Fifty Years of Fear & Loathing.

Chapter 1: January 1971.
This timeline is based heavily Drew's iconic Fear, Loathing, and Gumbo timeline. This timeline will avoid the excesses of Rumsfeldia, and will portray a POD within a POD of sorts, one which will take the timeline in a (slightly) less dystopian direction. I started it on another forum, but would like to share it here as well.

Jerry Garcia.
Friday, January 1st, 1971.
New Orleans, LA.
The Warehouse.
12:01 A.M.

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The show had been, all in all, a pretty stand-out gig. The Grateful Dead had roared through a trance inducing version of "Morning Dew" that kicked in the LSD trips of scores of young concert-goers. Afterwards, they sailed effortlessly and seamlessly through a variety of acoustic, bluesy songs before once again roaring through "Mason's Children," "Me and my Uncle," and a particularly raucous “Hard to Handle" that left their indisposed audience in awe of the crashing choruses that sounded like chariots thundering out of Valhalla. A few old classics - "Long Black Limousine" and originals like "Black Peter" before closing out the show with the jug-band sounding "Cumberland Blues." Jerry smiled radiantly, his teeth shining among the sea of thick black facial hair. He was in his element - this was what brought the Dead alive. It had been a long day; they had been busted down on Bourbon Street and were now facing marijuana charges but were able to be bailed out of jail in time for their show at the Warehouse that night in downtown New Orleans.

After the show, the band retreated behind the stage as the audience milled about in an ever-present, lingering cloud of marijuana. Young women clad in tie-died dresses, their hair adorned with flowers, danced in circles while amateur musicians beat on drums. The acid trips began to plateau, and the crowds began to file out as New Year's Eve evolved into New Year’s morning. Behind stage, Jerry struck a match to light a cigarette as a local television camera grew circled in. A young female reporter, on assignment to cover the New Year's celebrations across San Francisco, pushed a microphone into his face. "What do you think the 1970s will hold for America?" she asked. "It will be a decade of peace, magic, myth, bliss, celebration, and spirituality" replied Garcia.

Little did he know that night how wrong he'd be. But at the dawn of 1971, the Counter-Culture, though nearly fatally wounded by the incident at Altamont and the zeitgeist of stagnation that pervaded through the preceding year of 1970, still limped forwards into an uncertain future. The events of the last decade seemed far away. There was an extremely close presidential election that bared the odious scent of scandal. Then there was the death of John Kennedy, cut down by an assassin’s bullet in the prime of his life. There was the ever-present threat of nuclear war, most recently illustrated by the Cuban Missile Crisis. In the south, the black population had made itself heard while on the campuses a new generation of activists found their voices. In Vietnam, the best and brightest of a generation died face down in the muck in a quagmire that seemed without end. And at home, the cities were on fire as rioters raised hell on the streets in the face of rising unemployment, economic stagnation, and the listless lack of direction that seemed to bedevil the nation.

In fact, by 1971, it seemed the last bit dreams of the 1960s had died three years earlier with Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy. The unexciting candidacy of Hubert Humphrey and the venomous rhetoric of George Wallace ensured that Richard Nixon would finally achieve his dream of winning the President in 1968, the sad final chapter of the tragedy that was Camelot. For the eternally optimistic like Jerry Garcia, there was an innate cause to hope. But to many of his contemporaries, such as the fractured Beatles or the hibernating Bob Dylan, the onset of the 1970s had little to offer besides more division, violence, and blight.

Saturday, January 2nd, 1971: 66 people are killed and a further 200 injured in a stampede at Ibrox Park in Glasgow, Scotland, after the conclusion of a match between the Rangers and Celtic football clubs. It is one of the worst human crushes in recent memory in the United Kingdom.

Sunday, January 3rd, 1971: The 92nd Congress convenes in Washington; Carl Albert is elected Speaker, while Mike Mansfield remains Senate Majority Leader. Democrats continue to hold majorities in both chambers.

Monday, January 4th, 1971: Gallup releases it’s first polling ahead of the 1972 presidential election.

Gallup: 1,000 Registered Voters (Nationwide).
(R) Richard Nixon: 40%
(D) Generic Democrat: 34%
Undecided: 22%
Independent/Other: 4%

Gallup: 1,000 Democratic Voters (Nationwide).
Edward Kennedy: 41%
Edmund Muskie: 15%
George Wallace: 14%
Hubert Humphrey: 12%
George McGovern: 10%
Henry Jackson: 5%
Eugene McCarthy: 2%
Birch Bayh: 2%
Harold Hughes: 1%
Vance Hartke: 1%

Tuesday, January 5th, 1971: The Khmer Rouge goes on the offensive in Cambodia, seizing control of large swathes of the northwestern corner of the country. In response, the Lon Nol regime begins persecuting ethnic Vietnamese, claiming that North Vietnam is aiding the rebellion. This drives an increasingly large number of Vietnamese immigrants, particularly those working on the rural Palm Oil plantations, into the arms of the Khmer Rouge. While the radical, shadowy Maoist guerilla army’s leadership is predominately ethnically Khmer and distrusting of the communist regime in Hanoi, they none the less agree to cultivate more universal support within Cambodia as part of their efforts to seize power. This decision is reached over the begrudging objections of their enigmatic leader, Pol Pot, known to the cadres only as “Brother #1.”

Wednesday, January 6th, 1971: The Washington Post outlines the prospective presidential field ahead of the 1972 election; highlighted as the frontrunners for the Democratic nomination are Senators Muskie, Humphrey, and Jackson, while McGovern and outsiders like Governors Wallace and rather curiously, Iowa Senator Harold Hughes, are touted as dark horse contenders for the nomination. But it is clear through polling that the Democratic nomination belongs to Senator Kennedy, should he so choose to run. Despite the tarnishing scandal of Chappaquiddick, many Democrats look to the Senate’s “liberal lion” as the leading contender for the nomination.

Thursday, January 7th, 1971: Ahead of the upcoming elections in Honduras, President Oswaldo Lopez – who for seven years has ruled the country like a banana republic as a military dictator – announces that only the Liberal and National parties will be allowed to run a slate of candidates, effectively neutering the opposition’s ability to form a government as he prepares to transition out of office.

Friday, January 8th, 1971: The SS Antilles, a French owned cruise ship, sinks off Mustique. There are no fatalities, though the ship is ultimately scuttled on some reefs and is severely damaged by fire after the successful evacuation of the crew and passengers. It is later dragged further out to sea and sunk after an investigation by British maritime officials.

Saturday, January 9th, 1971: American Airlines Flight 30 collides midair with a Cessna over Newark, New Jersey. The damaged airliner managed to make an emergency landing with no injuries, though the two men onboard the Cessna are killed in the crash.

Sunday, January 10th, 1971: 200 South Vietnamese paratroopers overrun a small Viet Cong encampment in Cambodia near the village of Mimot; 20 American POWs are rescued and borne away to safety by the South Vietnamese forces while American helicopter gunships circle above. Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird hails the mission as a “pyrrhic success” and praises “the fierce determination of our allies” in the aftermath of the raid.

Monday, January 11th, 1971: Geoffrey Jackson, British Ambassador to Uruguay, is killed in a failed kidnapping by Marxist guerillas in the capital city of Montevideo. In response to the ambush and assassination of Jackson, Uruguayan President Jorge Areca declares a state of emergency and sends the army into the slums to root out suspected urban guerilla cells.

Tuesday, January 12th, 1971: All in the Family premiers in the 9:30 PM timeslot on CBS; the show will become the network’s biggest sitcom success of the decade, starring Carroll O’Connor, Jean Stapleton, Sally Struthers, and Rob Reiner. Despite initial poor reviews from most critics, the show quickly becomes a big hit with American audiences.

Wednesday, January 13th, 1971: Colonel Buzz Aldrin announces his retirement from the NASA program and will return to active duty in the Air Force after his legendary career as an astronaut. Despite the fame of being the first man to step upon the moon, Aldrin continues to insist that he will not seek other careers opportunities in Hollywood, corporate America, or politics despite a plethora of job offers.

Thursday, January 14th, 1971: The Haitian Chamber of Deputies votes unanimously (in the presence of armed, lingering Tonton Macoutes) to pass a constitutional amendment which allows President Francois Duvalier (“Papa Doc”) to appoint his 19-year-old son Jean-Claude as Vice President and heir.

Friday, January 15th, 1971: The Aswan High Dam in Egypt is opened after years of construction; the opening ceremony, attended by Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Soviet head of state Nikolai Podgorny, showcases the dam as a billion dollar masterpiece of modern engineering.

Saturday, January 16th, 1971: Complying with the demands of urban guerillas who had kidnapped the Swiss Ambassador to Brazil six months earlier, the Brazilian military regime releases seventy political prisoners into Chilean exile in exchange for the Ambassador’s safe release.

Sunday, January 17th, 1971: The Baltimore Colts defeat the Dallas Cowboys 16-13 in Super Bowl V in Miami, which was won after the Colt’s scored a field goal with five seconds left in the game.

George McGovern.
Sunday, January 18th, 1971.
Sioux Falls, SD.
KELO-TV Studios.
7:00 P.M.

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Senator George McGovern knew how he was going to win the game, because he was the one who wrote the rules.

The Senator from South Dakota, one of the leading progressive voices in American politics, had after all been the chair of the famed “McGovern-Fraser” Committee which had reformed the presidential nomination process after the chaotic convention in Chicago in 1968. Gone were the days of party bosses and crooked political machines – McGovern had ushered in the era of the primary election as the ultimate means on electing convention delegates, promising that the “politics of sunshine” would illuminate the party and shine a light on the shady practices that had kept the powerful elites entrenched. But the Senator was not content to just democratize his own party and was entertaining far greater ambitions throughout the duration of Nixon’s first term.

As he stepped into the studio, his televised speech to be delivered within a matter of minutes, McGovern felt an overwhelming spirit of optimism. This was largely due to the fervent support of the youth, who rallied around McGovern as the most reliable messenger for their generation. Disillusioned by the horrors of the Vietnam and discontent with the lack of social and racial justice at home, the “long hairs” flocked to the Senator’s banner. In spite of his relatively low polling (he was only placing fifth according to Gallup), the Senator believed that his moment had arrived, and that even the full force of the Kennedy juggernaut could not stop him.

He stepped to the podium; there was polite, tepid, and quiet applause from the audience that had gathered to watch his historic announcement, though the real audience was at home, watching on television screens in their living rooms or at their local bar. Though the address he was due to deliver would only be broadcast throughout South Dakota on local television, the text of his speech was due to be printed as an op-ed in numerous major newspapers across the country. McGovern was initially hesitant to launch his campaign so early, but it was the convincing arguments of his campaign manager, a young lawyer by the name of Gary Hart, which compelled him to jump into the fray so early. As the studio fell silent, a single camera man motioned with his hands that the Senator was at last live. The Senator, with his wife and family joining Hart behind the cameras, watched on in pride as the South Dakota Senator began his prepared remarks.

Today I announce my candidacy for the presidency of the United States. My wife, Eleanor and I have come home to South Dakota to make this announcement because here we shaped our basic political faith; here we were given the opportunity of public service. We are grateful to you for that opportunity and for your faith. We shall conduct this new effort to the honor of South Dakota, the nation, and ourselves.

You, my fellow South Dakotans, have not always agreed with my position on public issues. That was especially true in the early 1960’s when I stood almost alone in opposition to the sending of American troops to Southeast Asia. Despite these differences, you have rewarded my willingness to state my convictions freely and honestly. I anticipate the same fair hearing from citizens across the land. Thoughtful Americans understand that the highest patriotism is not a blind acceptance of official policy, but a love of one’s country deep enough to call her to a higher standard.

I seek the presidency because I believe deeply in the American promise and can no longer accept the diminishing of that promise. Our country began with a declaration of man’s rights to “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.“ These liberating ideals gave such meaning and purpose to the new American nation that our forebears proclaimed, “We mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.“

There is no higher standard to which our nation can repair then to the ideals of our founding documents. So as a candidate for the presidency, I shall see to call America home to these principles that gave us birth. I have found no better blueprint for healing our troubled land than is contained in the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. But I find a nation drifting so far from those ideals as to almost lose its way.


I believe the people of this country are tired of the old rhetoric, the unmet promise, the image makers, and the practitioners of the expedient. The people are not centrist or liberal or conservative. Rather, they see a way out of the wilderness. But if we who seek their trust, trust them; if we try to invoke the “better angels of our nature,” the people will find their own way. We are the children of those who built a great and free nation. And we are no less than that. We must now decide whether our courage and imagination are equal to our talents. If they are, as I believe, then future generations will continue to love America, not simply because it is theirs, but for what it has become-for what, indeed, we at this moment have made it to be.”

