Sure, 2024 has had lots of news — but compared with 1940, 1968 or 1973, it’s nothing exceptional

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What do these years of unprecedented events have in common?

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Richard Nixon in 1973 (Image: AP/Henry Burroughs) Richard Nixon in 1973 (Image: AP/Henry Burroughs)

History usually happens at a leisurely pace, with major events months or even years apart. But this year, it seems like someone has pushed fast-forward, with significant events coming on a weekly or even daily basis. One company is now selling a T-shirt declaring “THIS IS MY LIVING IN UNPRECEDENTED TIMES SHIRT.”

The announcement on July 21, 2024, that Joe Biden would withdraw from the US presidential race was the latest in a dizzying series of major US domestic events in 2024. Here’s a brief list:

April 15: Donald Trump’s New York hush money trial begins.

April and May: Pro-Palestine protests rock campuses around the country, and thousands are arrested.

May 30: Trump is found guilty in New York of 34 felony counts related to hush money payments.

June 27: Biden’s poor debate performance sets off intense speculation about his place on the Democratic ticket.

July 1: A Supreme Court decision in Trump v United States greatly expands presidential immunity from prosecution and raises serious questions about the status of various prosecutions of Trump.

July 13: Trump is injured in an unsuccessful assassination attempt.

July 15: A federal judge throws out the case against Trump for mishandling classified documents.

July 15: Trump picks Ohio Senator JD Vance as his running mate.

July 15: The Republican Convention formally nominates Trump for president, capping a remarkable political comeback.

July 21: Biden announces that he is withdrawing from the presidential race and endorses Vice President Kamala Harris for president.

July 21-22: Harris is quickly endorsed by leading Democrats and seems almost certain to become the first Black woman of South Asian descent to head a major party ticket.

While 2024’s fast pace of events is rare in American history, it’s not unique.

1968: Assassinations, political turmoil, war

Many observers have already compared 2024 to 1968. Both years saw incumbent Democratic presidents bow out of the election, as well as tragic outbreaks of political violence. But 1968 also saw a rapid unfolding of other historic events. Here’s what happened that year:

January 23: North Korea captures the Navy ship USS Pueblo.

January 30: North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces launch the Tet Offensive, undermining claims that the US is winning the Vietnam War.

February 8: Alabama governor George Wallace, a segregationist, announces his third-party presidential bid.

March 10: US commander in Vietnam, General William Westmoreland, requests 200,000 more troops.

March 12: Minnesota senator Eugene McCarthy nearly upsets President Lyndon Johnson in the New Hampshire primary.

March 16: New York senator Robert F. Kennedy announces his campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination.

March 31: Johnson agrees to a partial halt in the bombing of North Vietnam in order to negotiate an end to the war. He also announces that he will not seek reelection.

April 4: Martin Luther King Jr. is assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee. Major riots break out in several American cities.

May 10: Vietnam War peace talks begin in Paris.

June 5: Kennedy is shot in Los Angeles after winning the California primary. He dies the next day.

August 8: The Republican National Convention nominates Richard Nixon for president.

August 20: Soviet and Warsaw Pact forces move into Czechoslovakia, crushing the Prague Spring liberalisation movement.

August 26-29: A bitterly divided Democratic convention nominates vice president Hubert Humphrey for president. Outside the convention, Chicago police unleash a wave of violence against peaceful protesters.

September 30: Humphrey announces support for halting bombing in Vietnam and negotiating peace.

November 5: Nixon wins a narrow victory in the presidential election.

1940: War, US draft and FDR’s historic reelection

Two other years stand out for the rapid pace of significant events. The first is 1940, which was dominated by Nazi Germany’s invasions of European countries, the response to that aggression and a precedent-setting third term for US President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

April 9: Nazi Germany invades and conquers Denmark and Norway.

May 10: Nazi Germany invades the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg and France. British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain resigns and is replaced by Winston Churchill.

May 15: The Netherlands surrenders to Germany.

