Lisa McCubbin the author of an acclaimed new biography of Mrs. Betty Ford, in conversation with Michael Ford, son of President Ford and Mrs. Ford.
Transcript:
I'm Michael Barr I'm the Joan and
Sanford Weill Dean of the Gerald r Ford
School of Public Policy and it's my
distinct pleasure and honor to welcome
you here today for this wonderful
discussion I'm delighted to see so many
Michigan alumni and friends in the
audience happy homecoming I'm sorry that
the weather is looking a little bit iffy
now and for tomorrow but it is still
fallen Ann Arbor and the home team is
favored to win by two touchdowns we'll
see how that goes but the University of
Michigan established the forerunner of
the school that were in today in 1914
so more than a hundred years ago in the
Progressive Era and it was the first of
its kind in the country
and has really been a model ever since
as you know Gerald Ford captain the
Michigan football team here in the 1930s
went on to raise a family of four with
mrs. Betty Ford and to spent his life in
principled public service in Congress
and eventually in the White House when
Michigan named our public policy school
for President Ford in 1999 so nearly 20
years ago the pride floats strongly in
both directions between the University
and the Ford family the family as we
visited here many times and students and
faculty here have come to talk it often
about what we call the Ford legacy that
is leadership grounded in service a
commitment to hard work and getting the
facts right and having the courage and
wisdom as leaders to do what is right no
matter what the personal cost we're
gathered here in one of our larger
spaces for classes and events the Betty
Ford classroom aptly named known
informally and with affection by our
students simply as the Betty
I hope you got a chance to see of the
won some of the wonderful photos of mrs.
Ford in the vestibule they capture at
least some part of the strength and joy
and love with which she lived her life
I'm honored to introduce today's
featured guests here to tell us more
about mrs. Ford's life and legacy I
start with a host for our conversation
mr. Mike Ford Mike is the eldest son of
former President Gerald R and Betty Ford
Mike and his wife Gail have three
daughters and eight grandchildren he
currently chairs the Gerald R Ford
Presidential Foundation is served on the
Ford schools visiting committee for many
many years Mike has a BA from Wake
Forest and a master's in divinity and
for the last 36 years he has built a
long and successful career in student
affairs serving in multiple leadership
roles at Wake Forest as he retired
earlier this year Wake Forest presented
Mike with a medallion of Merit Award in
honor of his many years of service to
the school and its students commenting
on that award one of Mike's colleagues
University chaplain Tim Allman said of
Mike he models for students quote what
it means to be a person of integrity to
be a truth teller to be a person who
values service Mike thank you for your
friendship to the Ford school and of
course for being with us here today and
now our special guests the highly
successful award-winning journalist Lisa
McCubbin MS McCubbin has been a
television news anchor and reporter
hosted her own radio show and spent six
years in the Middle East as a freelance
writer she's written and co-written a
number of books that have topped the New
York Times bestseller list including the
Kennedy detail mrs. Kennedy and me five
days in November and five presidents her
latest book released just two weeks ago
is titled Betty Ford first lady woman
advocate survivor trailblazer it's the
first in-depth biography of Betty Ford
reviewers have called the book quote a
meticulously researched and delightful
biography and quote a warmly sympathetic
biography of a
woman Ms McCubbin were so honored to
have you here to share with us what
you've learned about the woman who is in
a very real way a guiding light for the
entire Ford school and the University of
Michigan community and so with that
please join me in thanking our special
guests I'm gonna now turn it over to
Mike to run the show thank you Michael
indeed it is a great pleasure to to be
back at the University of Michigan and
at the Ford school this is this place is
a very special kind of home for our
family our extended family and we love
coming back here too for me to see
college campus students you know is in
my DNA I you know in my career at in
higher education I I love to be around
college students and faculty and and and
here at Michigan the ways in which this
university in the school is impacted our
our family is very very meaningful but
last spring we had this very special
event hosted by the Ford school to honor
my mother Betty Ford on her 100-year
anniversary it was in April and the
school just rolled out this wonderful
recognition of her life and in this
space and and it was very very special
and now we're continuing the discussion
here with Lisa's biography on my mother
and it's only appropriate that we're
back again in my mother's 100th year on
this wonderful book that Lisa's written
and
we're thrilled to have it out and Lisa
is going to share a little more about my
mom's life and we're gonna have a little
discussion so take it away
okay so in writing this book I have to
tell a quick little story because when I
