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- <text id=93HT1011>
- <link 93HT1043>
- <title>
- 52 Election: Adlai Stevenson:Whose Adlai?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1952 Election
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- October 27, 1952
- Whose Adlai?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <qt>
- <l> He's the man that we need;</l>
- <l> We'll all follow his lead.</l>
- <l> He's our Adlai, our Adlai, our Adlai,</l>
- <l>our Adlai,</l>
- <l> Our Adlai's a wonderful guy.</l>
- </qt>
- <p> According to George Gallup, about 45% of U.S. voters could
- now sing Our Adlai with something approaching full-throated
- conviction. That's a lot of voters--and a fraction more than the
- polls gave Harry Truman at a comparable time in 1948. But in some
- respects it is a wonder that anyone has a chance to sing Our
- Adlai at all. Ten months ago, Adlai Stevenson was not even a name
- in the national consciousness; his rise has been unmatched in
- U.S. politics since Wendell Willkie's star raced across the sky
- in 1940.
- </p>
- <p> How did Stevenson get there? What turned him from a
- reluctant candidate into an aggressive campaigner? And what kind
- of sense is he making to the American people?
- </p>
- <p> He and his opponent, two very dissimilar men, have a common
- problem: the problem of being the nominee of a loosely knit and
- fractious party. Each is the leader of his party, at least for
- the duration of the campaign; and each is, to some extent, his
- party's captive.
- </p>
- <p> Days of Doubt. The requirements for the 1952 Democratic
- candidate were cheerfully laid down last May by Harry Truman. At
- the convention of the Americans for Democratic Action, a left-of-
- center group that generally lines up with the Democrats, Harry
- Truman said: "When a Democratic candidate allows himself to be
- put on the defensive and starts apologizing for the New Deal and
- the Fair Deal...he is sure to lose. The people don't want a
- phony Democrat. If it's a choice between a genuine Republican and
- a Republican in Democratic clothing, the people will choose the
- genuine article very time. That is, they'll take the Republican...I don't want any phony Democrats in this campaign."
- </p>
- <p> At that time, Adlai Stevenson was certainly reluctant to be
- the Democratic nominee. His reluctance was based on three points:
- his disinclination to run against Eisenhower, his horror of a
- Truman endorsement and his desire to continue his promising
- career as governor of Illinois. At that time, Ike was thought to
- be invincible, Truman was regarded as ballot-box poison and
- Stevenson was sure of re-election as governor.
- </p>
- <p> As convention time came nearer, and after Ike got the
- Republican nomination, the pressure on Stevenson to say yes or no
- became almost unbearable. In Minnesota, asked what he would do if
- he got the nomination, he gave a hoot of nervous laughter and
- said: "I guess I'd just shoot myself." Two days before the
- convention opened, in a more serious tone, he told his own
- Illinois delegates not to vote for him, saying that he did not
- aspire to the presidency and was "temperamentally, physically and
- mentally" unfitted for the job. Told of a Washington story that
- President Truman had decided to support him, he said: "Dear God,
- no!"
- </p>
- <p> Yet, after the Young Turks had been put down at the
- convention and the South had been placated, he got the
- nomination. In his acceptance speech he coined his own campaign
- slogan. "Let's talk sense to the American people," he said.
- "Let's tell them the truth, that there are no gains without
- pains, that we are now on the eve of great decisions, not easy
- decisions...The people are wise--wiser than the Republicans
- think." The speech made listening newspapermen, jaded with the
- stale insincerities of convention orators, look at each other:
- here was something different. What kind of campaign would a man
- like that make?