May 28: Belgium surrenders to Germany.

June 4: Evacuation of 338,000 Allied troops from Dunkirk, France ends as Germany routs British and French armies.

June 10: Italy declares war on France and Great Britain.

June 22: France surrenders to Germany. Germany controls almost all of central and western Europe.

July 17: Roosevelt is nominated by the Democratic National Convention for an unprecedented third term.

June 24: The Republican Convention nominates dark-horse candidate Wendell Willkie.

August 13: The Battle of Britain begins as Germany subjects Great Britain to intense aerial attacks.

September 16: The US institutes the first peacetime military draft in its history.

November 5: Roosevelt is reelected for a third term.

1973: Abortion, peace deal, Watergate, political mayhem

Finally, 1973 also witnessed a rapid sequence of historic events. The federal right to abortion was guaranteed by the US Supreme Court. The Vietnam War ended after almost 60,000 Americans and millions of civilians were killed. War began in the Middle East. And congressional hearings commenced in a political scandal that would, the next year, end Nixon’s presidency.

January 20: Nixon is inaugurated for a second term.

January 22: The Supreme Court issues its Roe vs Wade ruling, legalising most abortions. Former president Johnson dies.

January 27: The Vietnam War officially ends with signing of the Paris Peace Accords.

April 30: The Watergate scandal — involving a break-in at Democratic Party offices and a cover-up of it — explodes as Nixon announces that attorney-general Richard Kleindienst and White House aides Bob Haldeman and John Ehrlichman have resigned because of their roles in the scandal. Nixon also fires White House counsel John Dean.

May 17: Televised hearings of the Senate Watergate committee begin.

May 18: Archibald Cox is appointed as special prosecutor to investigate Watergate.

June 25: Dean testifies publicly and implicates Nixon in the Watergate cover-up.

July 15: Nixon is hospitalised with pneumonia.

July 16: White House aide Alexander Butterfield testifies that Nixon recorded his Oval Office conversations and phone calls.

October 6: Yom Kippur War begins as Egypt and Syria invade Israel.

October 10: Vice president Spiro Agnew resigns, pleading no contest to federal corruption charges.

October 20: Several Arab nations announce an oil embargo against the US for its support of Israel, beginning the 1973-74 energy crisis.

October 20: The Saturday Night Massacre: attorney-general Elliot Richardson and deputy attorney-general William Ruckelshaus resign after refusing Nixon’s order to fire special prosecutor Cox. Solicitor-general Robert Bork becomes acting attorney-general and fires Cox.

October 25: The Soviet Union threatens to intervene in the Yom Kippur War. In response, the US raises its defense alert status from DEFCON 4 to DEFCON 3. The war ends with a United Nations-sponsored ceasefire.

October 30: The House Judiciary Committee votes to begin investigating the possible impeachment of Nixon.

December 6: After both houses of Congress vote to approve him, Gerald Ford becomes the first vice president to assume that office via the 25th Amendment. That amendment, ratified in 1967, established the procedure for filling presidential and vice presidential vacancies.

What do these years of unprecedented events have in common?

One factor seems to be that wars and presidential elections seem to generate a cascade of events. Second, important events seem to beget more events. In 1940, the Nazi invasions led to Churchill becoming British prime minister and probably boosted the likelihood of Roosevelt running for and winning a third term.

In 1968, the Tet offensive helped trigger the challenges to president Johnson, which led to his decision to drop out. That helped set the stage for the calamitous Democratic convention that year.

Trump’s political and legal comebacks this year made Democrats even more desperate for a winning nominee, increasing the pressure on Biden after his poor debate performance.

We don’t know if the pace of news events this year will begin to slow down. What we do know is that most Americans might appreciate a bit of a breather before encountering another potentially historic event.

This piece first appeared in The Conversation.

About the Author

Philip Klinkner

Contributor

Philip Klinkner is an expert on American politics, including parties and elections, race relations, Congress and the presidency. He is the former director of the Arthur Levitt Public Affairs Center.

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