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- <text id=93HT1140>
- <title>
- 80 Election: Carter -- Running Tough
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1980 Election
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- August 25, 1980
- COVER STORY
- Carter: Running Tough
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Overcoming Kennedy, the President starts his hot pursuit of
- Reagan
- </p>
- <p>By George J. Church. Reported by Neil NacNeil and Christopher
- Ogden/New York.
- </p>
- <p> IT BEGINS. Every four years, America's two major political
- parties materialize in tandem conventions that form the
- proscenium for the presidential campaign to come. Some argue
- that these outbursts of ritual and oratory are anachronisms as
- doomed as dinosaurs. But as this and the following stories show,
- New York was a vital festival for the Democrats last week. Myths
- were made and unmade, plinths erected, men and women tested,
- principles examined and policies established--all essential
- ingredients to getting the show on the road.
- </p>
- <p> The spotlights picked him out first, a slim figure
- proceeding to the dais through a darkened Madison Square Garden.
- Jimmy Carter was about to give a speech crucial to his hopes
- for staying in the White House. Not since Harry Truman had a
- President received such a grudging, unenthusiastic nomination
- from a Democratic Convention--and Carter was starting from an
- even lower rating in the polls than Truman had carried into
- that campaign of 1948. The President had to set both a tone and
- a theme for his own uphill race, and he had to do it
- immediately.
- </p>
- <p> The tone he was able to attain, by adopting Truman's
- give-'em-hell style. Perspiration pouring from his face, his
- voice hoarse, his eyes coldly angry, Carter gave a shouting
- stump speech unlike almost any he has delivered before, in
- content as well as manner. It was a headlong assault on his
- rival, Ronald Reagan, depicting him as a dweller in "a world of
- tinsel and make-believe" who would "launch an all-out nuclear
- arms race" and start "an attack on everything that we've done in
- the achievement of social justice and decency in the last 50
- years." The nation, Carter cried, faces "a choice between two
- futures": a Democratic future of "security and justice and
- peace" and a Reaganite future of "despair...surrender...risk."
- </p>
- <p> With that blast began the final phase of the 1980
- campaign: eleven weeks that seem sure to be long, bitter, angry.
- The denunciations of Reagan will be echoed endlessly by Carter
- and other Democratic orators throughout the fall. Carried too
- far, the personal attacks might backfire and make Reagan a
- sympathetic figure. The G.O.P., meanwhile will be characterizing
- the President's tenure in the White House as 3 1/2 years of
- blundering incompetence. Says one Carter aide: "This campaign
- is going to be very messy, horribly bruising."
- </p>
- <p> Especially so, perhaps, because Carter's acceptance speech
- Thursday night succeeded, to the extent it did, primarily as a
- get-them-scared-of-Ronnie exercise. It failed, painfully, to
- achieve what the President's own staff had said would be its
- equally essential aim: communicating to all of America a vision
- of his goals that would lead and inspire the nation. While
- painting, in broad strokes rich with hyperbole, a gloomy
- picture of a Reaganite America, Carter described the Democratic
- promised land only in vague--or at times excessively
- technical--platitudes. Not even the delegates who had nominated him the
- night before, or the Carter supporters who packed the hall,
- appeared really moved. Their cheers on occasion seemed merely
- dutiful--a not unpleasant ritual diligently performed. At
- other times, it was his fighting spirit that seemed to rouse
- them, not his words.
- </p>
- <p> For Democrats, the evening was not a happy opening to the
- campaign: their nominee did not match Reagan's forceful yet
- restrained address at the close of the Republican Convention
- four weeks ago. An even more painful contrast for the Carterites
- was their candidate's failure to come anywhere near equaling the
- remarkable performance two evenings earlier of the man he had
- beaten for the nomination: Ted Kennedy. His strong, mellifluous
- voice ringing through the Garden, Kennedy had summoned the party
- to keep faith with its liberal past and the disadvantaged for
- whom it has traditionally spoken. Stirring memories of the New
- Deal and New Frontier glory days, he set off a 43-minute,
- dancing-in-the-aisles demonstration that far exceeded in noise
- and enthusiasm anything the Carterites could stage. It was a
- purely emotional, if not mindless phenomenon. To the assembled
- delegates, it made little difference that many of the big
- spending programs he advocated seemed more responsive to the
- problems of the '60s, or even the '30s, than of the '80s. On
- this one night he was their man, and they cheered his every
- word.
- </p>
- <p> The practical effect of the speech was nil: Kennedy had
- withdrawn his name from nomination the night before, after
- losing a rules fight that ended his last chance of prying loose a
- sufficient number of the 1,892 delegates Carter had won in
- primaries and caucuses. But the fervor of Kennedy's supporters
- demonstrated a severe problem, not only for Carter but for all
- Democrats. The party is searching for, and has not found a new
- role and a new voice. While its primary votes went to Carter,
- whose conservative economic policies caused Kennedy to jeer at
- him as "a clone of Ronald Reagan," the hearts of many of its
- activists still belong to the old-fashioned liberalism. After
- the Kennedy demonstration, delegates whooped through by voice
- vote several of the Senator's economic planks that seem out of
- touch with the realities of inflation and the mood of the
- country, including a call for a $12 billion jobs program that
- Carter had warned he could not accept. The Senator himself won
- 1,146.5 votes on the final roll call, to Carter's 2,129, and
- unheard-of performance for a man whose name was never formally
- placed in nomination, and who officially released his delegates
- to vote as they pleased before the ballot.
- </p>
- <p> By convention's end, Carter seemed to be fretting nervously
- over the degree of support he would get from Kennedy. In his
- acceptance speech, he appeared almost to plead for his rival's
- backing. Kennedy responded with what seemed a notable lack of
- charity. Though he refrained from criticizing the President, his
- formal endorsement was brief ("I will support and work for the
- re-election of President Carter"), his ritual appearance with
- Carter on the rostrum after the acceptance speech Thursday night
- was perfunctory--even strained--and his expression on that
- traditionally happy occasion was reserved and aloof.
- </p>
- <p> Will Kennedy and his admirers be similarly aloof during
- the campaign? That was the key question the convention did not
- answer. It was not a rancorous gathering, certainly not by the
- standards of such Democratic donnybrooks as those of 1948 and
- 1968. Indeed, it mildly disappointed some Reagan aides who had
- been hoping for an angry and divisive brawl. Only during the
- opening-night rules debate did Carter and Kennedy partisans
- exchange catcalls. The seemingly endless platform arguments that
- followed were conducted with a fair show of civility by speakers
- who rarely stirred passion, or even attention.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, many Kennedy delegates went home resigned to
- voting for Carter but unsure themselves of whether they could
- work for him with any degree of enthusiasm. That will probably
- be determined by how successful the President is in portraying
- Reagan as a specter. One major reason for the anti-Reagan
- strategy that will be the heart of the Democratic campaign is to
- impose on a party that could achieve unity: denunciations of
- Reagan are one thing, and perhaps the only thing, that nearly
- all Democrats can agree on.
- </p>
- <p> The approach just might work. Even Reagan's own strategists
- do not expect his big lead in the public opinion polls--28
- points just after the Republican Convention--to last for long.
- Indeed, they would not be surprised to see it cut in half by
- Labor Day. Pat Caddell, Carter's pollster, told TIME editors at
- lunch last week that "we may come out of this convention less
- than ten points behind, and I would prefer to come out ten to
- 15 points down--far enough down where we are clearly the
- underdog and Reagan is clearly on top." In that case, he
- thinks, voters will focus on Reagan rather than Carter and will
- not like what they see: "On an ideological scale of one to
- seven, from very liberal to very conservative, the distance
- between where the voters place themselves and where they put
- Reagan is very great. He is quite to the extreme right. Carter
- is much closer to the average voter. One of the things that I
- am much surprised by is the enormous doubt that exists about
- Ronald Reagan." As the oratory thunders toward November climax,
- Democratic planners have high hopes that millions of traditional
- party voters, frightened by visions of Reagan, the ideologue,
- and viewing a vote for Independent Candidate John Anderson as
- a ballot thrown away, will return, however grudgingly, to the
- fold. One politician unimpressed by the likelihood of any such
- Democratic unity is Ronald Reagan. Said he last weekend: "I
- shall forever remember the final scene that night when the
- Senator from Massachusetts joined the President on the platform.