Monday, January 19th, 1971: Congressman John Conyers (D-MI), who in early January made a brief bid to replace John McCormick as Speaker of the House before being overwhelmingly beaten out by Carl Albert in the Democratic caucus vote, gives scathing criticism of the Democratic Party’s leadership ahead of the 1972 elections. “If they gave the same of effort to earning the support of Black America as they did in the last cycle” says Conyers, “than we might as well just nominate ‘ol George Corley Wallace.”

Tuesday, January 20th, 1971: As President Nixon reaches the half-way mark through his term in office, the issue of his reelection is hotly debated in Washington. With McGovern’s campaign announcement formally setting the 1972 election in motion, there is increased speculation about other potential early entries into the race. Highlighting the new primary system implemented by the McGovern-Fraser Committee, the New York Times reports that Senators Birch Bayh (D-IN), Harold Hughes (D-IA) and William Proxmire (D-WI) are also in talks with aides about entering the race. The latter two Senators deny the reports entirely, while Senator Bayh states that he is “actively exploring” his options for 1972.

Wednesday, January 21st, 1971: Khmer Rouge militants launch a series of exploratory run-and-gun attacks on government forces within the capital city of Phnom Penh, a signal to the regime of Lon Nol that the communist guerilla movement’s reach within the country is growing. The following day, Khmer Rouge forces launch rocket and mortar attacks on the city’s airport.

Senator Richard Russell (D-GA) dies at the age of 73, forcing fellow Democrat Jimmy Carter, Governor of Georgia, to appoint a replacement. Leading the pack of potential replacements is former Governor Ernest Vandiver, who is the husband of Russell’s niece.

Thursday, January 22nd, 1971: President Nixon delivers his State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress, in which he reaffirms his commitment to affecting a “peace with honor” in Southeast Asia and voices interest in reorganizing large swathes of the federal bureaucracy into three streamlined Departments, the Department of Economic Development, the Department of Community Resources, and the Department of Human Services, as part of his “New Federalism” agenda.

Saturday, January 23rd, 1971: Kazimierz Switala is canned as Interior Minister of Poland by the country’s de-facto leader, Edward Gierek, the General Secretary of the communist ruling United Polish Worker’s Party. Gierek’s decision to force Switala to resign (ostensibly for “health reasons”) comes after workers went on strike following the decision by Switala to order the country’s secret police to open fire on demonstrators months earlier.

Sunday, January 24th, 1971: 92 Guinean opponents of the leftist aligned regime of President Toure are sentenced to death for their role in supporting a failed Portuguese invasion and coup plot from the year earlier. A further 72 persons, including the Catholic Archbishop of Conkary, are sentenced to life in prison in Camp Boiro.

Monday, January 25th, 1971: Uganda’s military topples President Milton Obote in a coup while the left-leaning Ugandan President was abroad, resulting in army chief Idi Amin seizing power in his place. The coup is welcomed by Washington and London, who were distrustful of Obote due to his socialist leanings.

Tuesday, January 26th, 1971: President Nixon nominates former Congressman George H.W. Bush to serve as the next American Ambassador to the United Nations after Charles Yost resigns to take up an academic position at Columbia University.

Wednesday, January 27th, 1971: Charles Manson and three female followers (Susan Atkins, Linda Kasabian, and Patricia Krenwinkel) are convicted for their roles in the Tate-LaBianca murders in a Los Angeles Court.

Thursday, January 28th, 1971: The Citizens Committee to Draft John McKeithen for President is launched in New Orleans, Louisiana, by several prominent Louisiana lawmakers seeking to lure the state’s populist Governor into the race. Despite their initial entreaties, Governor McKeithen tells reporters that he is not presently interested in pursuing the Presidency.

As part of his confirmation hearings for the position of Treasury Secretary, John Connally tells the Senate Finance Committee that he is both committed to the President’s agenda of “New Federalism” and to implementing sweeping, unprecedented tax cuts. Despite some opposition from liberal Democrats, the Texan and one time LBJ ally has broad bipartisan support for his nomination.

Birch Bayh.
Friday, January 29th, 1971.
Indianapolis, IN.
Indiana State House.
5:30 P.M.

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The crowd had been warmed up by several local political figures, including Congressman Andrew Jacobs Jr., ahead of the Senator’s speech. As Jacobs left the podium after introducing the Senator, who watched on with his beaming wife Marvella, the Senator arose from his seat to give the speech he had been waiting for so long to deliver. The crowd was smaller than anticipated, and the Senator was saddened that his partner in the Senate, Vance Hartke, had declined to attend. It was widely rumored in Washington that his fellow Senator was also interested in the Democratic nomination, which did not anger Bayh so much as it did confuse him. After all, the other Indianan Senator was less known to the general public, was less liberal than the times demanded, and less inclined to take somewhat risky political stands. Regardless, Bayh choose not to resent Hartke’s decision, knowing that the crowd – as small as it turned out to be – would be bigger than his should he choose to dip his feet into the water.

A light rain fell from a cold winter sky, the snow on the capital grounds still fresh from the blizzard that had hit the week before. The Senator cleared his throat as cameras clicked and flashed around him, and across the Hoosier state, local television affiliates carried the Senators announcement. The crowd cheered for several seconds after the first sentence, then fell silent as the Senator continued with his speech.

“Today I am announcing my candidacy for the Democratic Party’s nomination for President in 1972.

In undertaking this effort, I look to the legacy of our late President John Kennedy, for inspiration. At a time of stagnation, we must let our cynicism give way to celebration. In a time of division, we mustn’t let our discord stand in the way to unity. In a time of hopelessness, we mustn’t let the light of hope be dimmed by the darkness of those who profit from our distrust, who thrive on our fears. We need a new politics for a new America, and I want to be a new kind of Democrat.

I think it’s time our party have a serious conversation about ending the war in Vietnam once and for all. I think it is time for our party to undertake a bold effort of electoral reform to make government truly accountable to the people it serves. I believe it’s time America returns from Nixon’s nightmare to Kennedy’s Camelot. And most importantly, I have an unyielding faith in the goodness of the American people. I believe that, when given good choices, Americans will always make the right decision. And right now to be truthful, America is simply short of good options. We can change that together!

Here in Indiana, in America’s industrial heartland and agricultural breadbasket, we see the ultimate cross-section of American life. Good, hard working people, struggling to get ahead and desiring nothing more than to leave a better country for their children are being left behind. Well, maybe that’s alright in Nixon’s America, but in the real America, we leave nobody behind!

And that is why I am running for President. We cannot leave more Americans behind in the pursuit of values contrary to those of our founding fathers. My candidacy will be a rejection of the politics of greed and sleaze. It will be a candidacy that seeks to inspire, that seeks to rekindle, and that seeks to renew. So I ask for your support and your vote, and I ask that you keep your prayers with us as we undergo this great effort. Thank You, God Bless You, and God Bless America!”


Saturday, January 30th, 1971: Governor James Carter of Georgia makes waves in Washington when he appoints 39-year-old State Senator Sam Nunn to the empty Senate seat of the late Richard Russell. The decision to appoint Nunn, a more moderate southern Democrat representing a newer generation of leaders in the deep south, over former Governor Ernest Vandiver comes as a shock to many political observers.

Sunday, January 31st, 1971: Apollo 14, the third manned American mission to the moon, is launched with great fanfare from Cape Canaveral. Manned by Edgar Mitchell, Stuart Roosa, and Alan Shepard, the mission is expected to land on the lunar surface where they will spend their time engaging in various scientific exercises and experiments before returning to Earth in the lunar capsule.

And we're off! Each update will cover a month's worth of events.
 
Chapter 2: February 1971.
Monday, February 1st, 1971: Ugandan military leader Idi Amin outlaws the Uganda People’s Congress, the political party of exiled President Milton Obote, and subsequently fires every government official in the country and replaces them with loyal military officers. Amin also suspends parliament and assumes the office of President extralegally, with Britain and Washington recognizing his new regime immediately to the exiled Obote’s displeasure.

George McGovern.
Tuesday, February 2nd, 1971.
Washington, D.C.
McGovern Headquarters.
2:15 P.M.

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George McGovern knew from the beginning that he’d have to run - Nixon had no real interest in ending the war, only in what was politically expedient. And the remaining Democrats, those in and out of the race, seemed to be entirely content with that. Nixon was no statesman, McGovern knew. He was a cold-hearted Cold Warrior. “I’m not going to laude that man at his funeral like he was some sort of FDR” the Senator shouted as he crumpled up a wad of old memos and threw them into the trash. “We just can’t let him win, Gary! We can’t let him get a second term!” The Senator, who had just announced his presidential campaign, was as passionate and optimistic as ever. “We’ll win because we’re right. We just have to get the people aware of that” he further quipped. His voice was raised, but not in anger. Rather, it was enthusiastic if anything else. The staff in the room burst in polite applause, as if they had witnessed amateur theater at the community library on a Tuesday night.

His campaign manager and a handful of young aides surrounded him; for many, it was their only visit to the campaign’s central headquarters. Each was encouraged to bring one top volunteer with them. Among them was the new Texas state deputy director, a young 26-year-old Arkansas lawyer named Bill Clinton, and his friend, “one tough schoolteacher” as he introduced her to the candidate, by the name Ann Richards. “Senator, I’m gonna do what I can to make you our nominee.” “To the bitter end?” smiled the Senator, to which Clinton replied affirmatively: “to the happy ending.” Ann roared with laughter, slapping his shoulder jovially, “oh Senator, let me tell you, Bill here certainly has a way with words” she exclaimed in her thick Texan drawl.

“See, this is the passion we need to reinvigorate this party and rekindle the spirit that defines America and what it means to be American!” said McGovern, giving his unsuspecting audience a sneak peek at his next scheduled speech in Wisconsin. The room again applauded, and the Senator met with a handful of others before departing the campaign office for the Senate floor, where a vote was scheduled to take place. Driving him to the capital was a young aide by the name of Pat Caddell, who was also a pollster on the side, though chauffeur/coffee guy seemed to be the bulk of his work.

“I hear Humphrey is going to be able make the vote tonight. Guess he isn’t busy campaigning. Seems like some things never change, right Senator?”

“You said it friend”
exclaimed a bemused Senator McGovern.

“You think Muskie is going to run?” asked Caddell.

“Oh yeah, he’s running alright. He’s definitely in.”

“You know that for sure?”

“Heard it straight from the horse’s mouth.”

“Strange guy, so I’ve heard.”

“Angry guy, sure. He can get prickly.”

“Just like Nixon then.”

“Just like Nixon”
the Senator concurred, “just like Nixon.”

“Did you read the briefing on the poll numbers I gave you last week by any chance, Senator?”

“Oh, those?”
asked a slightly confused McGovern, “I think I just gave those to Gary, Pat.”

“I don’t think Gary will be of any help on this”
said Caddell, doing his best to hide his exasperation, “but I’m really seeing a lot of support from you from blue collar voters that I frankly didn’t expect…at least not this early on.”

“That’s great”
said McGovern, whose mind was clearly occupied by other matters.

“If you play down the war and play up the bread and butter issues, you’re going to be in command of an electoral juggernaut by this time next year. Not Kennedy.”

“I don’t think Ted is going to run anyway”
affirmed McGovern, who began rummaging through some papers he had carried with him on

“Oh, you reading it now?” asked Caddell. “This is just correspondence from back home” answered McGovern, “I am still a Senator, you know” he pointedly noted.

“Of course, Senator, but I’ve really tried to get Gary to reconsider just some of the messaging, and I don’t think he’s taking me very seriously, so I thought I’d just raise it with you.”

“Let me tell you something Pat, every letter in this envelope here – every single letter is about the war. The war is what is driving this country off the cliff, into the abyss. We’ve faced unemployment and wars before, but this time, the country doesn’t have the secret weapon we had during the war years.”

“The atomic bomb?”
asked a confused Caddell.

“No. Hope. And you’ll never find a lot of hope on a factory floor, Pat. Not in times like these.” Within a matter of moments, Pat pulled up in front of the Cannon Office Building, which housed members of the House of Representatives. “You can drop me here” said the Senator, “it’s just a short walk from here.”

“I can get you closer”
said Caddell, “it’s no problem, sir.”

“I’ll be fine here, thanks Pat.” The Senator exited the vehicle and made his way on foot towards the capital, oblivious to the time he’d have saved had Caddell driven him to the capital complex itself. It seemed as if naivety was natural to McGovern, and Caddell couldn’t help but begin to ponder if he had bet on the wrong horse in the race.

Wednesday, February 3rd, 1971: A second round of Khmer Rouge incursions into the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh ends with the United States embassy coming under mortar fire. The second attack on the city startles both the regime of Lon Nol, the nation’s President who just the year earlier had driven Prince Sihanouk from power, as well as National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger.

Friday, February 5th, 1971: Apollo 14 successfully lands on the moon. Stepping onto the moon, Alan Sheppard declared “it’s been a long way, but we’re here” as the NASA control room erupted into spontaneous celebration. The astronauts plan to conduct a variety of scientific experiments during their short time on the lunar surface, before making their return to earth in the coming week.

