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- <text id=93HT1084>
- <link 93XV0052>
- <title>
- 68 Election: Republicans:A Chance to Lead
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1968 Election
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- August 16, 1968
- THE NATION
- A Chance to Lead
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> As they start on the road to November, the Republicans are
- united. Now what will they do with the unity? Richard Nixon is
- clearly in tune with his party. Will he be in tune with the
- country?
- </p>
- <p> These are the chief questions that emerge from the
- Republican Convention and will dominate the political scene for
- the next 2 1/2 months. The American party system allows a
- measure of plasticity every four years. The Republicans are
- making the most of this chance. The painful ruptures of the past
- have been treated and very nearly healed--almost in a spirit
- of harmony or bust. After pulling back from its heartfelt but
- self-indulgent right-wing position of 1964, the 1968 party once
- more stands in the middle of its ideological spectrum.
- </p>
- <p> Within his party Richard Nixon represents the only
- centripetal force. The country is troubled, the opposition
- divided. The rational course is to play it safe, to bet that
- self-preservation--just staying together as a party--will
- be nine-tenths of victory. It is, after all, an election in
- which the incumbents are in danger simply because they are
- incumbents. Nixon's choice of the factionally neutral Spiro
- Agnew as running mate was part of that strategy.
- </p>
- <p> These assumptions, of course, may prove too neat. Unity is
- essential for a minority party, but the G.O.P. may find the
- price tag troublesome. Does harmony require straddling at the
- expense of commitment? Does it mean combining the vocabulary of
- change with the policies of conservatism? The convention offered
- mixed portents.
- </p>
- <p> Boldface Type. Symbols of unity and progress flapped like
- so many ensigns at fleet review. Barry Goldwater sounded like
- a man from the N.A.A.C.P. New York's John Lindsay agreed to
- second Agnew's nomination rather than serve as the rallying
- point for opposition to it. The platform, the keynote address,
- Nixon's acceptance speech and the subsidiary verbiage were on
- the whole impeccably progressive in tone, promising jobs,
- justice, education and a "piece of the action" to the poor,
- peace in Vietnam, honorable conciliation with the Communists.
- </p>
- <p> Those who wanted to could find less obvious signals
- bearing a slightly different message. Only one sentence in the
- platform's domestic-policy section appeared in boldface type:
- "We will not tolerate violence!" Somehow Nixon manages to sound
- more forceful and specific in emphasizing the need for law and
- order than in pleading for social justice. The targets of his
- acceptance are the "forgotten Americans, the non-shouters, the
- non-demonstrators." They are "good people. They're decent
- people. They work and they save and they pay their taxes and
- they care."
- </p>
- <p> His critics might reply that Nixon's "good people" really
- have little cause to protest in the streets. But more to the
- political point is that the whites, the mature, the securely
- employed and the affluent combine to form a voting majority.
- This massive bloc belongs permanently to neither party. It
- follows no one ideology. Nixon seeks to attract enough of it to
- form an electoral majority. To do it, he must capture the
- imaginations of many Democrats and independents who are largely
- reconciled to the Big Government he likes to berate and have
- been cool toward Nixon in the past. At the same time, he must
- reckon with the disinherited, principally Negroes, who in some
- states can hold the balance in a tight election.
- </p>
- <p> Tasteless Opulence. Nixon seems to be giving considerable
- weight to the kind of argument expressed by one Southern lady
- on the convention floor. She declared: "This is a protest year.
- We've got to get that protest." She did not mean Negroes or
- fractious students. The protesters that concern her are people
- "who are sick and tired of their money going out of their
- pockets to keep people sitting in front of TV sets all day."
- </p>
- <p> A great many Americans quite understandably feel this way,
- and there may be political wisdom in paying heed to such
- feeling--especially at a time when George Wallace can be found soaring
- on gusts of middle-class discontent. Nixon adopted the old-style
- Southern strategy in the convention, extending it to put
- together a coalition of Southern, Border and Midwestern states,
- indications are that he may use a similar strategy to try to win
- the general election. This makes sense particularly if one bets
- that conservative sentiment will run wide and deep between now
- and Election Day, and by no means only in the South. This
- formula might lose Northeastern states--but it might also
- attract significant numbers of disgruntled voters in the North.
