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- <text id=93HT1137>
- <title>
- 80 Election: Reagan's Rousing Return
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1980 Election
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- March 10, 1980
- COVER STORIES
- Reagan's Rousing Return
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Reborn in New Hampshire, he looks to more gains in the South
- </p>
- <p> He is that crinkly and blandly familiar face from scores of
- old movies on afternoon TV, that two-time loser for the
- Republican presidential nomination who has not been elected to
- any public office for a decade. Ronald Reagan, 69, seemed so
- complacent and venerable a Republican front runner that he hardly
- campaigned at all in Iowa, and his jarring defeat there at the
- hands of peppy, preppy George Bush, 55, prompted many of his
- followers to wonder whether he could ever make comeback. The most
- reliable public polls on the eve of the New Hampshire primary
- rated him no more than neck and neck with the onrushing Bush.
- Even veteran Republican politicians shrugged off any prospect of
- a major Reagan victory. "If that happens," said Gordon Nelson,
- G.O.P. chairman in neighboring Massachusetts, "I'm the Easter
- bunny."
- </p>
- <p> Last week it was Easter in February and Nelson may have felt
- long, floppy ears growing out of his head. For when the votes
- were counted in New Hampshire Tuesday night, Reagan had turned
- the Republican race upside down--again. He did not just win in
- what had been billed as a neck-and-neck contest; he swamped Bush
- by more than 2 to 1, and with 50% of the ballots, collected as
- many votes as his six G.O.P. rivals combined. (The breakdown:
- Bush, 23%; Senate Minority Leader Howard Baker, 13%; Illinois
- Liberal Representative John Anderson, 10%; former Texas Governor
- John Connally and Illinois Representative Philip Crane, 2% each,
- Kansas Senator Robert Dole, the vice-presidential nominee just
- four years ago, received exactly 607 votes, less than half of
- 1%.) By so doing, Reagan clearly re-established himself as the
- Republican front runner, the big man to beat from now to the
- Detroit nominating convention in July.
- </p>
- <p> Being in front is a happy but hazardous position in what is
- shaping up as the most volatile G.O.P. primary campaign since the
- Goldwater-Rockefeller-Scranton battles of 1964. The race, as well
- as the frame of mind of the voting public, is not only volatile
- but deceptive. "In primaries you never know what the voters
- mean," said raspy-voiced, chain-smoking Gerald Carmen, Reagan's
- shrewd coordinator in New Hampshire. "Are they just looking, just
- talking, just thinking?" Reagan himself had a euphoric answer. "I
- don't know about the hierarchy and the upper regions; I know
- about the people," he told cheering followers at a motel in
- Manchester the night of the big victory. "Now Nancy and I are
- flying over to Vermont (to campaign for the March 4 primary), and
- we won't need an airplane." Ecstatic Reagan staffers were telling
- jokes at the expense of the fallen George Bush. Sample:
- "Question: Why does Bush carry a turkey under his arm? Answer:
- for spare parts."
- </p>
- <p> But Bush is not ready to be plucked yet, and Reagan knows
- it. New Hampshire was only the first of 35 state primaries; Bush
- had built an impressive organization for this week's contest in
- Massachusetts, a liberal state where Reagan appeared to have
- limited support. And Reagan put his whole future campaign into
- question by dismissing, several hours before the polls closed on
- election night in New Hampshire, his controversial campaign
- manager, John Sears. Still, for the immediate future, both
- momentum and the calendar favor Reagan. The early March contest
- are in the Dixie states of South Carolina (March 8), Georgia,
- Alabama and Florida (all March 11). This is conservative country,
- where Reagan is strong. The next major confrontation will come in
- the Illinois primary on March 18, the first in any of the
- delegate rich industrial states.
- </p>
- <p> There is always a chance that the many Republicans who
- consider Reagan too conservative and simply too old to win the
- presidency will coalesce behind an alternative candidate. That
- could be Bush, Senate minority Leader Howard Baker, 54, or even
- ex-President Gerald Ford, 66, who appears sorely tempted to enter
- the race in an attempt to head off Reagan, his old nemesis from
- 1976.
- </p>
- <p> But Reagan at least deflated the balloon of Bush, his
- highest-flying early challenger. Bush, the former envoy to the
- United Nations and to China, former Republican National Chairman
- and former CIA director, had modeled his entire campaign strategy
- on the one followed by Jimmy Carter in 1976. He hoped to win
- national attention in Iowa, as he certainly did, ride the sudden
- burst of publicity into upset victories or at least strong
- showings in the early primaries, and then parlay those triumphs
- into the nomination. In the glorious and innocent weeks between
- Iowa and New Hampshire, Bush bragged incessantly in his Ivy
- League-cheerleader tones of having "the Big Mo" (momentum). But
- he did only well enough to maintain his new status as No. 2 going
- into the Southern round. Gamely and accurately, Bush summed up
- his New Hampshire debacle in a postprimary phone call to Reagan:
- "Ron, congratulations, sir. You beat the hell out of me."
