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- <text id=90TT1005>
- <title>
- Apr. 23, 1990: Dan Quayle:Late Bloomer
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 23, 1990 Dan Quayle:No Joke
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 28
- COVER STORY
- Late Bloomer
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Dan Quayle spent much of his life blissfully AWOL from history, a
- huge handicap even for a faster learner than he has given
- evidence of being
- </p>
- <p>By Garry Wills
- </p>
- <p> Can one, at this point, disentangle Dan Quayle from Dan
- Quayle jokes? He seems to induce a short attention span in
- others, leaving them stunned with a serene vacancy. The New
- Republic has penalized with mock awards people who are foolhardy
- enough to speak well of him. Can anyone be taken seriously who
- takes Quayle seriously?
- </p>
- <p> As the polls show, Quayle has not recovered from the way he
- was shoved into the public arena under a rain of blows. Gallup
- reported last month that 54% of the public--including 43% of
- Republicans--said he is not qualified to be President; 49%
- thought Bush should pick a new running mate for '92. "My
- skills," Quayle said recently, "have always been in negotiating
- and conciliating." That sounds like wishful thinking from a man
- so long under assault, including the deadly assault of laughter.
- Like Charlie Chaplin in the ring, what can he do but crouch
- behind the referee and wave his gloves in vague call-it-off
- gestures? Yet he practiced conciliation even before he stood so
- badly in need of it.
- </p>
- <p> When he was elected to the Senate in 1980, Quayle told
- political scientist Richard Fenno, "I know one committee I don't
- want--Judiciary. They are going to be dealing with all those
- issues like abortion, busing, voting rights, prayer. I'm not
- interested in those issues, and I want to stay as far away from
- them as I can." Yet Quayle was not raised among people who shied
- from extremes. He is the coeval of the cold war: the year of his
- birth, 1947, also gave us the CIA, the Attorney General's list
- of subversives and the internal-security program. When Quayle
- was five years old, Dwight Eisenhower carried Indiana with the
- help of Quayle's grandfather, publisher Eugene Pulliam, and
- William Jenner, who were, respectively, the right and the far
- right of the state Republican Party. When the John Birch Society
- was set up in 1958 with the thesis that Eisenhower had
- collaborated with communism, Quayle's parents became
- enthusiastic supporters of it. James Quayle compared Birch
- Society founder Robert Welch to the legendary prophet
- Nostradamus.
- </p>
- <p> When Dan Quayle was starting high school in Arizona, his
- neighbor Barry Goldwater was beginning his race for the
- presidency. When Richard Nixon ran for re-election in 1972,
- Quayle's father decided that Nixon, like Eisenhower, had
- betrayed the conservative movement--so Quayle pere supported
- the insurgent Republican right-wing candidate John Ashbrook.
- When Quayle entered the Senate, it was as the beneficiary of a
- conservative political-action-committee blitz that knocked off
- five liberal Senators that year (including his opponent, Birch
- Bayh of Indiana). Quayle's whole (short) adult life was spent
- cocooned in the modern conservative movement. He should have
- spread his butterfly wings as an ideologue, yet he came out
- talking compromise. That is the most striking thing about his
- intellectual formation.
- </p>
- <p> If he seemed for much of his life unaffected by the world
- around him, that may have been an advantage, considering the
- world he lived in. He avoided the Viet Nam War, but he also
- ignored much that led to Viet Nam. Inattentiveness is sometimes a
- survival skill. Quayle's pugnacious father did not always agree
- with Quayle's more famous grandfather, Eugene Pulliam, and among
- Pulliams it matters from which wife of Eugene one is descended
- (he had three). When the 17-year-old Quayle thought of siding
- with his father against his grandfather on behalf of family
- friend Barry Goldwater, his mother Corinne (a daughter of
- Pulliam's second wife) told him, "Don't start any more trouble
- in the family. We already have enough problems." Quayle's father
- James--an ex-Marine who named his son for a friend, James A.
