The Presidential Scoring Framework
Republican · 1974 – 1977

Gerald Ford

Default weighted total
+2.85
Range −10 to +10
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By Category

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How to read the numbersEvery sub-criterion is scored on two independent 0–10 scales: +good measures positive impact; −harm measures negative impact. net = good − harm and ranges from −10 to +10. The category total to the right of each card is the mean of its sub-criterion nets. Click thumbs to agree or disagree with any score.
C1
Economic outcomes
9% default weight · 4 sub-criteria scored
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+0.3
GoodHarmNet
  • Unemployment peaked at 9.0% (May 1975). Recovery began 1976. Inflation peaked 12.3% (1974), fell to ~5%.

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    • harm·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

      Stagflation peaked under Ford with unemployment at 9.0% and inflation at 12.3% in 1974-75; modest recovery 1976.

      bls.gov
  • Inequality relatively flat. Earned Income Tax Credit enacted (1975) — first refundable tax credit.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      EITC enacted under Ford became foundational anti-poverty tax instrument; modest at inception, expanded substantially under Reagan and Clinton.

      congress.gov
  • Deficits remained large from inherited stagflation. Tax Reduction Act 1975 added stimulus.

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    • harm·Tier 2·Statistic·Unverified

      Federal deficits remained large under Ford due to recession-era stimulus and continued inflation pressure.

      whitehouse.gov
  • Real wages stagnant. Unemployment-era labor weakness. ERISA (1974) enacted — major pension protection law.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      ERISA established federal pension and benefit protection framework that became foundational for US employer-sponsored retirement system.

      congress.gov
C2
Foreign policy & war
11% default weight · 4 sub-criteria scored
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+2.3
GoodHarmNet
  • Saigon evacuation (April 1975) ended Vietnam War. Mayaguez incident (May 1975) — 41 US deaths to free 39 hostages. No new major wars.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      Ford executed Saigon evacuation ending US Vietnam involvement; Mayaguez rescue operation lost more Americans (41) than hostages saved (39).

      history.state.gov
  • NATO solid. Helsinki Final Act (August 1975) major European-security framework. Continued detente with USSR.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      Helsinki Accords established European-security framework including human-rights provisions that subsequent dissidents used to challenge Soviet bloc.

      osce.org
  • Helsinki Accords. SALT II framework drafted (signed under Carter). Vladivostok Summit (1974). Kissinger continuity.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      Ford-Brezhnev Vladivostok agreement on strategic arms framework set up SALT II that Carter completed.

      history.state.gov
  • Indonesia invasion of East Timor (December 1975) with US approval — massive civilian casualties followed. End of Vietnam War civilian impact (Khmer Rouge takeover April 1975).

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    • harm·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      Ford and Kissinger explicitly approved Indonesia's invasion of East Timor on December 6, 1975, leading to estimated 100,000+ Timorese deaths over subsequent occupation.

      nsarchive.gwu.edu
C3
Civil rights & equality
9% default weight · 5 sub-criteria scored
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+3.4
GoodHarmNet
  • Continued CRA, VRA enforcement. Voting Rights Act extension 1975 expanded to language minorities.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      1975 VRA Amendments extended language-minority protections, particularly for Hispanic and Asian American voters.

      congress.gov
  • ERA ratification stalled under Ford. Title IX enforcement continued. Betty Ford openly pro-choice and pro-ERA.

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    • good·Tier 2·Historical record·Unverified

      Title IX enforcement continued during Ford term; Betty Ford's public advocacy normalized first-lady political voice.

      Title IX implementation 1974-1977; Betty Ford public advocacy
  • EO 10450 still in force. Era-typical neglect. Some Civil Service Commission guidance softening.

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    • harm·Tier 2·Historical record·Unverified

      Civil Service Commission softened EO 10450 enforcement somewhat in mid-1970s but federal LGBTQ employment ban remained formally in effect.

      Civil Service Commission policy revisions 1975 (Norton v. Macy precedent integration)
  • Education for All Handicapped Children Act of 1975 (now IDEA) — landmark disability rights legislation. Section 504 regulations drafted (issued under Carter).

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      EAHCA (later IDEA) established federal right to free appropriate public education for disabled children; transformative disability-rights legislation.

      congress.gov
  • Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975 (Public Law 93-638). Drafted under Nixon administration; signed by Ford. Ended termination era formally.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      ISDEAA enabled tribes to contract for federal Indian-services programs, formally ending termination era and establishing self-determination framework that continues today.

      congress.gov
C4
Civil liberties & rule of law
8% default weight · 4 sub-criteria scored
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+2.0
GoodHarmNet
  • Post-Watergate press relations improved. No major press conflicts.

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    • good·Tier 2·Historical record·Unverified

      Ford restored post-Watergate press-presidential cooperation patterns; no major conflicts.

      fordlibrarymuseum.gov
  • Church Committee (1975-76) exposed FBI/CIA/NSA abuses. Ford administration cooperated. Created Foreign Intelligence Surveillance framework (FISA drafted, enacted 1978 under Carter).