- </p>
- <p> Time to Refresh? Excitement, enthusiasm and confusion
- greeted him when he returned to Springfield. He picked his own
- personal campaign manager: Wilson Watkins Wyatt, onetime
- president of the A.D.A. and onetime Fair Deal Housing Expediter,
- and made it clear that his campaign would be run from
- Springfield, not from Washington. He named a new chairman of the
- Democratic National Committee: Stephen Mitchell, a little-known
- Chicago lawyer who had been, like Stevenson and Wyatt, a
- Washington operator (a Washington name for smart young lawyers in
- Government bureaus). Stevenson held several press conferences,
- some of them on a not-for-attribution basis, to permit reporters
- to become acquainted with his current views. Some of them: he
- hadn't the "faintest idea" whether or not he would drop Dean
- Acheson as secretary of State; he foresaw the day when East-West
- power will come into some kind of balance and it may become
- possible to negotiate with the Kremlin; and he bespoke his
- determination to put his "own stamp" on the campaign but
- acknowledged that he was for a "refreshened Fair Deal."
- </p>
- <p> Can Stevenson refreshen the Fair Deal? Democrats of course
- say he can't. Wrote Harvard Professor McGeorge Bundy,
- collaborator on Henry Stimson's autobiography and editor of
- Secretary Acheson's papers, in the October Foreign Affairs:
- "Fatigue and stalemate beset the groups on which Stevenson must
- rely. However much he himself may be a symbol of refreshing
- change, his party, and even his part of his party, are symbols of
- the status quo. Except where it has had Republican help, the
- Administration has been stalemated for several years, both at
- home & abroad. The much-debated Fair Deal is still a set of paper
- promises, and in foreign affairs the great achievements of the
- last four years are precisely those of which General Eisenhower
- is a symbol (except for the defense of Korea, which is surely not
- a one-party triumph). Moreover, in the sham battles over the past
- which have so often passed for Great Debating in the last two
- years, roles have been set and lines of contest fixed in a way
- which might make it hard for Mr. Stevenson to fulfill his promise
- of change in tone. His friends say that this is an easy task for
- a determined man with the White House as his base; his opponents
- will assert that the inertia of the loyal partisan is a most
- formidable force."
- </p>
- <p> On Aug. 12, Stevenson made his visit to the White House for
- an intelligence briefing; that same week he admitted in a letter
- to an Oregon editor that there is "a mess" in Washington. "It's
- been proved, hasn't it?" he said to questioning reporters. That
- might be "talking sense" to people at large, but politically it
- was a bad slip of the tongue.
- </p>
- <p> Harry Truman lost no time in showing what he thought of it.
- Unblinking, he told his press conference that he knew of no mess,
- and added that he was the key figure of the campaign. the
- Democratic Party, he said, has to run on the record of the
- Roosevelt-Truman Administrations and that is all it can run on.
- As the campaign progressed, it became more & more clear that
- Truman was right.
- </p>
- <p> The Aphorist. As he began to make speeches, the quality of
- mind Stevenson revealed was that of a man who feels that there
- are two sides to most questions, who is willing to give credit
- where credit is due, who believes that patience, hard work and
- understanding can solve most problems. But it was his sharp wit,
- directed at Republicans, which captured the imagination of his
- friendly audiences.
- </p>
- <p> His ability as a wit, phrasemaker and aphorist gave him a
- reputation in the first month of the campaign. The Republican
- Party's slogan, he said, was to "throw the rascals in," and "as
- to their platform, well, nobody can stand on a bushel of eels."
- Discussing social security at Flint, Mich., he remarked: "Now as
- far as Republican leaders are concerned, this desire for a change
- is understandable. I suppose if I had been sewn up in the same
- underwear for 20 years I'd want a change too."
- </p>
- <p> He not only had his own jokes and aphorisms, he quoted aptly
- from Shaw, Disraeli, Oliver Wendell Holmes, William James, Robert
- Browning and the London Times Literary Supplement. He also
- sprinkled his speeches with stories. Sample: about the couple who
- went to a justice of the peace to be married but were told they
- would have to wait three days. "Can't you just say a few words,"
- asked the man, "to tide us over the weekend?"
- </p>
- <p> Republicans were quick to say that he was just a funny man.