was first approached with the idea to
write a biography of Betty Ford I didn't
really know that much about her to be
honest and so I knew I would devote two
years of my life to this project and I
had to be passionate about it so I told
my editor I said I need to just think
about I need to research this a little
bit and I went for a long walk I live in
the San Francisco Bay Area and on this
walk where I just been approached with
this idea I kid you not I saw four
people wearing University of Michigan
sweater and I took that as a sign it
became the first of many signs and I'm
so glad I did so I'm gonna start off
with a little bit about Betty's early
life she was born Elizabeth and bloomer
April 8 1918 she was born in Chicago and
then the family moved to Denver and then
she had two older brothers bill and Bob
and the family moved to Grand Rapids
Michigan
and when Betty was about three years old
into this house at 7:17 fountain Street
and this is where Betty said her
memories began she her her mother was
named Hortense her father was William s
bloomer and he was a traveling salesman
and he wasn't uh he wasn't home a lot
but every time he came home he would
bring Betty a stuffed animal so this is
a picture of her with one of her
favorite animals and the family had a
summer cottage at Whitefish Lake that
they would go to and spend most of the
summers and when Betty was little she
would wander around from table to table
little picnic tables everywhere and the
people thought she was so cute and she
had this bubbly personality and they'd
give her a cookie and a brownie and she
started getting chubby so her mother one
day put a sign around her neck that said
please do not feed this child
so betty was kind of a tomboy having two
older brothers and she was very athletic
her mother wanted to instill some
femininity into her so she enrolled her
in dance class when she was eight years
old the Calla travis school of dancing
in Grand Rapids and from the moment she
started Betty said dance was her
happiness she wanted to take every kind
of dance there was she started with
ballroom dancing and then went on to
ballet and tap and modern dance and she
fell in love with modern dance and ended
up going to the Bennington College
School of Dance at a summer program in
Stowe Vermont and studying under Martha
Graham who was the grande Tom of modern
dance when Betty was 20 she went to New
York and actually danced in Martha
Graham's troupe she didn't make the the
a team so to speak because Betty liked
to socialize see everybody I interviewed
and like I'm sure you can attest to this
Betty
liked to have a good time she always had
a lot of boys wanting to go on dates
with her and she just enjoyed that and
Martha Graham said to her betty you if
you really want to be a number one
dancer you're gonna have to give up your
social life
well Betty loved dance but she wasn't
willing to give her whole life to that
so she ended up going back to Grand
Rapids teaching dance and she also to
earn a living she worked at her pool
chimers department store she was a
fashion coordinator there and she loved
fashion she was beautiful she was a
model for her pool shimmers and that's
how she earned her living so she also
when she went back to Grand Rapids met a
boy she ended up marrying his name was
Bill Warren and
and I think this was something that I
don't know did you even know about this
growing up that your mother had been
married before we we did know about it
but they didn't talk it's about that
yeah the five year five year
misunderstanding so yeah a lot of people
didn't know that so it turned out that
so so Betty's father had been a
traveling salesman and when she was 16
she came home one day and found that he
had taken his own life during the Great
Depression he had lost his job she also
found out at his funeral that he had
been an alcoholic she didn't know that
because he traveled all the time it
turned out that she married a man bill
Warren who was just like her father so
she decided to divorce him which in the
knew that she couldn't live the rest of
her life like this so she divorced him
and she swore that she was never going
to get married again she's going to be
an independent woman
and that's when Jerry Ford showed up and
he swept her off her feet and he
proposed very quickly but it when he
asked her to marry him she said yes
and he said we can't get married right
away because there's something I have to
do but I can't tell you what it is
well she trusted him so much and she
said that's fine whatever Jerry wants to
do and she would come to find out that
the thing he was going to do was he was
going to run for Congress now she didn't
know what running for Congress meant but
she thought if Jerry Ford wanted to do
it that was just fine and then what she
learned a little bit more she thought
we'll only old men with white hair go to
Congress so Jerry's not going to end up
going to Congress well sure enough he he
was running and they they decided to get
married but he the reason he didn't want
to get married too soon was he was
afraid that because Betty had been too
forced before that could hurt his
chances for election this was in the 40s
so they did end up getting married on
October 15 and there's a reason for that
date right Mike yeah so October 15th
it's a Friday and you know had to get
married on a Friday because Michigan was
