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- <text id=93HT1082>
- <title>
- 68 Election: Democrats:Survival at the Stockyards
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1968 Election
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- September 6, 1968
- THE NATION
- Survival at the Stockyards
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Schism, bitterness, demands for violent solution,
- disenchantment with the way things are, fear of what may be--these
- are the forces, some would say the demons, that are loose
- in the U.S. in 1968. The demons accompanied the Democrats to
- Chicago. A deeply divided party met amid paroxysms of violence
- in the city and obsessive security measures that surrounded a
- major function of U.S. democracy with the air of a police state.
- A bitter but rational argument about the Vietnamese war was
- traumatically translated into street battles between protesters
- and police. Nominees and other speakers spent valuable time
- condemning or justifying the conduct of Mayor Richard Daley's
- heavy-handed cops.
- </p>
- <p> The images of Chicago will haunt the Democrats during the
- campaign. Even if they can hang together through November (they
- did, after all, avoid a major walkout of factions, as happened
- in 1948), large groups within the party remain deeply and
- ideologically disaffected. Facing a confident and smoothly
- organized G.O.P., the Democrats must shoulder the voters'
- discontent with the incumbents.
- </p>
- <p> Welcome Reforms. Despite the obviously gloomy prospect, the
- outcome at the stockyards was not totally grim for the
- Democrats. Hubert Humphrey, desperately appealing for party
- unity, made what on the whole must be considered an excellent
- acceptance speech, and his selection of Maine Senator Edmund
- Muskie was generally well received. The convention may have
- picked a candidate opposed by a big segment of the party and
- backed by an alliance of old-line political bosses, but there
- is little doubt that the choice represented a majority view
- among Democrats. It is regrettable, perhaps, that the American
- political system did not cast up two more modern and exciting
- candidates than Hubert Humphrey and Richard Nixon. But the
- decision in Chicago, as in Miami Beach, does in a rough sort of
- way reflect the popular mood. Despite the deep disillusionment
- of many Americans with the Old Politics, the majority seems to
- have no strong appetite for radical solutions.
- </p>
- <p> In a larger sense, the Chicago production showed a
- remarkable degree of vitality in the party--and in the
- political machinery on display. The symbols of ward politics
- waved like Bourbon banners against a tide of reform, but the
- party did stage a convention that was more open and more
- deliberative than any in memory. The passionless play put on by
- Republicans in Miami Beach, by comparison, was a mere
- ratification process. Admittedly, the presidential nomination
- was never in serious question last week. But the party did
- engage in a candid, spirited debate on the Vietnam question, and
- 40% of the votes went for the relatively soft plank recommended
- by a minority of the Platform Committee: even some pro-Humphrey
- delegates voted against the Administration on this issue.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, the convention produced some welcome reforms.
- The venerable unit rule, often used to smother dissent in party
- affairs, was summarily scrapped. A standing measure to
- encourage minority representation at future conventions was
- strengthened. Rebels challenging the regular delegations from
- Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi got full or partial
- satisfaction. Said one disgruntled Georgian: "The white
- conservative vote in the South is not wanted by the present
- party leaders."
- </p>
- <p> None of this mattered much to some of Eugene McCarthy's
- disappointed supporters, and their leader's stubborn and
- unorthodox refusal to endorse Humphrey fed their bitterness.
- For the most adamant in this group, the only hope was to
- organize a new party, even if it meant a Republican victory.
- </p>
- <p> Dum and Dee. Other Democrats who have been fighting the
- Administration realize that whatever their differences with
- Humphrey, they prefer him to Nixon. Despite all the talk about
- Tweedledum and Tweedledee among the disenchanted, real
- distinctions exist between the major candidates and parties.
- Last week's acrimony and violence obscured it, but the Democrats
- assembled a platform and a public stance that differs markedly
- from the Republicans'.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon and the G.O.P. put heavier emphasis on the
- law-and-order issue than did Humphrey and the Democrats. The
- Democrats came out for putting into effect the radical and
- expensive proposals of the Kerner commission report. And if
- necessary, the Democratic platform says, the Government must
- become the "employer of last resort" of those unable to find
- work in private industry. The Republicans stressed fiscal
- responsibility and propose to combat urban problems primarily
- through private enterprise.
- </p>
- <p> Natural Ground. In campaign strategy, too, there is a major
- difference. Nixon obviously hopes for some Southern support. He
- plucked Spiro Agnew from obscurity at least partly to avoid
- offending Dixie. Like Nixon, Humphrey enjoyed heavy Southern
- support for the nomination. But he gave the South little in
- return. He ignored a Southern list of seven proposed candidates
- for the vice-presidential nomination and selected the man he
- considered best qualified of those willing to make the race.