- If that's the best they can do in unity, they have a long way
- to go."
- </p>
- <p> But as Carter tries to pull a Truman against a formidable
- opponent with a well-defined appeal, his problem is not simply
- that he projects and image of faltering leadership: the party
- he is trying to lead is itself in trouble. In Congress, the days
- of comfortable Democratic majorities may be past. A July poll
- showed the public favoring Republican congressional candidates
- over Democrats for the first time since 1952, 47% to 43%. The
- Democratic majority of 116 in the House could easily be reduced
- by 30 to 50 seats, and some Democratic leaders are afraid that
- a landslide Reagan victory might even cost them control of the
- House they have held since 1954. Democratic control of the
- Senate is also threatened; a shift of nine seats would hand over
- power to the Republicans for the first time since '54. Enough
- Democratic seats are in real danger to make that a distinct
- possibility.
- </p>
- <p> Closer to the grass roots, Democrats now hold 67 of the
- nation's 98 partisan state legislative chambers. But their
- margins in many are so thin that this fall they could lose
- control of the majority of the chambers for the first time since
- the New Deal. This is an especially ominous prospect for the
- Democrats, since legislators elected Nov.4 will draw new lines
- for their own and congressional districts based on results of
- the 1980 census--and Republicans are as skilled as Democrats
- in gerrymandering districts to ensure the maximum number of
- future seats for their party.
- </p>
- <p> These immediate threats at the polls reflect long-range
- and fundamental problems for the party. After dominating
- American politics for most of the past half-century, the
- Democrats are in substantial disarray. In one mid-1979 poll,
- only 38% of the people questioned thought of themselves as
- Democrats, down from 51% as recently as November 1976 (24%
- thought of themselves as Republicans). The party's long-dominant
- ideology of Government social activism is rejected as passe or
- even dangerous by many; 42% of voters polled by Yankelovich,
- Skelly & White Inc. in May called themselves conservatives,
- while only 15% were self-proclaimed liberals.
- </p>
- <p> Amid these changing patterns the party's leaders have been
- unable to define a new faith. The political swing to the right
- in the country has caught the Democrats off guard and off base.
- After studying recent data on the party's voters, Presidential
- Pollster Caddell was startled to discover that "if you look at
- Democrats on issues today compared to 1976, you will find that
- they looked like sort of moderate Republicans back in 1976."
- </p>
- <p> Other factors have been at work. Since 1972, a series of
- reforms diffusing power in the Democratic Party has hurt its
- effectiveness. Says Nelson Polsby, a professor of political
- science at the University of California, Berkeley: "The
- fundamental thing that has happened with this revolution of
- reforms is organizational: the party does not exist as an
- organizational force. It is not a question of the building being
- infested with termites, the termites are the building."
- Special-interest groups fight for their own causes, but not
- necessarily the full spectrum of the party platform. In such a
- situation, Democrats are having more and more difficulty
- holding the national party together. Says V. Lance Tarrance, a
- Houston-based Republican pollster: "The Democrats have trouble
- with supply lines. They can't reach out and win a Colorado or
- Texas with ease any more." Says George Christian, former press
- secretary to Lyndon Johnson and now a political consultant in
- Austin: "The sagebrush rebellion is for real."
- </p>
- <p> Though the Democratic Party traces its ancestry to Thomas
- Jefferson, its modern shape was sculpted by Franklin D.
- Roosevelt, who transformed what had become a largely Southern
- party into a national coalition of all those who looked to
- Government to improve their lot in life: industrial workers,
- especially union members; big-city dwellers; the poor; blacks,
- Jews and other minorities; and liberal activists of every
- background. Oddly assorted though this grouping was (it included
- both the descendants of Southern slaveowners and the
- grandchildren of their slaves, the alliance held together for
- almost two generations. The nation struggled through the
- Depression, fought World War II and then embarked on a boom
- that tried with marked success to deliver, as promised,
- something for everybody.