playing on Saturday
that was her honeymoon she they were
married in Grace Church in Grand Rapids
and had a big party and they jumped in
the car and drove Ann Arbor for the big
game and that's how their life started
yeah so she knew right away what she was
getting into right there was a lot of
football in that house then was three
boys to follow so she thought she was
marrying a lawyer from Grand Rapids well
now all of a sudden she's married to a
congressman and they moved to Washington
DC and and Mike well Mike came along
soon thereafter and growing up you would
often go to down to Congress take
through the Capitol with your dad and
that was kind of like your playground
right so my father was all in with his
career in the house and and mom had the
four children to try to manage and keep
up with and she was doing a wonderful
job with that but on Saturdays my dad
went to the office but he always brought
the boys down you know the three three
three boys to give mom a break and this
was a ritual where he you take us to his
office he maybe got a haircut he throw
us in front of a desk and I said
computer it was and he said not you all
of you this is how you type so we start
learning out
Peck but he says you need to write your
mother a letter and tell her how much
you love her
and how special she is and so he he
would often did his work and we were
typing those letters and and then we'd
finished that and then we'd run around
the halls of the Capitol and we you know
get lost and we literally got lost in
the halls and we have to ask the
policeman you know where where's Jerry
Ford's office so we could get us back
but we go home and we have our letters
and we give them to my mom
and she opened each one and and it was
like the first time she'd ever read that
and we probably did it you know 30 times
that's wonderful so that was their way
of sharing the parenting and for us to
you know kind of express our love to mom
going out and got your dad some good
brownie points with your mom because he
was gone a lot and your mother really
was the the one that was caring for all
four of you kids as you grew up
and what so what kind of mother was she
well she was very much a managed
managing you know chief managing officer
or whatever of the house she kept the
calendar she all the doctor's
appointments and the you know athletic
events and she was Cub Scout den mother
sunday-school teacher and she was always
kind of moving us from place to place
you know as you know any dutiful loving
mother would because my my dad was away
a lot when he was there he was all there
it was fully you know engaged Sundays
were sacred for us as a family
but mom was really going hard charging
and very much a manager of our lives
yeah
and in her own memoir she said she spent
a lot of time in the emergency room yeah
with you boys particularly which what is
it this time so yeah a very athletic
family so yes so that was Betty's life
and she was very involved as a
congressman's wife as well she when they
were first married she would go in and
sit and watch what was going on because
she wanted to learn what her husband's
job was about so that when he came home
in the evenings she could talk to him
intelligently about what he was doing
and so she really took an interest in
politics and and all of that so as the
kids grew so there were four children
eventually Mike Jack Steve and Susan and
Betty started to feel at one point that
you know there was just a lot going on
and like many mothers then and now what
about me you know she had been a career
woman and now she's giving giving giving
to her family and she had she had an
incident in which she was reaching
across the kitchen sink to open a window
probably to yell at one of the boys in
the backyard and she woke up the next
day in excruciating pain ended up in the
hospital right pinched nerve a pinched
nerve and the doctors prescribed pain
medication very strong pain medication
and when she got out of the hospital she
was concerned that this might act up
again so she asked the doctor what do I
do if it acts up again and he said well
don't let that happen take your
medication every four hours and that's
what she did and and she also went to
see a psychiatrist for depression which
he was very open about and the
psychiatrist prescribed Valium
so and none of the doctors mentioned
that you know maybe having that vodka
tonic at six o'clock with your husband
while you're taking all these
medications is not a good idea nobody
ever said that and it wasn't known
really back then so this this kind of
started this is just to let you see and
how things developed but you know as the
fate you this was this was just your
normal family and you really didn't see
anything no it was your mother it wasn't
something that we observed I mean
everybody you know our lives were fairly
crazy and you know was for children and
so it was sometimes survival just to get
through all that but we didn't really
see any effect on her functioning at
that time right and I don't know many of
you if you're from Michigan you might
notice where this picture is boy
mountain window was a favorite skiing
spot for you alright was so as Lisa said
my father and mother were vote both very
athletic
you know big football player from the
University of Michigan mom was a you
know a major professional dancer and so