- But he also discussed the dry issues of the party platforms,
- sometimes dryly; and he also frequently spoke with eloquence
- rarely heard in a political campaign: "We have become guardians
- of a civilization built in pain, in anguish and in heroic hope...If we creak, the world will groan. If we slip, the world will
- fall. But if we use our right of initiative and of decision
- without bombast or bluster, if we use it with clear heads and
- steady nerves, we shall rise in strength and grow in majesty and
- the world will rise and grow with us."
- </p>
- <p> The Egghead Vote. At first, crowds were small, far smaller
- than Eisenhower's, far smaller than Harry Truman drew in 1948. In
- his first attempt as a whistle-stopper he was a flop. He got
- better, by dint of practice, but his best performances were in
- set speeches, to big audiences.
- </p>
- <p> Many of his speeches had the quality of an after-dinner
- address: they did not rouse his audience as Eisenhower's
- incandescent personality could. What effect, if any, were
- Stevenson's speeches having? Was he making any sense--or talking
- over people's heads? Correspondents began to report a frequent
- phenomenon: the listener who thought Stevenson was probably too
- abstruse for most people--though of course he understood him.
- With one segment of the population--joyfully dubbed "the
- Shakespeare vote"--Stevenson certainly hits the mark. (Two
- campaign biographies, Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois by Noel F.
- Busch and Adlai Stevenson by John Bartlow Martin, have been on
- recent best seller lists. Published last week was Adlai's
- Almanac: The Wit and Wisdom of Stevenson of Illinois by Bessie R.
- James and Mary Waterstreet.)
- </p>
- <p> Columnist Stewart Alsop quoted a young Connecticut
- Republican: "Sure, all the eggheads love Stevenson. But how many
- eggheads do you think there are?" The term "egghead" (meaning
- "highbrow" or "double-dome") immediately got into political
- circulation.
- </p>
- <p> Not all the eggheads are for Stevenson. Last winter and
- spring, three figures dominated the political horizon: Truman,
- Taft and Eisenhower. To intellectuals and other "opinion makers,"
- Eisenhower was infinitely preferable to the other two. Taft
- warned the Republicans that many of this group would revert to
- their habit of supporting the Democrats, no matter which
- Republican or which Democrat was nominated. In this, Taft was
- partly right, and the egghead switch was intensified by the
- Stevenson eloquence.
- </p>
- <p> Harry's Boy? In the early days of the campaign, Stevenson
- tried desperately--and with considerable success--to
- demonstrate the fact that he was not Truman's hand-picked and
- amenable follower. But Harry Truman soon showed that you cannot
- teach your political grandmother to suck eggs. Sooner or later,
- Stevenson would have to face the facts of life and support the
- whole Democratic record--including Harry Truman's. In the next
- few weeks Stevenson swallowed manfully and changed his views on
- three important issues:
- </p>
- <p>-- He called for repeal of the Taft-Hartley Act. Previously,
- he had said that some parts of the law had "advanced the cause of
- good labor relations" and that "anyone who says flatly that he is
- either for or against that law is indulging in our common
- weakness for oversimplification." But in Detroit Stevenson said,
- "I don't say that everything in the Taft-Hartley Act is wrong: it
- isn't. And moreover, I'll say frankly that I don't think it's a
- slave-labor law, either. But I do say that it was biased and
- politically inspired and has not improved labor relations in a
- single plant...What should be retained from the old law can
- best be written into the new law after the political symbolism of
- the Taft-Hartley Act is behind us." Stevenson recognized that
- repeal of the law would deprive the Government of the power to
- deal with nationwide strikes; he had "no miracle-drug solution
- for this problem," but said a new law should give the President
- "a choice of procedures."
- </p>
- <p>-- He came out for federal control of the offshore
- tidelands. Previously, he had said he was not sure whether the
- tidelands were part of the national domain and asked whether this
- was a question of "rendering unto Caesar the things that are
- Caesar's" or whether the question was "Who is Caesar?"
- </p>
- <p>-- He said that, as President, "he could and would" use his
- influence to change the Senate's rules so that a majority
- (instead of two-thirds) of the membership could shut off a
- filibuster--and thus make possible passage of an FEPC law.