- </p>
- <p> Humphrey must now make an aggressive effort to prove that
- the Democrats who clamor for change do not have to change
- parties. Humphrey must also buck the widespread reaction
- against student protests, the militant assertion of Negro rights
- and other sources of domestic strife. "There may be a tendency
- to conservatism in the country right now," he acknowledges. "If
- you let the country move that way, it will. I have no intention
- of letting it." If he means it, and at the risk of being
- punished by this trend, Humphrey is clearly seeking his natural
- ground to Nixon's left.
- </p>
- <p>The Man Who Would Recapture Youth
- </p>
- <p> The look is merry, but the merriment is diluted. Often a
- pained bewilderment clouds his cherubic look, and his mouth
- tightens as if to seal in the explosiveness and confusion
- behind it. Despite the dancing eyes, the tireless smile, the
- bouncy spirit, the effusive greetings ("Well, bless your heart,"
- "Thank you, thank you, thank you"), the man the Democratic Party
- has nominated for President of the U.S. is not to be dismissed
- simply as a glib, out-of-touch relic of a political era long
- past.
- </p>
- <p> Hubert Horatio Humphrey bristles at the frequent
- suggestion that he is a man superseded by the times. He cannot
- comprehend why, in view of his record, he is looked upon as
- dated and dull, a prisoner of an obsolete system that has proved
- unresponsive to the problems of today.
- </p>
- <p> He has not lacked courage, as he is all too ready to
- recall. As mayor of Minneapolis at the age of 34 (he is 57 now),
- he cleaned up the police force, reduced crime and upgraded
- schools. He risked everything for principle when he forced a
- strong civil rights plank on a reluctant Democratic Convention
- in 1948, prompting a walkout by Strom Thurmond's Dixiecrats. He
- showed foresight when he crusaded for Medicare 15 years before
- it became law and proposed a Peace Corps nine months before it
- was established. His peace credentials, validated in the
- struggle for enactment of the Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty,
- were always gilt-edged--until Lyndon Johnson and Vietnam
- happened along.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, Humphrey is attacked as deficient in the very
- qualities that have distinguished his career. That explains, to
- a degree, the bewilderment that shows up in the pursed lips and
- clenched jaw. What he fails to grasp is that he is no longer
- Mayor Humphrey, or young Senator Humphrey, and has not been for
- many years. He constantly reminds people of the way he was, but
- he is that way no longer, and his frequent excursions into
- nostalgia only underscore the point.
- </p>
- <p> Conciliator. As TIME Correspondent Hayes Gorey notes,
- Hubert Humphrey is deeply grateful to Lyndon Johnson for having
- elevated him to the second highest office in the land and given
- him a crack at the first. Yet his gratitude may be misplaced.
- It was Johnson who years ago in the Senate played a major role
- in persuading Humphrey "to stop kicking the wall," as Hubert
- puts it; to abandon solitary crusades for hopeless causes. Once
- he grasped the lesson, Humphrey advanced to Senate majority whip
- and then Vice President under Johnson's tutelage. He also took
- on a good deal of L.B.J.'s coloration. Though never as devious
- or secretive as Johnson, Humphrey became remarkably like him in
- his desire to please everybody, his ambivalence, his addiction
- to hyperbole, his fidelity to the power blocs of the old
- politics (big labor, Southern Democrats, the surviving bosses
- and the elderly). He also became vulnerable to the kind of
- accusation emblazoned on a placard in Chicago last week: "There
- are two sides to every question: Humphrey endorses both."
- </p>
- <p> Like Johnson, Humphrey has become distrustful of the press--although
- his condition is nowhere near so grave as the
- President's--and he has begun to open a credibility gap of
- his own. Like Johnson, he has been unable to select or attract
- really first-rate aides. With some exceptions, notably his
- newly appointed campaign manager, Larry O'Brien, his staff is
- nondescript; this year alone, four of his close associates have
- been accused of wrongdoing. Most important, Humphrey learned
- from Johnson that in the U.S. Senate, a cutting edge leads most
- often to ostracism and ineffectiveness. Humphrey could tolerate
- neither; Eugene McCarthy and Robert Kennedy always flirted with
- both. "I'm not a fighter; I'm a conciliator," Humphrey has said.
- </p>
- <p> Having chosen the role of soother and persuader, he is
- puzzled nonetheless when people do not identify him with the
- creative, combative politician of yesteryear. After four years
- as Lyndon Johnson's Vice President, his public persona is that
- of a subordinate and apologist. It has become increasingly
- difficult to think of him in such terms as leader, fighter,
- innovator--which are precisely the terms in which he thinks
- of himself. He argues these days, urgently and almost
- desperately, that he is too his own man; that he can too be a
- strong, forward-looking President. Perhaps. But in order to
- accomplish that, he must recapture the spirit of his youth.