- Danforth, a World War II hero killed in action in Germany--was
- gung-ho for Viet Nam. J. Danforth Quayle was, famously, not.
- Considering the other enthusiasms of his father's, from Robert
- Welch to Ashbrook, from Nostradamus to Fundamentalist preacher
- "Colonel" Robert Thieme, there is something to be said for the
- son's reluctance to join his father's battles. Quayle grew up
- golfing with his imperious grandfather and camping (gun in hand)
- with his volatile father, an opinionated owner-editor whose
- Indiana newspaper is known to its local critics as the
- Huntington Herald "Suppress." Young Danny kept his head down,
- his eye on the ball.
- </p>
- <p> One of Quayle's college professors has an indelible memory
- of trying to make a point with Quayle, and talking into air. "I
- looked into those blue eyes, and I might as well have been
- looking out the window," says William Cavanaugh. But he was the
- teacher of Quayle's freshman composition course; he had differed
- with his student over the prose of Whittaker Chambers. Witness,
- Chambers' portentously anticommunist book, was a kind of bible
- in the Quayle family. Quayle's tactical incomprehension with
- Professor Cavanaugh may have been the response of one who knows
- where ideological conflict goes when it is pushed. Attending law
- school in Indianapolis, Quayle lived outside town with his
- grandmother, the divorced second wife, while a son of the first
- wife edited the Indianapolis paper, and the third wife was
- active in the Pulliam chain. Quayle kept peace all around. He
- may not know much, but he seems to have self-knowledge when he
- calls himself accommodating.
- </p>
- <p> Is Quayle serene merely because he is vacuous, preferring
- drift to ideology? That view obliges one to explain how, in
- politics, he drifted often and early to the top. Even his
- friends admit that his success was not by any blaze of
- intellect. Says M. Stanton Evans, the ex-editor of the
- Indianapolis News, who helped Quayle get his first political
- appointment: "There is a cycle in all of his offices. When he
- comes in, he is underestimated--too young, too inexperienced--and then he surpasses people's expectations." In other words,
- Quayle first gets the job and then gets qualified for it. But
- for a politician, getting the job is the primal qualification.
- How did he succeed at that? The only answer his critics have
- been able to come up with is a false one--family influence.
- </p>
- <p> Influence should have counted at DePauw University, an old
- Methodist school in northern Indiana with loyal alumni and great
- institutional pride. Quayle was a third-generation Pulliam at
- the school, a member of the same fraternity (Delta Kappa
- Epsilon) to which his grandfather, father and uncle had
- belonged. His grandfather founded the national journalism
- fraternity Sigma Delta Chi at DePauw, gave the school many
- bequests and served on its board. There was a Pulliam Chair in
- History until just before Dan's arrival on campus. "If I had
- known he was a Pulliam," says Ted Katula, the athletic director
- who was Quayle's golf coach, "that would have impressed me.
- Pulliams are big here. I didn't learn he was one till he was
- running for Congress." Yet Katula was the member of the
- university staff Quayle saw the most. Little was made of
- Quayle's being a Pulliam because few people knew it. He did not
- bring the subject up. In his experience, family ties were as
- much a source of division as advantage.
- </p>
- <p> Quayle got special treatment at DePauw in one provable
- case: he graduated with a major in politics without taking the
- required course in political theory. When he flunked the
- theoretical parts of the final exam, he was given a special exam
- without those parts. He was one of two students for whom this
- was done that year, and the common denominator in their case is
- not family (the other man was not a Pulliam) but a quarrel
- between the department head and the teacher of political theory
- over the size and kind of assignments given in the course. The
- two students had dropped the class when there were protests that
- the teacher, newly arrived from Harvard, had too long a reading
- list, protests the department head energetically backed. If
- other teachers went easy on Quayle, it was because he is the
- kind of person for whom people like to do favors. They were just
- doing what George Bush would later do on a colossal scale.
