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Spiro Theodore Agnew (November 9, 1918 - September 17, 1996) was the 39th Vice President of the United States, serving from 1969 to 1973 under President Richard M. Nixon. He studied chemistry at Johns Hopkins University and earned a law degree from the University of Baltimore.
He was elected chief executive of Baltimore County in 1962 as a reformer and Republican outsider in a predominantly Democratic county. Democrats also helped elect him governor of Maryland in 1966 when the Democratic primary selected an opponent of integration as that Party's candidate. As governor, he backed tax and judicial reforms and projected an image of racial moderation during the riots that followed the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. His moderate image, immigrant background and successful political career in a traditionally Democratic state made him an attractive running mate for Nixon in 1968.
In 1973, he became the second person to resign the vice presidency. Unlike John C. Calhoun, who resigned to take a seat in the Senate, Agnew resigned on October 10, 1973, while under investigation for accepting $29,500 in bribes during his tenure as governor of Maryland in 1967: the payments were kickbacks in return for government contracts. Before resigning, Agnew had insisted he was innocent, but then pleaded nolo contendere (no contest) to a single charge of failing to report income. He was fined $10,000 and put on three years' probation.
Agnew became a lightning rod for public opinion when he publicly and angrily denounced critics of US war policy in Vietnam. Mr. Agnew was known for attacking his opponents with unusual turns of phrase.
Among his most famous were "nattering nabobs of negativism", which Agnew speechwriter William Safire claims to have written, and "effete corps of impudent snobs". Both expressions refer to the press corps, which both Agnew and Nixon considered to be their ideological enemies and which ultimately played a role in Nixon's downfall.
Agnew is also generally credited with the term "radiclib", an abbreviation of "radical liberal". This term notably surfaced in the Watergate scandal, in White House Chief of Staff H. R. Haldeman's September 12, 1970 notes on a plot by Nixon to create "a front that sounds like Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) to support the Democratic candidates and praise their liberal records, etc., publicize their 'bad' quotes in guise of praise. Give the senators a 'radiclib' rating."
Patrick Buchanan, Safire and Agnew's other speechwriters ultimately did him no favors, however, by putting these words in his mouth: phrases such as "pusillanimous pussyfooting" and "hopeless, hysterical hypochodriacs of history" made him sound like one of those bombastic Southern politicians caricatured in L'il Abner or Pogo. Agnew toned down his rhetoric and dropped most of the alliterations after the 1972 mid-term elections.
Agnew was replaced as Vice President by Gerald R. Ford.