- </p>
- <p> How did Reagan do it? Bush's strategists were ready--after
- the vote--with a barrage of excuses. For one thing, the
- exhausted Bush flew home to Houston the weekend before the vote,
- while Reagan campaigned to the bitter end. Thus New Hampshire
- television viewers on Sunday and Monday saw pictures of Bush
- resting beside his Texas swimming pool while Reagan was doggedly
- plowing through chilled New Hampshire crowds--an odd contrast
- for a campaign in which Reagan's age was supposed to be a major
- handicap. Heavy stress was placed on the brutal daily pummeling
- Bush took in the Manchester Union Leader. New Hampshire's only
- statewide paper--though Publisher William Loeb has berated
- other candidates in other primaries with limited consequences.
- </p>
- <p> Then came the debates. In the first one, including all seven
- candidates, Reagan seemed stiff and ill at ease, but his private
- polls told him that he came across well, that the tide was
- already turning. He did even better in the furious flap over a
- Reagan-Bush debate the Saturday night before the primary. Reagan
- had challenged Bush to a one-on-one debate, sponsored by the
- Nashua, N.H. Telegraph, then agreed to pay the tab and artfully
- invited in four other candidates, Anderson, Baker, Crane and
- Dole. The Telegraph refused to change the rules for the debate,
- despite Reagan's angry protests, and a thoroughly flustered Bush
- supported the newspaper. The other candidates then charged out,
- accusing Bush of silencing them. The absurd scene made a strong
- impression on New Hampshire voters to whom Bush had been trying
- to sell himself as "a President we won't have to train." If he
- could not cope with so minor a contretemps, voters wondered, how
- would he react in an international crisis?
- </p>
- <p> Reagan, on the other hand, was masterful. At one point, when
- he was arguing that the other four candidates should participate,
- Telegraph Editor Jon Breen ordered the power in his microphone
- shut off. Reagan shouted, with impressive, raw anger, "I'm paying
- for this microphone, Mr. Green (sic)!" Said an admiring aide to
- Howard Baker: "There were cells in Reagan's body that hadn't seen
- blood for years. He was terrific!" Reagan's own judgment: "Maybe
- the people like to see a candidate sometimes not under control."
- </p>
- <p> All these fleeting phenomena taken together, though, do not
- come close to accounting for the scope of Reagan's unexpected
- victory. He won mostly by being himself: the old actor who
- excited so many Republicans in 1976; the propounder of
- unqualified conservative answers to the most fearsomely complex
- problems; the deliverer of the harshest barbs in a voice of
- smooth geniality. Even though the voters of New Hampshire are
- scarcely representative of the U.S. electorate, the fact that he
- turned them on once again last week focuses new attention on that
- puzzling and enduring phenomenon of Republican politics, Ronald
- Wilson Reagan.
- </p>
- <p> As the political season began, the nation was supposed to
- see a new Reagan: as conservative as ever, but speaking in
- gentler words, campaigning less strenuously, maintaining a benign
- air toward rivals. The reasoning was developed by John Sears:
- after his previous campaigns, all Republicans knew where Reagan
- stood so there was no longer any need to fire up the
- conservatives. Rather, the necessity was to maintain what seemed
- like a long lead by shunning any rhetoric that would frighten
- away moderates. Thus Reagan in January uncharacteristically
- fudged the wording of a suggestion that the U.S. supply arms to
- the anti-Soviet rebels in Afghanistan, though the proposal was
- hardly radical. Said Reagan to TIME Senior Correspondent Laurence
- Barrett: "I suppose I got hung up out of fear of distortion."
- </p>
- <p> The air of restraint succeeded only in making Reagan look as
- if he had lost his old enthusiasm--because of his age, some
- voters uncharitably suspected--and the strategy collapsed in
- the Jan. 21 Iowa caucuses. Out of that defeat charged the Reagan
- of yore, campaigning full time across New Hampshire and banging
- away again at all his old targets with stimulating vigor: "There
- is enough fat in the Federal Government that if you rendered it,
- there would be enough soap to wash the whole world." Some 22
- position papers designed to portray Reagan as a positive thinker
- were filed and forgotten. Instead, Reagan presented once again his
- nostalgic vision of a day still to be recaptured, when the
- individual was great and the Government small, the U.S. flag and
- dollar respected everywhere.
- </p>
- <p> The key to Reagan's popular appeal is his genuine belief
- that "there are simple answers" to the most complex problems. Some
- examples:
- </p>
- <p>-- Inflation. "Government causes inflation, and Government
- can make it go away." How? By cutting income taxes 30% over the
- next three years. That, in Reagan's view, would pep up the
- economy and produce enough new revenue to balance the budget of a
- Government that he would significantly reduce in size. First step:
- turning over all welfare administration and funding to states and
- localities which in compensation would be allowed to keep what he
- vaguely calls "X%" of all the federal taxes collected within
- their borders.
- </p>
- <p>-- Energy. "The energy industry today is virtually
- nationalized." If all Government controls on energy and
- agriculture are ended, Reagan says, and "if we turn both of them
- loose in the marketplace, they will produce the food and fuel we
- need." No special effort to conserve energy is necessary: "We are
- energy rich."