- This plan is reinforced by the echoes of riots past and
- prospective. A bloody battle was raging in a Negro area just
- across Biscayne Bay from Convention Hall. Each ghetto upheaval
- will make things tougher for the Democrats this year.
- </p>
- <p> Compared with the Miami riot, the scene in Convention Hall
- seemed a little unreal at times. All political conventions, of
- course, convey a certain air of fantasy. But last week's
- assembly went somewhat further than usual in this respect
- because of the lack of real contention over men or issues. The
- very idea of nominating a self-proclaimed "unknown quantity"
- such as Agnew hardly helped. Neither did the tasteless opulence
- of Miami Beach or the well-coiffured, well-dressed appearance
- of the delegates. "They're nice people," said one big-city
- Northern Senator, "but they've just never ridden a subway." The
- comment was not altogether fair. It is such people who work long
- and hard for their political parties; affluence, or the lack of
- it, is not necessarily an index of social conscience. Still, the
- contrast between the people in the Convention Hall and the
- nation's grubbier problems could not be ignored.
- </p>
- <p> Leeway. The Democrats will doubtless try to sharpen the
- contrast. Both Hubert Humphrey and Eugene McCarthy professed
- satisfaction at the prospect of running against a Nixon-Agnew
- ticket, although Humphrey had more reason to be happy. Had the
- Republicans picked Nelson Rockefeller, the temptation for the
- Democrats to desert their front runner would have been greater.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon, as the challenger, will have considerable leeway in
- shaping the debate. He may choose to capitalize primarily on
- the sour mood of the moment, or he may choose a more positive,
- upbeat approach. He may shuttle between the relatively
- conservative and relatively liberal lines. He is in a good
- position to take any course, for so far, at least, he has
- retained an uncommon degree of flexibility. Nothing in the
- platform, nothing he himself has said, binds him in an
- unalterable position. Within a few weeks the nation should be
- able to see how Richard Nixon intends to use his new strength.
- </p>
- <p>Now the Republic
- </p>
- <p> At the end, he took the podium the way he had taken the
- convention--as if it belonged to him. He stretched out his
- arms to take it all in. The fingers on both hands wigwagged
- victory Vs at the clapping, stamping, shouting, pulsing heart
- of the Republican Party. Four years ago, introducing Barry
- Goldwater at an identical moment, he had described himself as
- a "simple soldier" in the Republican ranks. Now the fortunes of
- political conflict had recommissioned him a five-star general.
- Richard Nixon was back for one more chance at Commander in
- Chief.
- </p>
- <p> Which Richard Nixon? Friends, enemies and those in between
- could not agree. They never could before. In a generally
- sympathetic biography nine years ago, Earl Mazo found in Nixon
- a "paradoxical combination of qualities that bring to mind
- Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Harry Truman and Joe McCarthy."
- The intervening years have polished Nixon and made him
- well-to-do, but they have not simplified him. He can still sound
- like the high-minded statesman and act like the cunning
- politico. He can talk eloquently of ideals and yet seem always
- preoccupied with tactics. He can plink out Let Me Call You
- Sweetheart for reporters on a piano or rib himself on television
- talk shows, but the grin never seems quite at home on his
- strong, heavy face. The almost mysterious quality about Richard
- Nixon is that he is a man of exceptional abilities and solid
- virtues, but somehow his many parts have always added up to less
- than a convincing whole. Today he seems closer than ever to
- overcoming this elusive handicap. He is certainly more
- confident, more self-assured--and with good reason. He has
- made an extraordinary comeback. He worked harder than anyone
- else for the nomination, with total dedication to his goal and
- to the party. In that sense, he amply deserved his victory.