- After years of deferring to the lords of the Senate, after his
- service as Johnson's Boswell, he will find the search
- particularly difficult.
- </p>
- <p> Humphrey is prone to weep on almost any occasion; his
- sensitivity to bright lights occasionally causes the tears to
- flow, but his emotionalism is more often the cause. He is often
- too anxious to please, too easily swayed, too inclined to think
- that everyone is basically a decent fellow. He talks too much.
- On the other hand, he has limitless energy, infectious
- enthusiasm, a quick and absorptive mind, and unquestionable
- idealism and commitment to the shaping of a better America. He
- is, further, a formidable man on the stump. Without doubt he has
- greater warmth and conveys greater sincerity than does Richard
- Nixon.
- </p>
- <p> Signs of Schism. The nomination had eluded him so long--he
- was first considered a presidential possibility in 1952--that he
- had finally despaired of winning it. Thanks to the
- convulsive events of 1968, it came within his reach. Yet on the
- day that he finally grasped it, he sat glumly in his suite in
- Chicago's Conrad Hilton Hotel while young demonstrators and
- angry police fought in the streets below. He tasted not victory
- but the acrid fumes of tear gas that wafted through an open
- window. What was to have been the happiest of days turned out
- to be an occasion for some doubt and depression. What was to
- have been remembered as the Democratic Convention that nominated
- Hubert Humphrey may go down in history instead as an event of
- rancor and rioting.
- </p>
- <p> Show of Support. Dismayed as Humphrey was by his party's
- confused, cacophonous mood, he began to brighten perceptibly as
- the balloting got under way and moved him ever closer to the
- nomination. The total mounted toward the needed 1,312. "Oregon
- is zilch," said Humphrey; his fellow Minnesotan, Senator Eugene
- McCarthy, had won its 35 votes in the May primary. Humphrey
- leaned forward expectantly, then broke into a wide grin as
- Pennsylvania put him over the top with 103 3/4 votes.
- "Pennsylvania started it and Pennsylvania put us over!" said
- the jubilant Humphrey, recalling that the state's show of
- support last spring gave him an all but unbeatable lead.
- </p>
- <p> Humphrey blew kisses toward the TV screen as the cameras
- zeroed in on his wife Muriel at the hall; then he dashed up and
- kissed the screen. Johnson, called from the L.B.J. ranch, told
- Humphrey: "You've got us here and all you need now are a few
- million more. We've got to get the party together and work to
- see this through November." "Bless your heart," said Humphrey.
- "Thank you."
- </p>
- <p> In the Hilton's Waldorf Room, Humphrey did a little jig to
- Let a Winner Lead the Way, then told the newsmen and the girls
- in white boaters and the campaign aides assembled there that
- the nomination was only "the beginning of the climb to new
- heights." He assured them that the party would soon be reunited.
- George McGovern, the late-starting candidate who emerged as a
- quietly capable and attractive man, will support Humphrey, if
- perhaps not enthusiastically. "I am no fan of Richard Nixon,"
- he said. But there was serious doubt that McCarthy would ever
- endorse the ticket. On the other hand, Wayne Morse, one of the
- loudest of the Vietnam critics, promised to do so, as did
- California Assembly Speaker Jesse Unruh and Vermont Governor
- Phillip Hoff, both of whom had been hostile toward him.
- California Congressman Burton, who had fought hard for the dove
- plank on Vietnam in the platform and backed McCarthy for the
- nomination, said of Humphrey: "I'm going to support him and
- encourage everybody I can to support him. I think he'll make a
- damn fine President. It's just this damn war that's in my craw."
- </p>
- <p> In his acceptance speech the following night, Humphrey
- made a moving plea for party unity. He borrowed a phrase that
- Robert Kennedy had used repeatedly before his campaign was cut
- short by an assassin's bullet last June: "I need your help."
- Added the Vice President: "There is always the temptation to
- leave the scene of battle in anger and despair, but those who
- know the true meaning of democracy accept the decision of today,
- never relinquishing their right to change it tomorrow."
- </p>
- <p> Never Again. It was a 50-minute speech, interrupted 75
- times by applause and three times by short-lived boos. It was
- deftly constructed. With suggestions from others, the major work
- was done by Humphrey's own speechwriting team headed by Ted
- Van Dyk, and by the Vice President himself.
