Chapter 1: Landslide CHAPTER 1 Landslide NOVEMBER 7, 1972 Approval. Richard Nixon had spent his entire life working for approval. Now, as the earliest vote counts came in on election night, 1972, it became clear that he''d finally gotten what he wanted. Not simply a second term as president. No. Nixon had won his first term as president in 1968 with a tiny majority and decided right then that when he ran for a second term, he''d win big, no matter what. He wanted real recognition. He wanted to be an unquestioned, undeniable, undoubted winner.
And he''d done it. Richard Milhous Nixon had won a majority of votes in forty-nine of the fifty states. Nixon, a Republican, had defeated his Democratic opponent by nearly eighteen million votes in one of the most lopsided wins in presidential history. Naturally, Nixon was pleased with the results. Voters had finally recognized his worth. As he saw it, he now had a mandate , a kind of authority to act boldly, and he planned to use it. But while Republicans around the country cheered the victory, Nixon made just one quick visit to a nearby celebration and a short television appearance to thank his supporters. Then he huddled with two close aides in a room on the second floor of the White House.
They talked long into the night, the president serious and unsmiling. Electoral College totals by state, 1972 presidential election Nixon wrote later that he didn''t really know why he was in such a gloomy mood that night. But he thought perhaps he was worried about Vietnam, or perhaps about the upcoming trial in the scandal everyone was calling Watergate .1 Worry about the war in Vietnam made sense. Nixon had campaigned for his first term in 1968 on a "secret plan" to end the long, long war. He''d reduced the number of Americans fighting there, but the war still wasn''t over and it grew more unpopular by the minute. Nixon believed that the presidents who led the country into the war had made a real mess of things, a mess he was stuck trying to clean up. And it got in the way of everything else he wanted to do as president.
In 1972, he campaigned again on ending the war. The situation was complicated, but Nixon was determined to finally achieve peace. Watergate was another matter. In June, five months before the election, police had interrupted a middle-of-the-night break-in at the Watergate office and apartment complex a mile west of the White House. They arrested the burglars on the spot and soon discovered that the men were somehow connected to Nixon''s reelection committee. The story hit the newspapers the next morning, and it could have been very awkward for the president if people believed his campaign staff had done something illegal to try to win votes. But Nixon''s press secretary--the White House aide who talks to reporters--went on television and described the crime as a "third-rate burglary" that had nothing to do with the president or any of his aides. Most news outlets soon moved on to other stories, and the burglary faded into the background.
The burglars faced charges related to the break-in and would probably be in the headlines again when they went to trial. But the judge on the case scheduled the trial for after the election, and that was good for Nixon. It meant that the story wasn''t in the news on Election Day. And by the time it was, most people wouldn''t even remember something that had happened in June. Even so, the night before the election, with all the polls predicting a landslide, Nixon wrote in his diary, "The only sour note of the whole thing is Watergate."2 Why would that be? Richard Nixon had worked toward winning the 1972 election by a big margin since the day of the 1968 election. But halfway through his first term as president, he had feared he might not win a second term at all. In 1970, prices for food and housing and gasoline were high and getting higher, and that hurt the president''s popularity.
People wanted him to fix the economy, and he wanted that too. But he hadn''t had much success. At the same time, tens of thousands of college students were shutting down campuses and highways across the country to protest the war in Vietnam and Nixon''s war policies. That made many voters angry and afraid and made the president look weak. When the Democrats started their campaign for the 1972 election, they would go after the president on all of it. At that point, even though the election was two years away, Nixon told his aides to do whatever it took to win big in 1972. They followed his order, even using tactics the public could not know about. Tactics that a lot of people would call unfair or underhanded, even criminal.
In fact, Nixon''s men knew that if Americans found out about everything the president''s campaign did, they might say President Nixon stole the 1972 election. But Richard Nixon and his aides went ahead with the underhanded tactics because they believed victory was important enough to use any means necessary to achieve it. President Nixon greets students in Utica, Michigan, 1972 For two years, the president''s men, as people called his aides (yes, they were all men), got away with dirty tricks, bribes, lies, and more in their effort to guarantee Nixon''s win. The botched break-in at the Watergate complex was their only slip, and it really wasn''t that terrible a crime. Nixon''s press secretary was right--it was a "third-rate burglary." But he was wrong that it had nothing to do with the president or his aides. The problem with Watergate was that if anyone dug too deeply into it, they could uncover enough dirt to destroy everything . As Republican celebrations ended late on election night, Nixon still sat with his aides.
At two o''clock in the morning, the president ordered scrambled eggs and bacon from the White House kitchen, and the men continued talking about Nixon''s victory and his second term. He and his men believed that he, Richard Nixon, and only Richard Nixon, could achieve peace around the world. Nixon had campaigned this time on his vision for world peace and the progress he''d made with China and the Soviet Union, as well as the real chance for an end to the war in Vietnam. He''d also promised better pay for the military, and he''d reminded voters of his first-term achievements--new environmental laws and agencies, reforms in law enforcement, new civil rights programs, and more. He''d even talked about plans for simplifying and smoothing out the workings of the gigantic federal government, something almost everyone agreed the government needed. Those kinds of promises--his platform --as well as a very weak Democratic candidate gave Nixon his huge win. Richard Nixon (right), and vice-presidential nominee Spiro Agnew at the 1972 Republican National Convention But Richard Nixon had other second-term plans on his mind that night too. Plans that weren''t in his public platform.
Unofficial plans that, like the secret campaign tactics, no one could know about. Plans that would shock the people who had just voted for him. Americans thought they knew Richard Nixon well in November 1972. They knew he grew up poor in California with a cold, stern father and not enough money. He had worked at his father''s store, helped care for his younger brothers, and still earned excellent grades. He was smart and studious, willing to work harder than anyone else, and he''d learned at a very young age not to give up. No matter what. Not when a younger brother died at the age of seven, and not when his older brother died eight years later after a long battle with tuberculosis.
Even when he got into Harvard but couldn''t afford to go, Richard Nixon refused to give up. He went to a nearby college, where he again worked harder than anyone else, and then went on to law school. Americans admired that kind of personal story. Many liked Nixon''s grit and his willingness to press on against the odds. That life story and some tough campaigning won Richard Nixon his first election in 1946 when he ran for the House of Representatives from a district in Southern California. Four years later, he won election to the Senate. In 1952, he was elected vice president under Dwight Eisenhower, and they won reelection together in 1956. But when Nixon ran for president in 1960 against Democrat John F.
Kennedy, he lost by one-tenth of one percent in the closest race in US history. That hurt, and after losing the race for governor of California in 1962, Nixon thought about getting out of politics. But he wasn''t a quitter. He spent time studying his mistakes, learning about voters in every part of the country, and thinking about new ways for the United States to work with foreign countries. In 1968, he ran for president again and got just enough votes to win. The trouble was that while people recognized Nixon as intelligent, hardworking, and determined, that was only one side of the man. Even his closest aides and advisors eventually admitted that he had a very dark side as well. For example, instead of thinking of political opponents as men and women who disagreed with him on the issues, Richard Nixon thought of them as enemies.
To him, that meant that bending or breaking the rules to defeat them was all right. From the very start of his political career he''d lied about the people he ran against, saying they were communists. By 1972, he didn''t want to defeat Democrats--he wanted to destroy them. Nixon also thought journa.