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- <text id=93HT1156>
- <title>
- 84 Election: Democrats:Drama and Passion Galore
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1984 Election
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- July 30, 1984
- NATION
- Drama and Passion Galore
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Despite its foregone conclusion, the convention was a sizzler of
- a show
- </p>
- <p>By Ed Magnuson. Reported by Benjamin W. Cate, David S.
- Jackson and Christopher Ogden/San Francisco.
- </p>
- <p> As Walter Mondale prepared to end his long march to the
- presidential nomination at last week's Democratic Convention, he
- and his staff left no detail, large or small, to chance. Yet no
- planner can manufacture drama and passion, and the Democrats'
- four-day spectacular in San Francisco surprised everybody with
- its abundance of both. From New York Governor Mario Cuomo's
- poignant evocation of the party's melting-pot past to Jesse
- Jackson's sweaty, moving, 51-minute tour de force to Geraldine
- Ferraro's winning performance in her unaccustomed role as
- history maker, the Democrats put on a sizzler of a show. And to
- end it, even Fritz Mondale, with his vision of opening doors to
- the future, gave what may have been the best speech of his life,
- one that he had honed through no fewer than 15 drafts.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Mondale very nearly scuttled all his meticulous plans
- with an uncharacteristically impulsive act on the eve of the
- convention: his move to oust Democratic National Committee
- Chairman Charles Manatt. Presidential nominees usually replace
- their party chairmen with their own people, but they generally
- wait until after the convention has ended. Even so, the firing
- of Manatt would probably not have caused much of a national
- stir had it not been for Mondale's choice of Bert Lance,
- President Carter's scandal-tainted Budget Director, to replace
- him. Whether they liked Manatt or not, and many did not, scores
- of delegates rushed to his defense. Willie Brown Jr.,
- California's Democratic assembly speaker sarcastically
- professed to see a plus for Mondale in the debacle. "He will now
- be perceived as a miracle worker," cracked Brown. "He made
- Chuck Manatt into a sympathetic figure." Mondale who felt
- indebted to Lance for helping him win crucial primaries in
- Alabama and Georgia last March 13, evidently hoped to ram
- through the appointment while the convention was celebrating
- Ferraro's nomination as Vice President. But a series of news
- leaks riled the delegates before they arrived in San Francisco.
- By the time Mondale showed up on Monday, they were fighting mad,
- even though the Mondale camp had wisely decided to back off, at
- least halfway.
- </p>
- <p> Manatt was kept on, but with a watchful Mondale loyalist,
- Michael Berman, installed as director--and de facto ruler--of the
- D.N.C., and Lance was given overall charge of the
- Mondale campaign. It had been a damaging blunder: not only had
- Mondale saddled himself with an unseemly link to the Carter
- Administration: he had seemed weak and vacillating in handling
- the uproar. Said Campaign Chairman James Johnson: "We did it in
- a clumsy way, and we wish we hadn't."
- </p>
- <p> Mondale's two opponents, Jackson and Gary Hart, saw the
- dissension over Lance as a last chance to pry away Mondale
- delegates and block a first-ballot victory. Hart's aides happily
- spread the word that some 50 delegates who had been unpledged
- or in Mondale's camp had expressed interest in voting for Hart
- out of disgust over the Lance affair. Mondale's retreat,
- however, took much of the steam out of the fledgling revolt.
- </p>
- <p> The Lance fiasco put delegates in a relatively subdued mood
- as they assembled in the 836-ft.-long convention hall. Los
- Angeles Mayor Tom Bradley sounded an opening plea for unity that
- would be heard again and again: "We are not here to beat up on
- each other, but to beat up on Ronald Reagan."
- </p>
- <p> The advice was followed with powerful effect by Cuomo. At
- times clasping his hands like a lawyer appealing to jurors, the
- Governor let his voice rise and fall to convey sympathy and
- deep conviction. He cited Reagan's claim that America is "a
- shining city on a hill" and then turned the words against him.
- "A shining city is perhaps all the President sees from the
- portico of the White House and the veranda of his ranch, where
- everyone seems to be doing well." With biting irony, Cuomo
- declared: "There is despair, Mr. President, in the faces that
- you don't see, in the places that you don't visit in your
- shining city." Cuomo urged his party to "get the American public
- to look past the glitter, beyond the showmanship, to the
- reality, the hard substance of things." People should not be
- diverted by "the President's amiability," he said, but must
- "separate the salesman from the product."
- </p>
- <p> Speaking solemnly, but with a kind of coiled power,
- throughout his 39-minute address, Cuomo charged that Reagan
- would not have won the 1980 election if he had told voters that
- he would "pay for his so-called economic recovery with
- bankruptcies, unemployment...and the largest Government debt
- known to humankind...That was an election won with smoke and
- mirrors and illusions. It is that kind of recovery we have now
- as well." Setting out a Democratic campaign theme, Cuomo said
- his party believes in "the family of America...the sharing of
- benefits and burdens for the good of all." Cuomo was
- interrupted 50 times by applause and by chants of "Mario,
- Mario."
- </p>
- <p> By Tuesday, Mondale's strategists faced three lingering
- obstacles to a harmonious convention. First, there were rumors
- of an incipient move among the 271 Hispanic delegates and
- alternates to abstain on the first roll call, as a way to
- dramatize their opposition to what they consider the
- discriminatory nature of the Simpson-Mazzoli immigration bill,
- which has been passed by both houses of Congress but in
- different forms that still must be reconciled. Second, Jackson
- was pushing four minority reports that sought changes in the
- party platform and using his sway over black voters as a lever
- to get them passed. Finally, Hart was backing one platform
- change and was still insisting, with no tangible evidence, that
- he would eventually win the nomination.
