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LOS ANGELES - Former US President Gerald Ford, who was swept into office after the Watergate scandal and later pardoned Richard Nixon, died at age 93, his widow said this evening.
"My family joins me in sharing the difficult news that Gerald Ford, our beloved husband, father, grandfather
and great-grandfather, has passed away at 93 years of age," Betty Ford said in a statement.
"His life was filled with love of God, his family and his country."
Her statement was released by Ford's office in Rancho Mirage, California, and did not say where he died.
A former Republican congressman, Ford took office vowing, "Our long national nightmare is over." He served for 2-1/2 years with a style often mocked as bumbling until he lost the 1976 US presidential election to Democrat Jimmy Carter.
Ford had been ailing and largely out of the public eye for several years.
He was the only US president who was not elected to either the presidency or vice presidency. He was appointed vice president in 1973 after Nixon's vice president, Spiro Agnew, resigned to avoid prosecution on corruption charges.
When Nixon resigned on August 9, 1974, to avoid impeachment in the scandal over a politically motivated burglary of Democratic Party offices in the Watergate complex in Washington, Ford became president.
One month later, on September 8, 1974, Ford stunned the nation and stirred enduring controversy by granting Nixon "a full, free and absolute pardon" for any crime he may have committed in office.
That set the paradoxical pattern for the fill-in presidency of this rough-hewn politician who had served 26 years as a congressman from Michigan.
"President Ford was a great American who gave many years of dedicated service to our country," President George W. Bush said in a statement from Crawford, Texas. "With his quiet integrity, common sense, and kind instincts, President Ford helped heal our land and restore public confidence in the presidency."
Ford's mini-term as 38th president included two assassination attempts; the fall of Vietnam; Cambodian seizure of a US freighter, which prompted him to "send in the Marines;" constant fights with Congress; and a penchant for stumbling, head-cracking clumsiness that made him a butt of jokes.
Critics ridiculed his occasional clumsiness with barbs such as "he can't walk and chew gum at the same time".
Ford revived questions about his intellect and grasp of issues with a notorious gaffe in a televised campaign debate against Carter in 1976. He asserted in defence of his foreign policies that "there is no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe".
He fell just short in his fight to overcome a 30-point Carter polling lead and lost one of the closest elections in US history.
Gerald Rudolph Ford was born in Omaha, Nebraska, on July 14, 1913. His name then was Leslie King but his parents were divorced soon after his birth and he later took the name of his stepfather, Gerald Ford Sr.
A Navy officer in World War II, Ford married Betty Bloomer in 1948. Mrs. Ford became a national figure in her own right, first as an outspoken first lady and then as a crusader against drug and alcohol addiction.
- REUTERS