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Gerald R. Ford Library1000 Beal Avenue, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2114www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov |
Domestic Council
JAMES M. CANNON
Assistant to the
President for Domestic Affairs;
Executive
Director of the Domestic Council:
Files, 1975-77
SUMMARY DESCRIPTION
Material on virtually all domestic policy
issues of the Ford administration, the 1976 campaign, reviews of the federal budget,
administration of the Domestic Council, and Cannon's earlier work on Vice
President Rockefeller's staff.
QUANTITY
35.6
linear feet (ca. 71,200 pages)
DONOR
Gerald
R. Ford (accession number 77-13, 77-32, 77-107, and 79-18)
ACCESS
Open. Some items are temporarily restricted under
terms of the donor's deed of gift, a copy of which is available on request, or
under National Archives and Records Administration general restrictions (36 CFR
1256).
COPYRIGHT
Gerald
R. Ford has donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of
his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. The copyrights to materials written by other
individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees
as part of their official duties are in the public domain.
Prepared by William McNitt, December 1981 (Revised 1986 and March 1995) [s:\bin\findaid\cannon, james - files.doc]
BIOGRAPHICAL INFORMATION
James M. Cannon
1918 Born in
Sylacauga, Alabama
1939 B.S.,
University of Alabama
1939‑40
& 1941-46 Served in the U.S.
Army
1940‑41 Worked for
Burroughs Adding Machine Company
1947-48 Reporter, Potsdam
(NY) Herald ‑ Recorder
1948-49 Reporter, Gloversville
(NY) Leader ‑ Republican
1949-54 Reporter, Baltimore
Sun; in 1950 and 1951 he served as a foreign correspondent
1956-69 Newsweek magazine; positions included: National Affairs Editor, Washington
Correspondent, Chief of Correspondents, and Vice President and Assistant to the
Publisher
1969‑73 Special Assistant
to New York Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller for liaison between the State of New
York and the White House and Congress
Jan.‑Aug.
1974 Special Assistant
to Nelson Rockefeller with the Commission on Critical Choices for Americans
Aug.‑Dec.
1974 Nelson Rockefeller's
congressional liaison for the vice presidential confirmation hearings
Jan.‑Feb.
1975 Assistant to Vice
President Rockefeller
1975‑77 Assistant to the
President for Domestic Affairs and Executive Director of the Domestic Council
1977‑80 Administrative
Assistant, then Chief of Staff to Senate Minority/Majority Leader Howard Baker
INTRODUCTION
James M. Cannon, a former journalist
and aide to New York Governor Nelson A. Rockefeller, joined the Ford
administration in January 1975 as an assistant to Vice President
Rockefeller. Soon thereafter, President
Ford assigned the Vice President a major role in the formulation of domestic
policy. On February 13, 1975, President
Ford announced that Rockefeller would serve as vice chairman of the Domestic
Council and oversee the day‑to‑day work of the Council staff.
Cannon's Role in
the Ford Administration
In order to help the Vice President,
the President appointed Rockefeller aides James Cannon and Richard Dunham as
executive director and deputy director, respectively, of the Domestic Council
staff. In addition, President Ford named
Cannon to the White House staff with the title of Assistant to the President
for Domestic Affairs. In both of these
positions Cannon succeeded Kenneth Cole, who had served since 1973. Cannon remained until the end of the Ford
administration.
The Domestic council existed on two
levels. It was a membership body
consisting of the President, Vice President and those Cabinet secretaries
concerned with domestic issues; and it was a permanent agency within the
Executive Office of the President with a staff of 30 to 40 persons. Since the membership body met infrequently
the staff of the Domestic Council carried on most of the work.
The duties of the executive director
of the Domestic Council varied greatly from those of his staff, since he was
the head of an agency and a policy advisor to the President. Domestic Council staff members developed a
specialized knowledge and drafted decision memoranda, briefing papers,
legislative proposals, and responses to correspondence within their areas of
expertise. The executive director had a
general knowledge of all issues on which his staff worked, but also spent much
time on administrative duties, and representing the Domestic Council in White
House meetings and meetings with government officials and lobbyists. As an Assistant to the President, Cannon also
provided policy advice to the President and represented the Chief Executive at
meetings with various individuals and groups.
Administrative duties handled by the
executive director included the budget, hiring, and staff assignments. One of James Cannon's first projects was a
reorganization of the Council in which the number of subject areas headed by
associate directors increased from five to nine. Specific issues were reassigned in order to
balance the workload. This
reorganization and several subsequent departures from the staff left Cannon
with numerous vacancies to fill during the summer of 1975. Congressional approval of an increase from 30
to 40 staff members in the spring of 1976 led to the hiring of several new
assistant directors during the rest of the year.