they they kind of came to skiing you
know later you know as they were adults
partly because of the attraction to
winter sports but also it was a social
thing for them
it took kind of some of their former
boyfriends and girlfriends were skiers
so that got him
anyway they kept us engaged as kids and
we'd go up to boy Mountain over between
Christmas and New Year's and they'd
throw us into the ski school in the
morning so they could go ski and then in
the afternoons we would all ski together
as a family and it was it was a
wonderful time at born mountain until
one winter the snow wasn't too good in
Michigan so friends of mom and dad's
said well you know if you've been out
too
and so we took this trip to Vail
Colorado when it was nothing it was yeah
you know one hotel and and the mountains
were a lot better and the snow was a lot
more plentiful and you know God bless
born mountain we never once you went to
Vail Valley
they´ll became their second home really
they bought a condominium there and they
would spend summers and Christmas there
so and as you got older your parents
really wanted you kids to be involved
with politics and current events right I
mean you had family discussions about
what was going on yeah so in the living
room but also actually more around our
dinner table we when dad would come in
he'd always have his evening swim if you
knew again that was his therapy we did
build a swimming pool in our little
little backyard and he would kind of
cleanse himself from you know work and
on the hill and then come into the we'd
have dinner and around the table he
would we talk about these different
issues in society I remember many heated
discussions around the civil rights
movement around Vietnam just our role as
a nation in Vietnam and that transition
and just many other things and that was
I think a place where they first
instilled in us this sense of civic duty
and responsibility and curiosity so yeah
that was a that was a those are special
times and it's been passed on hopefully
to all of our children yeah and so
during this time your father is rising
through the ranks in Congress and he
becomes minority leader and in nineteen
getting tired of you know this whole
Washington life she had comfort ooh she
thought it was a two-year term you know
and you know 20 years go by and he
promised Betty that he was going to run
one more time in 1974 and then he would
announce his retirement in 1975 and
Betty knew that Gerry's word was good as
gold so he's gonna go back to practicing
law and you come back to Grand Rapids
and kind of spend more time you know in
Michigan but there was a different story
there yeah so so in 1968 Richard Nixon
and Spiro Agnew are elected and then
overwhelmingly again in 1972 and history
intervenes when vice president Agnew
resigns and all of a sudden Nixon has to
nominate a vice president now did you
you knew your dad was on the shortlist
there was a list of about 10 names that
were circling around and you were away
at college at this point at graduate
school yeah okay so did you really think
your father was going to be named his
vice president not at all I was not on
did not think it was gonna happen my
mother did not either she she was not
feeling like that was in the in the
future there if you remember back then
the name that was being circulated it
was John Conway from Texas he was you
know everyone saying he's going to be
the new vice president and lo and behold
Richard Nixon pivots and he chooses
Gerald Ford from Michigan and it rocked
our world so yes so all of a sudden and
you know that there's we go into depth
in the book about this about how this
all happened and the phone call and
everything and you know Betty is just
overwhelmed because she really didn't
expect this and then in December of 1974
am I getting my ears right 73 okay seven
it right 73 he
is confirmed as vice-president and what
does he do he plants a big kiss on Betty
right afterwards and you could see the
Speaker of the House looking like you
know but there are so many pictures of
Jerry and Betty in these wonderful
embraces and they really had a wonderful
love story but when this happened
your dad apparently said to your mother
don't worry Betty vice presidents don't
do anything anyway
unless the president resigned so now
where were you when you found out your
dad was going to become president right
so this was in August
you know 74 Gail and I my wife had just
married July 5th you know a month
earlier now this backstory on that was
we were supposed to be married in August
okay and it was you know something
everyone the family was excited about
and you know she you know mom and dad
were wanting to make it right and not
you know make it too public
so they actually came to us not knowing
what was going to happen because you
know the things with Watergate were were
just unfolding each day was a different
revelation and so they actually
suggested that we move our wedding up to
July just to be same so we did July 5th
we are going back to graduate school she
was at Boston University I was at
gordon-conwell Theological Seminary and
and driving up to you know we actually
spoke to mom and dad said you know hey
we got any started school what do you
think should we stick around
no go so we're driving up this was in
the day when there was no cell phones
