The Guardian (USA)

Gerald Ford foundation accused of not honoring Liz Cheney over Trump fears

- Martin Pengelly in Washington

Gerald Ford’s White House photograph­er resigned from the board of the 38th president’s eponymous foundation and alleged it refused to honor Liz Cheney, the anti-Trump former Republican congresswo­man, for fear of reprisal should Donald Trump return to power next year.

The honor in question was the Gerald R Ford Medal for Distinguis­hed Public Service. Recent recipients include the former defense secretary Robert Gates; the late Republican presidenti­al nominee Bob Dole and his wife, the former senator Elizabeth Dole; and the late secretary of state Colin Powell.

“A key reason Liz’s nomination was turned down was your agita about what might happen if the former president is re-elected,” David Kennerly, 77 and a Pulitzer-winning photograph­er, told the executive committee and board members of the Gerald R Ford Presidenti­al Foundation in a letter reported by Politico.

“Some of you raised the spectre of being attacked by the Internal Revenue Service and losing the foundation’s taxexempt status as retributio­n for selecting Liz for the award.

“The historical irony was completely lost on you. Gerald Ford became president [in 1974], in part, because Richard Nixon had ordered the developmen­t of an enemies list and demanded his underlings use the IRS against those listed. That’s exactly what the executive committee fears will happen if there’s a second coming of Donald Trump.”

Gleaves Whitney, executive director of the foundation, told Politico legal advisers said it would not be “prudent” to honor Cheney because of her flirtation with a presidenti­al run, as to do so “might be construed as a political statement and thus expose the foundation to the legal risk of losing its nonprofit status with the IRS”.

Cheney, from Wyoming, is the daughter of Dick Cheney, the former Republican congressma­n, defense secretary and vice-president who was also Ford’s White House chief of staff and campaign manager.

A stringent conservati­ve who supported Trump as president, Liz Cheney turned against him when he refused to accept defeat by Joe Biden, ultimately stoking the deadly attack on Congress of 6 January 2021.

Cheney was one of 10 House Republican­s who voted to impeach Trump over the attack and, with Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, one of two Republican­s on the House January 6 committee that recommende­d Trump face criminal charges.

Cheney lost her seat to a Trumpbacke­d challenger but maintained a high profile as Trump cruised to the Republican presidenti­al nomination despite facing 88 criminal charges (14 over election subversion, 34 over hushmoney payments, 40 over retention of classified informatio­n) and multimilli­on-dollar civil penalties for tax fraud and defamation arising from a rape allegation a judge called “substantia­lly true”.

Cheney has considered but not mounted a presidenti­al run. Last month, she announced the formation of a political action committee to support anti-Trump candidates. Trump has attacked her relentless­ly, including calling for her to be jailed.

In his letter protesting against the decision not to honour Cheney, Kennerly said Gerald Ford “led by example

and placed his life on the line to do it”, from wartime naval service to a “short but impactful” presidency in the aftermath of the Watergate scandal and a long post-presidency before his death, at 93, in 2006.

Kennerly also cited Ford’s receipt in 2001 of a Profile in Courage award from the JFK Foundation, for his “controvers­ial decision of conscience” to give Nixon a pardon. In 2022, Cheney was one of five recipients of the same Kennedy award, alongside Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the president of Ukraine, and for “defending democracy at home and abroad”.

Kennerly said he saw “no other choice” than to give Cheney the Ford medal, and described making a “compelling presentati­on” to nominators seeming to waver.

“When you rejected her again in favor of a third person,” he wrote, “it became crystal clear to me that something else was going on. The process for honoring President Ford by recognisin­g his virtues in others was being undermined by the same pressures weakening Republican institutio­ns and many conservati­ve leaders.”

Kennerly accused the foundation of “the kind of acquiescen­t behaviour that leads to authoritar­ianism”, adding: “President Ford most likely would have come out even tougher and said that it leads directly to fascism.

“Those of you who rejected Liz join many ‘good Republican­s’ now aiding and abetting our 45th president [Trump] by ignoring the genuine menace he presents to our country. America is fortunate to have Liz Cheney still out there on the frontlines of freedom vigorously defending our constituti­on and democratic way of life. But you don’t have her back.”

The foundation, Kennerly said, had “missed a critical opportunit­y to send a message to our fellow citizens here in America and the rest of the world. When Ford was in office people still recall his commitment to our allies, the rule of law, and meeting the challenge posed by tyrannical leaders. By saying that we stand with Liz Cheney in the name of Gerald Ford to support her critical mission in this existentia­l moment we also would have honored his memory. And shown that we fear no evil.

“After this current divisive era passes, people will remember who stood up for what.”

Kennerly told Politico the letter “did not make me happy writing it”. Whitney said foundation trustees were meeting to discuss the matter. Cheney did not comment.

 ?? ?? Liz Cheney in Washington DC on 13 June 2023. Photograph: Anna Rose Layden/Getty Images
Liz Cheney in Washington DC on 13 June 2023. Photograph: Anna Rose Layden/Getty Images

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