Saturday, February 6th, 1971: British soldier Robert Curtis is killed in Belfast by nationalist militants, making him the first military casualty in Northern Ireland during the period that would come to be known as “The Troubles.”

Sunday, February 7th, 1971: A referendum in Switzerland results in male voters casting their ballots 65-35% in favor of amending the constitution to extend suffrage to women. Switzerland was the last country in Europe to deny women the right to vote as of 1971.

Monday, February 8th, 1971: Operation Lam Son 719 is launched by the ARVN’s First Division, clandestinely crossing the border with Laos to attack Viet Cong and North Vietnamese military installations that had been constructed in the neighboring neutral country along the famed Ho Chi Minh trail.

Tuesday, February 9th, 1971: A 6.5 magnitude earthquake originating from the Sierra Madre Fault rocks California, killing 64 and rattling much of southern California. Governor Reagan declares a state of emergency in response to the quake.

Wednesday, February 10th, 1971: President Nixon’s Oval Office taping system is installed by Secret Service agents; Nixon’s decision to begin taping his phone conversations through a voice activated system is kept a closely guarded secret even within the confines of the West Wing. The President was inspired to use a taping system by his predecessor Lyndon Johnson, and justified its purpose by telling Chief of Staff H.R. Haldeman, his assistant Lawrence Higby, and aide Alexander Butterfield that it was for the historical record. Only the President, his three aides, and a handful of Secret Service agents who helped install the system are aware of its existence.

Thursday, February 11th, 1971: John Connally is sworn in as Secretary of the Treasury after being confirmed by a 71-24 vote in the Senate. The previous Treasury Secretary David Kennedy is in turn going to continue serving in the administration as Ambassador to NATO, where the previous Ambassador Robert Ellsworth was shuffled out in preparation for a possible return to Congress.

Friday, February 12th, 1971: The six member nations of the European Economic Community approve a plan to establish a common currency in the coming years.

Saturday, February 13th, 1971: The Communist Party of the Soviet Union releases details of the Five Year Plan that had begun on New Years Day; the plan calls for the Soviet government to raise the standard of living faced by the average Soviet citizen, and puts a particular focus on producing consumer goods and growing trade relations with non-communist nations.

Sunday, February 14th, 1971: A group of Belgian farmers, angered by the European Economic Community’s agricultural pricing policies, manage to sneak three cows into the EEC headquarters in Brussels and lead them into the middle of a meeting between the member state’s Agriculture ministers. The interruption is a noticeable indication of a severe security lapse at the building, and while the protesters are herded out with their cattle in tow without incident, the protest is a reminder that there is still strong continental opposition to further European integration.

Richard Nixon.
Monday, February 15th, 1971:
Washington, D.C.
The White House.
11:12 A.M.

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HENRY KISSINGER: The situation in Cambodia is getting increasingly untenable, Mr. President. The attack on Phnom Penh shows Lon Nol’s military cannot hold the tide against the rebels. If Cambodia falls, the Viet Cong are going to have further options open to them if they want to push into the South. Their operational ability will greatly increase if they can commit hit and run attacks in South Vietnam with relative safety and impunity.

RICHARD NIXON: So we’re gonna have to go into Cambodia then, right Henry?

HENRY KISSINGER: It appears so, Mr. President. We risk the destruction of South Vietnam’s stability –

MELVIN LAIRD: Not to mention the morale of our forces in South Vietnam, but invading Cambodia again will not –

HENRY KISSINGER: Indeed, the morale of our forces is endangered as well. If the government of the Khmer Republic is this weak, and the recent incidents in Phnom Penh have proven that, then we are going to have to step in and solve this situation ourselves Mr. President.

MELVIN LAIRD: Mr. Kissinger, with all due respect, the operations we conducted last year in Cambodia were –

HENRY KISSINGER: Successful! They were successful, Secretary Laird!

MELVIN LAIRD: We were not able to root out their main base of operations, we’ve only recovered 20 of our men total, and we have failed to eradicate –

HENRY KISSINGER: With all due respect, Mr. Secretary, is that so much a failure of the strategy or is that just the failure of the Pentagon to implement that strategy?

RICHARD NIXON: Henry, we’re preparing to reequip the Cambodians, but what’s the, uh, the situation with the ability of their armed forces? I have not seen any guarantees that they will be able to protect or even use what we are giving them. I’d be more, uh, I’d have more peace of mind if, if uh, if our guys were in charge of the –

MELVIN LAIRD: Mr. President, we’re prohibited by law from using our own men in –

RICHARD NIXON: I know that already, Mel. I’m just stating that I think we’d be better off that way - we certainly don’t need more Senate meddling in our affairs, of course, but –

H.R. HALDEMAN: The House defeated the Cooper-Church amendment only after we pulled back last time. Sending them in again would result in a backlash that won’t help us next year, and Cooper and Church will be able to muster the votes this time.

RICHARD NIXON: So how do we go about this?

HENRY KISSINGER: We…well, we don’t go about this. You understand me?

RICHARD NIXON: I understand completely…

Tuesday, February 16th, 1971: The Washington Post reports that President Nixon will propose sweeping changes to the healthcare system to Congress in the coming days; the White House downplays these reports but does confirm that the President intends to submit several legislative proposals in the coming weeks as part of his campaign to streamline the federal bureaucracy. Despite his private disdain for the California Governor, Nixon finds an unexpected ally and spokesperson for his “New Federalism” agenda in the form of Ronald Reagan, who pitches Nixon’s plans to merge federal departments and agencies in an appearance on Johnny Carson’s The Tonight Show on NBC.

Wednesday, February 17th, 1971: Despite strong polling and swirling rumors, Senator Kennedy (D-MA) states that he isn’t “actively considering a run at this time” during an interview with CBS’s Walter Cronkite, but he doesn’t explicitly rule out running for President either. “I think it’s way too early” said Kennedy, “my first priority is serving my constituents.”

Thursday, February 18th, 1971: President Nixon proposes Congress pass legislation that would require all employers to pay 65% of their employees’ health insurance premiums; despite opposition from many of the conservative Republicans in Congress, Nixon is hopeful that Democrats will be supportive of the plan which he claims will dramatically increase access to medical care for all Americans while also driving down spending on programs like Medicare.

Friday, February 19th, 1971: Riots break out across East Pakistan as protesters take to the streets to call for greater autonomy.

Saturday, February 20th, 1971: A mistake at the Emergency Broadcast System maintained by NORAD results in every American television station going off the air for thirty minutes with an EBS message telling viewers to tune into their local radio station. The mistake is eventually corrected, and there are no major incidents of reported panic because of the error.

Sunday, February 21st, 1971: 123 people are killed in nineteen different storms that raged across the Deep South, with most of the fatalities being related to falling trees or tornadoes. The town of Inverness, Mississippi, is hardest hit by the storm, enduring the most casualties.

Monday, February 22nd, 1971: Pakistani President Yahya Khan is reported by journalists to have said “if we kill three million of them, the rest will eat out of our hands” regarding protests by the Bengali minority in East Pakistan demanding autonomy or independence.

Tuesday, February 23rd, 1971: Do Cao Tri, a South Vietnamese general tasked with leading covert operations in Laos against the Viet Cong and NVA, is killed alongside several ARVN personnel and a French journalist in a helicopter crash.

Wednesday, February 24th, 1971: Algerian authorities announce the nationalization of all oil infrastructure, including pipelines and refineries, existing in the country. In addition, several subsidiaries of French owned oil companies are nationalized or forced to cede a majority share of their stocks to the Algerian government.

Thursday, February 25th, 1971: The Vatican signs the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty as part of an effort to encourage the Catholic world to reject the use and construction of nuclear weapons.

Friday, February 26th, 1971: The Senate votes 89-5 to confirm George H.W. Bush as the next Ambassador to the United Nations. He is subsequently sworn into this position in early March.

Saturday, February 27th, 1971: Gallup releases new polling on the 1972 presidential race.

Gallup: 1,000 Registered Voters (Nationwide).
(R) Richard Nixon: 42%
(D) Generic Democrat: 33%
Undecided: 21%
Independent/Other: 4%

Gallup: 1,000 Democratic Voters (Nationwide).
Edward Kennedy: 31%
Hubert Humphrey: 16%
Edmund Muskie: 15%
George Wallace: 15%
George McGovern: 12%
Henry Jackson: 3%
Birch Bayh: 3%
John McKeithen: 3%
Eugene McCarthy: 1%
Harold Hughes: 1%
Vance Hartke: 1%

Sunday, February 27th, 1971: Stuntman Evel Knievel jumps 19 cars on a motorcycle ahead of a stockcar race in Ontario, California, setting a new world record in the process.
 
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I'm not caught up with all the various Fear and Loathing lore, what exactly is the POD/conceit of these timelines?
IIRC, the original Fear and Loathing doesn’t have a POD where things exactly separate from OTL, but the first notable difference is John McKeithen resigning as Governor in August 1971.
 
Chapter 3: March 1971.
Monday, March 1st, 1971: A bomb rips through a men’s bathroom in the Capital Building at 1:52 AM, resulting in over $300,000 worth of damage but causing no fatalities or injuries. Leftist or anti-war militants are suspected to be behind the blast. The FBI begins an immediate investigation into the bombing.

Tuesday, March 2nd, 1971: Protesting Bengali students in the East Pakistani city of Dhaka tear down the flag of Pakistan and raise the flag of the proposed nation of Bangladesh; this event, though so seemingly minor, sparks the beginning of the Bangladesh War of Independence.

Wednesday, March 3rd, 1971: The People’s Republic of China launches their second satellite into space; the successful mission is hailed by the ruling Communist Party of China as the latest demonstration of the Maoist regime’s advances in science and technological development.

Thursday, March 4th, 1971: Pakistani President Yahya Khan dissolves the National Assembly hours ahead of the inauguration of a new government that was to be led by the Bengali dominated Awami League; Khan’s actions are partly motivated by politics, as the coalition agreement between the Awami League and the Pakistani People’s Party stipulated that the outgoing Prime Minister Bhutto replace Khan as head of state. Finding the agreement unacceptable, Khan’s decision to void the result of the elections held in December results in rioting across East Pakistan.

Friday, March 5th, 1971: Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, aged 51, marries Margaret Sinclair, aged 22, at a private ceremony in Vancouver.

Saturday, March 6th, 1971: In response to greater unrest in East Pakistan, President Yahya Khan places the province under martial law. Despite troops being deployed to the streets, angry protesters continue to demand that the President resign and allow the Awami League dominated government to take office.

Sunday, March 7th, 1971: Before a crowd of two million supporters crowded into a stadium in Dhaka, Awami League leader Sheikh Rujibur Rahman delivers a brief speech calling on the masses to take up arms in support of his party, and voicing support for the independence of Bangladesh from Pakistan at the end of his remarks.

Monday, March 8th, 1971: “The Fight of the Century between Muhammed Ali and Joe Frazier takes place in Madison Square Garden. Frazier beats Ali after fifteen rounds. The internationally viewed fight was preceded by a circus life atmosphere in which tickets were highly priced and celebrities ranging from Woody Allen to Frank Sinatra were amongst those in the audience. “The fight was tremendous” said Donald Trump, a 25-year-old real estate developer who dabbles in Broadway promotion, “it was a yuge affair, you should’ve seen it in person.”

Tuesday, March 9th, 1971: An organization known as “the Citizen’s Committee to Investigate the FBI” stages a successful break-in at an FBI office in Reading, Pennsylvania in the early hours of the morning, in which several documents were taken. The militant burglars successfully timed the break-in with the Frazier-Ali fight, successfully deducing the night watchman would be distracted.

Wednesday, March 10th, 1971: John Gorton resigns as Prime Minister of Australia and leader of the Liberal Party after losing an internal no confidence vote in his leadership. He is succeeded as party leader and Prime Minister by William MacMahon.

The Senate votes 94-1 to ratify the 26th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which would lower the voting age to 18. The amendment is sent to the states for ratification.

Thursday, March 11th, 1971: At a meeting of the Committee to Re-elect the President (“CREEP”), President Nixon authorizes his campaign to appropriate $250,000 dollars in donated funds for the purposes of gathering intelligence about political opponents. This is the genesis of the White House “plumbers’ squad.”

Friday, March 12th, 1971: Prime Minister Suleyman Demirel is compelled by the Turkish armed forces to resign in face of a potential military coup. Described as “a coup by memorandum,” the incident is widely viewed in Ankara and Istanbul as a demonstration of the military’s authority over the country.

Ted Kennedy.
Saturday, March 13th, 1971:
Palm Beach, FL.
The Kennedy Compound.
11:45 A.M.