and so we are on the road with our you
you know u-haul and we get up there
literally get up there they've been
looking for us because we get up there
and there
is the press corps at our house our
little apartment there's our friends
waiting for us and then we find out I
mean literally find out that Nixon had
resigned was going to resign and that
was going to change everything so we had
to jump on a plane the next day to come
to Washington for the swearing-in of my
father that was a big summer for the
Ford family dad becomes president so
yeah so this is August 9th 1974 and your
mother said in her memoir that this was
the saddest day of her life
why do you think that is why did she say
I remember her saying that I think for
two reasons at one level she was very
sad as many of us were to see a sitting
president Richard Nixon have to resign
from office this was a dark day for our
nation for many reasons and that has
never happened before and I think at the
other level for my mother you know she
was looking forward to dad retired you
know he had promised and you know she
could kind of see you know a quieter you
know more you know any more intimate
life and and she felt like this was you
know just ramping it up to another life
now the good news is that she came to
realize that as first lady she was only
a little few hundred yards from his
office so it was really wonderful to
have him so close by and so she actually
saw him and he spent more time together
in the White House then when he was
moving around traveling speaking in
Congress and so yeah so that day
actually you know it had to have been
over
well mning and right little different
them yeah right after that after after
the swearing in there you go you go into
the Oval Office and have this family
portrait taken and then your dad goes to
work his first day of work and the
family goes back to their house in
Alexandria because the Nixons had left
so suddenly there was no inauguration
there were no inaugural balls the White
House wasn't ready for you to move into
so the family goes back to the house
while President Ford now has his first
day in office you're having a little
party there with the neighbors it's not
every day your dad becomes president so
and then your dad comes in later that
evening and you're Betty was pulling a
lasagna out of the oven and do you
remember what she and says you know your
President of the United States and I'm
working in the kitchen something's wrong
with this picture there's something
wrong here I'm still cooking so I don't
think she really cooked much after that
did she so so they actually lived at
their house at 5:14 crown View Drive in
Alexandria for the first 10 days of
Gerald Ford's presidency which I found
astonishing and you at UF presumably
went back to yeah went back to you know
our graduate school and we're coming to
visit often yeah
so then seven weeks later you get
another sort of devastating really
devastating piece of news my mother had
her annual checkup with her doctor and
they discovered she had a lump in her
breast so this was a shocker that she
was you know breast cancer and that they
needed to do some you know immediate
treatment and you know back then that
was you know kind of the early stage
of breasts you know cancer detection and
treatment
I remember dad calling we were up in in
Massachusetts and I never heard him I
guess there were two times when I heard
him emotional one when his mother
Dorothy Ford died and the other time was
when mom had this breast cancer and he
told us and that she was going for
treatment maybe surgery and and the one
thing I also remember is and I'm not
sure of this in the book but he wrote
mom this beautiful love letter before
she went into surgery and it's really
precious yeah you know regardless of
what happens you know you're my soul
mate and the way things were back then I
mean this is 1974 75 74 I'm getting my
dates all mixed up now 74 and you
couldn't say breast on television when
people had cancer it was whispered about
it was not something you talked publicly
about and when Betty went in she would
go under general anesthesia and they
would were going to do a biopsy and if
it was malignant while she was under
general anesthesia they would remove her
breast
so she went into the hospital a not
knowing if she had cancer and B not
knowing if she would wake up with her
breasts removed so you know just
completely different than the way it's
done now and and she was adamant to go
public with this with this very personal
decision because she felt that other
women were going through the same thing
and they were terrified too and that was
very oh yeah I spoke to who she was as
being you know very you know forthright
open and and also wanting to help others
who were facing similar crisis in their
life yeah and so she when she came out
with this
women's healthcare literally changed
overnight because women started lining
up at doctors offices calling their
doctors to get breast exams there were
pictures in the newspaper of how to do
self exams and all of a sudden research
and funding started and that became a
lifelong commitment of Betty's so she
realized at this point now she's first
lady she can make a difference and one
of the things she started talking about
was the Equal Rights Amendment so yeah
so mom was you know very outspoken about