- </p>
- <p> Given the bellicose mood of the convention, Humphrey faced
- a difficult task in striking the right tone. He was blatantly
- corny at times, and he used the device, also employed by Richard
- Nixon, of giving a point in one sentence and taking it back in
- the next; social justice balanced by the need for law
- enforcement, peace, but not forgetting the need for firmness.
- But on the whole, he was remarkably successful, and so patently,
- radiantly sincere that even a quotation from St. Francis of
- Assisi and a call to the nation for prayer were touching rather
- than treacly. Scorning both "mob violence" and "police
- brutality," he declared in a reference to the previous night's
- riot: "May America tonight resolve that never, never again shall
- we see what we have seen."
- </p>
- <p> One of Humphrey's thorniest problems was how to invoke
- Johnson's name without setting off a deafening--and damaging--chorus
- of catcalls. He did so by first mentioning the name
- of every Democratic presidential candidate, beginning with
- Franklin Roosevelt and only then paying tremulous tribute to
- Johnson's achievements. ("And tonight, to you, Mr. President,
- I say thank you. Thank you, Mr. President.") Having done his
- duty, and drawn boos as well as heavy applause, Humphrey then
- moved to cut the umbilical. It was now "the end of an era--the
- beginning of a new day," he said. To ensure that nobody missed
- the point, he used the "new day" phrase half a dozen more times,
- and it would be no surprise if that became the slogan of his
- campaign. In a Humphrey Administration--if there is one--he
- told reporters, "I may turn to `new dawn.' The dawn comes
- slowly, but it illuminates."
- </p>
- <p> Strategy of Panic. Humphrey's speech was a grace note in
- a week that had few of them. The amphitheatre itself was heavily
- guarded and isolated, like a prison camp or a nuclear
- installation. If the 10,000 young protesters were bent on
- raising a ruckus outside the hall, McCarthy's forces were
- determined to raise one within. "There is no floor strategy,"
- said McCarthy's aide, Jerry Eller, only half in jest, on the eve
- of the convention. "Just achieve panic, and then win."
- </p>
- <p> The scene was in sharp contrast with 1964 when a rare air
- of harmony prevailed and L.B.J.'s ubiquitous aides moved in
- quickly to muffle any signs of schism. Johnson's men were
- running things again, in tandem with Daley, but they were far
- less conspicuous this time as if they sensed that though they
- controlled the convention's machinery, they did not control its
- spirit.
- </p>
- <p> Postmaster General Marvin Watson, the unsmiling majordomo
- of the White House staff, oversaw credentials, schedules and
- arrangements, but moved through the amphitheatre's corridors
- all but unheeded. Convention Manager John Criswell was rarely
- in evidence.
- </p>
- <p> Sensing the mood, Johnson stayed away altogether. He was
- not worried about security; he could have helicoptered from
- O'Hare Airport directly to the convention site without seeing
- anybody but guards, delegates and newsmen. But he was concerned
- that his appearance would set off a thunderous wave of boos.
- There were rumors that he would turn up on the final day, but
- that might have been construed as an attempt to steal the show
- from Humphrey. Moreover, he himself realized that the delegates,
- on the night of the filmed tribute to Robert Kennedy, might be
- less than receptive. As it was, the memorial movie stopped the
- convention cold. With Broadway Star Theodore Bikel leading the
- way, and Actress Shirley MacLaine weeping freely, delegates
- sang chorus after chorus of the Battle Hymn of the Republic
- while the chairman futilely gaveled for silence.
- </p>
- <p> Had Johnson gone to Chicago, his 60th birthday would have
- been celebrated in Soldier Field (capacity: 77,000). Instead,
- he had coffee and cake at Daughter Luci's red brick ranch-style
- house in suburban Austin, Texas. Lady Bird and Grandson Lyn
- were there, as well as two busloads of newsmen. "I am not
- talking to the convention," he told the reporters, lest he be
- accused of stage-managing the affair. "I don't have anyone
- reporting to me other than Walter Cronkite."