- </p>
- <p> The coalition reached its zenith in 1964, when the
- ultraconservatism of Barry Goldwater drove blocs of Democratic
- votes back to Lyndon Johnson in numbers that Roosevelt himself
- might have envied. L.B.J. took 94% of the black vote, 90% of the
- Jewish vote, 80% of the union vote--and 61.4% of the total
- vote. This coalition remains the core of Democratic voting
- strength today. As Hamilton Jordan, deputy campaign chairman,
- told TIME editors last week, "It's impossible for Democrats to
- win without a strong turnout from minorities. It's impossible
- for a Democrat to win a general election without labor support.
- It's impossible for a Democrat to win without the vote of Jewish
- Americans, and so forth."
- </p>
- <p> That is precisely the trouble, since the coalition is no
- longer what it was. Inflation, recession and the pervasive
- uncertainties of the '70s have weakened the loyalty of many of
- its members. The South has been drifting away for decades: even
- Georgia-born Carter could take only 45% of its white votes in
- 1976; he won the region because a massive majority of the blacks
- supported his cause. But now a large number of blacks, dismayed
- that the civil rights crusade of the '60s and Carter's
- Administration have not done more to speed their economic and
- social progress are threatening to stay away from the polls.
- While most union leaders swung into line last week behind
- Carter, blue-collar workers packed Serb Hall in Milwaukee last
- March to greet Candidate Reagan and cheer his attacks on Big
- Government with shouts of "Give 'em hell, Ronnie!"
- </p>
- <p> Jews are afraid that Carter is trying too hard to work out
- an accommodation with the Arabs at the expense of Israel. To
- counter these fears, both Carter and Mondale pledged outspoken
- and undeviating support of Israel during their acceptance
- speeches, and the band played Hava Nagila, the traditional
- Jewish song of rejoicing. Yet, in these complicated times, there
- is the hazard that such pro-Israel demonstrations will further
- anger Arab nations that the U.S. needs as friends--and thus
- give Carter more troubles.
- </p>
- <p> Even if the Democratic coalition can be tugged back
- together, many of the party's basic elements are dwindling in
- numbers and clout. Union membership is declining, down from
- about a third of all nonfarm workers in the mid-'50s to less
- than a fourth today. Blue-collar workers are a shrinking
- minority of the work force (33%); white-collar workers have
- become an outright majority (51%). Fourteen of the 20 biggest
- U.S. cities, traditional Democratic strongholds, lost population
- during the 1970s, some drastically, as residents moved to the
- largely Republican suburbs. The cities that did gain in
- population tended to be in the Republican-dominated Sunbelt--Houston,
- Phoenix and San Jose, for example.
- </p>
- <p> Jack Walsh, a Boston political consultant who was briefly
- a Carter campaign director last year, sums up: "If the
- coalition voted Democratic by the same percentage today that it
- did in F.D.R.'s era, it would amount to about 35% of the vote."
- </p>
- <p> Nor has the party been able to find new loyalists to
- replace the defectors. In part, the Democrats have been the
- victims of their own success. They have enacted much of the
- classic liberal agenda--generous welfare plans, unemployment
- compensation, Social Security, Medicare, civil rights
- legislation. Some of the beneficiaries of these programs no
- longer consider themselves to be Democrats. Says Sol Chaikin,
- president of the International Ladies Garment Workers' Union:
- "You have a group that has moved out of the proletariat into the
- broad middle class."
- </p>
- <p> The Democrats have also been undermined by success in a
- more insidious way. Their decades of running Congress, most
- states and the White House have made them "the party of the
- Government," in the words of Texas Democratic Pollster George
- Shipley. So long as Government was presiding over a
- noninflationary boom that brought benefits to nearly everyone,
- that identification helped. But in an era of slow growth, energy
- shortages, persistent inflation, high taxes, unemployment and
- recurrent recession, the Democrats have been angrily attacked
- by members of the old coalition whose competing claims can no
- longer be reconciled. Says Convention Keynoter Morris Udall, who
- is now involved in a hot fight to hold on to his Arizona House
- seat: "I used to go home every election year and tell the
- senior citizens, 'We're going to increase Social Security
- benefits. Hurray for Udall and the Democratic Congress!' Now
- if we increase Social Security, the young people trying to raise
- a family say, 'What the hell is going on here? There's more
- money coming out of my paycheck. I can't stand it.'"