Besides holding frequent meetings
with individual staff members, he instituted weekly staff meetings, weekly
progress reports from staff members, and computer control over correspondence
and the staffing enrolled bills. During
much of 1976, his deputy Art Quern submitted a daily
"Morning Report" detailing upcoming deadlines. These tools allowed Cannon to keep track of
the issues work of his staff.
Cannon or his deputy reviewed all
draft memoranda, correspondence and briefing material
produced by the staff for the President and, after determining that they were
clearly written, presented all options, and were factually accurate,
forwarded them to Richard Cheney's office for eventual presentation to the
President.
Cannon had a busy schedule of
meetings and public appearances, often seeing people that the President could
not accommodate on his schedule. Cannon
also testified before congressional committees, participated in meetings
between the President and groups lobbying for specific policies, and met with
such persons as members of Congress, Cabinet secretaries, businessmen, labor
leaders, and other individuals to discuss their views on issues. In addition he regularly attended meetings of
the White House senior staff, a legislative liaison group, and the Economic
Policy Board. During the 1976 election
campaign he participated in meetings of the campaign issues group.
Scope and
Content of the Cannon Files
James Cannon's files cover all of
his activities from March 1975 until January 1977, with a small amount of
earlier material. The collection is
divided into series concerning his issues work, political activities, meetings,
department and agency budget reviews, and the administration of the Domestic
Council.
In general Cannon's Issue File and
the material on issues in the Meetings File are useful as an overview of the
handling of each domestic issue by the Domestic Council staff. The files of individual staff members, however,
contain much more detailed information on each issue.
Cannon's Meetings File is weakened
by the lack of documentation on many meetings.
Folders on meetings in which the President participated often contain
briefing papers, correspondence, memoranda and Cannon's notes on the
meeting. A problem is that these notes
are usually sketchy and Cannon's handwriting is hard to decipher. For meetings not attended by the President
there are few briefing papers, but some correspondence and memoranda. for meetings held
within the White House on a regular basis (such as senior staff meetings or
Domestic Council staff meetings) documentation is negligible. A few notes written by Cannon, often on the
folder itself, may be the entire record of a meeting. Many folders were empty when received by the
Ford Library. This does not necessarily
mean the files were weeded. The folders
may have been created routinely on the basis of Cannon's schedule, available
background material added, and given to Cannon for any note taking or
reference.
Researchers interested in the 1976
election campaign may find little of interest in Cannon's small Political
File. While Cannon was involved in the
campaign, he did not hold a key position and his files contain only scattered
items of interest.
In addition to the material on
domestic issues the greatest strength of the Cannon files lies in documenting
the organization and management of the Domestic Council. The Administrative File contains weekly staff
reports, Art Quern's "Morning Reports", and staff memoranda which record
the activities of the staff. Also
included are memoranda and scattered reports, clippings, and publications
concerning such topics as Cannon's reorganization of the staff in 1975, the
work of the Domestic Council Review Group for Federal Social Programs, and the
budget and operation of the Domestic Council.
The Cannon files, especially his
Administrative File, contain significant materials relating to Vice President
Nelson Rockefeller and his staff. As the
highest ranking former Rockefeller aide on President Ford's staff, Cannon was
the chief White House contact for many of his former colleagues. Since the Vice President had oversight over
the work of the Domestic Council for most of 1975, Cannon worked closely with
the Vice Presidential staff, especially John Veneman.
While this Rockefeller material
dates from Cannon's entire service with the Ford administration, much of it is
from the first half of 1975. Included
are memoranda, vice presidential schedules, and briefing materials concerning Cannon's
service on the Vice Presidential staff in early 1975, his transition to the
Domestic Council and the first few months of work in his new position. Among the materials pre‑dating Cannon's
service with the Domestic Council are a briefing book on the Council prepared
for Vice President Rockefeller in January 1975 and memoranda concerning the
initiation of a study of national domestic needs.
Related
Materials (March 1995):
A key related collection is the
personal papers donated to the Library by Mr. Cannon. Other related materials include all Domestic
Council staff files, especially those concerning specifically the
administration of the Council - the files of Kenneth Cole, James H. Cavanaugh,
Arthur F. Quern, Judith Johnston, and the Secretariat.
Although Cannon's files contain
materials on meetings of the Economic Policy Board and other scattered items on
the economy, the Domestic Council did not handle most domestic economic
issues. These are more fully documented
in, for example, the files of L. William Seidman,
Assistant to the President for Economic affairs, and the record of the Council
of Economic Advisors.