- </p>
- <p>-- Foreign Affairs. The Soviet Union has not changed since
- Stalin's time. "It has one course and one course only. It is
- dedicated to the belief that it is going to take over the world."
- Moreover, the Soviets have been winning everywhere for 25 years
- because of a U.S. "foreign policy bordering on appeasement."
- Washington has seriously weakened U.S. defenses, and what is
- needed is a rapid buildup in all types of arms. "Tune out those
- cynics, pacifists and appeasers who tell us the Army and Navy of
- this country are nothing but extensions of some malevolent
- military-industrial complex. There is only one military-
- industrial complex whose operations should concern us, and it is
- not located in Arlington, Va., but in Moscow." He fervently
- believes that the Soviet Union will back down in any
- confrontation with the U.S. One passage that never fails to win
- loud applause: "The President said we must ratify the SALT II
- treaty because no one will like us if we don't. He said he should
- give away the Panama Canal because no on would like us if he
- didn't. It is time to tell the President, 'We don't care if they
- like us or not. We intend to be respected throughout the world.'"
- </p>
- <p>-- Social Issues. He is a hard conservative on every one. He
- is outspokenly opposed to the Equal Rights Amendment, in contrast
- to some of his rivals (Bush, as a Congressman, supported it). As
- Governor of California, Reagan signed a relatively liberal
- abortion law, but now says that was a mistake; he advocates a
- constitutional amendment forbidding all abortions except those
- necessary to save the lives of mothers. He proposes another
- amendment to permit "voluntary" school prayer: "I think we are a
- nation under God. I think we have too many people in this country
- today who are interpreting freedom of religion as freedom from
- religion." Marijuana is "probably the worst and most dangerous
- drug in America today."
- </p>
- <p> Much of this message sounds less arrestingly different than
- it did in 1968 or 1976. The ideas that the Government causes most
- of inflation, that a balanced budget is necessary and that the
- U.S. needs a major defense buildup have become staples of
- political oratory, proclaimed not only by conservative
- Republicans but by many Democrats. Said Reagan to the New York
- Conservative Party in January: "Remember when we were a
- collection of little old ladies in tennis shoes and ultra-right-
- wing kooks? We've become respectable."
- </p>
- <p> Not completely. To some Republicans, not to mention
- independents and Democrats, Reagan's ideas sound less than
- compelling. Deep tax cuts could soon swell the inflationary
- federal deficit, and though all Republicans want to reduce the
- size of the Government, some doubt that it can or even should be
- slashed as drastically as Reagan advocates. Wasteful and misguided
- as many of Washington's social programs are, some at least are
- aimed at genuine needs that states and cities are not equipped to
- meet. Hardly any energy executives think the U.S. can be self-
- sufficient in fuel in this century; just to keep imports of
- foreign oil from rising will require a determined conservation
- effort. The dangers of forcing confrontation with the Soviets are
- obvious.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, Reagan is clearly telling many Republicans what
- they most want to hear, and if others are now sounding almost
- equally conservative, Reagan has been preaching his views longer
- and louder than anyone else. So his audiences forgive him for, or
- do not even notice, some remarkable misstatements that make
- Reagan sound at best ill informed.
- </p>
- <p> The most starling of these so far has been a Reagan
- assertion, in support of his contention that the U.S. could be
- self-sufficient in energy without Government controls, that
- Alaska alone has more oil than Saudi Arabia. It turned out that
- he was comparing oil already discovered in Saudi Arabia with oil
- that might someday be found in Alaska--and even on that basis he
- got the figures wrong. The highest guess for possible Alaskan
- reserves is 100 billion bbl., of which only 9.6 billion bbl. are
- considered proven reserves. Saudi Arabia has 200 billion bbl. in
- proven reserves alone, and perhaps as much as 530 billion bbl. in
- possible reserves.
- </p>
- <p> Despite his stern rhetoric, Reagan is almost never visibly
- angered, even by the most hostile questions, and banters easily
- with practically anyone; he and his wife Nancy have made a ritual
- of passing out candy to reporters on campaign planes and buses.
- The old entertainer usually seeks to entertain his companions
- too. On a campaign bus driving through a heavy snow in New
- Hampshire, he started out with a labored joke: "If anyone hears
- dogs barking, it's because the next leg will be done by sled."
- That led to a stream-of-consciousness monologue skipping
- erratically from dogs to other animals to firearms (Reagan has a
- small gun collection and does some target shooting, though he
- does not hunt) and concluding with a reading aloud from that
- day's installment of Doonesbury, one of Reagan's favorite comic
- strips. In a 1965 autobiography, recalling his elation at acting
- in college plays, Reagan wrote, "Nature was trying to tell me
- something--namely, that my heart is a hamloaf."