- </p>
- <p> No Millennium. At any rate, the 29th G.O.P. Convention,
- looking up at its nominee, was not in a mood for character
- analysis. After a conclave made dull by the swift rout of
- Nixon's foes and enlivened only briefly by a spat over the
- vice-presidential nomination, it was time for exultation. One
- thing that his detractors have never understood about Nixon is
- his total identification with the Republican Party and his
- understanding of it. His acceptance speech was pure Nixon,
- telling it as the party would like it to be--1968 style.
- </p>
- <p> He had worked for two weeks on the speech, writing it out
- himself on yellow legal pads. It contained major elements of
- the basic speech that he had delivered again and again during
- the primaries, and reporters who had followed him during those
- campaigns could finish many of the sentences as soon as they
- heard the first word or two. But the nation as a whole had not
- yet heard it. It was a mixture of carefully balanced political
- calculations and genuine personal warmth. It was, by any
- reasonable standard, corny, but it also was one of Nixon's most
- effective speeches in years. Gone was the excessive
- partisanship and professional anti-Communism of his early days.
- The nation wants a high-roader after Lyndon Johnson. The
- republic has survived subversion. The cold war is passe. Vietnam
- is something to be settled, not won. So Nixon told them what
- they wanted to hear. "Tonight I do not promise the millennium
- in the morning. I don't promise that we can eradicate poverty
- and end discrimination in the space of four or eight years. But
- I do promise action. And a new policy for peace abroad, a new
- policy for peace and progress and justice at home."
- </p>
- <p> To the Communist world, he declared an end to the "era of
- confrontations," now that the "time has come for an era of
- negotiations." But the new Administration must "restore the
- strength of America so that we shall always negotiate from
- strength and never from weakness." He did not touch on arms
- control, a major point to be negotiated.
- </p>
- <p> Greatest Engine. In parts, the speech followed the Nixon
- pattern of giving and taking away, of praising and then
- attacking. He paid his respects to the courts, but they have
- "gone too far in weakening the peace forces as against the
- criminal forces." And his Attorney General would be a real
- gangbuster. The black and the poor need rescue, but they "don't
- want to be a colony." Federal antipoverty efforts have not
- helped at all: "We have reaped from these programs an ugly
- harvest of frustrations, violence and failure." Therefore, urged
- Nixon, the Government must use its power to "enlist in this
- battle the greatest engine of progress ever developed in the
- history of man: American private enterprise."
- </p>
- <p> He was curiously touching in describing the son of the
- slums who "dreams the dream of a child. And yet when he awakens,
- he awakens to a living nightmare." He was rather embarrassing
- in the sketch of another child, himself, who hears a train go
- by and dreams of faraway places. "It seems like an impossible
- dream." But a self-sacrificing father, a "gentle Quaker mother,"
- a dedicated teacher, a minister, a courageous wife, loyal
- offspring, devoted followers--plus a cast of millions of
- voters--combine to put that boy on the train that stopped last
- week in Miami Beach, possibly on the way to the White House.
- </p>
- <p> The fact that Nixon spoke of himself as the hero of this
- American dream, even though his intent was plainly modest,
- seemed cloying to some. And the reference to a train whistle was
- an oddly old-fashioned note: trains do not symbolize escape and
- movement to today's young. Yet there could be little doubt that
- Nixon was sincere here, just as Lyndon Johnson is sincere when
- he talks about his years of poverty along the Pedernales.
- Certainly Nixon's audience in Miami knew what he was talking
- about, and responded.
- </p>
- <p> Good Avocation. His ability to evoke the good old days and
- look eagerly to the year 2000, and to make the mix sound
- coherent, points up his talent for accommodation, which is one
- explanation for Nixon's return from political limbo. The
- G.O.P.'s liberals can live with him. He picked up much support
- from the Goldwater wing (and won the blessing of Barry), not
- because he belonged to the party's right wing, but because he
- was acceptable to it. Many of the stauncher conservatives
- preferred Reagan, but they realized that the California governor
- was not a viable national candidate. Tom Stagg Jr., national
- committeeman from Louisiana, acknowledged: "We've had our shot
- at a candidate who totally met our qualifications, and that
- candidate got six states. We've had our druthers. Now shall we
- win one?"