- Previously, he had expressed "doubts" that a President should
- interfere with Senate rules; while he had not opposed FEPC, he
- had taken the general position that the states should be
- encouraged to tackle the problem (as he had done in Illinois).
- </p>
- <p> In his formal speeches, Stevenson has supported, or
- defended, the record of the Truman Administration, domestic and
- foreign--though some of his defensive remarks (e.g., on
- corruption) admit by implication far more than Truman ever has.
- Some of his own elaborations:
- </p>
- <p> Communism Abroad: "The answer to Communism is, in the old-
- fashioned phrase, good works--good works inspired by love and
- dedicated to the whole man."
- </p>
- <p> Communism at Home: After saying early in the campaign that
- the hunt for Communists was a hunt for "phantoms," and that U.S.
- Communists "aren't, on the whole, very important," he said that
- "as far as I'm concerned this fight will be continued until the
- Communist conspiracy in our land is smashed beyond repair," and
- that the job of tracking them down should be turned over to the
- FBI. "Our police work is aimed at a conspiracy, and not ideas or
- opinion. Our country was built on unpopular ideas, on unorthodox
- opinions. My definition of a free society is a society where it
- is safe to be unpopular."
- </p>
- <p> Corruption: "Whose fault is it that we get what we deserve
- in Government and that the honor and nobility of politics at the
- lower order of the genus pol, but it is the fault of you the
- people. Your public servants serve you right. Indeed, often they
- serve you better than your apathy and your indifference deserve,
- but I suggest that there is always time to repent and amend your
- ways."
- </p>
- <p> Inflation: "The cause of inflation can, I believe, be made
- plain. Let's stay in the kitchen a moment. It is as though we
- were making bread and while we answered the phone a malicious
- neighbor (i.e., Russia) dumped a whole cup of yeast into the
- bowl. That's the inflation story. In fact, that is inflation."
- </p>
- <p> Lawyers & Poets. The legend has grown up that Stevenson
- writes all his own speeches. No human being could do that, and
- Stevenson didn't try, even at the start of the campaign. His
- Liberal Party speech drew, in part, on a memorandum written by
- James Wechsler, editor of the far-to-the-left New York Post. The
- Detroit labor speech, in which Stevenson called for repeal of
- Taft-Hartley, was written by Willard Wirtz, onetime member of the
- War Labor Board.
- </p>
- <p> His main group of speech writers is quartered in Springfield
- (on the third floor of the Elks Club). Head of the speech writers
- is Arthur Schlesinger Jr., historian, Harvard professor, onetime
- vice president of the A.D.A., and apologist for Dean Acheson. All
- speeches, in fact almost all information intended for Stevenson,
- clear through Carl McGowan, Northwestern University law
- professor, who is Stevenson's closest adviser. Stevenson
- headquarters also receives memoranda and phrases from such
- professionals as Poet Archibald MacLeish. Playwright Robert E.
- Sherwood, Samuel I. Rosenman, Authors Eric Hodgins and Bernard De
- Voto.
- </p>
- <p> However, Stevenson's is the guiding and the finishing hand
- in the composition of his speeches. None of his staff doubts that
- Stevenson is a better speech-writer than any of his writers.
- </p>
- <p> Good Governor. Stevenson's record as governor has hardly
- entered the campaign. It was, in most respects, an excellent
- record. He improved highways, got additional millions for
- schools, improved social-welfare services (especially in state
- mental institutions) and put the state-highway police on a
- nonpartisan basis. The record was marred by two scandals: the
- counterfeiting of cigarette stamps in the state revenue
- department and the bribery of state officials who permitted horse
- meat to be sold for hamburger ("Adlaiburgers," the Chicago
- Tribune hastened to call them). Six state employees were indicted
- for bribery and malfeasance in the horsemeat scandal; in the
- counterfeiting case there were no indictments, but three state
- employees were dismissed because they refused to take a lie-
- detector test.
