Wednesday, August 6, 2014

The Untold History

Larry Elder On Richard Nixon And Martin Luther King



By The Richard Nixon Foundation

Best-selling author and radio talk-show host Larry Elder writes about the relationship between Martin Luther King, Jr. and Richard Nixon in a column for Town Hall.

Elder also interviewed Bob Bostock co-curator and co-author of the Richard Nixon Centennial exhibit about the background on Nixon and King. Listen to the interview here: larryelder.com.

Here is an excerpt from the Town Hall column:


President Richard Nixon
By Larry Elder, Apr. 11, 2013

Nixon, it turns out, had a much closer relationship with King than did Kennedy. In the Nixon Presidential Library in Yorba Linda, Calif., records show considerable handwritten notes and correspondence between Nixon and King. This includes a 1957 letter from King acknowledging their previous meetings, which thanked Nixon for his “assiduous labor and dauntless courage in seeking to make the Civil Rights Bill a reality,” and praised him for his “devotion to the highest mandates of the moral law.”

But in 1960, on the eve of the election, Nixon was in a tough spot. Nixon’s public silence might be misconstrued as acceptance of King’s arrest. On the other hand, as a candidate for his boss’s job, Nixon worried about the political costs of appearing ungrateful if he chastised President Dwight Eisenhower for not taking stronger action. Eisenhower, however, was content to let the Justice Department handle the matter.

According to historian and presidential biographer Stephen Ambrose, while Nixon made no public comments, he telephoned Attorney General William Rogers to find out if King’s constitutional rights were being infringed, thus opening the door for federal involvement. Nixon, a lawyer, was concerned about the ethics of calling a judge to get him to release someone.

Nixon, writes Ambrose, told his press secretary: “I think Dr. King is getting a bum rap. But despite my strong feelings in this respect, it would be completely improper for me or any other lawyer to call the judge. And Robert Kennedy should have known better than to do so.” That Bobby Kennedy, also a lawyer, nevertheless made a phone call to the judge did not alter the issue of whether it was appropriate. In retrospect, an easy call, but not at the time.

Source:  www.townhall.com

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1 comment:

  1. Larry, thank you for bringing this information to light. Seems a lot of folks are unaware how much members of the Republican party did support civil rights. These days all you here is that right wingers, Republicans and Tea Baggers are bigots, racists and at war with women! By the way, I used to listen to you in Houston when you on the radio here. I miss hearing your sage, sane comments.

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