- </p>
- <p> Another factor is Nixon's capacity simply to endure. As a
- child, he survived serious illnesses and a buggy accident that
- gashed his skull; two of his four brothers died in childhood.
- As a politician, he lived through youthful success and
- middle-aged failure by dint of total industry and a fatalistic
- belief that in politics conditions create a right time for a man
- despite his actions. A Navy veteran in 1946, he won a House seat
- at the age of 33. He was elected Senator at 37 and Vice
- President at 39. Ten years later, defeated for the Presidency
- and the governorship of California, he certified himself
- politically kaput. Most of the press agreed, including TIME. In
- 1966, sensing the vacuum in the party, Nixon campaigned
- tirelessly for G.O.P. candidates in 35 states and claimed a
- major share in that year's victory. Nixon is only 55, but he has
- been a national figure for nearly a generation. He has made
- survival an avocation.
- </p>
- <p> In large measure, his current success flows from the
- ineptness or vulnerability of his opponents inside the party.
- George Romney, first in the ring, was the first to drop out.
- Ronald Reagan had possibilities, but was too new on the scene
- and too rigid in his views. Nelson Rockefeller, while a strong
- and attractive candidate in many ways, has never fully
- understood the differences between the politics of nomination
- and the politics of election. In three leap years, he approached
- the party as if it were a collection of voters on election eve
- instead of a coalition of interests about to hold a convention.
- It is a failing shared by the liberal Republican leadership,
- which apparently learned little from its rejection in 1964.
- </p>
- <p> While Rockefeller fumbled with Romney's candidacy,
- supporting him with money (at least $250,000), staff help and
- increasingly hollow pronouncements of loyalty, Nixon continued
- to capitalize on the contacts and loyalties he had built up
- during 22 years in and around politics. Rocky staged his great
- revolving-door act over whether he would be an active
- candidate, in the process losing such important friends as Spiro
- Agnew. Nixon advanced cautiously, tying up delegate after
- delegate and winning primary after primary. The former Vice
- President was able to campaign at a leisurely pace, usually
- accompanied by wife Pat--who looks more chic than in 1960--and
- their pretty daughters, Tricia, 22, and Julie, 20.
- </p>
- <p> Fargo Friend. By the time Rockefeller clumped back into the
- race April 30, Nixon's momentum was almost impossible to stop.
- Rockefeller roared around the country, berating Nixon for
- refusing to stand up and fight. It was a weak argument coming
- from a man who had ducked the primaries. Rocky had style and
- good humor, and the crowds liked him. But he bet heavily on the
- public-opinion polls, only to have them backfire after the
- Harris and Gallup surveys clashed. When Rockefeller visited
- delegates, it was to get acquainted, "to show I don't have
- horns," as he himself acknowledged. When Nixon visited, it was
- old-home week. Nixon could drop in at Fargo, N. Dak., and say:
- "Hiya, George, remember that night when you were telling me
- about that time with Harry..."
- </p>
- <p> Nixon took the Oregon primary on May 28 against the
- disembodied competition of Rockefeller and Reagan, and that 73%
- vote, he believed, assured him the nomination. Only some self-
- inflicted stab or an act of Providence could stop him.
- Privately, he said: "Everyone is waiting for Nixon to blow his
- stack or confront Rockefeller directly. Well, it hasn't happened
- up to now, and I think it's too late to start."
- </p>
- <p> In the final days before the convention, it was not
- Rockefeller who kept a whiff of competition alive but the
- increasingly obvious availability of Ronald Reagan and the
- threat that George Wallace would cut into Nixon's
- post-convention strength in the South. By this stage, Nixon's
- campaign organization was tooling along flawlessly. He had
- assembled a talented crew of old and new aides from in and out
- of politics and from varying ideological backgrounds.