- </p>
- <p> He has himself cited his record as governor to support his
- argument that he can deal with corruption; he tells audiences
- that he knows about corruption because he followed "eight years
- of magnificent Republican rascality." He has never so much as
- slapped the wrist of the Cook County Democratic organization, the
- most corrupt and powerful of existing big-city machines, but he
- was not, like Truman, a machine-made man.
- </p>
- <p> The Hiss Case. One other act of Stevenson's as governor was
- lugged into the campaign last fortnight by Richard Nixon, the
- Republican candidate for Vice President: Stevenson's deposition
- as a character witness for Alger Hiss. Stevenson first met Hiss
- in 1933 as a young lawyer in the Agricultural Adjustment
- Administration in Washington, where, as he has said, "our contact
- was frequent but not close." He was with Hiss again at the first
- United Nations conference in San Francisco in 1945, at a U.N.
- session in London early in 1946, when he and Hiss had "offices
- near by each other and met frequently at delegation meetings and
- staff conferences," and at the U.N. session in New York in 1947.
- </p>
- <p> On June 2, 1949, two days after the first Hiss trial began
- in New York, Stevenson testified before a United States
- commissioner in Springfield that Hiss's reputation for integrity,
- loyalty and veracity "is good."
- </p>
- <p> Stevenson has defended his testimony by saying that it would
- be "a sad day for Anglo-Saxon justice when any man, especially a
- lawyer, will refuse to give honest evidence in criminal trial for
- fear the defendant may eventually be found guilty." Last week 22
- lawyers, some of them Republicans and Eisenhower supporters, came
- to his defense. So did the pro-Eisenhower New York Times. Said
- the lawyers: "The governor...did what any good citizen should
- have done..." The Democrats pointed out that Republican John
- Foster Dulles had endorsed Hiss for presidency of the Carnegie
- Endowment for International Peace.
- </p>
- <p> As the campaign's flame waxed and tempers shortened.
- Stevenson's tongue grew sharper. In the early days of the
- campaign, he often referred to Eisenhower as his "great" and
- "esteemed" opponent. But he tried to give the impression that Ike
- wasn't very definitely there at all, that his real opponents were
- Senators Taft, McCarthy and Jenner.
- </p>
- <p> But of late, Stevenson's tactics have changed. Both
- reluctant candidates now want very much to win. Stevenson has
- begun to hammer Ike. The phrases used for this at Democratic
- headquarters are that Ike "must be cut down to size" and that
- Stevenson must "destroy the Eisenhower symbol."
- </p>
- <p> He began to refer to Eisenhower as the "honorary Republican
- candidate" and the "Eager General." He said that Eisenhower was
- conducting a campaign of "ugly, twisted, demagogic distortion."
- And he implied that Eisenhower's election would lead not only to
- isolationism but to World War III.
- </p>
- <p> Other Stevenson cracks:
- </p>
- <p>-- "You can have the Old Guard Republicans who have said no
- to everything for 20 years--and to whom the General of the Army
- has now said yes."
- </p>
- <p>-- "There are some who say that the general intends to
- doublecross his new friends after the election. I do not believe
- either that the general is so unscrupulous or that they are so
- stupid."
- </p>
- <p> This was the tenor of his campaign last week and will
- apparently be his line of attack during the last ten days of the
- campaign, when Stevenson, who has already traveled almost 30,000
- miles and made about 100 speeches, will make his final swing
- through the industrial East. (To Ike's 40,000 miles and about 125
- speeches.)
- </p>
- <p> Some time ago, Stevenson was asked just what kind of
- Democrat he was. His reply: "`What kind of Democrat I am' makes
- me feel a little like the old lady who said she didn't know what
- she thought until she heard what she said. I'm not sure what kind
- of Democrat I am, but I am sure what kind of Democrat I'm not.
- I'm not one of those who believe we should have a Democratic
- regime because it is good for the Democratic Party. If the
- Democratic Party is not good for the nation, it is not good for
- me or for Democrats."
- </p>
- <p> Does Adlai Stevenson, and what he stands for, make sense to
- the American people? The people, who know but aren't saying yet,
- will answer on Nov. 4.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-