1711916796446.png
There was a considerable amount of blood in the water in the first two years after the 1968 election; the conundrum for the surviving Kennedy brother was that he was unsure if it were Nixon’s or his own. In the wake of Chappaquiddick, the Massachusetts Senator went over a few hours from being one of the President’s biggest fears to one of his easiest targets. Though few were willing to permanently write-off the career of the innately ambitious scion of one of America’s most legendary political dynasties, there was little excitement for the scandalized Senator outside of the Democratic Party’s northeastern base, which yearned for a revival of “Camelot.” Yet Kennedy was none the less the Democratic frontrunner for months until he finally took himself out of the race, popular among the most devoted members of the party as a fierce stalwart of American liberalism.

For those few dreamers who still eyed 1972 with some sense of promise (most of whom happened to share the surname “Kennedy”), the first half of 1971 would be judgement day for their last surviving prince’s career. Tainted by Chappaquiddick, Kennedy’s position as Senate Minority Whip was facing a test in the form of Senator Robert Carlyle Byrd of West Virginia. The Dixiecrat who had once filibustered the Civil Rights Act was an odd fit for such a position considering the increasingly liberal direction of the party, though over the course of the proceeding years he had largely moderated his segregationist views and strengthened his relations with his progressive colleagues.

On a breezy spring morning, Kennedy arrived from Washington at his family’s estate in Palm Beach, where he was joined by his brother-in-law Sargent Shriver, aide Paul Kirk, family adviser Arthur Schlesinger Jr., and DNC Chairman Larry O’Brien over the coming days. There would be women, booze, and strategy sessions a-plenty. But mostly women and booze. On the morning of Saturday, March 13th, the four men sat down in the grassy yard overlooking the seawall and beach, the cool ocean breeze blowing through the palm trees as the men bantered lightly under a blistering summer sun. But the elephant in the room couldn’t be ignored.

“Look, I can get this passed” Teddy began, eying each of his four companions with a solemn, resolved expression of purpose that fooled the masses but not the men present, continuing: “Byrd can’t get the votes. They won’t let a, er, a segregationist take that position. That won’t happen. I can sense the mood there.”

“Don’t be too apathetic, Ted. Byrd’s been working real hard. I thought he just wanted Appropriations. But he’s just like you - he wants it all, Ted!”
O’Brien’s warning was not simply the result of some juicy political intel; it was common sense, apparent to all but Kennedy.

“I know my turf, Larry, I know what Byrd’s hatching in January. Don’t worry about it. If we panic, if we legitimize Byrd’s challenge and make this an actual contest rather than a cloakroom gossip game, then we’ll be in trouble. We’re gonna make 1971 our year. The year of ‘da Kennedys.”

“Ted,”
Sargent beseeched, “you can’t be talking about the year after 1971, right?”

“Not today, not anymore. I meant it when I said no.”

“Good”
affirmed Sargent, “you’re making a smart decision, in the long term at least.”

“The polls were saying otherwise”
shot back Kennedy, who had only come to his decision to sit out ’72 reluctantly.

‘Ted, you wouldn’t win. You can’t run now, anyway. We lost Jack and Bobby to our enemies. We can’t lose you to our supposed friends-“

“The polls are saying otherwise, though. Can you believe that after all that I’m at-“

“Ted”
interjected Schlesinger, “God threw you a miracle. Don’t waste it now. Lay low. Work smart, not hard, and most of all, not recklessly.”

“I’m not reconsidering anything, jeez, hear me out;”
Kennedy’s words revealed a sense of desperation, as if he were begging them to allow him to reverse his non-candidacy announcement. “It’s not like it was now or never I guess”

“That’s what Jack and Bobby would’ve told you. “

“And the old man”
added Shriver.

“I sit this out, I’m going to be sidelined until 1980” bemoaned Kennedy.

“This is what you do.” Paul Kirk’s confidence was made transparent in the strength of his voice, which strung together crafted the image of the gritty Washington fixer well beyond Kirk’s 32 years, though his youthful appearance betrayed this immediately.

“We work hard, but we lay low. Byrd won’t be a problem, and if he becomes one, we make way for him. No big deal. Reuther and you have been working for years to pass a healthcare reform package. This can be your moment, with or without the job as Whip…it’d be easier as Whip, obviously-

“Well ‘er, uh, no shit wise guy!”
interjected Kennedy, a comment Kirk had already trained himself to ignore.

“You get the votes together. You pass the bill. You put the ball in Nixon’s court, and you let the public decide. If he vetoes it against the will of the public, your stock goes up, you get in. He vetoes it, the public applauds, you stay put, lose nothing, and lay low. If he signs it, you become the biggest star in the Senate and Nixon puts himself on the way to reelection. And that gives you 1976.

“Worst case scenario, Paul. The bill meets fierce opposition, the Dixiecrats buckle, Byrd becomes a problem. Humphrey will be hand wringing, and McGovern will say it won’t go far enough. We’ll have to water it down, but Nixon and Scott would deliver the votes. Then Nixon vetoes it anyway?

“Why’d he do that?”

“He’s an odd fellow.”
A historian and public intellectual, Schlesinger’s poignant observation was taken far more seriously than his joke had intended to be. But it rang true to those present.

“So he vetoes it. We’re down for the count in 1972. But at the very least, it’ll give me a cause to fight for and a good enough reason to be out there without being out there. We’ll er uh, we’ll keep them all waiting. We’ll keep them wondering. If the mood is right, it’ll propel us. If the mood is wrong, we live anther day. I think we’re done here for now. We’ll fondle the details later, but right now let’s fondle er uh….something else.”

The men agreed to adjourn, keeping both the subject matter of the meeting and their….other minor indiscretions quiet; no, it was a simple fishing trip. No politics, no girls. Just clean, relaxing fun in Florida. The secrecy pact did not have to be verbalized to be understood and was formalized by the shaking of hands and the patting of backs.

Unfortunately for them, the Cuban in the van outside had been an active listener and a silent participant in their meeting. He had worked hard to gain the grounds crew’s trust, and he worked harder the day he planted the bugs. But now he had completed his mission, he snuffed out his cigarette, and paused to review the tape.

Sunday, March 14th, 1971: On NBC’s Meet the Press, Louisiana Governor John McKeithen acknowledges the growing support for a draft McKeithen movement but continues to insist that he is not actively weighing a presidential bid himself. The Louisiana Governor also makes waves when he criticizes his potential rival George Wallace, describing him as “a regional phenomenon” who could “never unite this party.”

Monday, March 15th, 1971: The State Department revises a 21-year-old travel ban prohibiting Americans from visiting the People’s Republic of China; despite the reversal of the State Department’s policies, the regime of Mao Zedong in Peking remains incredibly selective when it comes to admitting Americans into the People’s Republic, accepting only three out of every one thousand visa applications from the United States.

Tuesday, March 16th, 1971: The Awami League elects their leader Sheikh Mujibur Rahman as leader of East Pakistan, effectively severing all remaining administrative ties to the Islamabad based regime of President Yahya Khan; with Pakistan at risk of severing into two nations, Khan orders the military to prepare for the complete takeover of East Pakistan.

John McKeithen.
Wednesday, March 17th, 1971.
New Orleans, LA.
The Napoleon House.
12:45 P.M.

1711933717516.png
The Napoleon House was a freshly minted officially recognized historic landmark in New Orleans, still operating as a well-beloved restaurant. Its upper floors, mostly vacant offices, provided the perfect hideaway for the impending political conclave. Some of the bigwigs of Louisiana’s steamy political machine had gathered, but the guest of honor was running late.

Former First Lady Blanche Long stared at the gumbo in her bowl, politely waiting for the arrival of the Governor before she took a single bite. Across the room, newspaper publisher Sam Hanna smoked a Marlboro, dropping his ashes carelessly across the wooden floor as he impatiently paced around the room. The young Gus Weill and State Senator Billy Boles engaged in idle conversation, holding off on the topic at hand until the meeting got underway. All the while, State Senator Sixty Rayburn read the Times-Picayune, glancing out the window to Royal Street below, where a brass band happily played a slow, rickety, and distinctly New Orleans version of “Shine On Harvest Moon” to a crowd of tourists and locals alike.

At last, a lone black Cadillac pulled up to the building, and Rayburn watched as the Governor was whisked inside by three state troopers, almost completely unnoticed by the gathered crowd outside. Neither was he noticed by the patrons inside, who continued with their meals and conversations on the first floor below. As soon as the Governor disappeared from sight from downstairs on the street, the sounds of footsteps coming up the stairs was heard by all present. Blanche gave a sigh of relief, ready to eat, but even more delighted that the meeting of such importance was finally about to occur.

“How are ‘yall?” asked Governor McKeithen as he entered the room while the State Troopers took up posts outside the room. He bent down to greet Blanche, the political matriarch of the Louisiana Democratic Party, with a familiar kiss and moved forward to heartily shake the hand of Gus Weill, his longtime assistant and trusted former campaign aide. Moving across the room to greet Boles, Rayburn, and Hanna, the Governor shook their hands with the same amount of vigor as he did for Weill, before finally taking his seat at the round table in the room, followed quickly by the others.

“So let’s get down to business here” said McKeithen, “what’s this business about me running for President about and how many times will I have to say no to you all?”

“Govanah”
Hanna addressed McKeithen, “this ain’t flattery. We frankly don’t need to flatter you, we go back a good ways.”

“Well, you got my attention Sam with this free lunch. Whatever you’ve got to sell me, I’m all ears. At least until my plate’s empty
well, Sixty, what exactly is this about?” The Governor turned towards the State Senator with the realization that the rumored draft effort was considerably more serious than he had initially estimated.

Well connected to the Democratic National Committee and House Minority leader Hale Boggs, Blanche Long spoke up. “The party is fixing on voting for the McGovern proposals and it’s going to be changing everything. The way we pick nominees will never, ever, be the same. You don’t have to win-”

“Well, there we have it, I don’t have to win. I’ll be a favorite son again?”
interrupted McKeithen.

“…you don’t have to win them all” Blanche continued. “But if you get a small chunk here, a small chunk here, a big chunk there, and so on, well…this is going to correlate to delegates."

“A lot of delegates”
interjected Weil from the other side of the table.

“JJ, you might not outright win the nomination. But you can take enough delegates with you to the convention and stop McGovern. He engineered all of these changes to the party structure to enhance his own ambitions. For the sake of the party, we need you to run” Blanche implored him, seeming confident in her predictions of electoral chaos.

“And who will fund such an endeavor? Aint nobody outside of this state actually knows who I am!” McKeithen responded in exasperation and shock that such a proposal was actually truly being debated before him.

“We got friends in the oil fields…the guys running the wells and the guys running the boardrooms” responded Senator Boles.

“And” Weill added, “we got Russell and Boggs on our side. Big names.”

“Say I run”
McKeithen quizzed Weill, “say I actually jump in. Say I pull third or fourth in a few states and place behind Wallace in the south. Say I come in third or fourth even in the delegate count. I can swing it for Muskie, or Humphrey, or Jackson. Alright. But why me? You can’t find another favorite son? One a little less busy than me?”

JJ, I’m a newspaper man. I know public opinion, and I’d like to think that I know what they think and what they want. Well, folks around here want two things: a president they can trust and a nominee they know can win. And JJ, and no offense, Mrs. Long, I know you don’t mean it that way, but you’re selling JJ short here. He can win…we can win! We can do this. We can win the nomination, and then we can even win the White House. This isn’t just about stopping McGovern. We can stop Nixon too” Sam Hanna’s words sunk into McKeithen, as they did to everyone else in the room.

“He’s right.” Blanche broke the silence. “You can win. And you will win. You ought to do this, Governor. We need you. The party needs you.” Finally, Rayburn spoke up: “Don’t worry about the money, we’ll get it for you. You won’t be short on funds. If you go ahead with this, we can make it happen.”

Another long pause filled the room. The silence wasn’t haunting, nor deafening. It was the silence of a man making a choice. Not a reasoned choice, but an impulse choice. Finally, McKeithen spoke.

“Well” he declared, “I guess I’m ‘runnin for President. Won’t ‘cha help me?”

Thursday, March 18th, 1971: Former New York Governor and 1944 and 1948 Republican presidential nominee Thomas Dewey dies at the age of 68; Dewey was discovered deceased in a Miami hotel room after playing a round of golf, the victim of an apparent heart attack.

Friday, March 19th, 1971: Argentine President Roberto Levingston removes the army’s chief of staff from his post, angering the top military brass in a country famously prone to military coups.

Saturday, March 20th, 1971: An early, prototype unmanned drone is deployed over China’s top secret Lop Nur nuclear test site. The mission is successful in gathering the necessary intelligence, but the drone crashes. This is the fourth and final attempt at such a mission, and the unmanned drone program ends afterwards when it is determined that the Chinese military managed to recover the crashed drone after it plummeted from the sky over Yunnan province.

Sunday, March 21st, 1971: A minor mutiny in South Vietnam breaks out after a platoon of American soldiers refuses to be deployed secretly across the Laotian border. The commanding officer is relieved of duty, and the mission eventually proceeds after the threat of disciplinary action was raised.

