THIS DAY IN HISTORY – President Nixon signs national speed limit into law – 1974

Via History.com

On January 2, 1974, President Richard M. Nixon signs the Emergency Highway Energy Conservation Act, setting a new national maximum speed limit.

Prior to 1974, individual states set speed limits within their boundaries and highway speed limits across the country ranged from 40 mph to 80 mph. The U.S. and other industrialized nations enjoyed easy access to cheap Middle Eastern oil from 1950 to 1972, but the Arab-Israeli conflict changed that dramatically in 1973. Arab members of the Organization for Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) protested the West’s support of Israel in the Yom Kippur War by stopping oil shipments to the United States, Japan and Western Europe.

OPEC also flexed its new-found economic muscle by quadrupling oil prices, placing a choke-hold on America’s oil-hungry consumers and industries. The embargo had a global impact, sending the U.S. and European economies into recession. As part of his response to the embargo, President Nixon signed a federal law lowering all national highway speed limits to 55 mph. The act was intended to force Americans to drive at speeds deemed more fuel-efficient, thereby curbing the U.S. appetite for foreign oil. With it, Nixon ushered in a policy of fuel conservation and rationing not seen since World War II.

The act also prohibited the Department of Transportation from approving or funding any projects within states that did not comply with the new speed limit. Most states quietly adjusted their speed limits, though Western states, home to the country’s longest, straightest and most monotonous rural highways, only grudgingly complied. Even after OPEC lifted the embargo in March 1974, drivers continued to face high gas prices and attempted to conserve fuel by buying revolutionary Japanese economy cars. For many, a desire for fuel-efficient automobiles became the standard until the trend toward gas-guzzling sport-utility vehicles (SUVs) emerged in the 1990s. In 1987, Congress authorized states to reset speed limits within their borders, but proponents of the national maximum speed limit law claimed it lowered automobile-related fatalities, prompting Congress to keep it on the books until finally repealing it on November 28, 1995.

Today speed limits across the country vary between 35 and 40 mph in congested urban areas and 75 mph on long stretches of rural highway. U.S. drivers now drive almost as fast as their European counterparts, who average between 75 and 80 mph on the highway. On some roads in Italy, it is legal to drive as fast as 95 mph.

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6 Comments
Melty
Melty
January 2, 2022 8:15 am

We have a stretch of toll road with a limit of 85. Man the 55 thing sucked. Nixon did a lot of stupid shit that has come back to bite us over the years. EPA, moving the fiat to full fiat are examples

Balbinus
Balbinus
  Melty
January 2, 2022 11:56 am

The PLAN has been moving forward since at least 1740. It is currently in high gear and headed for the cliff. This world is now a dangerous place.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
January 2, 2022 9:12 am

Never about safety, always about control.

BUCKHED/BUY MORE AMMO/MORE BOURBON TOO.
BUCKHED/BUY MORE AMMO/MORE BOURBON TOO.
January 2, 2022 11:16 am

I got my first car in 1976 . A 1967 Mustang with a 351 and a 4 speed…my car told Nixon ” Screw Your Speed Limit ” .

I got pulled one night for racing…doing 105mph. Spent a few hours in jail but got released by the cops because I told them I was in a world of trouble for breaking curfew,that my car would be taken away etc by my parents . They had pity on me and released me and my buddy. The story was BS and my buddy got two weeks restriction from his parents .

Vigilant
Vigilant
January 2, 2022 9:18 pm

One foot on the brake and one on the gas…

Brian Reilly
Brian Reilly
January 3, 2022 10:38 am

In 1971, Nixon and his boys at Treasury and the Fed officially stopped all convertibility of the fiat US dollar into gold. Thence came the great inflation, which included gas and oil. And everything else. All on purpose, all to exert more control over we the people. Mideast embargo? Bullshit. “Power struggle to ensure a distribution of wealth that all sorts of mutts all over the world (especially in the US) would put up with even though they were getting fucked more every day” is much more accurate description.

We should have told the cops then to get fucked, but we (mostly) put up with it. And here we are. We get what we put up with, and deserve nothing more.