- </p>
- <p> Logistical plans for the convention were already being
- made in November of 1967, three months before Nixon announced
- that he was running. Rooms in the Hilton Plaza were booked even
- before the hotel was finished. Finally, Nixon established a
- virtual colony in Miami Beach populated by 500 staffers and
- roughly 1,000 volunteers. An elaborate telephone and radio
- communications system was created. Besides command posts in
- Nixon's hotel and in a trailer outside Convention Hall, branch
- operations were maintained in 35 hotels housing delegates.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon's game is poker, and in poker, he observed upon
- arriving in Miami Beach last among the candidates, "it's the
- fellow without the cards who does the strongest talking. I've
- got those cards." Nixon was so confident of his hand that he
- tarried on Long Island during the preconvention weekend. On
- Monday morning, he appeared at a naturalization proceeding in
- New York on behalf of his Cuban driver and cook, Manolo and Fina
- Sanchez. When he got to Miami Beach that evening, Rockefeller
- and Reagan were frantically and forlornly scampering after
- delegates. By this time, the hot Florida sun had finally hatched
- Reagan's official candidacy.
- </p>
- <p> Stirrings. Behind the convention scene of mixed turmoil and
- torpor (from her pinnacle of 84 years, Alice Roosevelt
- Longworth pronounced it "soporific"), there was a good deal of
- political jostling and even some drama. During the three days
- leading up to the Wednesday-night balloting, the main
- maneuvering centered on three elements: 1) a handful of
- uncommitted delegations, of which Maryland, Ohio, Michigan, New
- Jersey and Pennsylvania were the most important; 2) the South,
- which was largely in Nixon's camp already but vulnerable to
- Reagan; and 3) Nixon's choice of a running mate.
- </p>
- <p> Michigan, under Governor George Romney, and Ohio, under
- Governor James Rhodes, were subject to raiding by Nixon. But
- the gains to be made there were not worth the cost of
- antagonizing their powerful leaders, who clung to their status
- as favorite sons. Romney was apparently prepared to hold out
- indefinitely. Rhodes, who had been generally regarded as eager
- to be in line with the winner, remained surprisingly stubborn.
- Not so secretly, he wanted a Rockefeller-Reagan ticket as the
- strongest draw in Ohio and, despite a well-earned reputation for
- sagacity, held out some hope for its success. "We've really
- stirred things up," he said at one point. "We've turned this
- into an open convention."
- </p>
- <p> Most of the important stirring, however, was being done on
- Nixon's behalf. New Jersey was restless under its commitment to
- the favorite-son candidacy of Senator Clifford Case, and the
- Nixon forces decided to move in on it. On a golf course over
- the weekend, Nixon Aide Peter Flanigan told State G.O.P.
- Chairman Webster Todd: "Look, we need your delegation right
- now." Todd, whose wife was openly supporting Rockefeller, shot
- back: "Hell, no!" But pressure continued on individual
- delegates, who saw no purpose in holding out for a lost cause.
- By Tuesday night it was open knowledge that New Jersey would
- break, just as it had at the 1964 convention.
- </p>
- <p> Conservative Trio. Pennsylvania Governor Raymond Shafer had
- dropped his favorite-son role in order to back Rockefeller. But
- neither Shafer's influence nor his choice to nominate
- Rockefeller could hold the entire delegation in line. Some of
- the Pennsylvanians had scant respect for their Governor,
- privately referring to him as "Dudley Do-Right," after the
- feckless cartoon character who usually ends up doing the wrong
- thing for the right reason. And Nixon had powerful supporters
- in the delegation, including George Bloom, chairman of the state
- public-utility commission, and Congressman James Fulton. When
- Rockefeller visited the Keystone Staters, District Attorney
- Robert Duggan of Allegheny County demanded: "And where in hell
- were you in 1964?" It became increasingly clear that Nixon would
- get some help from Pennsylvania.
- </p>
- <p> Agnew's defection to Nixon was all but official before the
- convention started. Meanwhile, though, Nixon men were compelled
- to mount a defense operation among the Southern delegations.
- Reagan had been making inroads in Alabama, North Carolina and
- Texas particularly, and this trend could not be allowed to go
- on unchecked. Barry Goldwater, Senator John Tower of Texas and
- Senator Strom Thurmond of South Carolina--three of the most
- conservative men in the party--counterattacked on Nixon's
- behalf. Goldwater chatted with Southerners in his hotel suite.
