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In 1974, the country was still sorting through the aftermath of Nixon’s resignation and now had a president, Gerald Ford, who had never been elected as president nor even as vice president. The nation was in crisis, and the prospect of the vice president assuming the office of the president was no longer a hypothetical, it was a reality. So Ford chose a nominee who carried the clout he needed to get congressional approval, New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller.
By Micah Brickner5
55 ratings
In 1974, the country was still sorting through the aftermath of Nixon’s resignation and now had a president, Gerald Ford, who had never been elected as president nor even as vice president. The nation was in crisis, and the prospect of the vice president assuming the office of the president was no longer a hypothetical, it was a reality. So Ford chose a nominee who carried the clout he needed to get congressional approval, New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller.