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I tend to think, even if Ford made a deal, it was a healing effort on his part. He never wanted a Presidency of his own and I think he legitimately felt the best thing he could do was lead a healing of the country.

Was he correct? Harder to call. Personally, I think not. I think it began a time of Republican arrogance, "get away with it philosophy" that remains pervasive today. Nixon should have been indicted, tried, and ajudged fairly. ALL THOSE who helped, many more than we know I suspect, and then, perhap pardoned since nothing would be gained sending him to jail.

Just my two cents.

rich

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» RE: ich M Posted by: andrewstromotich
» RE: ich M Posted by: oregoncharles
Nixon pardon genesis of Iraq?
Posted by: sausage on Dec 28, 2006 9:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In light of Mr. Navasky's revelation it is appropriate to ask, rhetorically of course, is Gerald Ford's pardon of Richard Nixon in part responsible for the unconstitutional abuse of presidential powers that have occured since then?

The sight of Richard Nixon before a court of law would have sent the clear message to the American people that our consitutional system of justice works. By pardoning Nixon before he had even been indicted for any crimes, in any jurisdiction, Ford short-circuited our constituional system of law. His action, in effect, signaled that in the United States there are in fact two systems of justice:One for the politically powerful and well-connected, the other for the rest of us.

Ford's pardon placed Nixon, an ex-president, above the law.

Subsequent Republican presidents have taken that a step further and placed themselves above the law while in office; Reagan's alleged "non"-involvement in Iran-Contra comes most readily to mind. And after the opera buffa of President Bill Clinton's impeachment, the threat to impeach a setting president is so diminished as to be laughable.

Ford's pardon loosened the Constitutional restrains on presidential abuses of power. So now we find ourselves with no Constitutional remedy to a willful president who has led the nation into a ruinous and senseless occupation of a country which could never do us any real harm.

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» RE: Nixon pardon genesis of Iraq? Posted by: abdullahiedward
Never thought I could hate a president more than Richard Nixon.
Posted by: Ellie1 on Dec 28, 2006 2:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I came of age through his illegal disregard of the laws of this country, and I despised him. I still remember where I was when he resigned, and how the group I was with cheered. When he died, I cheered again (ok, call me morbid). And now I am living through the same scenario-a president I despise who has no regard for this country. I just hope I outlive this bastard so I can cheer again.

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Ford was a jerk
Posted by: UnEasyOne on Dec 29, 2006 1:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think it's important in light of all the revisionistic crap we'll be hearing ad nauseum for the next few days to inform those of us who were too young or weren't alive at that time what was really going on. On top of the Nixon pardon and even though appointed to the office by the most corrupt president in our history till that time, he took it on himself to veto every decent piece of legislation passed by the Democratic congress, setting a record for vetoes in the process. He then campaigned against a "veto proof congress." There is sooo much more...

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a spelling comment
Posted by: steve7193 on Dec 29, 2006 6:59 AM   
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The "General Hague" referred to is Alexander Haig.

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» RE: a spelling comment Posted by: albrechtkrausse
sinecure
Posted by: sinecure on Dec 29, 2006 9:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Victor Navasky indicated the matter going to the Supreme Court where the case was lost by a 6 to 3 vote along party lines with Sandra Day Oconner writing the court's opinion, but that the facts she points to in her opinion were essentially false according to Victor. To clarify this point, I would like to know what the facts in question were to which Victor refers to in the Supreme Court's final decision on the matter and the basis for them being in error.

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» RE: Help with your homework Posted by: lessbread
Oh, what a noble guy...
Posted by: xbj on Dec 29, 2006 12:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How wonderful, he agreed to pardon Nixon to keep Poppy from putting a bullet in Nixon's brain the way he did JFK... what a sweet wonderful quintessentially and uniquely American story.

Hope they talk about THAT at the funeral today... I won't see it, I boycott fawning media whitewashes.

My gosh, Hell certainly IS getting awfully crowded, isn't it?

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amazed that there is nothing on alternet about sadaam's execution
Posted by: andrewstromotich on Dec 29, 2006 5:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
who gives a crap about ford. why is there nothing about the execution of sadam. this is going to effect us security more than anything else this year (and maybe much longer), and not a word (not to mention the fact that he will be killed in the middle of a trail where he could shed light on US involvement in the gassing of the kurds).
why is this site avoiding the important stuff for this nearly totally irrelevant filler?

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» RE: Saddam's execution Posted by: dvmx
» RE: Saddam's execution Posted by: andrewstromotich
The Ford- Nixon Deal
Posted by: dvmx on Dec 30, 2006 9:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I think Ford pardoned Nixon to head off any further investigation of the Watergate scandal, because of the many links to the JFK assassination. (Remember Hunt, Sturgis, and Barker? The Hunt blackmail attempt? Nixon telling CIA to get FBI off his tail or else the "Bay of Pigs" stuff would come out? Mrs. Hunt's suspicious death in a plane crash?)
Hague could expect Ford's understanding of the importance of closing down probes that risk uncovering uncomfortable facts- he had already performed this service at the Warren Commission.

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» RE: The Ford- Nixon Deal Posted by: albrechtkrausse
Of Course
Posted by: oregoncharles on Dec 31, 2006 10:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
they had a deal; how else could a nonentity like Ford become President? This shows the idiocy of allowing a President who is obviously going down to name his own successor.

And pardoning Nixon set a disastrous precedent, allowing the current cabal to believe in their own immunity.

They probably already have a deal with Pelosi, hopefully our next President. She sure sounds like it. I hope she remembers what happened to Ford.

The present reporting is based entirely on not speaking ill of the dead. The anonymity of comments has some advantages.

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