- Thurmond and Tower took some waverers for boat rides. Their
- message was basic and concise. The real contest was between
- Nixon and Rockefeller; every defection to Reagan would
- ultimately only benefit Rockefeller.
- </p>
- <p> Rumors that Nixon was going to pick a liberal as a running
- mate were everywhere. When a Miami paper printed a front-page
- story that it would be Oregon Senator Mark Hatfield,
- Rockefeller's and Reagan's men distributed 3,000 copies on the
- convention floor to make sure that no one missed the point.
- Thurmond and company denied the report, but the most effective
- disclaimer came from Nixon in private meetings with
- Southerners. "I won't do anything that would hurt development
- of the two-party system in the South," Nixon told them. "I won't
- take anybody that I have to shove down the throats of any
- section of the country." Thus such Nixon loyalists as Party
- Chairman Harry Dent of South Carolina were able to tell skeptics
- on the floor: "I've got it written in blood."
- </p>
- <p> Nixon was also artfully placating Southerners on certain
- sensitive issues. The Miami Herald managed to get a tape
- recorder into one of the private sessions. In the transcript it
- printed later, which Nixon's spokesmen did not knock down, he
- explained his public support of this year's open-housing civil
- rights bill as a matter of political tactics rather than
- conviction. "I felt then and I feel now," said the transcript,
- "that conditions are different in different parts of the
- country." But he wanted the issue "out of sight" so as not to
- divide the party and risk a platform fight. The Southerners also
- remembered Nixon's criticism of Johnson's Supreme Court
- appointments. While Nixon did not quarrel with Abe Fortas'
- designation on personal grounds, the Southerners who did looked
- kindly on Nixon's position.
- </p>
- <p> Collapsed Movement. Vote projections by the networks and
- the wire services bounced about a bit between Monday and
- Wednesday, while Rockefeller men insisted on talking about the
- "erosion" of Nixon's strength. The most accurate count, as it
- turned out, was by the Nixon organization, which earlier had
- talked about 700 and privately refined its calculations to 702.
- Needed to be nominated: 667. As the nominating speech droned on,
- Nixon visited his command trailer outside the hall and got word
- that a first-ballot victory was assured.
- </p>
- <p> As the roll call progressed, it was obvious that Nixon was
- faring exactly as he had expected. The candidate, watching
- television and keeping his own tally in his penthouse suite,
- could have noted in the first several states an extra vote here
- and there beyond his minimal requirements. Then Florida and
- Georgia came through with large majorities--evidence that the
- Reagan movement had collapsed. Maryland delivered 18 out of 26.
- Four Michiganders deserted Romney. Mississippi's unit rule held
- for the entire delegation of 20. The undermining of Case's
- position in New Jersey produced a welcome 18 out of 40. In
- Pennsylvania, Nixon picked up 22 more.
- </p>
- <p> By the bottom fifth of the alphabetical listing, the fight
- was really over. After West Virginia, Nixon had 650, and
- Wisconsin's 30, won in that state's primary, broke through the
- magic number to make it 680. Wyoming added its twelve, for a
- first-ballot total of 692, compared with 227 for Rockefeller,
- 182 for Reagan and 182 sprinkled elsewhere. It was even less of
- a race than it seemed. Nixon had reserve votes in several
- favorite-son delegations that he could have called upon if
- necessary. Minnesota Congressman Ancher Nelsen, one of the nine
- whips working the floor for Nixon, had only one complaint: "We
- got rather hungry. Getting a hot dog--that was the biggest
- crisis we had." Floor Manager Rogers Morton told reporters: "The
- only time I got worried was when my shirttail came out and I
- couldn't get it back in."
- </p>
- <p> Coffee and Cokes. Nixon won with no help at all from
- California and Massachusetts and only token support from three
- of the other large states, New York, Ohio and Michigan. He owed
- his victory to Illinois, most of the smaller states in the West
- and Middle West, and particularly to the South and the Border
- States. Excluding Arkansas, which stayed with Governor Winthrop
- Rockefeller, 14 Southern and Border States delivered 298 votes,
- or 45% of the number needed to nominate. Thus Nixon's
- determination to keep the South happy.
