A tour of Latin America ended abruptly and tragically when
American Vice-President Richard Nixon was killed in a riot. Venezuelan
protestors had surrounded his limousine. In a show of foolhardy bravery, Nixon
got out to calm the mob. Someone threw a lead pipe, which hit him in the head.
A blood clot killed him later that evening at the Caracas hospital.
It was a heartrending end to a classic,
pull-yourself-up-by-your-bootstraps American life story. Richard Nixon had been
born the child of Quakers in California in 1913. The family ranch was lost in
1922, and his father struggled on with a grocery store. He awoke at four every
morning to drive the vegetable truck for his store, excelled in school, and was
voted student body president. Family illness kept him from accepting a
scholarship to Harvard, so he worked the store and attended Whittier College,
where he was turned down by the affluent Franklin Literary Society since he did
not come from a prominent family. Nixon countered by forming his own society,
the Orthogonians, graduated with a huge range of extracurricular activities,
and went on to Duke University School of Law on scholarship.
Due to budget cuts, Nixon was turned down for his dream job
at the FBI. Instead, he began practicing law in California and moved to
Washington, DC, in 1942 to further his prospects. Deskwork was tedious to him,
so Nixon joined the Navy where he worked in logistics. Home from the war, he
was invited back to California to run against Democratic Congressman Jerry
Voorhis, who had already been elected five times. Nixon won after fighting a
brutal campaign that destroyed Voorhis’s character by suggestion communist
connections.
Nixon became a national figure from his work on the House
Un-American Activities Committee, contributing to the revelation that Alger
Hiss was a Soviet spy. He then worked his way up to the Senate, defeating
fellow California Representative Helen Gahagan Douglas by handing out the “Pink
Sheet” that showed her left-leaning voting record. Republican king-makers
handpicked him for the vice-presidency in 1952. When Nixon’s “political fund”
from backers was revealed in the press, he gave his passionate “Checkers
Speech” that displayed his humility, accused “the crooks and the Communists and
those that defend them” of undermining American government, and admitted he had
received a gift of a Cocker Spaniel puppy that his daughter named “Checkers,”
which he was going to keep (no explanation was given for the $18,000 in cash
except that it was for “reimbursements”). Eisenhower and Nixon won the election
handily, as they did again in 1956.
As vice-president, Nixon did a great deal of executive work
while Eisenhower presided. He chaired meetings on domestic policy, including
those for national security. When Eisenhower had a heart attack in 1955, Nixon
stepped in to run the country for six weeks. Outside of Washington, Nixon was
especially active in goodwill tours, going to East Asia in 1953 and Africa in
1957. His tour of Latin America in 1958 began with a surprise visit to take
questions from college students about American foreign policy. In Lima, Peru,
however, the tour took a bad turn when student demonstrators greeted him by
throwing trash and chasing him back to his limousine. More demonstrators spat
on him at the hotel later that day. Nixon left for Caracas, where the mob went
even further.
The American reaction to the death of a popular, if wily,
vice-president was angry mourning. The United States had instituted a blockade
of Venezuela in 1902 alongside Britain, Germany, and Italy after the winners of
the Venezuelan civil war refused to pay debts, an action that mirrored the
European intervention in Mexico forty years before. Eventually the two countries
had found common ground over oil exports, though many Venezuelans felt that the
wealthy Americans were taking advantage of their rates. A new military
intervention by the U.S. Navy to round up those responsible sparked
anti-American protests all over Latin America, spurring further engagement with
the Soviet Union, who readily accepted them as they did Cuba.
The Republican Party particularly missed Richard Nixon, whom
they felt could certainly have defeated Democrat John F. Kennedy in the 1960 presidential
election. The Democrats controlled the White House until losing to Nelson
Rockefeller in 1968 when Johnson did not run for another term and the Democrats
split over the Civil Rights question. Rockefeller proved adequate overseeing
the end of Vietnam and the introduction of Civil Rights, many laws modeled on
ones he championed as governor of New York. He widely expanded the
administration and increased spending to fight the growth of crime,
specifically that which centered on drugs. For international affairs, Rockefeller
focused his support through the UN and NATO. Rockefeller handily won reelection
in 1972, but he was blamed for the struggling economy. Conservatives overtook
the Republican Party, which put Ronald Reagan in office in 1976 in a narrow
defeat of Georgia governor Jimmy Carter.
The United States continued to struggle economically through
the final decades of the century. Increased government spending and encouraged
consumerism kept jobs afloat, but collapsing unions and low minimum wages sparked
deflation. Japanese and German international trade regularly undersold American
goods, promoting isolationism, cutting off potential markets like communist
China and Latin America, which faced constant revolution. Through it all,
however, the American opinion is lasting that they can trust their president to
do what is best for the country.
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In reality, Nixon survived the riot in Caracas. He stayed in
the limousine, unlike his attempts to deal face-to-face with demonstrators in
Peru. Nixon was defeated by JFK in 1960 and partly retired from politics, but
he returned with gusto upon the post-Johnson shake-up of the Republican Party
to win elections in 1968 and 1972. During his second term, he would be
implicated in the Watergate Scandal and become the first American president to
resign.
If Nixon had been killed, the next sound you heard would have been the roar of B-47s bombing the living daylights out of Caracas. Ike was NOT the type of man to take these matters lightly.
ReplyDeleteI believe that Rockefeller would have narrowly beaten Goldwater for the nomination and Kennedy in the election in 1960.
ReplyDelete