| Main |

President Nixon still pretty steamed about suspect staff loyalty

Hard to believe maybe, but ex-President Richard Nixon is still pretty @&^?:%\%# angry.

This guy's mom may have been a Quaker, but he perfected grudges beyond Sicilian-style. Every few months, it seems, we get new evidence that Nixon's even angrier than the last time we heard from him.

Another 90,000 pages of documents and 198 hours of Nixon tapes were released Tuesday by the Nixon Presidential Library and Museum in Yorba Linda. Phewee! If we could somehow tap into this thermal anger, bang, national energy independence the next day.

Richard Nixon leaves office in disgrace after the Watergate scandal

Google swears that Richard Milhous Nixon died on April 22, 1994. But thanks to these tapes, Nixon's voice lives on as a reminder of something. You can listen to many of them here and we've added a couple of video recordings below. (Just click on the "Read more" line to view them and listen.)

This latest tape collection, chronicled elsewhere on this site today, has Nixon plotting with aide H.R. Haldeman to get the income taxes of Clark Clifford, a Vietnam War critic and former Secretary of Defense, audited.

They were also plotting to get "TK" in a compromising situation for unexplained reasons. Some people think "TK" is Ted Kennedy.

The 37th president of the United States was also very concerned about checking "across-the-board loyalty" of all White House staff. Naturally, like any presidential paranoid, Nixon was especially concerned about photographs of other presidents hanging in the presidential residence.

Who wouldn't be?

On Nixon's orders to aide Alexander Butterfield (the same aide who would later reveal to Congress the secret tapes' existence), photos of all other presidents were safely removed from the White House's 35 offices -- except for two that remained hanging in the workspace of a very suspicious woman named Edna Rosenberg.

Her FBI, CIA and Secret Service files were thoroughly checked but had obviously been cleansed of any evidence of Communist influence over the woman who'd worked in that building longer than anyone else, 41 years.

Especially incriminating about Rosenberg was the fact that Nixon noticed one photo on her office wall showing President John F. Kennedy, who some people named Richard Nixon remembered had narrowly defeated Richard Nixon for president in 1960.

Worse, that photo had been personally signed to Edna by Kennedy.

"On January 14th," a Butterfield memo later reported to the president, "the project was completed and all 35 offices displayed only your photograph."

--Andrew Malcolm

To secretly sign up for automatic cellphone alerts on new Ticket items, register here when nobody is looking. For Ticket RSS feeds, register here, also clandestinely.

Photo credit: Associated Press

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c630a53ef01053634196f970c

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference President Nixon still pretty steamed about suspect staff loyalty:

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Tricky Dicky's most famous slogan, second arguably to "I am not a crook," was "You won't have me to kick around anymore." It seems that he keeps coming back to become the subject of even more ignominy, from time to time. I might understand him being bitter about the close loss to JFK, but taking down photos of ALL presidents? Does that include portraits, too? Wonder what Geo Washington, Abe, Ulysses, and Taft would have thought of that. Good thing for him they were all deceased by the time he issued his edict.

Post a comment
If you are under 13 years of age you may read this message board, but you may not participate.
Here are the full legal terms you agree to by using this comment form.

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until they've been approved.

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In







Follow us on ... »

Follow @latimestot for political news and backgrounders sent direct to your Twitter page or mobile device.
Our Bloggers

Andrew MalcolmAndrew Malcolm's immigrant parents repeatedly stressed the importance of active participation in a democracy. Early lessons included learning the alphabetical list of states by watching televised roll calls of national political conventions. That childhood exposure led to a lifelong fascination with politics, including 40-plus years of covering them and a brief stint practicing them as press secretary to Laura Bush in 1999-2000. A veteran foreign and national correspondent, Malcolm served on the Times Editorial Board and was a Pulitzer finalist in 2004. He is the author of 10 nonfiction books and father of four.

Johanna NeumanJohanna Neuman is a veteran Washington correspondent for both The Los Angeles Times and USA Today, having covered presidents and politics as far back as Ronald Reagan. A former president of the White House Correspondents Assn., she authored a book on media and foreign policy, “Lights, Camera, Wars.” Most recently she was co-author of the Countdown to Crawford blog here at The Times.
The daily destination for breaking news from The Times and other top political sources on the Web.
Political blog from the Chicago Tribune.

All L.A. Times Blogs

All The Rage
American Idol Tracker
Angels Unplugged
Babylon & Beyond
Big Picture
Booster Shots
California Consumer
Comments Blog
Company Town
Culture Monster
Daily Dish
Daily Mirror
Daily Travel & Deal Blog
Dish Rag
Dodger Thoughts
Fabulous Forum
Gold Derby
Greenspace
Hero Complex
Homicide Report
Jacket Copy
L.A. at Home
L.A. Land
L.A. Now
L.A. Unleashed
La Plaza
Lakers
Money & Co.
Movable Buffet
Opinion L.A.
Outposts
Pop & Hiss
Readers' Representative Journal
Show Tracker
Technology
Ticket to Vancouver
Top of the Ticket
Up to Speed
Varsity Times Insider
Categories