Monday, March 22nd, 1971: The Weather Underground, a shadowy network of leftist militants, claims responsibility for the March 1st capital bombing. The guerilla organization has been suspected of several small bombings in the past, but the attack on the capital is a warning sign to the FBI that their methods are getting more complex and their actions increasingly dangerous.

Tuesday, March 23rd, 1971: The Washington Post reports on the widespread FBI surveillance of American citizens dating back to 1957, using documents that had been seized by the Citizen’s Committee to Investigate the FBI earlier in the month as evidence of such programs.

Wednesday, March 24th, 1971: Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and several other East Pakistani political figures and independence activists are arrested by the Pakistani military in several pre-dawn raids inside their own homes. The arrests are the opening stage of Operation Searchlight, the Pakistani government’s plan to put down unrest in East Pakistan once and for all.

Thursday, March 25th, 1971: 45 people are killed at Dhaka University after the Pakistani military opened fire on a crowd of mostly student demonstrators demanding the release of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman from military custody in the aftermath of his arrest.

Friday, March 26th, 1971: The leaders of the Awami League declare East Pakistan’s independence as Bangladesh. India, Pakistan’s neighboring rival nation, immediately indicates to Washington that they are prepared to recognize Bangladesh’s independence even at the cost of war with Pakistan.

Saturday, March 27th, 1971: Over 10,000 people are reported dead in East Pakistan as the Pakistani military moves to crush the separatist rebellion in what rebels have declared to be Bangladesh. Most of the casualties have been killed by the military during the sporadic fighting that has taken place since the launch of Operation Searchlight. The Indian government formally protests the alleged human rights abuses before the United Nations.

Sunday, March 28th, 1971: The final episode of the Ed Sullivan Show is aired on CBS after a 23-year run.

Monday, March 29th, 1971: First Lt. William Calley is found guilty by a military court martial for the murders of 22 villagers in My Lai, which was one of the most shocking and infamous incidents of the entire Vietnam war.

Tuesday, March 30th, 1971: Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm (D-NY) establishes the Congressional Black Caucus with Congressmen William Clay (D-MO), George Collins (D-IL), John Conyers (D-MI), Ron Dellums (D-CA), Charles Diggs (D-MI), Augustus Hawkins (D-CA), Ralph Metcalfe (D-IL), Parren Mitchell (D-MD), Robert Nix (D-PA), Charlie Rangel (D-NY), Louis Stokes (D-OH), and Walter Fauntroy (D-DC). Though he was not a founding member, Senator Edward Brooke (R-MA) is also invited to join the congressional grouping.

Wednesday, March 31st, 1971: Gallup releases new polling ahead of the 1972 presidential election. With Kennedy not yet publicly committed to running or not, his lead is beginning to slip.

Gallup: 1,000 Registered Voters (Nationwide).
(R) Richard Nixon: 44%
(D) Generic Democrat: 36%
Undecided: 18%
Independent/Other: 2%

Gallup: 1,000 Democratic Voters (Nationwide).
Edward Kennedy: 29%
Hubert Humphrey: 18%
Edmund Muskie: 13%
George Wallace: 13%
George McGovern: 13%
John McKeithen: 5%
Birch Bayh: 4%
Henry Jackson: 2%
Eugene McCarthy: 1%
Harold Hughes: 1%
Vance Hartke: 1%
 
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I think it would be helpful in the "timeline" sections to put an asterisk or italicize events that are occurring ITTL exactly as they occurred IOTL
 
A good start to things, although I'm not entirely sure how much has changed as of yet. Buzz Aldrin's entry certainly grabbed attention though. Armstrong was the second in this timeline, I take it?
 
A good start to things, although I'm not entirely sure how much has changed as of yet. Buzz Aldrin's entry certainly grabbed attention though. Armstrong was the second in this timeline, I take it?
Nothing really changes until the fall of '71, and even those changes have marginal effects. The real POD remains unchanged from the original (McKeithen entering the race), these early chapters are just outlining how that happens seeing as how the original timeline didn't really touch upon that.
 
Chapter 4: April 1971.
NOTE: While the narrative scenes thus far have been constructed by me, many updates in the future will include entire scenes written by Drew, with only minor contextual edits. This timeline is not an original work by me, but rather, a rehash of FLaG '72 until a certain point within the timeline. The end goal here is to avoid Rumsfeldia, but that will become more and more clear as the decade moves on. Until then, here's April 1971.

Richard Nixon.
Thursday, April 1st, 1971.
Washington, D.C.
10:33 A.M.

john-ehrlichman-with-richard-nixon.jpg
JOHN EHRLICHMAN: Mr. President, Mr. Hunt and Officer Ulasewicz are here.

RICHARD NIXON: Ah good, (inaudible grumbling), so what uh, what do we have on the agenda today?

HOWARD HUNT: Mr. President, we have some good news to bring you -

RICHARD NIXON: Is that so?

ANTHONY ULASEWICZ: It is so, Mr. President. Your Kennedy problem has gone away.

RICHARD NIXON: Somebody whacked Ted?

(laughter)

HOWARD HUNT: He won’t be a candidate sir.

RICHARD NIXON: Ted is staying out, huh? Son of a bitch isn’t stupid. Hell, I’d be afraid to face him more but then again I’m not running in ’76. So…you’re confident he’s out?

HOWARD HUNT: It’s all on the tape. He’s going to announce it any day now. Absolutely no way, no how. His people aren’t doing anything conducive towards a U-turn either. He’s not running for President in 1972.

RICHARD NIXON: What about Mankiewicz?

JOHN EHRLICHMAN: Actually, I’ve heard McGovern’s snatched him up. That true?

RICHARD NIXON: McGovern?! These guys think their shit doesn’t stink. They think everyone else either thinks like them or doesn’t think at all. Well, trust me, stupid people vote. And they’ll vote for McGovern, not me!

Friday, April 2nd, 1971: The Tripoli Agreement is signed in Libya, in which representatives from several major western oil companies agreed to pay higher prices for OPEC member nation’s oil and gas reserves.

Saturday, April 3rd, 1971: Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm (D-NY), a black woman and a fierce feminist and proud progressive, tells a reporter from the New York Times that she is hoping a member of the Congressional Black Caucus enters the Democratic primaries in the coming weeks, but doesn’t name any particular member who might be interested in a presidential bid. Chisholm further adds that while she would support Senator Kennedy if he were the nominee, she wouldn’t necessarily endorse him during the primaries and expressed interest in “an alternative progressive candidate” who could take on Nixon.

Sunday, April 4th, 1971: Senator Ted Kennedy (D-MA) announces he will not seek the Presidency “under any circumstance,” during an interview on NBC’s Meet the Press, removing the presumed frontrunner permanently from the contest. Citing a desire to focus on his role as both a father and husband as well as a legislator, Kennedy’s decision to sit out the 1972 Democratic primaries blows the door for the nomination open.

Monday, April 5th, 1971: Tajuddin Ahmad, a key leader of the Bengali liberation movement and high rankling member of the Awami League, travels to neighboring India to personally request aid and support from Pakistan’s longtime nemesis; Prime Minister Indira Gandhi approves the aid, and India quickly aligns itself behind the concept of an independent Bangladesh.

Tuesday, April 6th, 1971: The United States National Table Tennis Team is invited to play against the Chinese team in Peking; the surprise invite for the American team to visit China comes after the US and Chinese team competed against one another in the world championships held in Tokyo. The regime of Chairman Mao in China has traditionally denied Americans entry into the country.

Wednesday, April 7th, 1971: The Yugoslavian ambassador to Sweden is assassinated in his office by two Croatian gunmen associated with a radical Croat separatist group. The gunmen are able to flee the embassy after exchanging fire and injuring a responding police officer on their way out.

Thursday, April 8th, 1971: Ahead of the upcoming party congress, the politburo of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union is expanded from 11 to 15 men, allowing four new members from the Central Committee to join the party’s highest ranked political organ. The decision to expand Politburo membership was in part due to Brezhnev’s increasingly unilateral streak within Soviet politics; by naming four new lackeys to the Politburo, Brezhnev has also reduced his already established colleagues influence within the top echelons of the party.

Friday, April 9th, 1971: President Nixon announces in a televised speech from the Oval Office that the Defense Department has begun preparations to withdraw over 100,000 American servicemen from Vietnam as part of his efforts to deescalate the ongoing conflict.

Saturday, April 10th, 1971: The American Table Tennis Team arrives in Red China after crossing into the country by way of Hong Kong. The American delegation is the first of its kind to visit the People’s Republic of China in years, and the rare cultural exchange between the two countries is widely watched by observers who sense a thaw in relations between China and the west.

Sunday, April 11th, 1971: East Pakistan’s rebel insurgents declare the independence of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh, with Sheikh Mujibur Rahman being installed as interim President. Pakistan does not recognize the declaration, and refuses to release Rahman, imprisoned since the Dhaka Racetrack speech, from detention.

Monday, April 12th, 1971: Senator William Proxmire (D-WI) is reported by the Washington Post to be in secret discussions with aides and senior strategists about making a potential early entry in the 1972 Democratic primaries. With McGovern on the rise due to Kennedy’s exit and his own early launch, there is increased pressure on other prospective candidates to enter the race and stop McGovern. Proxmire denies the reports, and states that he is focused primarily on his work in the Senate.

Tuesday, April 13th, 1971: Fox McKeithen, the 29-year-old son of John McKeithen, is arrested in Nashua, New Hampshire for drunk and disorderly conduct after he and a McGovern campaign staffer confronted each other in a bar. Though Governor McKeithen has not officially entered the race, he had dispatched his son Fox to the state in order to get a feel of the electorate before deciding whether or not to form an exploratory committee. The arrest aside, a bruised Fox McKeithen later returns to Baton Rouge to inform his father that Senator Muskie’s lock on the state might not be as strong as polling indicates.

Wednesday, April 14th, 1971: The Soviet Union explodes an atomic bomb over Siberia as part of an effort to create a massive manmade lake; the nuclear detonation was smaller in scale than the average nuclear warhead and failed to create as big of crater as they had hoped for. The use of nuclear weapons for construction purposes is subsequently abandoned in the aftermath of the failed project.

Richard Nixon.
Thursday, April 15th, 1971:
Washington, D.C.
The Old Executive Office Building.
8:08 A.M.

images

Nixon was in the den, his quiet alcove within the depths of the decrepit Executive Office Building across the street from the White House. He was busily engaged writing reminders for himself on a yellow notepad when Haldeman and Ehrlichman, his two most trusted aides, entered side by side. He had been expecting them at some point, but their joint presence initially alarmed him.

“I wasn’t expecting both of you at the same time” he said, motioning them forward, “come in.”

“Mr. President, we have the numbers you requested”
said Haldeman, his voice flat and emotionless in tone.

“Are they bad? Why are you both here?”

“We just thought we’d touch base with you now to save some time later.”

“I’m going to be stuck in this damn building all day anyway”
grumbled the President.

“Well, with Kennedy out” began Haldeman, “the numbers have shifted considerably.” The decision of the Massachusetts Senator and dynasty scion to not seek the Democratic nomination in 1972 had turned the race on its head, with the clear frontrunner stunning Washington. The only other figure who could remotely unite the party was Hubert Humphrey, the nominee of the Democratic Party in 1968 and a Senator and former Vice President. But the party’s nomination process had evolved in the era of the McGovern-Fraser reforms, and it was even harder now than it was four years before for Humphrey to win the nomination.

“What are Hubert’s numbers now?” asked the President, knowing that the labor machine that was so strong within the party would rally around the Minnesota Senator.

“He’s at 30%” answered Ehrlichman, who reviewed the memo he held in his hand.

“Followed by whom?” inquired the President again.

“McGovern at 17%, followed by Muskie at 16%.”

“Muskie ahead of Wallace?”
asked Nixon in surprise.

“Followed by Wallace at 12%” answered Ehrlichman.

“Then who?”

“Then you got McKeithen, Jackson, Chisholm, Bayh, and McCarthy” continued Ehrlichman, “they’re all hovering under 10%.”

“McWho?”
asked the President sardonically. He knew the answer to his question.

“He’s making a small splash in the south, but not enough” said Haldeman, “but he is actively contesting New Hampshire, even though he hasn’t made it official if he’s in or out.”

“Does he really think he has a chance that far north?”
said the President in shock, “I mean, J.J. isn’t a dumb backwoods hick, but does he really think that they’ll know who the hell he even is up there?”

“I think the cold weather will solve that problem”
said Ehrlichman, “it’ll send him packing back south.”

“Let the big boys contest this election”
surmised the President, “New Hampshire is Muskie country. Ed’s the guy we got to be worried about. He’s the one we’re going to have to do something about. Got it?”