- </p>
- <p> Beards and Beads. In Chicago, the delegates seemed to come
- from almost the same mold as the neat, well-groomed Republicans
- who had assembled in Miami Beach three weeks earlier. There were
- more of them (2,989 v. 1,333 Republicans), and they were crammed
- into a hall with two-thirds the capacity of Miami Beach's ample
- Convention Hall. There were more beards, beads and celebrities,
- including Astronaut John Glenn. Connecticut Delegates Paul
- Newman and Arthur Miller, California Delegates Shirley MacLaine,
- her brother Warren Beatty, Decathlon Star Rafer Johnson and
- Pierre Salinger. There were more Negroes (337 delegates and
- alternates v. 78 in Miami Beach), and they played a far more
- meaningful role. Channing E. Phillips, militant pastor of
- Washington's Lincoln Memorial Congregational Temple, was offered
- as a nominee for the presidency and won 67 1/2 votes. Georgia
- State representative Julian Bond, also a Negro, was offered as
- a vice-presidential nominee, but withdrew because he is 6 1/2
- years under the constitutional age minimum of 35. Power brokers
- in their own right, like Cleveland's Mayor Carl Stokes, Richard
- Hatcher, Mayor of Gary, Ind., and Michigan Congressman John
- Conyers were also on hand.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever the differences, the Democrats, like the
- Republicans, represented the nation in all its diversity. Even
- more than the Republicans, however, they faithfully reflected
- the nation's fissures and feuds. And while the G.O.P. was bent
- on papering over the cracks in order to restore the party unity
- that had been all but destroyed in 1964, the Democrats arrived
- spoiling for a fight. They lost little time in getting down to
- what amounted to a revolutionary overhauling of the regulations
- that have governed past conventions. The unit rule, which
- helped strangle intraparty dissent in nine states by allowing
- the majority of a delegation to control 100% of the votes, was
- abolished; Humphrey had been willing to delay the move until
- 1972 to mollify his Southern backers, but the convention was in
- no mood to wait. The rule increasing minority representation in
- delegations at future conventions was strengthened, ensuring
- that Negroes would be even more heavily represented than they
- were last week.
- </p>
- <p> The first real battle erupted on the first night.
- California's Jesse Unruh, Speaker of the State Assembly and
- delegation leader, moved to delay consideration of the
- Credentials Committee report. Humphrey's men figured that Unruh
- was simply trying to delay the convention long enough to get a
- draft movement going for Teddy Kennedy. They decided to force
- a roll-call vote as the first big test of strength between the
- pro- and anti-Administration forces. In a nine-room control
- center on the amphitheatre's second level, Oklahoma Senator Fred
- Harris, a key Humphrey aide, declared: "We want to put the
- crunch on. This is a big one." Humphrey men on the floor were
- told: "The vote is `No' on the Unruh motion, and let's push it."
- It turned out to be an easy Humphrey victory--1,648 1/2 to 875--and
- it approximately reflected the divisions within the hall.
- </p>
- <p> The key credentials disputes involved Mississippi and
- Georgia. Making good on a promise made in 1964, the Democrats
- unseated a delegation chosen by the regular Democratic
- machinery of Mississippi and replaced it with a racially mixed
- group of insurgents. The Credentials Committee sought to settle
- the Georgia dispute by awarding half of the delegation's 41
- elected delegate votes to the regulars, who included a number
- of loyal, moderate party members, and half to a rebel group led
- by Julian Bond. Bond's group wanted all the seats, forced a
- roll-call vote that turned out to be the closest contest of the
- convention. When the move was beaten 1,413 to 1,041 1/2, the
- California and New York delegations, which proved a magnetic
- force for dissent through the convention, chanted "Julian Bond!
- Julian Bond!" Hurriedly, the convention was adjourned.
- </p>
- <p> Narrow Scope. The most bitter, bruising fight was waged
- over the Vietnam plank. The scope of the debate was far narrower
- than it was a year ago. Then, there was still a raging quarrel
- about whether the U.S. should escalate the war still further or
- begin curtailing its involvement. Now practically everybody
- agreed that the war should be ended, and the dispute centered
- on the mechanics of settlement. For a time, Humphrey edged
- toward favoring an outright bombing halt against North Vietnam,
- with no conditions attached. Johnson too had been thinking of
- declaring such a halt, chiefly because he had been assured by
- Moscow that it was seriously interested in persuading Hanoi to
- reach a settlement of the war. Premier Kosygin had even sent
- Johnson a letter expressing Moscow's willingness to cooperate.
- </p>
- <p> In the light of these developments, Humphrey decided that
- he would delay staking out a detailed Vietnam position for the
- Platform Committee. Events, he figured, would take care of that
- for him, and any new move toward peace would help him
- tremendously. He began using more dovish terms in public,
- promoting a bombing halt and hinting at progress in Paris.
- Johnson abruptly reversed field with his hard-line talk before
- the Veterans of Foreign Wars in Detroit two weeks ago, catching
- Humphrey unawares. The reason: Moscow had turned cool, perhaps
- because of the Czechoslovak crisis, while Hanoi's negotiators
- in Paris had abruptly reverted to a rigid stance and Communist
- troops in South Vietnam were resuming their attacks on the
- cities. Johnson told associates that Hanoi and Moscow were
- "reading the polls" in the U.S. and "playing Democratic Party
- politics" in hopes of influencing the choice of a candidate.