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      Church Committee investigations exposed extensive CIA, FBI, NSA abuses; Ford administration cooperated and initiated reform process leading to FISA 1978.

      senate.gov
  • Post-Watergate restraint era. Vetoed FOIA Amendments (1974) — overridden. War Powers Resolution accepted. Mayaguez unilateral but limited.

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    • harm·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      Ford vetoed FOIA Amendments strengthening the law; Congress overrode the veto; subsequent administration complied with strengthened framework.

      congress.gov
  • Vetoed FOIA Amendments 1974 (overridden). Privacy Act 1974 signed. Government in the Sunshine Act 1976 signed. Mixed pattern.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      Ford signed multiple post-Watergate transparency reforms including Privacy Act and Sunshine Act; vetoed FOIA Amendments (overridden).

      congress.gov
C5
Domestic welfare & health
9% default weight · 4 sub-criteria scored
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+2.5
GoodHarmNet
  • Swine flu vaccination program (1976) controversial — 25 deaths, ~500 Guillain-Barré cases. ESRD Medicare program continued. Modest record.

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    • harm·Tier 1·Historical record·Unverified

      Ford's swine flu program vaccinated 40 million Americans before halt due to Guillain-Barré link; became cautionary tale for subsequent public-health programs.

      cdc.gov
  • 5.2Education
    +71+6

    EAHCA 1975. Education Amendments 1976. Continued Pell Grant expansion.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      EAHCA was foundational federal education-for-disabled-children legislation; substantial education investment continued.

      congress.gov
  • Stagflation-era pressures on welfare programs. Food Stamps reformed. EITC enacted. Modest expansion overall.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      EITC creation was foundational anti-poverty policy innovation though small at inception.

      congress.gov
  • Section 8 program expansion (drafted Nixon, signed by Ford August 1974). Housing inflation pressures.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      Ford signed Section 8 voucher program one week into his term (originally Nixon-era legislation).

      congress.gov
C6
Environmental stewardship
6% default weight · 3 sub-criteria scored
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+4.0
GoodHarmNet
C7
Crisis management
9% default weight · 4 sub-criteria scored
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+2.8
GoodHarmNet
  • Pardon of Nixon (one month into term, September 8, 1974) — fast but politically devastating. Saigon evacuation fast.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      Ford pardoned Nixon within one month of taking office; rapid decision aimed at closing Watergate chapter but politically devastating.

      fordlibrarymuseum.gov
  • WIN inflation campaign ineffective. Saigon evacuation effective. Pardon controversial.

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    • harm·Tier 2·Historical record·Unverified

      WIN (Whip Inflation Now) campaign was widely criticized as ineffective; inflation continued through Ford term.

      fordlibrarymuseum.gov
  • Honest in pardon decision communication despite political cost. Generally direct with public.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      Ford publicly defended pardon as in national interest; testified to Congress (October 1974) — first sitting president to testify under oath to Congress.

      fordlibrarymuseum.gov
  • Watergate chapter closed via pardon (some say prematurely). Vietnam ended. Stagflation passed to Carter unresolved.

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    • good·Tier 2·Academic·Unverified

      Ford pardon of Nixon retrospectively defended by many historians as enabling national focus on other matters, criticized by others as precluding accountability.

      Nixon pardon historical assessment; subsequent presidential scholarship
C8
Institutional integrity
8% default weight · 7 sub-criteria scored
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+4.9
GoodHarmNet
  • Personally clean. Modest finances. Most honest presidency since Eisenhower per contemporary assessment.

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    • good·Tier 1·Academic·Unverified

      Ford widely considered one of most personally honest presidents of modern era; no personal-ethics scandals during or after term.

      Standard biographical scholarship; contemporary press assessments
  • Generally clean administration. Rockefeller wealth disclosure during VP confirmation set new transparency precedent.

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    • good·Tier 2·Primary document·Unverified

      Rockefeller's financial disclosure during VP confirmation established new transparency precedent for executive-branch appointees.

      senate.gov
  • Pardon of Nixon controversial as institutional-norm issue. Otherwise norm-respecting. Restored Watergate-era constitutional balance.

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    • harm·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      Ford's preemptive Nixon pardon was constitutionally legitimate but normatively controversial; contributed to Ford's 1976 defeat.

      fordlibrarymuseum.gov
  • One SCOTUS appointment: John Paul Stevens. Stevens became major moderate-then-liberal justice over 35 years. Strong selection.

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    • good·Tier 1·Historical record·Unverified

      Stevens served on SCOTUS for 35 years (1975-2010) and became major moderate-to-liberal voice; widely regarded as a strong Ford appointment.

      supremecourt.gov
  • Merit-based selection. AG Edward Levi non-political process.

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    • good·Tier 2·Historical record·Unverified

      Stevens selection conducted via merit-based process led by AG Levi, returning to pre-Nixon-era professional vetting.

      Stevens selection process records (AG Edward Levi)
  • Stevens unpredictable jurisprudentially; restraint-or-activist depending on issue. Mixed pattern.