Friday, April 16th, 1971: Senator Harold Hughes (D-IA) tells the Des Moines Register that he is weighing a presidential bid in 1972, stating the need for a “spiritual and social revival” in America. Hughes confirms that he has formed an exploratory committee to fund his endeavors and travels over the next few months as he tests the waters.

Saturday, April 17th, 1971: Reverend Jimmy Swaggart of Baton Rouge’s Family Worship Center abandons his planned efforts to expand his ministry into a televised gospel powerhouse in favor of politics after he files to run for Congress in his native Louisiana as a Democratic candidate.

Sunday, April 18th, 1971: President Anwar Sadat of Egypt, Colonel Muammar Qaddafi of Libya, and President Hafez al-Assad of Syria meet in Tunis, Tunisia to form the Federation of Arab Republics, a confederation of Arab states meant to counterbalance Israel and the west’s influence in the region.

Monday, April 19th, 1971: A judge in California sentences cult leader Charles Manson and three female accomplices to death for their role in the 1969 Tate-LaBianca murders.

Tuesday, April 20th, 1971: Prime Minister Lon Nol of the Khmer Republic announces his intention to resign following a stroke he had suffered in February. Lon Nol is unable to find a suitable successor, and reluctantly agrees to rescind his resignation two weeks later when efforts to form a new government fail after days of negotiations. Though Lon Nol remains in his office, his deputy Sisowath Matak wields most power behind the scenes while Lon Nol continued to recover from his stroke.

Wednesday, April 21st, 1971: Francois Duvalier, the Haitian dictator better known as “Papa Doc,” dies at the age of 64 following a heart attack. He is succeeded as President by his 19-year-old son Jean-Claude Duvalier, who relies on the greatly feared “Tonton Macote” to maintain his rule. Real political power is said to be wielded by Luckner Cambrone, a key Tonto Macote leader and the on-again off again lover of the deceased Papa Doc’s widow.

Thursday, April 22nd, 1971: Jean-Claude Duvalier, son of the late Haitian President known as “Papa Doc” is sworn in as President of Haiti following his father’s demise. Nicknamed “Baby Doc,” the 19 year old Duvalier is the youngest head of state in the world.

Friday, April 23rd, 1971: The Pakistani military, with help from Islamist collaborators, massacre over 3,000 Bengali Hindu civilians in the Thakurgaon region of Bangladesh, sparking fierce anti-Pakistani and anti-Islamic backlash in neighboring India.

Saturday, April 24th, 1971: The New Democratic Party of Canada elects David Lewis, a Toronto area MP, as the party’s leader after Tommy Douglas stood down from the party’s leadership. Lewis, a relatively moderate member of the party, beat back a strong challenge from activist and leftist professor James Laxer and his allies (a faction called “the Waffle”) after several ballots.

Sunday, April 25th, 1971: An official report due to be released by a presidential commission chaired by Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. studying diplomatic relations with both the People’s Republic of China and the Republic of China is leaked a day early to the New York Times. The report recommends the United States drop its objection to Red China joining the United Nations, but not at the expense of the Republic of China’s seat.

Monday, April 26th, 1971: Pakistani soldiers kill 375 Hindu civilians in northern Bangladesh, the second major massacre to take place in the chaos plagued breakaway country.

Tuesday, April 27th, 1971: South Korean voters reelect President Park Chung Hee over Kim Dae Jung with 53% of the vote.

Wednesday, April 28th, 1971: In response to massacres in Bangladesh, the Indian army is mobilized on the order of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to intervene on the rebel’s behalf. Knowing that the confrontation between the two nations would likely result in war along the country’s western border with Pakistan as well, the Indian military immediately begins preparations for a two-front war.

Thursday, April 29th, 1971: After a week of delay, the Soyuz 10 space satellite is launched, resulting in the world’s first space station being put into orbit.

Friday, April 30th, 1971: Anti-war activist John Kerry files to run for Congress in Massachusetts against Harold Donohue in the Democratic primary. The Vietnam veteran turned anti-war crusader argued that the incumbent, Congressman Donohue, has been too supportive of the Nixon administration’s war policies.

Gallup releases new polling for the 1972 election.

Gallup: 1,000 Registered Voters (Nationwide).
(R) Richard Nixon: 42%
(D) Generic Democrat: 37%
Undecided: 19%
Independent/Other: 2%

Gallup: 1,000 Democratic Voters (Nationwide).
Hubert Humphrey: 26%
Edmund Muskie: 22%
George Wallace: 17%
George McGovern: 15%
John McKeithen: 6%
Birch Bayh: 5%
Shirley Chisholm: 3%
Henry Jackson: 3%
Eugene McCarthy: 1%
Harold Hughes: 1%
Vance Hartke: 1%
 
Another good amount of detail with things and the US election proceeding along nicely. Might be a good idea to mark the exact spots that were taken from the original FLAG as well, when they show.
 
Another good amount of detail with things and the US election proceeding along nicely. Might be a good idea to mark the exact spots that were taken from the original FLAG as well, when they show.
The only problem with that is that, as the timeline progresses, many events (not all) will be retained, particularly between 1971-1977ish. Seeing as this timeline aligns with FLaG's original draft up until a few years before the Rumsfeldian turn, I'd be typing a lot of asterisks,
 
Chapter 5: May 1971.
Saturday, May 1st, 1971: 500,000 anti-war activists march in Washington D.C., where the protests are mostly peaceful. Despite concerns that the protest could get out of hand due to the size and volume of the masses assembled, the protest march largely unfolds without incident. The May Day protests resulted in the arrest of over 12,000 people, mostly for drug and disorderly conduct offenses, breaks the record for the largest mass arrests until that point in time. About a thousand of those who had been arrested were taken into custody at the capital, where they staged a sit-in protest.

Richard Nixon.
Saturday, May 1st, 1971.
Washington, D.C.
The White House.
9:33 A.M.

1712184699950.png
RICHARD NIXON: God damn it Haldeman! Haven’t these punks every heard of Sunday? I can hear the damn music all the way over here. And what the hell are those blimp -things their flying?

H.R. HALDEMAN: Their flying balloons to keep the helicopters at bay, Mr. President.

RICHARD NIXON: Balloons? Where the hell they get balloons from?

H.R. HALDEMAN: No idea, sir. But it’s clear that we’re gonna have to bring in the boots to finish this job.

RICHARD NIXON: Good. Make sure Walter Washington gets the police on the job. Arrest all of them.

H.R. HALDEMAN: We’re unsure the District has room in it’s jails for them. We’re gonna have to make….other accommodations.

RICHARD NIXON: Where do you have in mind?

H.R. HALDEMAN: We can have a stockade set up in RFK.

RICHARD NIXON: Good. I expect this problem to be cleared up by this time tomorrow. You think Washington will comply?

H.R. HALDEMAN: If he wants to be reappointed by you, he ought too.

RICHARD NIXON: Then things are set. Get this cancer out of my backyard….and Henry, try and keep the cameras off all this.

H.R. HALDEMAN: I’ll do my best, Mr. President.

RICHARD NIXON: One last thing.

H.R. HALDEMAN: Yes, Mr. President?

RICHARD NIXON: I want to be sure that nothing is done to the veterans. I want the word out-not on the street, but among the blues-that if any of them even claim to be a veteran, they’re to be released immediately, understood? I want the word out that they don’t get touched. Not at all. Don’t do a damn thing to them. Just let ‘em raise hell. The punk kids, those who aren’t claiming to be veterans, and you know, their…their uh, easy to pick out. Those are the types I don’t give a damn about. But the veterans among them are not to be touched.

H.R. HALDEMAN: I’ll put the word out.

Sunday, May 2nd, 1971: Egyptian President Anwar Sadat dismisses Vice President Aly Sabri after the latter criticized Sadat’s support for Qaddafi’s proposed Federation of Arab Republics. Sadat’s decision to purge Sabri from the top levels of power in Egypt is viewed by National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger as a worrying sign that Egypt is more committed to the Arab Federation than previously thought.

Monday, May 3rd, 1971: Walter Ulbricht is “retired” from office in East Germany, being stripped of his position of General Secretary of the ruling Socialist Unity Party. Though he remains the county’s ceremonial head of state, real power lies in the hands of his successor Erich Honecker, an orthodox Stalinist.

Tuesday, May 4th, 1971: Days after 1,200 protesters were kept confined inside RFK Stadium due to their involvement in large scale protests that disrupted much of Washington, a rally is held outside the Justice Department’s offices. In a freak coincidence, one of the speakers leading the event (which demanded the release of those jailed at RFK Stadium) was a wanted fraudster John Froines, who was dragged offstage by police officers within a matter of minutes.

Thursday, May 6th, 1971: Louisiana Governor John McKeithen quietly forms an exploratory committee to allow him to put together a small but professional political operation; he quickly finds there is no shortage of donors in his home state, eager to put their Governor into the White House.

Friday, May 7th, 1971: Congressman Pete McCloskey (R-CA), a critic of the Vietnam War who has butted heads with the Nixon administration, tells the Los Angeles Times that he is weighing whether to enter his name into the New Hampshire ballot. Promising to run on an anti-war platform, McCloskey admits he has little chance of winning, and instead is hoping to demonstrate the anti-war wing of the GOP’s political power in the hopes of influencing the administration’s direction on foreign policy matter.

Sunday, May 9th, 1971: The Los Angeles Times reports on the recent business activities of eccentric billionaire Howard Hughes, who had in recent years been buying up failing television stations across the country. Though the iconic businessman does not comment on the report, it is widely rumored in Hollywood that he is considering launching a major national television network that could compete with ABC, CBS, and NBC.

Monday, May 10th, 1971: At a cabinet meeting at the White House, Vice President Agnew angers President Nixon when he attempts to talk over National Security Adviser Henry Kissinger. Afterwards, Nixon dispatches his Chief of Staff H.R. Haldeman to the Vice President’s office with a simple message: “next time, just sit down and shut the fuck up.” This incident is the beginning of a long, slow fissure that developed between the President and Vice President.

Tuesday, May 11th, 1971: 59 people are killed in a horrific bus crash in South Korea after the driver lost control of the vehicle and crashed off the side of a mountain road, rolling 60 feet downhill before landing in a lake.

Wednesday, May 12th, 1971: President Nixon privately meets with Treasury Secretary John Connally in the Oval Office, where he quietly offers the Vice Presidential nomination to the former Texan Governor should Agnew agree to stand down from the ticket.

Thursday, May 13th, 1971:
The House of Representatives votes narrowly by a margin of 201-197 to revive federally funded research into supersonic airplanes. Spurred on by the French’s development of the Concorde, President Nixon has aggressively pushed American’s major airplane manufacturers such as Boeing to look into building an even faster plane.

Friday, May 14th, 1971:
The Pakistani army massacres over 800 Hindu civilians in the village of Demra in Bangladesh, committing horrific acts of sexual abuse and torture on those unfortunate enough to be rounded up by them. With the help of Islamist rebels who view the socialist Awami League as a threat to the predominance of Islam in Bangladeshi society, hundreds of people are systematically slaughtered in a vicious fashion.

Richard Nixon.
Saturday, May 15th, 1971:
Washington, D.C.
The White House.
12:19 P.M.

DStpz07XkAEFGBc.jpg:large

ROSEMARY WOODS: Mr. President, I have your brother on the line.

RICHARD NIXON: Patch him through….

DONALD NIXON: Hello?

RICHARD NIXON: How are you, Donald?

DONALD NIXON: Fine, fine. I wanted to know –

RICHARD NIXON: Look, Donald, I have a question for you. I want you to hear me out on all of this.

DONALD NIXON: Ok, go right ahead.

RICHARD NIXON: Well as you may have read in the papers or whatnot, this deal with Ted isn’t working.

DONALD NIXON: You mean Agnew….or Kennedy?

RICHARD NIXON: Yes, Agnew.

DONALD NIXON: And why is that?

RICHARD NIXON: He’s the laziest micromanager I’ve ever encountered, always interfering in other people’s business around here while rarely accomplishing anything other a few alliterative soundbites that the networks never air anyway. I’m getting kind of sick of him, spending all that time on the golf course doing nothing. He’s useless!

DONALD NIXON: So you’re going to dump him from the ticket?

RICHARD NIXON: Well, that’s the thing. He isn’t going to go quietly. He won’t give up the job easily, unless a better offer comes along. If we dump him from the ticket in 1972, he’ll only rally the conservatives around him, or even worse, his buddy from Hollywood and then we’ll just have an unwanted interloper on our ticket.

DONALD NIXON: In other words, back to where you started?

RICHARD NIXON: Exactly.

DONALD NIXON: I think I can help you on this one.

RICHARD NIXON: How so?

DONALD NIXON: Howard Hughes been pitching this idea for a new network, an alternative to the big three. One that caters to the interests of the hard hats, you know? None of this stuffy Stamford highbrow crap. No more of these arrogant, elitist, prickly hacks masquerading as reporters. He has the money to snatch up God knows how many local television affiliates, but he hasn’t been able to attract the right people to get the project off the ground.

