Richard Nixon.
Publié le 10/05/2013
Extrait du document
«
As President Eisenhower neared the end of his second term, his vice president emerged as his logical successor, and the president endorsed Nixon in March.
Nixonreceived an impressive vote in party primaries, and at the Republican National Convention, held in Chicago in July, he received all but ten of the delegates’ votes on thefirst ballot.
Nixon chose as his running mate the U.S.
ambassador to the United Nations, Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts.
An unusual feature of the campaign wasa series of four televised face-to-face discussions between Nixon and his Democratic opponent, Senator John F.
Kennedy of Massachusetts.
Kennedy was widelyregarded as the winner of the debates, which helped him win the election.
Even with the debates, the popular vote in November was extremely close.
Both candidates received more than 34 million votes, and Kennedy beat Nixon by only112,803.
Because of the way the popular vote was distributed, however, the vote in the electoral college was 303 for Kennedy to 220 for Nixon.
IV ROAD TO THE PRESIDENCY
A California Campaign of 1962
After losing the presidential election, Nixon returned to California, and in 1962 became the Republican candidate for governor, opposing the Democratic incumbent,Edmund G.
(“Pat”) Brown.
Again the campaign was bitter, and Nixon argued that Democrats were not sufficiently concerned about the threat that Communism posedaround the world and at home.
He also asserted that California did not enforce its laws strictly enough.
This time the strategy did not work; Brown won easily.
At firstNixon refused to acknowledge Brown’s victory.
When he did so at a televised news conference, he used the opportunity to attack the press, who he felt had treated himunfairly in the campaign.
Most political observers believed that Nixon’s political career was ended.
B Election of 1968
After his defeat, Nixon moved to New York City, where he joined a large law firm.
He remained in close touch with national Republican leaders and campaigned forRepublican candidates in the 1964 and 1966 elections.
By February 1, 1968, he had sufficiently recovered his political standing to announce his candidacy for president.
In seeking the nomination in 1968, Nixon had certain handicaps to overcome.
For one thing, he had not won an election on his own since 1950.
Moreover, he had nostate in which to base his candidacy: His former state, California, had rejected him in 1962, and his current state, New York, was the home ground of another possiblecandidate, Governor Nelson A.
Rockefeller.
In addition, Nixon could count on few Republican governors for support, and they would lead the delegations from theirstates at the Republican National Convention.
On the other hand, Nixon did have wide support in Congress and with other politicians whom he had helped in their campaigns.
In addition, he seemed to occupy amiddle position in policies and ideas between the conservative wing of the party, then led by Governor Ronald W.
Reagan of California, and the Northeastern liberalwing, which preferred Governor Rockefeller.
Polls indicated clearly that Nixon was the favorite of regular party members.
With their backing Nixon easily won the nomination on the first ballot at the convention held in Miami Beach, Florida, in August.
For his running mate he chose Spiro T.Agnew, the governor of Maryland.
His Democratic opponent, Vice President Hubert H.
Humphrey of Minnesota, had to contend with serious divisions within his party and was on the defensive becauseNixon placed particular stress on the unsuccessful war in Vietnam and the growing antiwar protests at home.
The election was complicated by a third party headed byformer Alabama governor George C.
Wallace.
Nixon and Humphrey each gained about 43 percent of the popular vote, but the distribution of Nixon’s nearly 32 millionvotes gave him a clear majority in the electoral college.
V PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
A Vietnam War
The most important issue Nixon faced when he became president was the Vietnam War.
The war had begun in 1959 when Communist-led guerrillas in South Vietnam,backed by the Communist government of North Vietnam, launched an attempt to overthrow the government of South Vietnam.
The struggle widened into a warbetween South Vietnam and North Vietnam and ultimately into a limited international conflict in which the burden of the war fell mainly on civilians.
The United Statesfirst sent military advisers to South Vietnam in the 1950s.
After a report in 1964 that the North Vietnamese had attacked U.S.
vessels in the Gulf of Tonkin, Congresshad authorized President Lyndon Johnson to increase U.S.
military involvement.
The Johnson administration authorized the bombing of North Vietnam, and the first U.S.combat troops arrived in South Vietnam in 1965.
By 1968 there were more than 500,000 U.S.
troops there.
Antiwar sentiment developed at home, and demonstrationsagainst the war became a daily occurrence, particularly on university campuses.
Nixon had campaigned against the war, saying that he would bring U.S.
soldiers back home.
The protests, however, did not decrease with Nixon’s election, even thoughhe began withdrawing U.S.
combat troops from South Vietnam, in accordance with a policy announced in 1969 while he was in Guam on an Asian tour.
Called the Guam,or Nixon, doctrine, the policy stated that the United States would continue to help Asian nations combat Communism but would no longer commit U.S.
troops to landwars in Asia.
Nixon announced that 25,000 U.S.
troops would be withdrawn from Vietnam by August 1969.
Another cut of 65,000 troops was ordered by the end of theyear.
Nixon’s program, known as Vietnamization of the war, emphasized the responsibilities of the South Vietnamese in the war.
However, Nixon expanded the Vietnam War.
In April 1970 he authorized the invasion of Cambodia to pursue North Vietnamese troops there.
The authorization was metwith protest demonstrations around the country.
In 1971 the United States assisted a South Vietnamese invasion of Laos.
The air war was also intensified as U.S.
bombing missions were increased over Laos, Cambodia,and North Vietnam.
Through the later months of 1971, American withdrawal from Vietnam continued, but with little apparent effect.
Casualty figures in 1971 reflectedthe intensification of South Vietnam’s own fighting efforts against the Communists.
While U.S.
deaths in Vietnam declined dramatically to 1380, compared to 4221 in1970, the South Vietnamese forces, on the other hand, suffered about 21,500 dead, some in Cambodia and Laos but the majority in South Vietnam.
The SouthVietnamese claimed the enemy death toll to be 97,000.
A1 Quang Tri Offensive
The tide of the war took a turn for the worse on March 30, 1972.
North Vietnam launched a massive offensive south into Quang Tri province.
In April, the United Statesretaliated with the first deep-penetration bombing raids over the north since 1967.
On May 8 Nixon ordered the mining of major ports of North Vietnam, notablyHaiphong, to destroy enemy supply routes.
Air strikes were directed against North Vietnamese railroad lines, causing serious economic problems.
Quang Tri City, afterbeing held by the Communists for four and one-half months, was recaptured by South Vietnamese forces on September 15..
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓
Liens utiles
- Richard Nixon par Loly Clerc Il est né le 9 janvier 1913 à Yorba Linda, une petite ville de Californie, dans une famille modeste de commerçants : " Je me souviens de ma mère.
- Nixon Richard Milhous, 1913-1994, né à Yorba Linda (Californie), homme d'État américain.
- Nixon's Resignation Speech Nixon's Resignation Speech August 8, 1974 Richard Milhous Nixon was the first United States president in history to resign from office.
- Nixon's Checkers Speech Under attack for having used a secret campaign fund for his personal expenses, Richard M.
- Richard Milhous Nixon - biography.