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    • good·Tier 2·Academic·Unverified

      Stevens evolved from moderate Republican appointee to consistent liberal vote; jurisprudential restraint mixed with activism on specific issues.

      Stevens jurisprudential trajectory analysis
  • Stevens confirmed unanimously 98-0 within 19 days. Pre-modern (pre-Bork) confirmation process.

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    • good·Tier 1·Historical record·Unverified

      Stevens confirmed unanimously and rapidly — last pre-Bork-era SCOTUS confirmation under traditional norms.

      senate.gov
C9
Democratic health
8% default weight · 4 sub-criteria scored
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+3.8
GoodHarmNet
  • Signed VRA Amendments 1975 expanding language-minority protections. Continued federal voting-rights enforcement.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      Ford signed VRA extension expanding protections to language minorities.

      congress.gov
  • Cordial relationship. Saturday Night Live's Chevy Chase Ford caricature became cultural moment without administration response.

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    • good·Tier 2·Historical record·Unverified

      Ford maintained dignified response to often-mocking press treatment; restored post-Watergate cooperative norms.

      fordlibrarymuseum.gov
  • Survived two assassination attempts within 17 days (Sara Jane Moore, Squeaky Fromme, September 1975). Handled with dignity. Era of declining political violence.

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    • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

      Ford survived assassination attempts by Lynette 'Squeaky' Fromme (September 5, 1975) and Sara Jane Moore (September 22, 1975).

      secretservice.gov
  • Generally restorative. Pardon decision polarizing but specific. Lost narrowly 1976 — competitive election.

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    • good·Tier 2·Historical record·Unverified

      Ford lost 1976 election narrowly (50.1% to 48.0%); election was competitive across both ideological spectrum and regions, suggesting modest polarization.

      1976 election results; Ford-Carter debates
C10
Long-tail consequences
7% default weight · 4 sub-criteria scored
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+2.3
GoodHarmNet
  • ISDEAA, EAHCA, RCRA, FLPMA, Magnuson-Stevens — all operational 50 years later. EITC foundational. Helsinki Accords legacy.

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    • good·Tier 1·Historical record·Unverified

      Multiple foundational laws signed in Ford's short term (ISDEAA, EAHCA, ERISA, RCRA, FLPMA, Magnuson-Stevens) remain operational frameworks today.

      Continued operation of Ford-signed legislation 1974-present
  • Post-Watergate institutional restoration. Pardon precedent debated. Church Committee reforms (FISA, IG framework) durable.

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    • good·Tier 1·Historical record·Unverified

      Ford-era cooperation with Church Committee enabled the legal-framework reforms (FISA 1978, IG Act 1978) that constrained intelligence-community abuses through subsequent decades.

      senate.gov
  • Modest. Boomers came of age. Vietnam ended ('Vietnam Syndrome' began). Stagflation generational economic experience.

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    • harm·Tier 2·Academic·Unverified

      Vietnam War end under Ford initiated 'Vietnam Syndrome' affecting US foreign-policy decisions for 25+ years.

      Generational political-science scholarship on Vietnam Syndrome
  • Helsinki Accords human-rights provisions enabled Soviet bloc dissident movements. East Timor genocide ~200K dead. Indochinese refugee crisis.

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    • harm·Tier 1·Historical record·Unverified

      Helsinki Accords' human-rights provisions enabled Soviet bloc dissident movements; East Timor approval led to ~100,000-200,000 Timorese deaths over subsequent decades.

      Helsinki Watch (later Human Rights Watch) founding 1978; East Timor mortality estimates
C11
Decorum & conduct
4% default weight · 4 sub-criteria scored
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+5.8
GoodHarmNet
C12
Effect on populace
6% default weight · 4 sub-criteria scored
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+2.5
GoodHarmNet
  • Restored civic confidence post-Watergate but stagflation and Vietnam end dragged. End-of-term ~53% approval.

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    • good·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

      Ford averaged ~47% approval; pardon caused immediate ~20-point drop; ended term ~53%.

      news.gallup.com
  • Restorative effect on cohesion post-Watergate. Bicentennial unifying. No major divisive policies.

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    • good·Tier 2·Historical record·Unverified

      Ford era featured Bicentennial-era national unifying moments and post-Watergate institutional restoration.

      1976 Bicentennial commemorations; period civic data
  • Vietnam withdrawal completion damaged short-term standing. Helsinki Accords improved. Stagflation reduced economic credibility.

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    • harm·Tier 2·Historical record·Unverified

      Ford-era US international standing was mixed: restored post-Watergate trust slightly, Vietnam-era damage continued.

      International press coverage 1974-1977
  • Allied relations restored. Vietnam-era hostility continued in much of world.

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    • good·Tier 2·Historical record·Unverified

      Foreign public sentiment toward US under Ford modestly improved from Vietnam-era lows.

      USIA international polling 1975-1976
C13
Immigration & demographics
6% default weight · 4 sub-criteria scored
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+3.0
GoodHarmNet