- </p>
- <p> Quayle, who has refused to release his college and law
- school transcripts, was certainly no student at DePauw. The
- teachers who disliked him did so because he was good at getting
- by on charm. He was serious only about golf, a family passion
- instilled in him during the long Arizona days of his
- adolescence. His father, who has a unilaterally disarming
- candor, admits overstating it when he said of Dan's major, "If
- he's anything like his old man, it was probably booze and
- broads." But the minutes of Quayle's fraternity have this entry:
- "A petition was submitted to have Bro. Quayle censured for his
- violation of house security. It was moved he be: 1) fined $25,
- 2) removed from all house offices, 3) warn him that his pin will
- be lifted if he does it again. A motion was accepted to table
- the petition's motion." Violating house security means having
- unauthorized persons in one's room.
- </p>
- <p> There had not been much war protest on the DePauw campus by
- the time Quayle graduated in 1969. Quayle's father was writing
- editorials backing the war in Viet Nam, but his son was not
- paying attention. As graduation approached, Quayle had to do
- some shopping around to find an opening in the National Guard.
- (In 1988 he said he meant to go to law school, but he had not
- applied to one.) He asked people he knew about the Guard, whom
- to call, but it is unlikely they did or could rig things for
- him. His grandfather was semiretired in Arizona; his father was
- not a natural ally in this effort. He had the advantage of
- knowing where to go, but not of fixing what the response would
- be.
- </p>
- <p> During his service in the Guard through much of the
- academic year 1969-70, Quayle decided he did indeed want to
- study the law. Admission would not be easy after his admittedly
- poor academic performance at DePauw, but here a personal contact
- was helpful. He knew the admissions director of the Indiana
- University law school in Indianapolis--through his family, as
- he knew most older people. This admissions director, Kent
- Frandsen, was a judge in the little town of Lebanon, outside
- Indianapolis. Another prominent citizen there was Quayle's
- grandmother, Martha Pulliam, who was given the Lebanon paper as
- her own in the divorce. (She was the one Quayle would live
- with.) Frandsen gave Quayle a break, something he was doing for
- many others at the time. The night school was expanding its
- enrollment--it would move into a new and larger building in
- 1970--and Frandsen had a summer program to try out marginal
- cases. Quayle, out of school for a year, went into that program.
- </p>
- <p> Frandsen did him another favor when he called in Quayle and
- another student, Frank Pope, and asked them to start a student
- newspaper for the night school. Before, there had been just a
- mimeographed sheet. Frandsen wanted to begin life in the new
- building with a real paper, and he allotted money to the
- project. Quayle became the editor of the journal he and Pope
- called the Barrister. It is unlikely Frandsen would have asked
- Quayle to do this if he doubted he could manage the newspaper
- along with courses at night and work during the day.
- </p>
- <p> Daytime work was expected of Quayle (he had waited on
- tables at DePauw), and his father suggested working in the
- office of Indianapolis Mayor Richard Lugar. The father called
- his friend, fellow Pulliam editor Stan Evans. According to
- Evans, "Jim asked me to lunch with Dan. I did most of the
- talking and learned for the first time that he wanted to go to
- law school. I said I thought it would be better to work in the
- [state] attorney general's office than in the city government,
- since I knew that many of the people who worked there were in
- law school."
- </p>
- <p> Evans knew about the young Republicans in the statehouse,
- since they were involved with him in conservative causes. As he
- said of Quayle's performance, "He was not as ideological as the
- other people in the A.G.'s office. He was certainly not out at
- Ashbrook rallies." (Evans, a friend of Quayle's father's, agreed
- with him on the need for a third-party candidate in 1972.)
- </p>
- <p> It was normal that those working in the state government
- should have political connections of some sort. In the
- Lieutenant Governor's office were Daniel Manion, son of the John
- Birch Society's Clarence Manion, and Frank Pope, whose family
- was so close to William Jenner that he grew up calling him Uncle
- Bill. In the budget agency was Judy Palmer, who was the personal
- assistant to Edgar Whitcomb's wife during Whitcomb's 1968
- campaign for Governor; in the prosecutor's office was Vicki
- Ursalkis. All these people were students at the night school,
- only a few blocks from the statehouse, but they saw more of each
- other during their daytime tasks, in the balconies ringing the
- rotunda, than in the school, even though Quayle, Pope, Ursalkis
- and Palmer made up a study group for their law classes.