- </p>
- <p> On the campaign trail, Reagan does very little handshaking;
- his standard appearance is a short speech followed by a question-
- and-answer session. With the actor in him again coming out, he
- loves to roll words around and test out lines, noting and then
- repeating at the next stop whichever ones get the loudest laughs
- or applause. At the end of the New Hampshire campaign, he could
- feel affection flowing from the crowds, and he responded
- exuberantly. His last appearance before the vote was a classic
- campaign scene: a crowd of 300 gathered inside the white
- clapboard town hall in New Boston (pop. 1,630); sirens screeched,
- bells clanged and lights flashed from a firehouse across the
- street; a brass band belted out lusty, if strangely matched,
- renditions of God Bless America and Ease on Down the Road.
- Reagan, visibly buoyed, even got off some unrehearsed one-liners.
- When a local politician proudly showed him the town's 90-year-old
- heavy polished-oak ballot box, Reagan cracked, "I'd like to stuff
- that ballot box."
- </p>
- <p> Away from the crowds, Reagan has an odd kind of little-boy
- quality that makes his wife and staff protect him. Aides are
- forever reminding him to get his dinner, to put on his overcoat,
- to make in public some interesting point he had discussed with
- them privately. However, relations between Reagan and his staff,
- for all its consideration and devotion, are strictly
- businesslike. None of his present aides address Reagan as
- anything but "Governor." For personal friendship, Reagan turns at
- home to old buddies from his movie days, among them William
- Holden and Jimmy Stewart, and a few of the California businessmen
- who first backed him for Governor 14 years ago.
- </p>
- <p> Reagan's wife Nancy is a gracious and attractive woman of
- 53. They will celebrate their 28th anniversary this week. She
- travels with "Ronnie" (a nickname that only she and a few of his
- closest friends use) as adoring fan and adviser in small things.
- "Smile, honey, smile!" she will whisper to the candidate as he
- gets ready to tape a TV interview. A onetime movie actress who
- appeared in such films as East Side, West Side (1949) and
- Shadow on the Wall (1950), she gave up her career to marry
- Reagan. The candidate seems quite accurate when he says, "Any
- interest that she has in politics, she got from me." She does
- play a significant part, however, in Reagan's decisions about his
- staff.
- </p>
- <p> Nancy makes occasional separate appearances, but limits them
- to innocuous Q-and-A, sessions. Says she: "Making a speech would
- scare me to death." When Reagan is speaking, she sits near by
- watching him with rapt attention, laughing at the little jokes
- she has heard scores of times. Why? "There is always something
- different in the audience or the setting, and I do enjoy hearing
- Ronnie talk."
- </p>
- <p> Reagan copes good-humoredly with a subterranean but
- important issue: his age. He jokes about it at senior citizens'
- meetings, and once amiably let a TV reporter run her fingers
- through his gray-streaked brown hair to see if it was dyed; she
- could not find any signs that it was. Other evidence is equally
- inconclusive. In TV closeups, Reagan sometimes looks wrinkled and
- wattled. He seems to walk a bit stiffly and sometimes has
- difficulty hearing questions from an audience.
- </p>
- <p> His afflictions are minor and might not even be noticed if
- Reagan were not under the most intense scrutiny. He plows through
- grueling campaign days with apparently undiminished vigor, though
- he does try to get eight hours of sleep a night; and until late
- in the New Hampshire campaign he insisted on flying back to
- California every weekend to relax at his ranch, a $1.5 million
- enclave near Santa Barbara that few reporters or even campaign
- aides are ever permitted to visit. His doctors insist that he is
- in "remarkably good" health, and he maintains a hard campaign
- schedule without feeling any need to exercise or watch his diet.
- Quite the contrary: he is one of the few politicians who
- regularly eat the food at banquets), and he complains mildly that
- he is often called on to speak before he can start on the
- dessert.
- </p>
- <p> Reagan has some other problems that could become serious in
- future primaries. One is his campaign staff--or what is left of
- it. This staff is by far the biggest working for any candidate in
- either party this year. In some ways it is superbly organized.
- Advancemen carry a check list of 106 items for every Reagan
- stop: staffers' hotel rooms must be at least one floor away from
- those occupied by reporters; the hotel's full restaurant menu,
- not just an abbreviated room-service version, must be available
- to Reagan and Nancy; the lectern from which the 6-ft. 1-in.
- Reagan is to give any formal speech must be precisely 43 in.
- high. But there was angry infighting that led to last week's
- shake-up, and there are odd gaps. Strangely enough for a
- candidate with Reagan's acting experience, there is no one in
- overall charge of preparing TV commercials; the first two taped
- for the New Hampshire campaign had to be discarded because they
- dealt exclusively with domestic policy at a time when the
- attention of the voters had swung to foreign affairs, and they
- were dull besides. Nor is there any full-time speechwriter.
- Reagan reserves that job for himself, endlessly scribbling
- passages on 4-in. by 6-in. index cards, which he shuffles into
- new arrangements to vary the standard speech that he delivers at
- every town hall and country club: he blames some of his fluffs on
- difficulty in reading his own shorthand.
- </p>
- <p> Far more important, Reagan has somehow managed already to
- spend $12 million of the $18 million he is allowed under federal
- election laws to pay out for all the rest of the pre-convention
- campaign. Part of the reason is that his managers figured they
- could spend lavishly in the early stages, on the theory that
- after the Illinois primary, Reagan would have the nomination
- locked up. That might happen, but if his rivals manage to prolong
- a close contest past Illinois, Reagan could be severely crimped
- in the decisive late primaries. His difficulties, however, pale
- alongside those faced by his competitors after New Hampshire.
