Richard Nixon: Was He Truly Conservative?

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It is clear that Richard Nixon was elected as a conservative. He promised themes of “law and order” (Lecture 24, November 14), pandered to what he called the “silent majority” (Silent Majority Speech, 1969) and promised to end the unpopular Vietnam War, a product itself of liberal policies and ideals. He offered a sharp contrast in rhetoric between the soaring “we can do it all” language perpetuated by Kennedy and Johnson (Lecture 25, November 19). But how truly conservative was “Tricky Dick’s” presidency? Did the man who was elected specifically to end the seemingly endless chaos of the sixties actually prolong the national nightmare? In terms of economic policy, Richard Nixon’s legacy as a conservative or liberal is somewhat mixed. By the time of Nixon’s election, Great Society programs that provided economic aid to African-Americans and the poor had become increasingly unpopular due to the ever increasing costs of financing such programs along with the costly war in Vietnam (Lecture 25, November 19). Nixon charted an economic course along the middle path between new-right conservatism and the liberalism that had previously dominated the decade (Lecture 25, November 19). On one hand, Nixon recognized the need both symbolically and practically to cut back on various Great Society programs. One such program that suffered cutbacks was the space program. While Nixon did allow Kennedy’s dream of a moon landing to become reality in 1969, he soon after put limits on the space program which had more symbolic value than anything else. The space program was a new-liberal hallmark of the “we can do it all” philosophy of the reaching of new heights in a promising future that promised a “new frontier” (Lecture 25, November 19). Cutting ba... ... middle of paper ... ... he had promised to end as a candidate. Nixon’s run as an international crook finally caught up to him in 1972, when burglars were caught and arrested inside of the Democratic national headquarters at the Watergate hotel complex in Washington. Nixon attempted to cover it up, but eventually he was found caught in his own web of lies, and was forced to resign in 1974 (Lecture 30, December 12). Nixon’s promises of a return to normalcy were shattered with these revelations. The confidence in the Presidency that he had hoped to restore was even lower than it was when he entered office. If the 1960’s were defined by political and social instability, then Richard Nixon did nothing but further the sixties into the 1970’s. The 1960’s truly ended with the pardon of Richard Nixon by President Ford in 1974. After doing so, Ford declared: “our long national nightmare is over”.

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