Material concerning his work on legislation, congressional liaison, issues, and office administration while serving as the deputy director of the White House Congressional Relations Office. The most significant documentation concerns a variety of national security and foreign policy issues, including the Vietnamese War and investigations of the intelligence community, although some material on domestic issues appears. Included are minutes of some congressional leadership meetings with the President, 9/75-6/76.
Series Description and Container List
Container List
Collection Overview
Scope and Content Note
The Robert Wolthuis files span the period November 1974 to January 1977. They document Wolthuis' work in the White House Congressional Relations Office.
Wolthuis, a former Assistant Secretary of Defense for Legislative Affairs and administrative assistant to Sen. Wallace Bennett of Utah, joined the White House staff on January 1, 1975. Although his title changed several times, his primary responsibility remained the same for the duration of the Ford administration: to serve as chief deputy to Max Friedersdorf, the Special Assistant to the President for Legislative Affairs and head of the Congressional Relations Office. Unlike other staff people in the office, Wolthuis did not work exclusively with Senators or Representatives. Rather, he handled broader legislative issues, directed the office in Friedersdorf's absence, and occasionally attended meetings in Friedersdorf's place.
The files' most significant documentation, including memoranda, correspondence, minutes and reports, relates to national security and foreign policy issues. Material on the Middle East covers the Turkish arms embargo, Arab boycott of firms dealing with Israel, and aid to Israel. For Vietnam, the material especially relates to a congressional fact finding trip in February 1975 and the follow‑up reports on the situation in Indochina. The files also include material on the 200 mile fishing limit and the Ford administration's response to investigations of U.S. intelligence activities. For many of these national security and foreign policy issues, and also for domestic concerns such as tax cuts and energy policy, the highest level documents are minutes of meetings which President Ford had with congressional leaders.
Other materials in the files cover a variety of domestic issues, routine administrative functions of the Congressional Relations Office, and Wolthuis' personal activities. In addition to the domestic topics covered in the legislative leadership meetings, there are scattered documents on bill signing ceremonies, military base realignments, and presidential letters of endorsement for candidates in the 1976 election. Office administrative items include a series of logs on bills received at the White House (November 1974‑October 1976) and congressional clearances for White House appointments (1975). The "Letters" folders contain Wolthuis' correspondence with members of Congress, and political, religious, and educational leaders in his home state of Utah.
Related Materials (January 1985)
The files of Wolthuis' colleagues in the Congressional Relations Office contain related material, especially covering the routine administrative functions of the office such as logs of bills received at the White House. Several categories in the White House Central Files relate to Wolthuis' activities and the substantive issues on which he was involved. Examples include FG 31-1 (Legislative Leadership Meetings), CO 1-7 (Middle East), CO 165-2 (South Vietnam), and FO 3-2/CO 156 (Mutual Security/Turkey).
Details
2.0 linear feet (ca. 4,000 pages)
Gerald R. Ford (accession number 77-62)
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 Ford 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.
Processed by
Dennis A. Daellenbach, January 1985
Biography
Robert K. Wolthuis
August 7, 1935 - Born, Ogden, Utah
1955-58 - Missionary, Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints, serving in the Netherlands
1959 - A.S. degree, Weber State College, Ogden, Utah
1960 - B.A. degree, University of Utah, Salt Lake City
1962 - M.A. degree, University of Utah, Salt Lake City
1963 - National Park Service, Washington, DC
1964-72 - Research Assistant, Legislative Assistant, and Administrative Assistant to Sen. Wallace F. Bennett, Republican from Utah
1968 - Ph.D. degree in International Relations, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore
1972 - Republican candidate for Congress, Utah's First Congressional District
1972-73 - Field Representative for Sen. Wallace F. Bennett
1973-74 - Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Legislative Affairs (Senate)
1975-76 - Deputy to the Assistant to the President for Legislative Affairs
1976-77 - Special Assistant to the President
1977- - Deputy Staff Director, Republican Policy Committee, United States Senate