- </p>
- <p> George Bush has undeniable assets. His recitation of the top
- Government jobs he has held--in his words, his "fantastic
- credentials" for the presidency--sometimes bring oohs and ahs
- from the voters. As a New England aristocrat who moved to Texas
- and made a fortune in the oil business, he endlessly boasts that
- he is one candidate who has actually met a payroll. He preaches a
- bubbly optimism ("I just know we can solve all our problems"). He
- is a demon campaigner, who started so early that he often tells
- audiences, accurately, that his race is already two-thirds over,
- and he has proved himself an expert at putting together an
- extensive political organization.
- </p>
- <p> But intense personal campaigning and superb grass-roots
- organization were not the whole explanation of why Bush did so
- well in the Iowa caucuses. He was also a fresh face, and an
- energetic and appealing alternative to Reagan. His victory, and
- his rocketing rise in the polls that followed, subjected him to
- an intense level of examination that caused him trouble in New
- Hampshire. Once a dull speaker, Bush has adopted an excitable
- platform manner that is not always impressive: his sentences
- sometimes come out in a jumble, and his hyperactive gestures
- occasionally appear to be out of sync with his words. He
- sometimes speaks in a mystifying CIA jargon; he will refer to a
- suit as his "gray unit" and tell audiences that the U.S. must
- "stay ahead of the power curve."
- </p>
- <p> Bush's basic difficulty is that he is trying to be all
- things to all Republicans. His views on most issues are nearly as
- conservative as those of Reagan. He too wants to reduce federal
- spending programs, slash regulation of business, cut taxes in
- such a way as to stimulate investment, while still sharply
- increasing defense spending and adopting a much tougher policy
- toward the Soviets.
- </p>
- <p> But Bush seeks to present these positions in a more moderate
- tone than Reagan; he would not cut taxes so deeply as Reagan
- would. Bush, like Reagan, is against the Panama Canal treaties,
- but voices concern about seeming to ally the U.S. with outdated
- colonialism. There is a strong case to be made for a
- fundamentally conservative posture that manages to recognize the
- complexities of the modern world--but Bush in New Hampshire did
- not make that case, and partly by design. He repeatedly refused
- to be specific. He had a budget drawn up detailing just which
- social programs he would cut by how much to balance tax cuts and
- increased defense spending, but he decided not to present it. His
- candid explanation: "Whatever I do will depend on whether it will
- help me get the nomination."
- </p>
- <p> In addition, Bush got himself tagged with a charge that has
- proved damaging: that his background (Andover, Yale, Skull and
- Bones) made him a member of the Eastern liberal establishment.
- The accusation is unfair in view of Bush's basic conservatism,
- but it has hurt. Union Leader Publisher Loeb sneered at Bush as a
- "clean-fingernails Republican," and Senator Gordon Humphrey of
- New Hampshire put out a large mailing asserting that Reagan was
- the only candidate who was not identified with the Eastern
- liberal "defeatist" complex. At meeting after meeting, Bush was
- asked whether he was a member of the Trilateral Commission (he
- was), a perfectly worthy and respectable group devoted to better
- relations among the U.S., Europe and Japan, which
- ultraconservatives portray as a sinister band of plotters bent of
- merging the U.S. with the Soviet Union. (Some other members:
- Henry Kissinger and two other members of the Nixon Cabinet, Peter
- Peterson and Caspar Weinberger; two Nixon appointees to the
- Council of Economic Advisers, Paul McCracken and Marina Whitman;
- Banker David Rockefeller.) When Reagan was asked about such
- quasi-Birchite charges, he did not disavow them. In fact, he
- said, "I hope it works." But he added piously, "I myself don't
- say things like that in a campaign and I'm not going to."
- </p>
- <p> Late last week, Bush pledged to get more specific and more
- aggressive. "I will be sharpening the differences between Ronald
- Reagan and myself," he said, and he called on the press,
- reasonably enough, to demand exactitude from Reagan too. Asked
- Bush: "What is the date Governor Reagan has in mind when the
- Federal Government is going to have a balanced budget?" But some
- members of his staff wondered if Bush could make that approach
- work. Said one: "He has no sense of the jugular, and there is no
- use trying to make him into something he is not. He's a nice
- clean guy. He's the eagle." Asked another aide: "And the eagle
- has no talons?"
- </p>
- <p> If Bush cannot recover, the logical candidate to stop Reagan
- would be Howard Baker. He has impressive credentials as a
- moderate conservative who speaks smoothly and sensibly, and has
- considerable experience in Washington (he has been a Senator
- since 1967). But he is suffering severely from a late start and
- showing little if any talent for campaign organizing. John
- Anderson's proud independence and stubborn insistence on
- advocating unpleasant proposals--he hammers away on the need
- for a $.50-per gal. gasoline tax to reduce energy consumption--have
- won much favorable media attention and a core of devoted
- followers. But the core remains small. John Connally's smooth
- wheeler-dealer conservatism has excited corporate executives but
- not the electorate; he has been reduced to staking everything on
- a strong showing in the primary in South Carolina, and even there
- he is running badly in the polls (8.8% in the latest one).