- According to Pope, the women carried the men in these
- preparations. "Dan and I wouldn't have done what we did in law
- school without Vicki and Judy." Quayle dated Vicki before he met
- Marilyn.
- </p>
- <p> Most of these Republicans had past ties to the Jenner
- organization, which Quayle's grandfather had opposed for years,
- but that did not trouble Quayle's relations with them. Quayle
- liked to ask Pope's mother, when he played bridge at her house,
- about the old Jenner wars she relished as a party organizer. He
- took this in without much comment, and certainly without
- reciprocal revelations. "There was one thing Dan Quayle never
- talked about," Frank Pope says now, "and that was his family."
- </p>
- <p> The statehouse was a den of young activists, among whom
- Quayle seemed almost apolitical. Pope says Manion "dragged"
- Quayle and him to a meeting or two of the Young Americans for
- Freedom, but "Dan [Manion] was so far right he scared Danny and
- me." Certainly there were young activists in Quayle's circle who
- shared his father's zeal for Ashbrook. But Quayle did his work
- at the attorney general's office and in class, and went home to
- his grandmother's house in Lebanon.
- </p>
- <p> Marilyn Tucker was as bright as the women in Quayle's study
- group, and her uncle, the Indiana secretary of state, was a
- Jenner man. She and Quayle were sure of each other from the
- start and were married in 1972 by the friend of both their
- families, Kent Frandsen. It was a fine political marriage by
- Indiana standards, but after passing the bar exam in 1974 Quayle
- went back to Huntington, to his father's small paper, without
- announced political ambitions.
- </p>
- <p> The myth now firmly established is that some Fort Wayne
- party men chose Quayle because of his looks for the thankless
- task of running against eight-term Democratic Congressman Ed
- Roush in 1976. Quayle was recently introduced to a board meeting
- of the Hoover Institution as one who volunteered to "fall on his
- sword" in that 1976 campaign. But Walter Helmke, the G.O.P.
- candidate in 1974, says that the idea of Roush's invincibility
- is nonsense. "He only beat me by 8,000 votes, and that was in
- the post-Watergate election when Republicans did badly. When Dan
- ran against Roush, Gerald Ford swept Indiana for the
- Republicans. Ford carried Dan."
- </p>
- <p> The idea of Quayle's passive role in this beauty-queen
- audition is also overstated. Helmke remembers that Quayle was
- out in his journalist's role observing his own campaign and
- Richard Lugar's unsuccessful run against Birch Bayh in the 1974
- Senate race. Helmke was surprised when Quayle asked foreign
- policy questions in those local races. And two years later, when
- Helmke showed Quayle around Roush's district, they were not
- looking for swords to fall on.
- </p>
- <p> Nor did talent scouts have to prod Quayle into his 1980
- campaign against Birch Bayh. He aggressively sought a conflict
- in which the odds were longer against him than they had been
- four years earlier with Roush. When the golf coach, Katula,
- asked why he would risk a safe House seat on such a race, Quayle
- told him, "Coach, we're just going to have to work harder."
- </p>
- <p> He campaigned in all 92 counties of the state. He defused
- the age issue by saying, over and over, "Birch Bayh was almost
- the same age when he beat Homer Capehart." (This ploy would
- backfire when Quayle used a similar line about John Kennedy in
- 1988.) When Bayh accused him of extremism, Quayle distanced
- himself from the ads being run against Bayh by the National
- Conservative Political Action Committee, telling the Washington
- lobbyists, "Your negative campaign will allow him [Bayh] to
- allege that outsiders are trying to tell the people of Indiana
- how to vote." Quayle resigned from the Committee for the
- Survival of a Free Congress because it was trying to purge
- third-party presidential candidate John Anderson from the
- Republican party. He ran an ideological campaign but with just
- enough touches of pragmatism.