- </p>
- <p> It was after 2 a.m. Thursday when the voting ended. With
- scarcely time out for a round of congratulations, the candidate
- plunged into a round robin of meetings with advisers, aides and
- party leaders about the vice-presidential nomination. Ten days
- earlier, he had sent notes to a number of supporters, asking
- them to send suggestions to a post office box in New York,
- "anonymously, if you prefer." Whether he got any ideas from
- that source was not clear, but he did arrive in Miami with
- Agnew definitely on his mind.
- </p>
- <p> As the meetings progressed through the early-morning
- hours, with a kaleidoscope cast of participants sipping coffee
- and Cokes, a list containing scores of names was gradually
- shortened. New York Mayor John Lindsay, probably the most
- discussed possibility up to that point, was dismissed early as
- too unpopular among conservatives. John Gardner was briefly
- mentioned, soon dropped. Among others considered were Reagan
- and Tower, both of whom would have antagonized liberals.
- Hatfield, Romney and Keynoter Dan Evans were mentioned, then
- Tennessee Senator Howard Baker.
- </p>
- <p> Overwhelmed. The shifting group of conferees contained its
- own roster of notables: Thomas Dewey, Herbert Brownell, Billy
- Graham, Everett Dirksen, Gerald Ford, Barry Goldwater, Karl
- Mudt, Party Chairman Ray Bliss. Finally, after a brief break for
- a nap and a breakfast of cold cereal, Nixon convened still
- another meeting. By this time, the possibilities had been
- reduced to five: Senator Charles Percy; Lieutenant Governor
- Robert Finch of California, a longtime Nixon friend and
- associate; Congressman Rogers Morton of Maryland; Governor John
- Volpe of Massachusetts ("It might be nice," Nixon observed, "to
- have an Italian Catholic on the ticket"); and, of course, Agnew,
- Finch and Morton attended the meetings but left while they were
- being talked about.
- </p>
- <p> It was past noon when Nixon ended the talks by observing:
- "Well, I think the meeting has accomplished about all that it
- can accomplish." Morton put in a call to Agnew. "Are you
- sitting down?" Morton inquired. Nixon got on the phone and broke
- the news. "I'm overwhelmed," said Agnew, whose stoic expression
- rarely admits of such a condition.
- </p>
- <p> The Criteria. Overwhelmed also, but hardly in the same way,
- were many of the Republicans and much of the country when Nixon
- went on television 15 minutes later to announce the selection.
- Nixon laid out three criteria for the No. 2 man on the ticket:
- 1) he must be qualified to become President, 2) he must be an
- effective campaigner, and 3) he must be capable of assuming the
- new responsibilities for domestic affairs that Nixon says he
- will entrust to his Vice President.
- </p>
- <p> Attaching Agnew's name to these requirements shocked many,
- because they knew virtually nothing about the man beyond the
- fact that he was a very new, moderately successful Governor with
- no national or international status. Many Northern Republicans
- were rankled by the ready acceptance of the selection by
- Southerners and by conservatives generally. Although Agnew is
- a moderate by Maryland standards and a liberal by Deep South
- criteria, there was the suspicion that he was on the ticket to
- placate Thurmond and other segregationists. Not only liberals
- protested. Colorado Senator Peter Dominick howled: "There are
- 2,000,000 people in my state who have never heard of Agnew. It's
- a terrible choice."
- </p>
- <p> Events during the rest of the day began to take care of
- Agnew's anonymity. Irate over the aura of a shabby deal that
- surrounded his selection and disturbed by some of his recent
- criticism of Negro activists, leaders in a number of
- delegations talked revolt. As usual, however, the liberals were
- disorganized. By the time the final night's session convened to
- name a vice-presidential candidate and hear both nominees'
- acceptance speeches, a coalition had been assembled to second
- Agnew's nomination: Lindsay, Percy, Tower and California's
- William Knowland. They covered all factions of the party.