- </p>
- <p> The real race, however, is just beginning. Some 60 of the
- eventual 1,994 delegates to the Detroit convention have so far
- been chosen; Reagan and Bush are tied with 22 each. During the
- next two week, Reagan has a chance to increase his lead and even
- possibly to knock one or two rivals out of contention--especially
- Connally, if he runs poorly in South Carolina, where
- he is staging a $1 million blitz. On the other hand, Bush has an
- opportunity to solidify his standing as Reagan's chief rival, and
- he would not have to win in the Southern primaries to have to win
- in the Southern primaries to do so but merely finish close to
- Reagan.
- </p>
- <p> Reagan has one intangible asset in the South: he campaigns
- better there than in the Northeast. He gestures more freely,
- speaks more vigorously, even looks younger. One reason may be the
- weather. Like many another Southern Californian, Reagan is far
- more at ease when he can strip off his suit jacket, as he did two
- weeks ago on the sun-drenched campus of Palm Beach Junior College
- in Florida. cried Reagan: "It is time to start a crash military
- buildup, to make us so strong that no one will ever again raise a
- hand against the U.S." the students cheered.
- </p>
- <p> Southern crowds are generally receptive to a strongly
- conservative appeal, and the friendly reaction makes Reagan
- loosen up. On his brief Southern swing just before the close of
- the New Hampshire campaign, more than 2,500 young people jammed
- into the auditorium of Samford University in Birmingham and
- applauded even his most prosaic remarks. Reagan responded with
- some notably loose oratory. He repeated his opposition to
- registration for the draft--a position that only Ted Kennedy
- shares among the active candidates--and then added, in reference
- to the possible registration of women: "There's something
- inherent in the draft that suggests combat. I don't want to be
- part of any society that puts women into combat." That was
- sometimes of a cheap shot at Jimmy Carter, who has also said that
- he would never permit the use of women in combat. Bush takes the
- same line, and less articulately. In one of his recent speeches
- he came out against "mixed sex in foxholes."
- </p>
- <p> A string of Southern victories for Reagan would surprise no
- one, which brings the campaign to Illinois. If one of Reagan's
- rivals does not manage to beat Reagan there, his momentum could
- become unstoppable. In Illinois, as elsewhere, Reagan is
- benefiting from the fact that the vote opposing him is split up
- among a number of candidates. On the other hand, a Reagan defeat
- in Illinois--especially if it followed an unexpected loss in one
- or two of the Southern states--would probably lead to a hard
- race right up to the convention. Baker told supporters last week
- he would concentrate his efforts on making a comeback in Illinois,
- and Bush will be campaigning hard there too. As of now, all
- predictions are for a close contest. Says Don Totten, Reagan's
- Illinois chairman: "With the swings in the polls and the
- fickleness of the voters, it is hard to tell what is going to
- happen next."
- </p>
- <p> However Reagan does in Illinois or the South, his triumph in
- New Hampshire virtually guarantees one thing. It is possible now
- to visualize any of his rivals being defeated so badly in the
- next few weeks as to be forced out of the race. It is no longer
- possible to foresee such a fate of Reagan. He may lose, but he
- will almost certainly be a strong contender to the end. His
- biggest problem may be that the very hard-line conservative
- positions that appeal to the enthusiasts who vote in G.O.P.
- primaries are exactly those that might not attract the much
- larger body of people who will vote in November.
- </p>
- <p>"We Were Sandbagged"
- </p>
- <p> One of the decisive events of the New Hampshire primary was
- the strange spectacle of an angry Ronald Reagan confronting a
- flustered George Bush on the stage of the Nashua High School gym,
- while four other candidates jostled behind them like hapless
- losers in a game of musical chairs. When the four stalked out,
- one of them, Representative John Anderson, summed up the group's
- protest. "The responsibility for this whole travesty rests with
- Mr. Bush." Countered Bush's New Hampshire campaign manager, Hugh
- Gregg, the next day: "We feel we were sandbagged."
- </p>
- <p> Reaganites were admitting nothing, but there was evidence
- that the former Governor's strategists had engaged in some last-
- minute gamesmanship. It was Reagan who first challenged Bush to a
- two-man debate on Jan. 29, and the Nashua Telegraph (circ.
- 25,604) agreed to sponsor it. Two days before the debate,
- however, the Federal Election Commission ruled that the paper's
- sponsorship amounted to an illegal-political contribution. Reagan
- offered to split the $3,500 tab with Bush. Bush refused, so
- Reagan paid for it all.
- </p>
- <p> But on the day of the debate, Reagan suddenly began to worry
- about complaints from the excluded candidates. Besides, was it
- really to his advantage to treat Bush as the only other major
- candidate? Reagan operatives began, calling the other
- candidates--Senator Howard Baker, Senator Robert Dole, Representative
- Phillip Crane and Anderson--to invite them to the debate.