- </p>
- <p> Quayle is not interested in lost causes. (Maybe it was
- fitting that he not go to Viet Nam?) In this he resembles his
- grandfather, who constantly frustrated his conservative editors.
- Eugene Pulliam, says Stan Evans, "was a seat-of-the-pants guy,
- unpredictable." Jameson Campaigne Jr., whose father edited the
- Indianapolis Star for Pulliam, says, "He [Pulliam] was not a
- conservative; he was a Methodist--a good government type.
- That is why he opposed Jenner and the corrupt Republicans in
- Indiana."
- </p>
- <p> Pulliam bought 51 newspapers in his career, but most of
- them were small-town papers, and he had a small-town approach
- to government. It is not surprising that he settled in Lebanon, a
- little community that is almost an annex to its golf course.
- Pulliam believed in paternalistic civic improvement, where
- business, politics and journalism unite to clean up a town and
- then run it for its own good. He clashed early in his career
- with the Klan, lax liquor laws and prostitution.
- </p>
- <p> When he got involved in national politics, it was as a
- pragmatist. He joined Eisenhower in 1952 against the Taft
- conservatives. He joined Lyndon Johnson in 1964 against
- Goldwater, whom he had helped draw into politics in order to
- "clean up" Phoenix. He went back to the Republicans in 1968 and
- stuck with Nixon. Quayle's father rebelled against both
- Eisenhower and Nixon by supporting Birch and Ashbrook--lost
- causes. Pulliam had no more use for the Birchers than for
- Klansmen.
- </p>
- <p> Some mistook Pulliam for an ideologue because his pragmatic
- political stands mattered as much to him as the papers' income.
- He defied advertisers over matters like liquor licensing and a
- Phoenix beltway, favored by the business establishment, which he
- helped defeat. He was prickly about his independence and about
- that of his family and loved institutions. He resigned from the
- board of DePauw when the school refused to turn down federal
- money with strings attached. His own children and heirs were
- expected to work; the money he left them is tied up, dependent
- on their performance on the newspapers.
- </p>
- <p> Pulliam gave the readiest daily sign of his competitiveness
- on the golf course. He learned in Lebanon how to talk with the
- city establishment on the links, and he set a Quayle family
- pattern of buying homes that overlook the fairways. He liked
- year-round golfing, so he left Lebanon in the winter, first for
- Florida, then for Phoenix. He was an advocate of improvement,
- tourism and more golf courses for Phoenix long before he bought
- his paper there. The Phoenix course on which Quayle learned to
- play is nestled among a dozen or so clubs, their bright green
- carpets dramatic against the pebbly desert.
- </p>
- <p> Quayle was such a natural golfer that his grandfather soon
- liked having him for a partner. The Pulliams read character on
- the golf course. The DePauw coach admires the nerve, even the
- courage, of Quayle's game. "He likes the heat of battle." He
- claims that Quayle rises to challenge, takes chances but keeps
- his head. Could Quayle beat his old coach, who stays in shape
- and plays constantly? "By the 16th hole, conversation would be
- at a minimum."
- </p>
- <p> Quayle's competitiveness appealed to Roger Ailes, who
- handled him in his 1986 re-election race for the Senate.
- Quayle's record in debates was good until he met Lloyd Bentsen.
- He debated Roush five times in 1976 and Bayh once in 1980. The
- general view was that both men underestimated him and were
- beaten by him. Dan Evans, Quayle's 1980 manager, says he was
- effective against Bayh because he was not being "handled," as in
- 1988--the Nancy Reagan excuse about debate "overpreparation."
- But Quayle needed help in 1988, when he was on the defensive
- from the outset. Indiana reporters say that even now he has not
- regained the confidence and ease he showed in his earlier
- campaigns.