- </p>
- <p> After a new briefing, Humphrey reverted to the
- Administration line. Some Midwestern supporters, who had
- cheered the dovish stance in a private Chicago talk just a few
- days earlier, felt betrayed. The hawks were just as outraged
- that he had even considered a bombing clause.
- </p>
- <p> Initially, the Platform Committee approved a plan urging
- the U.S. to "stop all remaining bombing of North Vietnam in the
- expectation of restraint and reasonable response from Hanoi."
- Johnson did not like the business about "expectation." Though
- he huffily denied any role in dictating the platform language,
- he summoned Committee Chairman Hale Boggs back to Washington,
- ostensibly for a briefing on Czechoslovakia, but also for a
- Vietnam briefing. He sent White House Staffer Charles Murphy to
- Chicago to oversee the Vietnam deliberations. Soon the text was
- changed to read that the bombing would stop "when this action
- would not endanger the lives of our troops in the field." No one
- was quite sure what that meant.
- </p>
- <p> McCarthy was determined to use the Vietnam plank as his
- springboard to the nomination. By sponsoring a floor fight over
- the minority proposal, which called for "an unconditional end
- to all bombing," he hoped to split the party and attract enough
- support to put him over. At first, the convention's managers
- sought to schedule debate on the issue in the early-morning
- hours when practically nobody would be watching TV. But the
- dissidents raised a tremendous ruckus. "Let's go home, let's go
- home!" they roared. Convention Chairman Carl Albert seemed at
- a loss. Finally, Chicago's Mayor Richard Daley drew a finger
- across his throat and Albert got the message. He cut the fuss
- off by adjourning the meeting.
- </p>
- <p> Stop the War. When the debate got under way next afternoon,
- it led to an unusually free and searching exchange of views.
- Many war critics wanted above all a kind of ritual sacrifice--an
- admission by the Johnson Administration that its involvement
- in Vietnam had been a grave error. Doves generally characterized
- the majority plank as a charter for more of the same.
- </p>
- <p> Supporters of the plank argued that it left several
- options open to a future President, rather than unwisely
- committing him in advance to a specific course of action.
- Moreover, warned Missouri's Governor Warren Hearnes, an
- unconditional bombing halt could endanger U.S. servicemen. Boggs
- cited a statement by U.S. Vietnam Commander Creighton Abrams to
- the effect that a bombing halt would mean a fivefold increase
- in enemy strength in the area of the Demilitarized Zone within
- two weeks. Many military experts consider Abrams' estimate an
- exaggeration.
- </p>
- <p> The doves received the loudest ovations for their
- statements. But the pro-Administration forces, dominated by
- Southerners who were determined to prevent a repudiation of
- Johnson's policies though not particularly interested in how
- the plank might damage Humphrey, received the most votes. When
- Albert read the final tally, it stood at 1,567 3/4 for the
- majority plank, 1041 1/4 for the minority. Even before he
- finished reading the results, a chant of lament began in the New
- York delegation: "We shall overcome, we shall overcome..." From
- the galleries: "Stop the war! Stop the war!"
- </p>
- <p> As happened often during the week in such situations, an
- official on the podium flashed a signal to the 50-piece Lou
- Breese orchestra to strike up some noisy numbers to drown out
- the chants. In this case, with stunning inappropriateness after
- a debate on bombing, it was the Air Force's song, Off We Go
- into the Wild Blue Yonder. The band ripped into Happy Days Are
- Here Again in the midst of a somber passage on Vietnam during
- Humphrey's acceptance speech.
- </p>
- <p> A Real Ball Game. Fully 40% of the Democratic delegates
- stood in opposition to the Administration's policy--and by
- implication, Humphrey's. Even so, the Vietnam uproar proved no
- real threat to the Vice President's hopes of gaining the
- nomination. The greatest threat came, instead, in an evanescent
- move to draft Massachusetts Senator Edward Kennedy.
- </p>
- <p> California's Unruh, anxious to win over the state's
- fractious liberals so that he can seek the governorship in 1970
- (he has even been seen recently on vacation sporting a Nehru
- jacket and love beads), talked up a switch to Teddy. McGovern
- and Connecticut Senator Abe Ribicoff persuaded Daley to delay
- his anticipated endorsement of Humphrey for a few days to see
- if the draft-Teddy move could get rolling. Daley needed little
- persuading; Humphrey is his fourth choice, after Lyndon
- Johnson, then Bobby Kennedy, and finally Teddy Kennedy.