the role of women in society and she now
I had a platform I guess as the first
lady and you know this is when the
feminist movement was just beginning and
and you know she would not maybe think
of herself as a radical feminist but she
was a strong feminist and and pretty
radical for her day to go and champion
you know equal rights for women equal
pay for equal work equal education
Social Security everything which would
be hopefully captured through an Equal
Rights Amendment so she was campaigning
for that publicly much to the concern of
not so much my dad but all of my dad's
staff they thought she was a little too
vocal about this and you know the
pushback and the public opinion wasn't
wasn't going to be that great and so she
said what she well Dick Cheney and Don
Rumsfeld went to President Ford and said
could you ask Betty to tone it down and
your dad said to them if you want her to
tone it down you go tell
and neither one of them did and they
confirmed that story with me last year
when I saw them so a year after your
your mom became first lady she agreed to
go on 60 minutes and I'm gonna play you
a little clip of this it really brings
her to life and you'll see this spunky
lady unafraid to answer all these
questions
this is 1975 yes I told my husband we
have to be honest exactly how you feel
and I feel very strongly that it was the
thing in the world when the Supreme
Court voted to legalize abortion and in
my words bring it out of the backwoods
and put it in the hospitals where it
belong I thought it was a great great
decision we've also talked about young
people living
well human being like all the young
girls if you wanted to continue in I
would certainly counsel on advise her on
subject and I want to know pretty much
about the young man that she was
planning to get here was it was a pretty
young to start affairs Betty bloomer
would have been the kind of girl who at
least experimented with marijuana oh I'm
sure I probably when I was growing up at
their age I probably would have any
interested to see what the effect I
never would have gone into it as a habit
or anything like that it's the type of
thing that young people have to
experience like your first beer or your
first cigarette something like that
I think everyone be fascinated know what
is the issue that you were you said
chatter pull it down and say listen I
want you to listen what a lot of it had
to do with perhaps putting a woman in
the cabinet and won that one
isn't that crazy
what what are you thinking when you
watch that well she's a woman ahead of
her time that's for sure you know when
we we saw that it did kind of make us a
little nervous because she was talking
about the family maybe a little more two
more little too transparent but then
again it was refreshing it was you know
is the woman that was our mother and we
knew her as someone who spoke her mind
and was you know honest and and really
thinking about you know what is the best
for you know all people so I I'm just
glad she you was able to you know be
outspoken like this yeah yeah and you
know we just loved Betty I'm gonna go
through these next ones a little bit
quickly she brought dancing back to the
White House White House parties were fun
again and Jerry and Betty were always
the last ones to leave the dance floor
and then came the campaign of 1976 and
her she was actually more popular than
your father at in the polls at times and
unfortunately Jerry Ford did not win
that election and he lost his voice at
the end of the campaign and your mother
actually gave the concession speech so I
want to just move forward quickly to
what happened next it's a terrible time
losing you know that election but then
there was your mom and dad stayed in the
White House for a couple more months and
the last day her last full day in the
White House she's do you want to tell
the story still a story the photo is out
here in the hallway to what probably my
favorite photo of my mother you know
in his first lady so this is the Cabinet
Room in the West Wing
very sacred you know serious you know
you know presidential space and she was
with David Kenner Lee who was the White
House photographer and they were kind of
finishing up you know the last day of
occupancy in the White House and walked
by there and she said to David you know
I've always wanted to get on top of that
table and David you've got to know David
David is a prankster himself he said I
miss this Ford please do go ahead go for
it and so she took off her shoes and she
went up and gave a dancers pose on the
cabinet table and that was her final
farewell to the White House and then she
did this and that ended up being the
cover of the Betty Ford book so we want
to make time for some questions from the
audience so you know the the book
chronicles Betty's whole life and
obviously a big part of her life was
what happened the following year and the
family had a very painful intervention
and we describe that in the book and is
it accurate as you remember it and yeah
it's very well accounted for in the in
the book it was a very difficult painful
time for our family as would for any
family facing an intervention for loved
one we we were somewhat you know in the
dark about how serious my mom's illness
was with alcohol and drug addiction my
sister was you know with out there in
California and saw the changes in my