- Although Bush told the newspaper that he would reluctantly agree
- to a six-man debate, he was not told of the Reagan camp's
- maneuver--whether accidentally or by design is up to each voter to decide
- for himself.
- </p>
- <p> Once at the gym, Reagan and the four unscheduled candidates
- went into an anteroom to decide how to proceed. Bush arrived,
- knowing nothing of this turn of events. As he approached the dais,
- he was invited to join the others in the anteroom. He declined,
- pleading the press of time and thinking he might be walking into
- a trap. When Reagan finally appeared with the other four and
- argued for a six-man forum, Moderator Jon Breen editor of the
- Telegraph, insisted that the format would not be changed.
- </p>
- <p> Then the now famous scene: Reagan grabbing the mike, Breen
- ordering the power cut off, and Reagan shouting back "I am paying
- for this microphone!" Pandemonium. "You Hitler!" someone yelled.
- "Didn't you ever hear of freedom of the press?" Throughout the
- uproar, Bush looked confused. "I was invited here by the editors
- of the Nashua newspaper," he said. "I am their guest. I will play
- by the rules, and I'm glad to be here." This was generally taken
- as support for a two-man debate.
- </p>
- <p> When it was all over, Bush was still trying to explain.
- "Frankly, I feel he (Reagan) used you to set me up," he wrote to
- the four candidates the next day. Crane now agrees with that
- judgment. But the other three candidates still blame Bush for the
- debacle. Reagan calls Bush's complaints "ridiculous." Admits Bush,
- with unquestionable accuracy: "I could have handled certain
- things better."
- </p>
- <p>Ford: Ready to Tee Off?
- </p>
- <p> In the wake of New Hampshire, there is little doubt that
- former President Gerald Ford is on the verge of deciding whether
- to plunge into the race for the Republican nomination. It is also
- clear that if he is to make his momentous move, he must do so in
- two or three weeks. Increasingly, some party pros are betting
- that Ford will decide to run. In a conversation with TIME last
- week, Ford himself made it plain that his candidacy was very
- possible.
- </p>
- <p> Fit, tanned and outwardly relaxed as he ponders the campaign
- in his Palm Springs-area home, Ford looks eager to join the
- action. His telephone jangles repeatedly with calls from old
- political cronies urging him to announce his candidacy as their
- best hope of stopping Ronald Reagan. Apart from the lingering
- animosity from his close personal fight with Reagan in 1976, Ford
- shares the fears of many Republican leaders that Reagan could not
- win if the Democrats renominate President Carter. He doubts that
- the other Republicans in the race could win either.
- </p>
- <p> Ford's supporters, on the other hand, feel that his record
- in the presidency would serve him well in a campaign against
- Carter. He could point to his reduction of inflation, his
- advocacy of more funds for defense, and the consistency of his
- foreign policy under Secretary of State henry Kissinger. Contends
- Bob Hughes, a longtime ford supporter in Ohio and G.O.P. chairman
- in Cleveland: "The American people this time are either going to
- vote for an incumbent President or someone who has been
- President."
- </p>
- <p> Nor is all the telephoning incoming to Ford. On the morning
- after the New Hampshire primary, Hughes got a call from Palm
- Springs. It was Bob Barrett, one of Ford's top aides, who asked
- simply: "Are you still uncommitted?" Says Hughes: "I told him
- that I was sitting tight." Hughes is convinced that Ford will
- announce his candidacy shortly.
- </p>
- <p> The endorsement of several Midwest Republican Governors,
- including Ohio's James Rhodes, Michigan's William Milliken,
- Illinois' Jim Thompson, Wisconsin's Lee Dreyfus and Indiana's
- Otis Bowen, could well follow. Already, some Ford backers are
- prepared to finance a national advertising campaign to promote
- his candidacy. Declared Chicago Republican Chairman Lou Kasper
- enthusiastically: "Ninety-eight percent of the Republican
- politicians I know would be for Jerry Ford if he runs. And I
- think he will run."
- </p>
- <p> Why the new urgency about a Ford decision? Foremost is the
- possibility of a party rush toward Reagan in the glow of his New
- Hampshire victory. While Ford has talked in the past of waiting
- for a potential deadlock at the nominating convention, many of
- the party's pros consider that most unlikely. They also note that
- the filing deadlines for remaining key primary elections are
- either past or imminent. Nevertheless, if Ford were to start
- filing this week in all primaries still open, he would have a
- chance to win 729, or 36%, of the 1,994 national convention
- delegates. In addition, more than 400 other delegates are yet to
- be chosen in state caucuses or state conventions.
- </p>
- <p> In practical terms, the final date for Ford to become a
- serious primary campaign challenger is March 21, the deadline for
- both the California primary, which will select 168 delegates, and
- Michigan, where home-state Republicans presumably would give Ford
- a big share of their 82 delegates. Republicans partial to Ford
- concede that Reagan would be a favorite in California, but they
- are fighting the state party's rule that awards all 168 delegates
- to the one candidate who tops the primary vote. They want to give
- Ford a shot at a share of that large chunk of delegates.