- </p>
- <p> Quayle starts from a conservative base but tries to keep
- the freedom to maneuver away from it. In 1976 he suggested that
- marijuana be decriminalized, a view too radical to be repeated
- before his constituents. Dan Coats, who now holds Quayle's
- Senate seat, is a born-again Christian who as Quayle's aide
- helped him win votes from the religious right; but Richard
- Fenno, the political scientist who observed his 1980 race,
- noticed that Quayle kept his commitments to a minimum in this
- part of his campaign. In the Senate, Quayle avoided the social
- issues and sought expertise in defense, specializing in SDI. His
- staff emphasizes the way he could cooperate "even with Teddy
- Kennedy" to pass the job-training act. This is the kind of
- paternalistic program, involving business, that his grandfather
- supported in towns he "looked after." Quayle's pragmatism is
- good politics, but he seems to favor it in any case. In an
- editorial for the Barrister (the first political writing of his
- I can find), Quayle attacked the machine-driven convention
- system in Indiana, calling for open primaries--the kind of
- reform Eugene Pulliam always favored.
- </p>
- <p> As Vice President, Quayle has established a right-wing base
- again, choosing a hard-line and activist staff (unlike Vice
- President Bush's bland low-profile aides). The number of Ph.D.s
- is emphasized by his press office (two for Carnes Lord, his
- national security aide). He recruited from the ranks of
- believers in the cold war, just before that war's demise,
- surrounding himself with those who have an investment in it. His
- chief of staff, William Kristol, is the son of neoconservative
- Irving Kristol and Gertrude Himmelfarb and is a former aide to
- William Bennett. Quayle is comfortable with intelligence in his
- vicinity.
- </p>
- <p> Structurally, Quayle's position with Bush, a man never
- quite accepted by the right as "one of our own," is that of
- Nixon with Eisenhower--bridge to the right, voice of the
- right, pacifier of the right. In the latter role he has already
- been criticized by the National Review and conservative
- columnist Eric Breindel. It is a high-risk position, since
- reflex anticommunism is not the right-wing glue it was before
- Mikhail Gorbachev. Quayle has treated changes in the Soviet
- Union as suspect, while saying he does not differ from the
- President (the refrain against which all Vice Presidents must
- play their own tunes). Quayle is loyal to individuals, as he
- showed in the Senate in 1986 by his frantic efforts to win a
- judgeship for Daniel Manion (whose written opinions were more
- embarrassing than Quayle's spur-of-the-moment inanities); but
- he does not play to lose. If Bush wants to get rid of Quayle,
- he may get as little cooperation as Eisenhower got from Nixon.
- Kristol, who turned down other job offers in the Administration
- to go with Quayle, is firm for his man. Similar commitments are
- in the making.
- </p>
- <p> During the 1988 campaign, people wondered about Quayle's
- actions (and even his whereabouts) in the Viet Nam War. But the
- startling thing is that, if he inherited the Oval Office
- tomorrow, Quayle would be the first President since World War II
- who did not serve in the military during that war. Even Jimmy
- Carter, the U.S. President of most recent birth (1924), was a
- Navy cadet during the war. Not only was Quayle born after the
- war--the first baby boomer so near the top--he is also the
- first man to have grown up entirely within the confines of the
- modern conservative movement. He was surprisingly unscarred by
- that (or any) experience when Bush chose him. Quayle claimed
- John Kennedy was just as young in 1960; but Kennedy had known
- prewar Europe as well as the wartime Pacific.
- </p>
- <p> Stan Evans traces an arc in Quayle's career of rising (if
- belatedly) to expectations. The angle of the arc must now go up,
- dramatically. Quayle was born not only roughly a quarter-century
- after any preceding President; he spent another quarter-century
- blissfully AWOL from history. His press secretary, David
- Beckwith, calls the Vice President a "classic late bloomer"--which means that the first three decades or so of his life do
- not matter, just the last decade. That is starting late even for
- a faster learner than Quayle has given evidence of being. How
- can he "rise to expectations" when the U.S. can expect all the
- troubles of a world coming out of the cold war, and when the
- person doing the rising came in with the cold war himself? That
- is why, for all the jokes, we must take Dan Quayle seriously.
- We must do so, because Bush did not.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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