Series Descriptions
1‑40 Issues File, 1972-77. (16.0 linear feet)
Memoranda to and from the President, the
Domestic Council staff, and departmental and agency officials; briefing papers;
drafts of Presidential speeches and statements; drafts of legislation; enrolled
bills; meeting notes; press releases; reports; occasional correspondence with
members of Congress, state and local officials and the general public; and
newspaper clippings. This file concerns
legislation drafted by the administration or proposed by members of Congress;
and the work of the Domestic Council in identifying major policy problems,
coordinating the formulation of policy options, initiating factual analyses,
reviewing legislative proposals, and establishing guidelines for implementing
laws. Major topics include: aircraft
noise control, busing, crime, drug abuse, energy, intergovernmental affairs, a nuclear policy statement, the status of
Arranged
alphabetically by subject.
41‑42 Political File, 1975-76. (0.8 linear feet)
Memoranda to and from the President and
members of the White House staff, meeting notes, schedules, occasional
correspondence with the public and Republican officials, press releases, and
newspaper clippings. This series
concerns Republican politics during the Ford administration, especially
President Ford's campaign in 1976.
Included is material on Cannon's activities with the campaign issues
group and the White House coordinators group.
Arranged
alphabetically by subject.
43‑63 Meetings File, 1975-77. (8.4 linear feet)
Memoranda to and
from the President, the White House staff, and the Domestic Council staff;
briefing papers; meeting notes; agenda; and resumes. This series concerns Cannon's meetings with
his staff, the President, Cabinet members, members of Congress, businessmen,
labor leaders, lobbyists, persons seeking jobs with the Domestic council and
others. The meetings held most
frequently include those of the Domestic Council staff, the White House senior
staff, a legislative liaison group, and the Economic Policy Board. While many folders in this series contain
little material or were received empty, those concerning the Economic Policy
Board generally contain minutes of meetings and copies of policy papers
discussed at the meetings. Researchers
should consult the Issues File for related material.
Arranged
chronologically by the date of the meeting, with a separate folder on each
meeting.
64‑66 Budget File, 1975-76. (1.2 linear feet)
Budget related memoranda to and from the
President, Domestic Council staff, and officials of the departments and
agencies; press releases; and especially agency and department budget
requests. The latter were widely
distributed documents which indicated program statements, with both agency and
OMB funding recommendations and the previous year's funding level. This material was apparently sent to Cannon
for a review by his staff. There are few
annotations, and this may be Cannon's reference set.
Arranged by fiscal year and thereunder alphabetically by type of review (i.e.
Presidential review, Director review, etc.) and then
alphabetically by the name of the department or agency.
67‑89 Administrative File, 1969-76. (9.2 linear feet)
Memoranda to and from government officials and
others; briefing papers; briefing books; and weekly reports of Domestic Council
staff members. This series concerns
Cannon's administrative activities; the budget, organization and operation of
the Domestic Council; a chronological compilation of issues briefing books for
the President; a chronological compilation of memoranda and briefing materials
supplied to the President by the Domestic Council; and some Presidential
trips. Many sequences of material in
this file are incomplete. This series
was formed by combining some files received from Cannon with files received
from Pat McKee, his administrative assistant.
Arranged
alphabetically by subject and thereunder
chronologically.
Container List
Abortion (1)‑(2)
Abortion ‑
Meeting with Catholic Bishops, September 9, 1976
Agriculture (1)‑(3)
Air Quality (1)‑(2)
Air Quality ‑
Meeting with Humphreys, Quern, and Schleede, April 8,
1976
Air Quality ‑ Meeting with
the President and Republican Members of the Senate Public Works Committee, June
8, 1976
Aircraft Noise (1)‑(5)
Aircraft Noise
(6)‑(17)
Aircraft Noise
(18)‑(19)
Aircraft Noise
‑ Meeting with Secretary Coleman, Jim
Lynn and Judy Hope, July 19, 1976