- </p>
- <p> For many voters, Government now appears to be not an ally
- but an enemy whose tax-and-spend policies foster wilder and
- wilder roller-coaster rides of inflation and recession. With
- the nation turning against Big Government, the Democrats have
- run out of acceptable new ideas--their stock in trade for so
- long--because the ideas have always involved creation of an
- ever larger bureaucracy. Ironically, it is Ronald Reagan, with
- his nostalgic vision of a day when the individual was great and
- the Government small, who now appears as the innovator,
- proposing risky but exciting new courses--to cut taxes by 30%
- over the next three years, for example.
- </p>
- <p> It will not be easy for the party to accommodate itself to
- these new trends. For many Democratic loyalists, any rightward
- shift looks like a betrayal of the party's commitment to the
- poor, to minorities, to all the disadvantaged. Nonetheless, the
- party is changing. After its emotional outburst for Kennedy,
- the convention nominated a President who has proposed limits on
- social spending and increases in defense outlays, appointed a
- Federal Reserve chairman who pushed interest rates to
- unheard-of levels, all but openly engineered a recession in
- order to slow inflation, and intends to campaign as an advocate
- of a balanced budget.
- </p>
- <p> But what new positions can the Democrats develop for
- themselves? The convention gave no answer. There was constant,
- worried talk that the Democrats were "a party in transition"
- (New Jersey Senator Bill Bradley), "a party in an identity
- crisis" (Connecticut Representative Toby Moffett), "a party
- that is struggling to finds its soul" (Massachusetts Lieutenant
- Governor Thomas P. O'Neill III). Says Eric Goldman, a former
- adviser to Lyndon Johnson: "The Democratic Party may have
- outlived its usefulness." Says Ramsey Clark, L.B.J.'s Attorney
- General: "The Democratic Party is a party in name only, not in
- shared belief."
- </p>
- <p> Somehow the party must balance the new awareness of fiscal
- reality that even Kennedy delegates feel with the traditional
- commitment shared by Carterites that all Americans should have a
- fair chance to achieve the good life. If the party cannot yet
- communicate to the people a detailed program for achieving its
- vision, it at least must offer a firm sense that it knows where
- it wants to go. That was lacking last week.
- </p>
- <p> The party obviously lacks the ideal leader to help it
- through this difficult period of transition. Jimmy Carter won
- the presidency by campaigning deliberately as an outsider--and
- he has remained one. Even if he wins a second term, he has no
- solid base in the party that would enable him to unify it behind
- his ideals. Looking to the future, Louis Koenig, a political
- scientist at New York University, says: "The hope for the
- Democratic Party is to become a party of issues--social,
- economic, foreign policy, inflation, energy, the dollar, health
- costs. But party leaders have not emphasized issues--they
- have stressed personalities."
- </p>
- <p> A party unsure of its mission, rallying around its
- President unenthusiastically and telling the nation to vote for
- him primarily out of fear of his opponent, is hardly apt to
- inspire the electorate this fall. But whatever happens in
- November, it would be a gross mistake to count out the
- Democrats: witness all those obituaries of the Republican Party
- written at regular intervals from 1964 to as recently as 1976.
- The Democrats are still the majority party, a party open to
- bewilderingly diverse groups who somehow pull themselves
- together for one more election, and then another and another.
- Said Vice President Mondale last week: "This Democratic
- Convention is a mirror of all America--all of it, black and
- white, Asian and Hispanic, native and immigrant, male and
- female, young and old, urban and rural, rich and poor."
- </p>
- <p> The Democrats' ability to stitch together an effective
- coalition, however, may not be limitless. Says Massachusetts
- Senator Paul Tsongas, a Kennedy supporter who nonetheless
- questions the traditional liberal philosophy: "I think there
- comes a swell of realities and eventually someone takes
- advantage of it. One of our parties is going to deal with those
- realities in very effective terms. And that party is going to be
- in power for a very long time."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-