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Gerald Ford is remembered as a “normal” placeholder president — calm, forgettable, transitional. But the paper trail around Ford tells a different story: a man positioned inside the most sensitive investigations and constitutional handoffs of the modern era.
In this episode, we follow the mechanics of power — not party mythology — and map Ford’s unusual arc: his role on the Warren Commission (including the early push for the “magic bullet” framing), the 25th Amendment pipeline that elevated him from House leadership to vice president to America’s only unelected president, and the unsettling sequence of two assassination attempts within 17 days.
Then there’s the part almost no one talks about: Ford’s role in shaping a behind-the-scenes bipartisan continuity culture — the “club of ex-presidents.” Was this statesmanship… or institutional management?
In this episode, we examine:
- Gerald Ford’s Warren Commission role and the Oswald narrative
- The 25th Amendment as a power transfer mechanism (Agnew → Ford → Nixon resigns)
- Watergate as a system event, not just a scandal
- The 1975 assassination attempts and what changed afterward
- The “club of ex-presidents” and elite continuity across party lines
- Ford’s later comments on how a woman might become president — and why that matters
Question for you: Was Ford simply “the safe choice”… or the preferred outcome?
No transcript available for this episode.

The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show

The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show

The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show