Authors: Betty Caroli
When Senator Hillary Clinton nearly won the Democratic Party's presidential nomination in 2008, many Americans changed their minds about whether a woman could be elected chief executive. © Getty Images.
As First Lady, Michelle Obama billed herself as mom in chief to two young daughters, but many Americans focused on her fashionable wardrobe and her athleticism. Courtesy of the White House website,
www.whitehouse.gov
.
The country's disillusionment with government influenced the new First Lady. The United States' recent military involvement in Vietnam and the rumors of doctored casualty reports and other concealments, Spiro Agnew's “nolo contendere” response to charges that he had accepted bribes, and Richard Nixon's alleged complicity in the Watergate crimes committed during his 1972 campaign all added to a consensus that honesty had value but that in government it was rare. Betty Ford explained that she felt a need to be open: “I tried to be honest,” she later wrote. “I tried not to dodge subjects. I felt the people had a right to know where I stood.”
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In discussions with reporters, she spoke with disarming frankness about her children, her own health problems, and how she felt about being a political wife. When she hired a press secretary, she gave her two assignments, one of which was to provide “honest answers.”
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This was no new guise contrived to “sell” a First Lady. Betty Ford had always had a reputation for candor, and she had already shocked reporters when, as wife of the vice president, she gave as explanation for her drowsiness: “I take a Valium every day.”
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In the fishbowl at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, her announcements simply received more attention, and rather than rendering her gauche or stupid, they made her enormously popular. In short order, Betty Ford made honesty something chicâand reticence, passé. Helen Thomas, veteran UPI reporter, echoed her colleagues when she pronounced Betty Ford a “real friend” of the press,
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and Rosalynn Carter, who succeeded Betty, credited her with “making it easier to talk.”
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This new approach became immediately evident when Betty Ford scheduled her first press conference less than a month after Gerald's swearing in. Helen McCain Smith, press secretary to Pat Nixon, had stayed on to help in the transition, but this event in no way resembled Pat's encounters with the fourth estate. One hundred and fifty reporters heard a slightly nervous Betty Ford announce that she intended to work for substantive changes, especially in the campaign for ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment. This was quite a different exchange than the one in March 1933, when fewer than three dozen reporters attended Eleanor Roosevelt's first press conference and heard her promise to avoid substantive issues and never comment on pending legislation. In Betty Ford, feminists finally had a First Lady who worked for them openly, rather than discreetly behind the scenes.
Surprises continued when a reporter asked how the new First Lady stood on abortion, and she described her position as “definitely closer” to that of Nelson Rockefeller, who supported the Supreme Court's
decision leaving the matter up to the woman and her physician, than to that of Senator James Buckley who thought the Court had gone too far. Reporters could hardly fail to notice that Gerald Ford would have answered differently.
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In Alabama, a a few days later, Betty Ford spoke to the fears of many American mothers when she speculated that her children had probably experimented with marijuana.
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Later, she raised some eyebrows when she confessed that she had often been “tempted to split” her ticket.
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For the rest of her time in the White House, Betty Ford showed no signs of abandoning the stands she took in those first few weeks, and she became closely identified with the Equal Rights Amendment. First introduced in Congress in 1923, the version approved in 1972 was short and simple: “Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex.” Pat Nixon, First Lady at the time Congress acted, kept a good distance from the amendment, insisting that she favored equal rights and equal pay but that she saw no need for federal action to guarantee either one.
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Pat Nixon's view had, in fact, been the common one before about 1970; even some self-identified feminists had opposed the amendment because of the fear that it would wipe out the hard-won protective legislation for women workersâlaws that shielded women from having to lift heavy loads, work night shifts, and undertake hazardous tasks.
By 1970, however, the situation had changed because federal courts had begun to void those state laws as discriminatory. Working against the ERA while claiming to protect women's interests no longer made sense. The anti-ERA movement, increasingly visible and vocal in the 1970s under the direction of Phyllis Schlafly, used different arguments, including the charge that such an amendment was unnecessary (since several states had passed their own equal rights measures) or unwise (because women would then be expected to move into dangerous or unpleasant areasâincluding the armed forces and unisex toilets). Feminists responded to the opposition by making the Equal Rights Amendment the focus of their campaign, just as their grandmothers had singled out suffrage.
By the time Betty Ford turned the weight of her position to the issue, the amendment stood before the states, waiting for the final three to ratify (of the thirty-eight necessary). When time came for votes in states considered likely to approve the amendment (Illinois, Missouri, North Dakota, Georgia, Nevada, and Arizona), the president's wife got on the telephone and lobbied wavering legislators for their votes. Her press secretary, Sheila Rabb Weidenfeld, reported
that Betty used a very gentle approach, but that she could be persuasive. “I realize you're under a lot of pressure from the voters today,” she told one woman legislator from a rural district in Missouri, “but I'm just calling to let you know that the President and I are considerably interestedâ¦. I think the ERA is so important.”
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The president's wife installed a separate telephone line in the White House for her lobbying because, as she later explained, “there's a law or something about that sort of thing.”