mother and the deterioration and the
rest of the boys we were spread out but
fortunately with some medical help Susan
and
had you know conferred and and really
talked through what can we do to
basically save her life and so they
proposed this intervention by the family
and so we got the call and you know we
were like this is terrible and can we do
this but we jumped on the plane all of
us converged in Palm Springs we had a
time to talk through mom's illness with
medical professionals and we talked
about it and prayed about it as a family
and then we got some coaching on what an
intervention does and in April 1st 1978
it they were she was surprised to see
Gail and I because we were you know in
Pittsburgh at that time and we all came
in and had this this very serious
encounter but loving encounter and
basically the message was you know mom
we love you who love you dearly this is
not your problem
this is our problem and we will together
as a family
get through this and she finally
released her defenses and accepted that
and went into detox and from there and
the rest is kind of history she she
turned that around just like breast
cancer and in 1982 she co-founded the
Betty Ford Center with Leonard Firestone
and the Betty Ford Center has since
served over a hundred thousand patients
saved countless lives and the the book
also is a love story of your parents and
it's I hope you'll all get the book and
and learn so much more about Betty Ford
and Mike it's been such a pleasure to
share this with you and the final quote
there
a final final quote well yeah there is
one thank you for reminding good we
talked about yes
your father once said when the final
tally is taken her contribution will be
larger than mine do you agree with that
I understand where my father's coming
from when he says that and I think both
my father my mother and each in their
own way made enormous contributions to
the health and well-being of many people
in our nation and I think for my mother
as Lisa does so well in the book and
when she talks about Betty Ford as a
trailblazer as someone who is an
advocate someone who was a survivor
first lady
it is embodies who she is because she
was a woman ahead of her time who had
tremendous vision and purpose for other
women in particular and their health and
well-being their role in society being
elevated to an equal level and then when
she fought her own demons of alcohol and
drug addiction she came out and said
there are so many other people that need
this help as well let's create this
wonderful facility and be bringing other
people through the treatment and the
recovery like I have and so in many ways
she's lived a significant life and
legacy and their love story I would
simply say they where my mother gave so
much and made so many sacrifices early
in her life as the wife of a congressman
for kids you know just pretty
insignificant
roll at in society and my dad was out
there doing all these great things it
reversed it reversed after they went to
the desert and when my mother came to
realize her illness and go through
recovery the first person that was there
by her side to champion her efforts to
get well to create this beautiful Betty
Ford Center to raise money was my dad
and he was second fiddle she was the
center piece and they shared 58
beautiful years together and impacted
our lives and many others so very
special
so beautiful
so anybody have any questions do we need
microphones yes there's a microphone so
wait till she brings the microphone to
you and take this one right here thank
you
hi Lisa hi Mike thank you for being here
Lisa
knowing what you know about Betty for
today if you could talk to her today
what would you say to her oh gosh
I think Betty and I would be really good
girlfriends I would say thank you first
of all just thank you and I just want to
have fun with her because she just
seemed like such a fun lady Oh
over here let's go over here sure I
always wondered why Betty wore a blue
dress for her wedding maybe it was a
dark blue dress I'm guessing that
because she had been married before that
you never really talked about it but I
think because it was her second marriage
yeah that's why it was and she designed
it as well yes yes here hi Mike this
question is for you how do you think
your mother would react or what would
she say about the me to movement and
those things going on today I you know
was anticipating that she would be a
champion for that movement you know she
I think understands that a woman's voice
in back then in the 70s and even today
in 2018 in terms of their voice in
challenging some of the social
expectations practices of today is not
heard and needs to be expressed and that
there's many victims in society that
have pushed it down
their experiences their you know abuse
or assault and needs to be listened to
and respected and given you know given a
you know some kind of recourse you know
some kind of so I think she would be a
strong advocate for sexual abuse and
assault victims young next any more
questions do we have a microphone over
here this is more of a remembrance one
of my favorite political events I ever
saw on television was when the tribute
was to former President Ford and Tip
O'Neill of course as the Democratic
Speaker of the House and Ford when the
house was was the Minority Leader they
got along so well something is so
