George P. Shultz on President Nixon and Abuse of Power
Excerpt from
George P. Shultz's recorded interview by
Timothy J.
Naftali, 10 May
2007, the
Richard Nixon Oral History Project of the
Richard Nixon Presidential Library and
Museum.
About the Richard Nixon Oral History Project:
The Richard Nixon Oral History Project was created in
November 2006 at the initiative of
Timothy Naftali, weeks after he had begun his tenure as director of what was then the
Nixon Presidential Materials Staff at the
National Archives and Records Administration. (The Nixon Presidential Materials Staff became the Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum on
July 11, 2007, with the incorporation of certain facilities in
Yorba Linda, California, that formerly had been operated by the private
Richard Nixon Library & Birthplace.)
The project was intended to preserve the memories and reflections of former Nixon officials and others who had been prominent in the
Nixon era by conducting videotaped interviews. Starting in
February 2007,
Paul Musgrave,
Special Assistant to the
Director, coordinated the project, which was housed in the
Office of the Director.
Naftali insisted from the project's inception that it be a serious, impartial and nonpartisan source of information about
President Nixon, his administration, and his times. A second goal of the project was to provide public domain video that would be available as free historical content for museums and for posting on the
Internet. Donors to the project neither requested nor received a veto over interview questions or interviewee selection. (Funding for interviews, materials, and support staff came in part from the Richard Nixon Library & Birthplace foundation, which ceased to support the project in 2007; in part from donations from
Nixon administration alumni; and in part from the appropriated and self-generated funds of the Richard Nixon Presidential Library itself.) Accordingly, the project includes interviews with former staff members of the Nixon administration as well as journalists, politicians, and activists who may have been opposed to the Nixon administration and its policies.
Taken as a whole, the collection contributes to a broader and more vivid portrait of President Nixon, the Nixon administration, and
American society during the Nixon era.
With over
120 interviews completed as of
August 2009, the Richard Nixon Oral History Project is the first publicly available, comprehensive oral history project of the Nixon administration. Given the unique circumstances of the
Library's birth and the contentious history of the Nixon materials, no full-scale oral history project had been undertaken by the
National Archives before Naftali's arrival, nor had the private Richard Nixon Library & Birthplace foundation committed itself to such a task. There had been earlier attempts at Nixon-related oral histories, which met with varying degrees of success.
The Center for Oral and
Public History at
California State University, Fullerton, collected more than
200 interviews in the late
1960s and early
1970s; this collection is available through COPH. An extensive exit interview program with departing administration officials run by the
National Archives and Records Service (as it was then known) during the Nixon-Ford administration has not been processed in full as of August 2009. The first Nixon
Foundation, which operated during the
Nixon White House years, undertook an oral history project in
1970 to cover Richard Nixon's life up to his entry into political life.
Following the collapse of that foundation in the wake of the
Watergate scandal, those oral histories were transferred to
Whittier College and have not yet been released. The Nixon Presidential Materials Staff interviewed several former Nixon officials in the late
1980s and a few others in the early
2000s, but these programs were not sustained.
Gerald and
Deborah Strober published excerpts from interviews with
Nixon-era figures in their
1994 book Nixon: An Oral History of His Presidency
. In the late
1990s, the A Few
Good Women project, sponsored by
Barbara Hackman Franklin and the
Pennsylvania State University, recorded interviews with approximately two dozen former Nixon officials about the administration's drive to increase the number of women in the senior levels of the federal civil service.
John Whitaker, an independent researcher and former Nixon administration member, conducted several dozen interviews in the early 2000s; those interviews, which are owned by the Nixon foundation, are closed to researchers.
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For more information, please visit the
Nixon Library at www.nixonlibrary.gov or contact us at 714-983-9120 or nixon@
nara.gov
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