Richard M. Nixon
Richard Nixon (1913-1994) was an American politician and President from 1969 to 1974. The most remembered parts of his career were, as a California Senator, his aggressive prosecution of alleged Communists in the U.S. government, and as President, his tough Cold War stance against the Soviet Union, his recognition of the People’s Republic of China, his “New Federalism” program to give federal funds to state governments, his proposed Family Assistance Plan (an expanded cash support plan that failed in Congress), his conversion of a conscription based to a volunteer military, and, finally, his personal involvement in the Watergate campaign scandal of 1972 that led to his resignation from the Presidency in the face of certain Impeachment.
One would scarcely think of Richard Nixon as a friend of decentralization. The presidential reorganization commission that he launched in his first term (the Ash Commission) had no interest in that idea, and his New Federalism proposal had the reverse effect of making state governments ever more dependent on the Federal government.
However, in the early stages of his 1968 campaign he delivered a perceptive and eloquent national radio address, largely written by his aide Raymond K. Price Jr., who was something of a decentralist believer. It remains an eloquent statement of decentralist thinking, even though that thinking made little or no appearance in the Nixon Presidency.