- </p>
- <p> The dissidents scrounged for a candidate willing to oppose
- Agnew, but were turned down by Lindsay. Rockefeller refused to
- cooperate with the revolt, even though some of his allies,
- notably Rhode Island Governor John Chafee, were leading it.
- Finally George Abbott of Nevada nominated Romney. The ensuing
- vote was a cruel slaughter: 1,128 for Agnew to 178 for Romney.
- The loser then followed tradition by moving to make the
- nomination unanimous.
- </p>
- <p> Although the minirevolt against Agnew's selection may have
- satisfied bored delegates' desire for combat and excitement, it
- was not only futile but unwise as well. Both party tradition
- and U.S. history since Aaron Burr's day dictate that the
- President must have a No. 2 man whom he wants and trusts. And
- if by some fluke the convention had forced Romney or someone
- else on Nixon, and the ticket had gone on to win, the unwanted
- Veep could have looked forward to even more frustrations than
- the incumbent normally suffers.
- </p>
- <p> Underrated. At week's end, as Nixon and Agnew went to the
- L.B.J. ranch for a briefing on national-security affairs, it was
- uncertain how much permanent damage to the ticket's chances in
- November had been caused by the scuffle. Initially, Nixon was
- forced on the defensive, arguing that Agnew was an "underrated
- man." Later Agnew complained that he was being unfairly tagged
- as an opponent of civil rights merely because he opposed civil
- disobedience.
- </p>
- <p> Certainly the Marylander will be no asset to the ticket
- among Negro voters, although it is doubtful that Nixon will get
- much black support in any case. Agnew may be helpful, on the
- other hand, on the border regions and some Southern states,
- such as Virginia, Texas, Florida and North Carolina, in which
- Nixon has a fighting chance to beat George Wallace. This is what
- Nixon men call a "peripheral strategy," more or less conceding
- the Deep South to Wallace. To capture the Presidency, however,
- the Republicans must sweep much of the West as well, while
- carrying some of the vote-heavy states, including Ohio, New
- Jersey and Michigan. New York will probably be an insurmountable
- problem for Nixon. Illinois will be nearly as tough. California
- figures to be a tossup.
- </p>
- <p> Humphrey's Problem. Nixon maintains that he will fight hard
- for all the crucial states, and says of the major industrial
- states: "I don't think we gave them adequate attention in 1960."
- He will avoid his 1960 mistake of barnstorming all 50 states.
- His mode of attack is best suited to opposing Hubert Humphrey.
- He sounded eager for it. "Two tough fighters like Hubert
- Humphrey and Dick Nixon," said Nixon after his nomination, "are
- going to slap each other around pretty hard on the issues. But
- I'm going to keep it on a high level--no personal attacks,
- just on the issues." In an interview with TIME last month, he
- indicated his strategy: "Humphrey's problem," he said, "is that
- he carries the past on his back. He is the candidate of the past
- no matter how much he talks about his programs and the future."
- Nixon is hardly alone in his conclusion that "if there is one
- thing the American people don't want, it's what they've got."
- </p>
- <p> Having won the Republicans, Nixon now has to win the
- Republic. Some of his friends and most of his foes are dubious
- that he can do it. At Rockefeller's headquarters before the
- Miami Beach convention, Gordon MacRae sang: "Richard Nixon's
- going far, In his snappy Edsel car. General Custer's coming in,
- Gonna show Dick how to win."
- </p>
- <p> Rockefeller's people have company in thinking that Nixon
- is a permanent loser, and Nixon knows it. Just after the Oregon
- primary, he described his feelings: "You know, politics is the
- cruelest sport of all. There are few loyalties, very few
- friends. But coming off the floor, that meant something to me.
- I kind of get a bang out of demonstrating that the old saws, the
- old myths about Nixon have no validity." He has yet to prove
- that, of course, but he is perhaps in better shape to do so now
- than ever before. In the weeks to come, the nation will observe
- a fascinating and peculiarly American human drama, the final
- testing of a man who almost had everything, almost lost
- everything and is now given a rare opportunity to try again.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-