lacking today I mean those guys really
hit it off well and they were doing a
tribute now to Betty Ford and part of
this too and somebody was going to sink
to Betty Ford and Tip O'Neill grabbed
that microphone I'm gonna sing to Betty
and he's saying beautifully when Irish
eyes are smiling I know I should have
interviewed you for the book part two
the addendum any other questions I
interviewed over 70 people for this book
people that were colleagues friends and
of course all the family members
yes ma'am this was a lovely lovely
discussion I had a chance to hear Steve
speak in Palm Springs on the week his
dad became president and it was just as
as moving as this was my question is
this is such a phenomenal story both
their lives
are you making a movie from your lips to
God's ears
we'll work on that one yes over here
Mike I'm proud to say I voted for your
dad in 1976 I doubt your father could
get elected sewer commissioner now on
the Republican ticket so what would your
father say about what's happened to the
extreme and elements the repeal of all
parties these days but particularly the
Republican Party okay I thought we were
talking about Betty Ford no I
I would I would feel like my father
would be very sad and disturbed by the
evolution of the Republican Party to a
more extreme right perspective the the
formal party and I think he would be
very concerned just disappointed in just
the the high intense partisanship that
is going on at all levels of governments
and you know it's this gentleman over
here said my father some of you know I
mean this is very very best friends were
on the other side of the aisle and we're
Democrats and and they had tremendous
respect in regard for each other though
they differed on political something
philosophy and in policy they were able
to conduct civil conversations and in
respectful engagement and work out
compromise too so the government was
working you know instead of stalemate
and so I I know he would be very sad to
just kind of see where we are right now
and and hopefully we can you know with
institutions like the Ford School of
Public Policy you know bring change
positive change do that so and more
women
we have a couple questions over here yes
sir
do you have any idea if Betty Ford's
mother had a similar sort of personality
in terms of honesty and directness and
speaking her mind I did get that
impression
her mother died shortly after Jerry was
elected the first time so you never knew
you never knew her but in Betty's own
memoir she talks about her mother and
how what a strong-willed woman she was
and then and after Betty's father died
her mother had to go out and get a job
she worked as a real estate agent so she
had that role model in her life of a
strong woman speaking up for herself and
standing up for herself was there went
over here yeah I just had a question
about the relationship between Gerald
Ford and Jimmy Carter and and and
whether that carried over at all in
terms of a relationship between the two
couples or between the two women Rosalyn
Carter also in her own way having been a
very strong do you wanna talk or do you
want me to talk about that yeah why
don't you start because I was in the
books on yeah so I can add to that yeah
I actually interviewed Rosalyn Carter
for the book down in Georgia and she and
Betty formed this wonderful friendship
and partnership later in in the 80s
because Rosalyn Carter's cause was
mental health issues and as Betty was
you know really championing for more
insurance to cover treatment for alcohol
and drug addiction the two of them got
together and they actually lobbied
Congress together these two former first
ladies whose husbands had you know been
rivals and what an example that set
really was fabulous yeah and yeah we as
you know time passed after the election
of 76 the relationship between my father
and mother
and the Carters really warmed up and and
strengthened this excellent example
around policy of mental health but also
they my father and president former
President Carter also did a number of
speaking in forums together around human
rights if you remember my dad was one of
his major accomplishment was the
Helsinki agreements in in Europe which
really broke open the discussion and the
kind of started that slippery slope of
human rights among communist bloc
nations and Jimmy Carter carried human
rights across the globe and so they
really came together with great respect
and admiration and friendship and even
to the point that and my father's
funeral Jimmy Carter was one of the
eulogist for that so again yeah
bipartisan you know respect that is the
strength of the American democracy so do
we have any more questions okay thank
you
this was really just a very moving and
an insightful and fabulous discussion
between the two of you I'm really
grateful for both of you being willing
to do it here at the Ford school and in
the Betty
we are I'm gonna have a reception after
this everybody's welcome to join for
that Lisa and Michael have a little time
to chat further at the reception if
you'd like a tour of the Ford school we
have Ford school students outside we'll
give you a tour of the Ford school and I
have a wonderful wonderful Homecoming
weekend and go blue and then and the
Betty Ford book is available for the
Betty Ford book is available for sale
and sign it outside please please enjoy