- </p>
- <p> Not even Ford's most ardent supporters believe he could
- enter now and get enough of the remaining delegates to win
- outright on the convention's first ballot. Their strategy
- apparently would be to try to gain enough delegates to deny
- anybody a first-ballot victory. Then Ford would have to make a
- deal with one of the still surviving, candidates, most likely
- Howard Baker or George Bush, to gain a convention majority. An
- offer to share the ticket as a vice presidential candidate--and
- heir apparent to the party leadership--would be his main
- bargaining point.
- </p>
- <p> Other veteran Republican strategists doubt any such plan
- could work. They contend that Ford's entry as an active candidate
- would merely further divide the anti-Reagan vote in the
- primaries, without seriously diminishing Reagan's level of
- support.
- </p>
- <p> Some Republican leaders also wonder whether there might not
- be a bit of nostalgia in the current surge of sentiment for Ford.
- They compare the feeling to the earlier yearning in the
- Democratic Party for Ted Kennedy to run--and a few see Ford
- almost as vulnerable to slippage once he enters what could be a
- bitter intraparty feud.
- </p>
- <p> Yet last week, there was less doubt about the "if" of a Ford
- move; it seemed much more a matter of "when?"
- </p>
- <p>Once Again, the Bush Thing
- </p>
- <p> Call it the George Bush thing, since it is yet unnamed by
- Political Chronicler Theodore H. White. It is not the garden
- variety syndrome that even a political science professor could
- identify. The thing normally cannot be seen or heard. It is not
- easily documentable with dates and places and simple sentences.
- It is a shadow that has followed Bush throughout his national
- prominence. It showed up again in the New Hampshire campaign, and
- in the squalid Nashua argument over who should or should not
- debate. That helped trigger some of the electoral doubts that
- engulfed Bush in the primary.
- </p>
- <p> It is now one of those ridiculous but important minidramas
- in the bizarre world of campaigning that may never be accurately
- sorted out, because so many people were involved and so much of
- the story hinges on perceptions and feelings jammed into a few
- minutes. The same sort of thing happened when John Kennedy, the
- new Democratic nominee in 1960, offered Lyndon Johnson the vice-
- presidential slot, and L.B.J. astonished everyone by accepting.
- No one is yet certain how it all evolved.
- </p>
- <p> Some scornful critics are suggesting that the Nashua
- incident portrayed Bush as the fragile, blue-blooded, rich Ivy
- Leaguer they always thought he was. The Ivy League takes a lot
- of bad raps. Strong men do emerge from those schools. Franklin
- Roosevelt and John Kennedy went to Harvard and Gerald Ford to
- Yale.
- </p>
- <p> The more thoughtful students of George Bush have always been
- concerned about a degree of sensitivity or reticence or perhaps
- propriety that seemed to suggest timidity. At crucial times in
- Bush's career that quality appeared and raised doubts about his
- fiber. This problem has grown disproportionately large in the
- house of magnifying mirrors that we now call the presidential
- selection process.
- </p>
- <p> Examining such a subtle trait in a person like Bush with a
- record of established achievement is a journey into
- psychohistory, which is hazardous and which politicians hate. Yet
- those considerations can be terribly important in public
- perception and finally in public judgment of a leader.
- </p>
- <p> Back in 1970, when Bush was running unsuccessfully a second
- time for the U.S. Senate from Texas, he looked to President
- Richard Nixon and Vice President Spiro Agnew for help--but
- nervously. Nixon was growing testy over attacks charging that he
- had not liquidated the Viet Nam War. Agnew was Nixon's rude
- political and press hatchet man. Both spoke in Texas for Bush.
- Afterward, Bush had some second thoughts and canceled film clips
- of the Nixon visit in his efforts to walk a narrow line between
- the White House and his ambitions beyond. Ever so slightly those
- first impressions formed that Bush was too cautious.
- </p>
- <p> In 1974 Bush was Republican national chairman as Watergate
- rose against Nixon, and Bush rekindled concerns about his
- propensity for hyperdeliberation. Why did he not distance the
- G.O.P. from Nixon? If he could not do that, then why did he not
- quit? His answer was like those of Secretary of State Henry
- Kissinger and White House Chief of Staff General Alexander Haig.
- Bush stayed to preserve some order as the House of Nixon
- collapsed. Nixon's guilt had not been proved in court, nor had he
- been impeached. Bush tiptoed once more: mannered, thoughtful,
- searching for a civilized route through anarchy. But his quiet
- political diplomacy seemed to many to be excessively restrained
- at a time when the national interest demanded a loud and angry
- shout.
- </p>
- <p> The question about Bush is now with us again. Why did he not
- instantly take charge of that New Hampshire squabble and either
- exit with firm grace or invite his rivals in with commanding
- confidence and humor? (After all, Ronald Reagan had enough
- presence to grab the mike.) Was it good manners, plain
- politeness, or was he momentarily anesthetized by the fear that
- the intrusion of others would dilute his thin lead over Reagan?
- In the end, it may be yet another lesson to all practitioners
- that in the era of superprogrammed politics, the natural man
- needs to be let out now and then.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-