- </p>
- <p> From a suite in the opulent Standard Club, a businessman's
- retreat near the Loop, Teddy's brother-in-law Stephen Smith
- headed the operation. A day before the presidential balloting,
- he drove to Gene McCarthy's headquarters at the Conrad Hilton.
- McCarthy assured Smith that if a genuine draft developed, he
- would step aside and throw his support to Kennedy--but only
- after his own name had first been placed in nomination, since
- he felt he owed at least that much to those who had supported
- him for so long. McCarthy asked Smith if he thought such a move
- would do any good. "It would then be a real ball game," said
- Smith. But in Hyannisport, Teddy was still convinced that he
- should not be in the game--yet. He is 36, and his youth would
- deter him. So does the fact that his brother Robert's
- assassination occurred so recently. Either 1972 or 1976, he
- concluded, would be a better time. Just before Daley held his
- final caucus with the Illinois delegation, Ted Kennedy issued
- a statement through his Washington office, urging supporters "to
- cease all activity on my behalf."
- </p>
- <p> The last apparent obstacle to Hubert Humphrey's nomination
- was out of the way. After the turbulent Vietnam debate, the
- delegates took a two-hour break, then began drifting back to
- the amphitheatre to vote on the presidential nomination. But at
- that moment, Chicago's lake front was turning into a
- battleground. All week, the antiwar demonstrators and Chicago's
- police had engaged in minor, but sometimes bloody skirmishes.
- On the night of the presidential balloting, the skirmishes
- turned into a major battle.
- </p>
- <p> At the amphitheatre, taped scenes of flailing police
- batons were played over scores of television screens. The
- delegates were appalled. Standing at the podium to nominate
- McGovern, Ribicoff looked down at the Illinois delegation 15
- feet in front of him, and denounced "Gestapo tactics in the
- streets of Chicago." Daley's lieutenants leaped up, shaking
- their fists. "How hard it is to accept the truth," said Ribicoff
- calmly, looking straight at Daley. "How hard it is." Now Daley
- was on his feet too, the heavy-jowled, heavy-lidded "Great
- Dumpling," as Chicago Columnist Mike Royko calls him, waving and
- shouting, among other things, "Get out, go home!"
- </p>
- <p> Speaker after speaker referred to the scene at the Hilton,
- and each set off a rumbling chorus of boos aimed at Daley.
- Several delegates demanded that the convention be transferred
- to another city. Donald Peterson, a Wisconsin dairy executive
- and chairman of his state's rambunctious delegation, shouted
- into his state's microphone: "Thousands of young people are
- being beaten on the streets of Chicago! I move this convention
- be adjourned for two weeks and moved to another city." Daley was
- so rattled that at one point, when Illinois was asked if it had
- any names to place in nomination, he grabbed the mike and
- started casting the state's votes. Finally, beet-red with anger,
- he stood up and walked out of the hall. The night after "Bloody
- Wednesday," as it came to be called, a cordon of plainclothesmen
- ringed the Illinois delegation, and the galleries were packed
- with the mayor's henchmen waving freshly printed banners: WE
- LOVE DALEY.
- </p>
- <p> Locked Door. Humphrey's nomination was almost an
- anticlimax. It went very much as his aides had anticipated: a
- first-ballot victory with 1,761 3/4 votes to 601 for McCarthy,
- 146 1/2 for McGovern, 67 1/2 for Channing Phillips.
- </p>
- <p> Humphrey had little problem choosing a running mate. He
- had consulted 100 party leaders, businessmen and labor
- officials, including A.F.L.-C.I.O. Boss George Meany, who simply
- urged him to choose the best man. By the morning after his
- nomination, his mind was made up. A week before Chicago, he had
- met for two hours in his Harbour Square apartment in Southwest
- Washington with Gene McCarthy. McCarthy agreed that his own
- chances for the nomination were slight, whereupon Humphrey asked
- if the second spot would appeal to him. "No," said McCarthy.
- "Don't offer it." During the same week, Humphrey visited Teddy
- Kennedy at the Senator's McLean, Va., home. "Teddy told me he
- wasn't a candidate," said Humphrey. He asked Kennedy: "Is the
- door ajar, is the key in it, or is it locked?" Replied Teddy:
- "The door is locked. I'm not a contender."
- </p>
- <p> Ethnic Appeal. Weeding out of other possibilities left
- Maine's Edmund Muskie, little-known but with other assets to
- commend him. A ruggedly handsome, young-looking man of 54, he
- imparts a Lincolnesque air of cool statesmanship in counterpoint
- to Humphrey's volatile manner. A former Democratic Governor and
- currently Senator of an overwhelmingly Republican state, Muskie
- is a Polish Catholic. The era of religiously balanced tickets
- and of purely ethnic appeal may be dying, but it is not quite
- dead. Besides, there are considerably more Poles in the U.S.