RICHARD NIXON: Interesting idea, but I don’t think Agnew would surrender the trappings of his office just to go into the corporate world. Besides, that guy is one lazy, stupid son of a bitch. No millionaire…well, maybe Hughes, because he’s bonkers…but no other millionaire would want to hire an executive like Ted in a hundred thousand years. No, Ted doesn’t want the money. He has plenty of it, it seems, right now. God only knows where he got it. Ted wants the attention. Maybe that’s how we’ll get rid of them.

DONALD NIXON: Maybe he ought to be on television?

RICHARD NIXON: That’s as good of an idea as I’ve heard. At least so far. The only speech that prick has ever pulled off was about the press. Put him on the tube, have him sing our praises each night, and give him a few million dollars a year. It keeps him from causing us any further harm, it gives them the celebrity needed to pull in an audience, and Ted can go on and rant and rave and bitch and moan until he fades back into irrelevance. And in the meantime, it’ll give the Silent Majority a voice on television for the first time. You think Hughes would be interested in this?

DONALD NIXON: I’ll certainly forward the idea to him.

RICHARD NIXON: Make this happen, Donald. It’s worth pursuing.

Sunday, May 16th, 1971: Egyptian President Anwar Sadat fires seven cabinet members as well as expelling several members of the ruling Arab Socialist Party, citing an unspecified plot against his life as the motivation. The purge predominately targeted allies of the late President Nasser and other pro-Soviet or leftist voices within the government and ruling party. The shakeup in Egypt angers his Libyan and Syrian partners in the Federation of Arab Republics.

Monday, May 17th, 1971: Virtually every American railroad is shut down when the Brotherhood of Railway Signalmen go on strike, quickly forcing their employers to raise their salaries due to the severe economic disruption caused by their strike.

Tuesday, May 18th, 1971: Efrain Elrom, the Israeli consul in Ankara, is kidnapped by the People’s Liberation Front, a militant communist group active in Turkey. The militants demand the release of 20 Palestinian prisoners from Israeli custody or Elrom will be executed; the Israelis refuse the groups demands, and Elrom’s body is found with a bullet wound to the head in the trunk of an abandoned car days later.

Wednesday, May 19th, 1971: Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau travels to Moscow as part of an official state visit to the Soviet Union, where he joins Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin in signing an amity agreement. Trudeau, while reaffirming his commitment to NATO, also expresses a greater interest in expanding ties with the varied member states of the Non-Aligned Movement.

Friday, May 21st, 1971: Nearly 2,000 Hindus in the village of Dakra are slaughtered by Islamist death squads acting on behalf of Pakistan as the liberation struggle in Bangladesh continues.

Saturday, May 22nd, 1971: The LBJ Presidential Library is opened at the University of Texas in Austin; President Nixon joins former President Johnson at the opening ceremony, as do scores of other invited dignitaries from both Washington and Texas.

Monday, May 24th, 1971:
The Tupolev Tu-144, the Soviet Union’s alternative to the French Concorde, makes its first successful international flight from Leningrad to France ahead of the Paris Air Show.

Tuesday, May 25th, 1971:
The New Democratic Party, South Korea’s chief opposition movement, doubles their presence in the national legislature when they win 90 seats, up 45 from the last election. Despite their successes, the party still lacks the numbers needed to be a real threat to the ruling Democratic Republican Party of President Park Chung-hee.

Thursday, May 27th, 1971
: Egyptian President Anwar Sadat travels to Moscow, where he joins Soviet head of state Nikolai Podgorny to sign a Treaty of Friendship and Mutual Cooperation between the two nations. Sadat’s actions anger his neighbor, Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi, who felt Sadat’s decision to seek out an alliance of the Soviet Union and Egypt weakened the internal harmony of the Federation of Arab Republics, which Libya and Syria also belong too.

Friday, May 28th, 1971: Actor and WWII war hero Audi Murphy is killed in a plane crash in North Carolina at the age of 45.

Saturday, May 29th, 1971: South Vietnamese forces retreat from Cambodia after they encountered fierce Viet Cong and North Vietnamese resistance near the village of Snuol. The NVA and Viet Cong inflict over a thousand casualties on the South Vietnamese forces, despite American air support in the form of airstrikes and helicopter gunships.

Sunday, May 30th, 1971: A Grateful Dead concert in San Francisco at Bill Graham’s Winterland Ballroom devolves into chaos after Apple Cider spiked with LSD proliferates through the crowd of concertgoers. Though there were no injuries, the show had to be stopped repeatedly due to the chaotic nature of the crowd.

Monday, May 31st, 1971
: Memorial Day is observed in the United States for the first time; prospective presidential candidates use the holiday to speak out against the ongoing conflict in Southeast Asia as Gallup releases a new poll.

Gallup: 1,000 Registered Voters (Nationwide).
(R) Richard Nixon: 41%
(D) Generic Democrat: 39%
Undecided: 17%
Independent/Other: 2%

Gallup: 1,000 Democratic Voters (Nationwide).
Hubert Humphrey: 25%
Edmund Muskie: 23%
George Wallace: 16%
George McGovern: 15%
John McKeithen: 7%
Birch Bayh: 6%
Shirley Chisholm: 3%
Henry Jackson: 2%
Eugene McCarthy: 1%
Harold Hughes: 1%
Vance Hartke: 1%
 
Chapter 6: June 1971.
Tuesday, June 1st, 1971: A group calling itself “Vietnam Veterans for a Just Peace” march in Washington; over 10,000 veterans march in support of President Nixon and the war in Vietnam. Though it is the largest pro-war demonstration in recent memory, the number of attendees for the previous anti-war march a month earlier dwarfed those at the pro-war march. Vice President Agnew addresses the crowd of pro-war veterans at the base of the Washington Monument.

Wednesday, June 2nd, 1971: The Razakars, a paramilitary death squad aligned with the Pakistani government and Islamist militias, are deputized as soldiers in the Pakistani authority, effectively giving them the go-ahead to continue their genocidal campaign of village massacres and ethnic cleansing without impediment from the regime of Yahya Khan in Islamabad.

Thursday, June 3rd, 1971: Jimmy Hoffa, who had been incarcerated since 1967 on a number of fraud related charges, announces in a letter to members of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters that he will be retiring as President of the union. Despite being tried and convicted of numerous corruption related charges, he continued to manage the affairs of the union from behind bars. His decision to stand down as president of the union was part of an agreement between Hoffa and the Justice Department, which promised him that President Nixon would commute his sentence on the understanding that Hoffa no longer involve himself actively in the labor movement.

Edmund Muskie.
Friday, June 4th, 1971:
Nashua, NH.
5:20 P.M.​

1712254464468.png
The New Hampshire primary was more than half a year into the future, but there was already increased chatter about the Granite State’s increased influence in the wake of McGovern-Fraser. Nobody knew this better than George McGovern, the only officially declared candidate in the Democratic primary race, but he wasn’t to be alone in the race for long. Senator Edmund Muskie had previously served as Governor of neighboring Maine and had later joined Vice President Humphrey on the Democratic ticket that emerged from the chaos of the Chicago convention in 1968. By all accounts he was the leading frontrunner in the wake of Kennedy’s exit from the race, especially with Humphrey’s ambitions for 1972 still being vague.

Officially, Muskie was merely passing through New Hampshire for a day, primarily to campaign for his fellow Senator Thomas McIntyre’s reelection. The Nixon administration had been hoping to recruit a strong challenger to the Democratic incumbent, who held office in a traditionally Republican friendly state. But his mission to New Hampshire was in reality based around his own ambitions, both in the Senate and beyond. Having been the Democratic Vice-Presidential nominee, Muskie’s endorsement carried a lot of weight within the party and particularly in his native New England; now was the time, he thought to himself as he entered a small Irish pub in Nashua virtually anonymously. If anyone recognized him, they didn’t seem to care. Walking to a small booth, Muskie sat down and waited for the man he was due to meet with to arrive. Earlier in the day, when he had been testing the waters with his fellow Senator, he had been impressed by his reception. But off the campaign trail, he was just another suit at the bar. He was testing the waters, and it appeared to be lukewarm at best.

Finally, he spotted a familiar face, who peered over the booths trying to pick out the Senator. It was none other than that of Berl Bernhard, a lawyer and former member of the United States Commission on Civil Rights during the Eisenhower and Kennedy years. Bernhard had worked in the interim years as a law professor before returning to serve as General Counsel of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. This position put him in close proximity to Muskie over the course of the year, and after Kennedy withdrew his name from consideration, it became clear to Bernhard – an unabashed Liberal Democrat – that Muskie was the man for the moment. Muskie came to New Hampshire seeking the support of voters. Bernhard came to New Hampshire looking for a job.

“Senator” said Bernhard as he sat down across the booth from Muskie, who greeted him in turn only with a nod.

So…how are the waters?” asked Bernhard.

“Not too warm” said Muskie, “but not too cold either.”

“That’s a good start”
said Bernhard, who punctuated his remarks with a sigh that vocalized his exaggerated relief.

If this is the launchpad” replied Muskie, “than I’m not so sure we’ll get to the moon.”

“It’s early…I mean, who else is actually running besides McGovern? You think McGovern can win this thing? Of course not. Nobody does. I wouldn’t be so discouraged.”


Bernhard’s optimism rang sort of hollow to Muskie; a trained lawyer who knew how to pick his every word carefully, Bernhard had already built a psychological profile of him during his time in Washington. He knew, just by osmosis, what made the Senator tick. He also knew how to appeal to his better angels.

“It’s not the people who I think will sink my campaign” continued Muskie.

“Then who? McGovern? God knows Humphrey isn’t going to actively campaign here. McKeithen? Nobody has ever even heard of him. Jackson is never going to fly, Wallace will fracture the party, and the rest just aren’t up to the task. McCarthy? Bayh? Vance Hartke? I mean, these aren’t exactly heavy hitters.”

“It’s Nixon I’m worried about. Now that Kennedy is out of the way, I’m going to be his main target.”

“That is to your benefit”
shot back Bernhard, “allow him to frame the narrative for us, then adopt and embrace it. Be the anti-Nixon. Flip the situation on it’s head and turn the White House upside down. They’ll never see it coming, these aren’t exactly the biggest brains in Swampy Bottom.”

“I think centering our entire campaign on just being the frontrunner isn’t going to win me the votes I’d need here”
said Muskie, “the people here are talking about bread and butter, not some Washington chess match.”

“Of course”
replied Bernhard, who continued in a lawyerly fashion. “If that were the case, Kennedy would have found himself in deep, deep trouble. It’d have created an opening, a vacuum if you will, in which you are the only one who could profit from it.”

“You have an answer for everything”
answered Muskie, who was unsure if he meant it or if he were just being sarcastic. The statement rang true, whatever it actually meant. Bernhardt was a prestigious Washington lawyer and bureaucrat who had taught for a stint of Georgetown, so the Senator could only trust in his credentials.

The conversation continued for the better part of an hour before the two parted; Bernhard walked away thinking he had the job. Muskie was less confident. The Senator departed that night torn; Bernhard had the organizational skills and legal bonafides that would make him a great campaign manager. Yet he was also naively optimistic, so blinded by hatred of Nixon that it had become second nature, a personality trait that he, like so many American liberals, simply believed was universal. It was this out of touch mindset, this political aloofness that put off Muskie. Sure, he had the necessary experience navigating the murky waters of the federal bureaucracy, but did he have the political acumen?

Friday, June 4th, 1971: United Airlines Flight 796 is hijacked shortly after takeoff out of Charleston, West Virginia, by a drunken passenger named Glen Elmo Riggs, who demanded to be flown to Israel. The plane makes an emergency landing in Washington, D.C. after convincing the would-be hijacker that the flight was landing ahead of schedule in Newark, New Jersey, it’s intended destination. The pilot manages to overpower Riggs upon landing, leading to his arrest by responding officers’ moments later.

Saturday, June 5th, 1971: Six Flags over Mid-America opens in Saint Louis, Missouri. It is the latest theme park of the franchise to be constructed and is one of the largest operating in the Midwest.

Sunday, June 6th, 1971: An Air Force fighter jet and Hughes Airwest Flight 706 collide midair near Duarte, California. Both Air Force pilots and all 44 passengers and crew on Flight 706 are killed when the remainders of both their planes plummet from the sky and crash into nearby canyons.

Monday, June 7th, 1971: Bengali activists begin circulating millions of dollars in fake currency throughout West Pakistan in part of an effort to cause economic chaos. The proliferation of the counterfeit money becomes so severe that the Pakistani government is forced to close banks as debate increases over a potential new regional currency for the rebelling provinces.

Tuesday, June 8th, 1971: Edmundo Perez Zujovic, a former Finance Minister in the Chilean cabinet before the rise of President Allende, is assassinated by leftist militants in Santiago in his car during a drive-by shooting.