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First Ladies had been twisting arms since Abigail Adams went after funds for furnishing the White House, but never before had the action been quite so open, so widely reported, or directed at a decidedly feminist cause. When questioned about the propriety of intruding in state politics, Betty's press secretary insisted this was a national issue since an amendment to the Constitution was at stake. To those who thought such activism inappropriate, Betty Ford replied: “[I] will stick to my guns,”
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and she did, even when mail ran three to one against her
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and pickets marched in front of the White House waving “Stop ERA” signs.
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She appeared undaunted by letters to the editors of major newspapers charging her with “arm twisting tactics ⦠[which are] unseemly at best,”
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or by more dramatic objections, such as that of a group of black-clad figures who paraded in front of the White House and then were shown on evening television, chanting in unison: “Betty Ford is trying to press a second-rate manhood on American women.”
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In spite of her efforts, the Equal Rights Amendment failed ratification by the requisite number of states, and Betty Ford directed the remainder of her work on behalf of women to getting them appointed to important jobs. It is impossible to calculate exactly her influence; but in light of the president's own pronouncements, his record is interesting. In his abbreviated presidency, he named twenty-one women to posts requiring Senate approval. Another forty-five selected by his predecessors remained in their jobs, bringing the total to sixty-six, far higher than it had ever been.
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Some of the Ford appointments were at high levels, including several commission heads, important judgeships, and a cabinet member: Carla Anderson Hills, as secretary of Housing and Urban Development after March 10, 1975. Betty did not have the pleasure of seeing her husband appoint the first woman to the Supreme Court. Gerald Ford filled only one vacancy on the high tribunal and that went to John Paul Stevens in December 1975.
In addition to her work on women's issues, Betty Ford devoted considerable attention to the arts, especially dance. She had begun dancing when she was eight years old and during two summers she
had studied with Martha Graham at Bennington College. After graduating from high school, she had rejected college and Grand Rapids in favor of New York City and more dance. Although she never made Graham's top troupe and had to support herself partly by modeling for the John Powers Agency, she retained a lifelong interest in dance. In middle age, when she was advised by a psychotherapist to take time for something she enjoyed, she chose dance.
Art enthusiasts welcomed an advocate in the White House and predicted she would help them,
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but First Lady Ford gave less to the arts in the next few years than she got from her association with them. Innumerable photographs of her attending dance programs and meeting with artists gave the public an image of a healthy, active president's wife involved in a noncontroversial area. In fact, her association with dance far outshadowed much of her other hard work. When she accompanied the president to China, she had wanted to avoid the “peeking in the kitchen pots” coverage that Pat Nixon had received in 1972, and she consulted with Chinese specialists so she would be informed. What television crews preferred to catch, however, was her visit to a school, where the Ford team had coached the children. Betty, whom the
New York Times
described as “Not a Robot at All,” delighted them all by clapping her hands and dancing with them.
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That kind of coverage, publicizing an attractive, energetic First Lady, achieved immediate rewards, and in 1975, the National Academy of Design named Betty Ford a Fellow, the first president's wife to be so honored since the group singled out Eleanor Roosevelt in 1934. In making the award, the photographer Ansel Adams called Betty “the most refreshing character we've had in public life for sometime,” (and he significantly did not limit the field to women).
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In many ways a very traditional wife, Betty Ford crossed lines to appeal to feminists and to less independent-minded housewives. In conversations, she frequently emphasized her traditional values, telling a legislator on one occasion that she was no “wild-eyed Liberal” and that she enjoyed “being a wife and mother as much as anyone.” “But,” she would continue, “that is not the point ⦠women should have equal opportunities.”
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She refused to bow to Phyllis Schlafly's claims of being chief protector of mothers' interests and would point out that Phyllis's six children outnumbered her own brood by only two. In describing “liberation” as “inwardly happy,” she found friends in both the feminist and more traditional camps. Her whole life history spoke to the experience of women who, like herself, had never worked a day outside their own homes after their marriages. But her outspoken support of women's issues gained approval from others
who could not imagine adulthood without careers of their own. Her candor in dealing with her own experiencesâdrug dependence, cancer surgery, psychotherapy, and her children's experimentation with illegal drugsâwon the admiration of women who were tired of hearing about “super perfect” families in the White House.
Before she had held the job six months, Betty Ford's hope that she would be remembered “in a very kind way as a constructive wife of the President”
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was assured. Her unfortunate bout with cancer aroused admiration for her courage, and her popularity cut across social and economic lines. She played a cameo role on the Mary Tyler Moore show and topped the Gallup Poll of “Most Admired Women”
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(although
Good Housekeeping
readers had rated her less favorably, causing a spokesperson for the magazine to explain early in the Ford administration that “feminist types” did not appeal to all Americans.)
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Betty Ford also led a list compiled by five “opinionmakers” as “best epitomizing the word âclass,' “âoutranking old-timers Princess Grace of Monaco, Fred Astaire, Cary Grant, and Katharine Hepburn. The woman almost unknown to the public three years earlier had made large strides, and 1976 campaign buttons supporting “Betty's husband for President” showed just how valuable an active presidential wife could be.
Betty Ford's Democratic counterpart in the 1976 election proved a formidable opponent, but unlike Betty (or any of the preceding four First Ladies), Rosalynn Smith Carter was a newcomer to Washington. Had she trained at the center of national politics, she might have formed a loyal support system among reporters and other oldtimers, but her apprenticeship had been limited to the Georgia governor's mansion and to a long campaign across the nation.