- (6,000,000) than Greeks (600,000), giving the Democrats a clear
- edge in that department over Nixon's vice-presidential choice,
- Spiro Agnew. Particularly important is the fact that the
- heaviest concentrations of Poles are in nine key industrial
- states that account for 196 of the 270 electoral votes needed
- to win the presidency. [New York, with 1,200,000, Illinois
- 750,000, Pennsylvania 740,000, Michigan 500,000, New Jersey
- 400,000, Ohio 250,000, Massachusetts 250,000, Wisconsin 200,000,
- Connecticut 200,000.] Muskie may well be able to offset George
- Wallace's strong appeal to this bloc. In his acceptance speech,
- Muskie acquitted himself well, underscoring the need for the
- U.S. "to build a peace, to heal our country."
- </p>
- <p> Study Panels. To run the campaign, Humphrey named
- ex-Postmaster General Larry O'Brien to the dual post of campaign
- manager and chairman of the Democratic National Committee. Under
- the diffident John Bailey and in the face of total indifference
- on the part of the President, who never cared much about the
- mechanics of national politics, the committee has all but
- withered away in the past five years. O'Brien, who will handle
- both jobs without pay--but is anxious to depart immediately
- after the campaign to replenish his finances--promised to have
- the committee "updated and strengthened in every way."
- </p>
- <p> Agriculture Secretary Orville Freeman will play a key
- role. For two months, he has been conferring with party
- leaders, commissioning polls of voter attitudes toward Humphrey
- and drawing up an overall battle plan. For months, 32
- individual study groups have been working up position papers for
- the Vice President. Former Chairman of the Council of Economic
- Advisers Walter Heller oversees seven economic study units;
- Columbia Kremlinologist Zbigniew Brzezinski coordinates nine
- foreign policy groups; other panels are headed by veteran
- Government advisers like Francis Keppel, former Commissioner of
- Education, and Jerome Wiesner, who was Special Assistant to the
- President on Science and Technology from 1961 to 1964. In
- addition, Humphrey has his own "Minnesota Mafia" of businessmen
- and lawyers.
- </p>
- <p> Slim to None. Humphrey launched his campaign this week as
- the underdog. Nixon led him by an overwhelming 16% in the last
- Gallup poll and by 6% in a later Lou Harris sampling. He trailed
- Nixon by four points in his home state's Minnesota Poll, by nine
- in the Chicago Sun-Times' Illinois survey. Though the G.O.P. may
- ultimately suffer the most from George Wallace's third party,
- Humphrey knows that the Alabamian's racist pitch also threatens
- to cut deeply into the Northern blue-collar wards that were once
- dependably Democratic. As for the South, Humphrey has little
- choice but to write much of it off to Nixon and Wallace. One
- North Carolina delegate declared that the Democrats' chances in
- his state ranged from "slim to none."
- </p>
- <p> On the eve of his nomination, Humphrey read a 30-page
- campaign primer made up of recommendations offered by a number
- of advisers. A major suggestion was that his first task must be
- to establish, swiftly and firmly, an image of decisiveness,
- independence and inventiveness. On the two issues that are
- likely to dominate the campaign, however, Humphrey may find
- little room for maneuver. If he strays too far toward the doves
- on Vietnam, he risks antagonizing both the Administration and
- the hawks. He will probably talk about "justice and law" rather
- than the more repressive-sounding Republican usage, "law and
- order," but he will have to do so without opening himself to
- attack from Nixon and Wallace.
- </p>
- <p> It will be a tough path to tread. Columnist Joseph Kraft,
- for one, is convinced that he will succeed. "Humphrey is the
- man for this particular season partly because he is in rapport
- with the established chiefs of the low-income whites," wrote
- Kraft. "He speaks their rhetoric and shares their faith in the
- basic goodness of American life. He does not force them into a
- corner of defensive hostility. And because he is a prairie
- radical not altogether relevant to the sharpest problems of the
- immediate present, he will not be firing up the young for a
- bloody march down the path to disaster."
- </p>
- <p> Ready to Lead. Humphrey's aides describe him as "the man
- whose time has come." An argument can be made that his time has
- passed; that the adventurous spirit of Minneapolis and his early
- days in the Senate can no longer be recaptured. Humphrey thinks
- they can. At the end of his acceptance speech, he cried, "I am
- ready to lead our country!" He has nine weeks to persuade the
- electorate that he also has the qualifications.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-