Wednesday, June 9th, 1971: King Rama IX celebrates his Silver Jubilee; having served as Thailand’s monarch since 1946, the King remains a powerful force within the country’s political life.

Thursday, June 10th, 1971:
President Nixon issues an executive order lifting the trade embargo on the People’s Republic of China, ending all restrictions on Chinese imports, and allowing for the export of non-strategic items.

Friday, June 11th, 1971
: The last fifteen Native American activists who had been occupying Alcatraz for the last 19 months leave the island, ending the lengthy protest at the former prison in San Francisco Bay.

Saturday, June 12th, 1971: Tricia Nixon marries attorney Edward Cox at a White House wedding ceremony; as the President and his family as well as the upper echelons of Washington society celebrates the newlyweds, word reaches President Nixon of a major impending leak that would dramatically shake up the course of his presidency in due time...

Richard Nixon.
Saturday, June 12th, 1971.
Washington, D.C.
The White House.
10:30 P.M.​

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The festivities of the day were over, and (most) of the guests had departed the White House. Having now retreated to his private office across the street within the archaic Executive Office Building, the President was unwinding following the wedding of his daughter Tricia to Edward Cox. Though the ceremony was perfect, and though he was overjoyed that his eldest daughter had tied the knot, there was that ever-present chip on Nixon’s shoulder that couldn’t be brushed off. The New York Times had really done it this time; twelve hours or so after the President walked his daughter down the aisle, the world’s attention was not on the White House wedding or the beautiful bride, but rather, the newly released “Pentagon Papers” which outlined the controversial secret history of American involvement in the Vietnam War. The classified documents, which had been leaked to the press, had caused a massive uproar, a catastrophic political crisis which the President was too delightfully distracted to deal with on that particular day. He was sure it was an intentional slight. The phone on his desk rang, and he grumbled something unintelligible to himself as he picked it up. The recording devices clicked on automatically.

RICHARD NIXON: Hello?

OPERATOR: Mr. President, Doctor Kissinger is on the line.

HENRY KISSINGER: Mr. President?

RICHARD NIXON: Henry, how are you? How are things in California?

HENRY KISSINGER: Well, I just got here, and I have to leave early tomorrow morning, so I’ll be back by the afternoon.

RICHARD NIXON: Oh, I see. I see.

HENRY KISSINGER: How was the wedding?

RICHARD NIXON: It could not have been more wonderful, Henry, it was a very lovely ceremony. A very special day for us.

HENRY KISSINGER: That is very nice to hear, Mr. President. I’m sorry I had to miss it. I’m assuming at some point today you’ve talked to Haig?

RICHARD NIXON: Yes, yes, I talked to Al.

HENRY KISSINGER: It seems as if things are quieter now –

RICHARD NIXON: Not here!

HENRY KISSINGER: I can imagine so.

RICHARD NIXON: Al was very disturbed by that New York Times thing.

HENRY KISSINGER: Well, Mr. President, I think that –

RICHARD NIXON: Unconscionable damn thing to do!

HENRY KISSINGER: It is unconscionable Mr. President.

RICHARD NIXON: Of course, it’s….it’s unconscionable on the part of those that leaked it. But that has to do with the previous administration, to my understanding. None of it relates to us. Am I correct in that?

HENRY KISSINGER: Yes, Mr. President, that is correct.

RICHARD NIXON: But my point was….what I want to know, I guess, is whether it was one of our guys involved in the leaking? Do we know?

HENRY KISSINGER: In public opinion, it actually, if anything, will help us a little bit, because this is a gold mine of showing how the previous administration got us in there.

RICHARD NIXON: I didn’t read the thing. Tell me…give me your view on that in a word.

HENRY KISSINGER: It just shows the mismanagement of how we got there, and it all pins it on Kennedy and Johnson.

RICHARD NIXON: Yeah.

HENRY KISSINGER: And McNamara. From that point of view, it helps us. From the point of view of the relations with Hanoi, it hurts a little, because it just shows a further weakening of resolve.

RICHARD NIXON: Yeah.

HENRY KISSINGER: It’s good copy for them. They will sell a lot of papers today.

RICHARD NIXON: I suppose The Times ran it to affect the debate this week.

HENRY KISSINGER: Oh yes, no question about it.

RICHARD NIXON: Well…I don’t think it’ll have that kind of effect.

HENRY KISSINGER: No. No, because it’s….in a way, it shows…..it shows what they’ve tried to do. I think they outsmarted themselves, because they had put themselves….they had sort of tried to make it “Nixon’s War,” and what this massively proves is that, if it’s anybody’s war, it’s Kennedy’s and Johnson’s.

RICHARD NIXON: Yeah?

HENRY KISSINGER: So now these Democrats bleating about what went wrong –

RICHARD NIXON: I haven’t heard what any of them have had to say –

HENRY KISSINGER: The usual chorus of criticism from the usual suspects. Bayh, McGovern, Kennedy, they have all tried to bounce this back on you, but it was very weak –

RICHARD NIXON: Well, judging by what you’ve told me, they really must be just trying to reach.

HENRY KISSINGER: They’re grasping into the unknown, hoping to latch onto anything.

RICHARD NIXON: This is treasonable, Henry.

HENRY KISSINGER: Exactly.

RICHARD NIXON: Doesn’t it involve secure information? Stuff like that? What kind of people would do such things!

HENRY KISSINGER: It has the most…it has the highest classification.

RICHARD NIXON: Yeah, yeah.

HENRY KISSINGER: It’s treasonable, I hold no doubt. I am absolutely certain this violates all sorts of national security laws.

RICHARD NIXON: Well…what do we do about it? Do we ask a…?

HENRY KISSINGER: We talk to Mitchell?

RICHARD NIXON: No…you tell Mitchell, uh, you tell…

HENRY KISSINGER: This is not an occasional leak from the Defense Department….this is everything they had on -

RICHARD NIXON: Yeah, let me ask this – call Mitchell. I think you should talk to Mitchell, and uh, tell him that we need to bring this fellow in on the grounds that this is a national security leak, and that we need to know who he is, what he has, and who he’s shared it with. Put him under oath.

HENRY KISSINGER: We should probably wait until –

RICHARD NIXON: Another way to do this is to have a congressional committee haul him in.

HENRY KISSINGER: - we should probably do it after Wednesday.

RICHARD NIXON: Think about it, have him go before a congressional committee under oath. If he lies, he committed perjury. If he sings like a bird, we might be able to root out some of their allies embedded in the bureaucracy here.

HENRY KISSINGER: I can talk to Mitchell when I get back into Washington.

RICHARD NIXON: Good, I’ll have Al brief him ahead of your arrival. Thank you, Henry.

HENRY KISSINGER: You’re welcome, Mr. President.

Sunday, June 13th, 1971: A day after President Nixon celebrated the wedding of his daughter Tricia to lawyer Edward Cox, the New York Times publishes the “Pentagon Papers,” a classified history of American involvement in Vietnam. Though the documents only covered the history of the Vietnam War through the Kennedy and Johnson presidency, the leak still greatly rattles the administration. Seeking an injunction to prevent the full publication, the case quickly gets tangled in the court system.

Monday, June 14th, 1971: Senator Mike Gravel (D-AK) enters portions of the “Pentagon Papers” into the Congressional Record, drawing the ire of his pro-war colleagues in the Senate. He read excerpts of the leaked documents for three hours, frequently being heckled by pro-war Senators from both parties who claim the Alaska Senator is abusing his position to make a political stand. Gravel’s national status is raised because of his actions on the Senate floor.

Tuesday, June 15th, 1971: A judge in New York issues an injunction against the New York Times, prohibiting them from publishing any further content from the Pentagon Papers for four days or until the matter can be resolved in court.

Wednesday, June 16th, 1971: President Nixon declares the “War on Drugs” in a televised speech from the Oval Office, in which he highlights growing concerns about the prevalence of drugs in the country as well as his administration’s own plans on how the federal government will address it. Nixon calls for the House and Senate to pass legislation that would create stiffer penalties for drug smugglers as part of his plans to crack down on crime.

Thursday, June 17th, 1971: Secretary of State William Rogers and the Japanese Foreign Minister sign a treaty in Okinawa that would return the island to Japanese control. America had retained control of the island since 1945, using it as a military outpost in Asia despite the post-war government of Japan’s attempts to recover the island. The treaty effectively ends the territorial dispute and sets an orderly transition in process while simultaneously strengthening bilateral relations between the two nations.

Friday, June 18th, 1971: The Washington Post begins independently publishing copies of the Pentagon Papers, despite the injunction issued against the New York Times for doing the same. The Post’s editor Ben Bradley receives a threatening phone call from William Rehnquist, the Assistant Attorney General of the Office of Legal Counsel, demanding that they refrain from publishing any further exerts. Bradley refuses and hangs up the phone in defiant anger.

Saturday, June 19th, 1971: 64 Muslim Filipinos are murdered in the country’s southernmost island on Mindanao by a pro-government militia which had accused the Muslims in the region of hoarding weapons.

Monday, June 21st, 1971: British MP Geoffrey Ripon arrives in Luxemburg for direct negotiations with representatives of the European Economic Community. The British Prime Minister Edward Heath had strongly supported British membership in the European common market, but there remains skepticism of the European project in both the Conservative and Labor parties.

Tuesday, June 22nd, 1971: The International Court of Justice rules that the South African occupation of Southwest Africa is illegal under international law and should cease immediately. The ruling is ignored by the Apartheid regime in South Africa, who continue to resist efforts by the Southwest African People’s Organization. South Africa ignores the ruling.

Wednesday, June 23rd, 1971: The Senate votes 57-42 in favor of a bill that would authorize the withdrawal of American forces from Vietnam upon the condition that North Vietnam release all American prisoners of war. The bill moves forward to the House of Representatives, where it faces a more uphill climb.

Thursday, June 24th, 1971: After days of negotiations, the British are admitted to the European Economic Community. Though the EEC’s willingness to allow Britain entrance into is a victory for the government of Prime Minister Edward Heath, there are still strong elements of opposition to Britain joining the European Community on both the left and right that threatens Heath’s efforts to bring Britain into the EEC.

Friday, June 25th, 1971:
President Nixon hosts his former interparty rival Nelson Rockefeller in the Oval Office, primarily to discuss policies related to criminal justice issues, in particular controlling the flow of narcotics into the country. Rockefeller, whose administration in New York has taken a firm line against the production, importation, and distribution of illegal narcotics ranging from marijuana to opiates, encourages the President to push for stricter criminal penalties for drug dealers during their two hour long discussion.

Sunday, June 27th, 1971:
Elections in Japan result in the ruling center-right Liberal Democratic Party maintaining their control of the legislature. Though their firm supermajority in the Imperial Diet is not threatened, the opposition Socialist Party manages to make minor gains. Eisaku Sato, the Prime Minister of Japan since 1964, is set to remain in office in the wake of the Liberal Democratic Party’s victory.

Monday, June 28th, 1971
: Brooklyn mobster Joseph Colombo is assassinated at an Italian American Civil Rights League led unity rally at Columbus Circle in New York City. Colombo is shot twice in the head by Jerome Jackson, a hired gun who posed for a photo with Colombo before withdrawing a pistol and shooting him three times in the head before one of Colombo’s own men shot and killed him as well. The gangland slaying in broad daylight becomes a source of controversy in New York City, with Mayor John Lindsey calling for greater state and federal efforts to tackle organized crime in response to the killing.

Daniel Ellsberg surrenders himself to federal authorities in Boston at the urging of his friend Richard Holbrooke after the Justice Department charged him under the provisions of the Espionage Act.

Tuesday, June 29th, 1971: The Supreme Court rules 8-0 in favor of boxer Muhammed Ali, throwing out Ali’s conviction for resisting efforts to draft him into the United States military after the boxer’s lawyers successfully argued that Ali’s status as a conscientious objector was improperly addressed.

Wednesday, June 30th, 1971
: In The New York Times vs. The United States, the Supreme Court rules 6-3 that the Nixon administration’s attempts to stop the New York Times from publishing the Pentagon Papers were unconstitutional. The paper’s editors confirm it will resume printing excerpts the next day.

Gallup releases updated polling displaying the shape of the 1972 presidential landscape as the summer gets well underway.

Gallup: 1,000 Registered Voters (Nationwide).
(R) Richard Nixon: 41%
(D) Generic Democrat: 39%
Undecided: 17%
Independent/Other: 2%

Gallup: 1,000 Democratic Voters (Nationwide).
Hubert Humphrey: 24%
Edmund Muskie: 24%
George Wallace: 18%
George McGovern: 14%
John McKeithen: 8%
Birch Bayh: 5%
Shirley Chisholm: 3%
Henry Jackson: 1%
Eugene McCarthy: 1%
Harold Hughes: 1%
Vance Hartke: 1%
 
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