‑ Meeting with the President and
Secretary Coleman, September 6, 1976
‑
Meeting with the President, Vice President, and Secretary Coleman, September 9,
1976
‑ Meeting with the President and
Secretary Coleman, September 11, 1976
‑ Meeting with the President and
Secretary Coleman, September 18, 1976
‑ Meeting with the President, October
19, 1976
Airline
Regulatory Reform
Amnesty
Antitrust
Appalachian
Regional Commission
Auto Emissions
(1)
Auto Emissions
(2)‑(8)
Automobiles
Aviation (1)‑(2)
Beverage
Containers
Bicentennial (1)‑(3)
Bicentennial (4)‑(8)
Block Grants
Busing (1)‑(9)
Busing (10)‑(14)
Busing
‑ Background Book (1)‑(4)
‑ Pontiac (Michigan) Poll
‑ Presidential Meetings (1)
Busing
‑ Presidential Meetings (2)‑(4)
‑ Presidential Statements (1)‑(4)
Cable Television
Census (1980)
Child Nutrition
Citizen's Band
Radio
Coal Leasing
Commerce (1)‑(2)
Commerce
‑ Meeting on Questionable Corporate
Payments Abroad, March 16, 1976
Commerce
‑
Meeting on Questionable Corporate Payments Abroad, June 10, 1976
Common Situs
Picketing
Common Situs
Picketing ‑ Meeting with the President, December 18, 1975
Communications (1)‑(2)
Communications ‑ Meeting with
Charlie Walker, William Ellinghaus, and Paul Hensen,
Community Development (1)‑(3)
Community Development ‑
Meeting with the President and Secretary Hills, February 10, 1976
Consumers (1)‑(3)
Consumers (4)‑(7)
Crime (1)‑(5)
Crime ‑
Meeting with Senator Hruska and Max Friedersdorf, July 14, 1975
Crime ‑
Meeting with the President and D.C. Chief of Police, July 13, 1976
Crime Message (1)‑(2)
Crime Message (3)‑(5)
Culture
Day Care
Defense
Disasters
Disasters ‑
Teton Dam
Drug Abuse (1)‑(4)
Drug Abuse (5)‑(8)
Drug Abuse
‑ Meeting with the President, March
4, 1976
‑ Meeting with Dick Parsons and Ed
Johnson, March 31, 1976
‑ Meeting with the President,
‑ Meeting with Dick Parsons and Peter
Bensinger, July 22, 1976
‑ Trip to El Paso and San Diego, February
4‑8, 1976
- Trip to Miami, March 8, 1976
Earthquakes
Earthquakes ‑
Meeting with Schleede, Barnes, Moore, and Kidd,
August 4, 1976
Economic Policy
Board (1)‑(4)
Economy (1)
Economy (2)‑(4)
Economy ‑
Meeting on New Spending Moratorium, March 14, 1975
Economy ‑
Meeting on Economic and Energy Matters, March 28, 1975
Education (1)‑(6)
Energy (1)‑(3)
Energy (4)‑(8)
Energy
‑ Meeting with the President, March
25, 1976
‑ Meeting of the Energy Resources Council,
May 18, 1976
‑ Meeting with George Humphreys and
Glenn Schleede, August 12, 1976
‑ Meeting on reorganization of energy
activities, November 22, 1976
‑ Meeting with the President and
Frank Zarb, January 4, 1977
Energy
Environment (1)‑(10)
Environment ‑ Meeting with
Warren Rogers, John Muensh, and Joseph McGrath, March
2, 1976
Expo '81
Federal Energy
Administration
Federal Energy
Administration
‑ Meeting with Frank Zarb and Max Friedersdorf, June
1976
‑ Meeting with Frank Zarb, July 14, 1976
Federal Energy
Administration
‑ Meeting of the Energy Resources
Council, September 2, 1976
Food Stamps (1)‑(9)
Foreign Policy
(Murphy Commission)
Forest Practices
(Monongahela Bill)
Grain Exports
Grazing Fees
Handicapped
Hatch Act
Health (1)‑(10)
Health (11)
Health Insurance
‑ Catastrophic
Highways (1)‑(3)
Home Ownership
(1)‑(2)
Home Ownership
‑ Meeting with Secretary Hills,
September 9, 1976
‑ Meeting with the President,
September 11, 1976
Housing (1)‑(5)
Housing (6)‑(7)
Hudson River
Tolls
Illegal Aliens
(1)‑(3)
Indian Affairs
Intergovernmental
Affairs (1)‑(7)
Intergovernmental
Affairs (8)‑(9)
Intergovernmental
Affairs
‑
Meeting of the Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, September
1975 (1)‑(3)
‑ Meeting of the National Governors
Conference, February 23, 1976
‑ Meeting with Peter Schabarum, March 11, 1976
‑ Meeting with the President and
Governor Evans, July 2, 1976
‑ Meeting of the Advisory Commission
on Intergovernmental Relations ‑ 1976
‑ Meeting of the National League of
Cities, November ‑ December 1976
Interior (1)‑(2)
Justice (1)‑(6)
La Guardia Airport
Bombing
Labor (1)‑(6)
Labor (7)‑(9)
Land Use
Land Use ‑
Meeting with the President, March 14, 1975
Long Island
Beach Cleanup
Mass Transit (1)‑(3)
Mass Transit
‑ Labor Protective Agreements (1)‑(2)
Mass Transit
‑ Labor Protective Agreements (3)‑(6)
‑
Labor Protective Agreements: Meeting with the President, Secretary Coleman and
Secretary Usery,
Medicare
Medicare
Administration Report (1)‑(2)
Minimum Wage
Minorities
National
Security
Natural Gas
Natural Gas
Shortage Report
New River