- </p>
- <p> Hispanic disgruntlement came to a head at a noisy caucus
- on Tuesday morning. Mario Obledo, president of the League of
- United Latin American Citizens, made an impassioned argument
- that Mondale had not taken a firm enough stand against the
- immigration bill. "Abstain! Abstain!" shouted delegates. A
- resolution advising abstention finally lost on a 38-to-38 tie
- amid boos and shouting.
- </p>
- <p> The Jackson platform challenge was more troublesome.
- Jackson was annoyed at not being consulted about the Lance
- appointment, complaining to numerous groups, "For women it's
- Ferraro, for the South it's Bert Lance, but for the blacks and
- Hispanics, so far they can point to nobody or no concrete
- commitment." The Mondale forces easily defeated Jackson planks
- calling for the U.S. to renounce the first use of nuclear
- weapons (2,216 to 1,406); a real decrease in defense spending
- rather than a modest rise (2,592 to 1,128); and the elimination
- of runoff primaries when no candidate receives a majority in the
- first vote (2,501 to 1,253). The intensity of black feeling over
- the dual-primary issue was demonstrated in almost brutal fashion
- when Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young spoke against the Jackson plank.
- Other black delegates booed and shouted throughout Young's brief
- speech. "You damn turncoat!" screamed one black delegate. "Uncle
- Tom!" cried another. Sweating profusely, Young looked shaken as
- he left the podium.
- </p>
- <p> The Mondale forces wisely compromised on the fourth
- Jackson proposal, which called for a variety of
- affirmative-action techniques to provide greater job
- opportunities for minority applicants. Mondale operatives
- finally agreed to support the plank if Jackson would drop his
- demand for "quotas" in employment and substitute "verifiable
- measurements." This partial victory did not end black
- restiveness, and flyers circulated on the floor urging the 700
- or so black delegates to vote for Jackson on the first roll
- call.
- </p>
- <p> While Hart wanted to block Mondale from a first-ballot win,
- he had been boxed in. Mondale strategists had reluctantly
- agreed not to resist Hart's one floor motion, which sought to
- ban the use of U.S. troops, particularly in the Persian Gulf,
- until after all negotiations had failed and only if U.S.
- security was at stake. In return, Hart instructed his delegates
- to vote against the Jackson dual-primary plank. In an earlier
- unifying move, Mondale had agreed to let Hart address the
- convention on Wednesday night, right before the nomination
- balloting was scheduled to begin.
- </p>
- <p> Still, the frustration felt by blacks raised fresh
- uncertainties about how Jackson would handle his long-awaited
- hour of glory at the convention podium on Tuesday night. When he
- appeared, he somehow managed to lift everyone, turning the
- political gathering into a revival meeting, complete with a
- humble confession and a plea for forgiveness. Subdued and
- speaking softly at first, he brought tears, then stirred
- delegates to shouts of joyful agreement with the powerful
- litany of his attack on Reagan's policies.
- </p>
- <p> The first sustained applause came as Jackson vowed not to
- be a spoiler in the coming campaign. "There is a time to compete
- and a time to cooperate," he said. Then, in muted tones, he
- summed up his conduct as a candidate: "If in my high moments,
- I have done some good, offered some service, shed some light,
- healed some wounds, rekindled some hope...or in any way...helped
- somebody, then this campaign has not been in vain." Next
- he made a confession: "If in my low moments, in word, deed or
- attitude, through some error of temper, taste or tone, I have
- caused anyone discomfort, created pain or revived someone's
- fears, that was not my truest self...Please forgive me. Charge
- it to my head...so limited in its finitude; (not to) my heart,
- which is boundless in its love for the entire human family. I
- am not a perfect servant. I am a public servant...Be patient.
- God is not finished with me yet." Some delegates shouted,
- "Jesse!" Others wept. Many did both.
- </p>
- <p> Jackson made it clear he was reaching out to Jews, offended
- by his references to "Hymie town" and his slowness to repudiate
- the anti-Semitic rantings of the Nation of Islam's Louis
- Farrakhan. "We are much too intelligent, much too bound by our
- Judeo-Christian heritage...much too threatened as historical
- scapegoats, to go on divided, one from another." His face
- glistening by now, the Baptist preacher closed on an upbeat
- note. "Our time has come. Our faith, hope and dreams have
- prevailed. Our time has come." The emotional night ended as
- delegates, black and white, clasped hands high and swayed
- rhythmically to a stirring spiritual, Ordinary People.
- </p>
- <p> But the next morning black frustration flared again. At a
- packed caucus of black delegates, Coretta Scott King, widow of
- Martin Luther King Jr., pleaded for unity. Her eyes brimming,
- she said, "Those of you who wronged Andy Young need to say,
- 'I'm sorry.'" She also was booed. Later Jackson scolded the
- black delegates. "It is a source of embarrassment to me for
- those of you who respect me and my leadership to boo or hiss any
- black leader," he said. Looking at King, his eyes now tearful
- too, he added, "She deserves to be heard."
- </p>
- <p> Appearing at the black caucus with Ferraro, Mondale took
- off his suit jacket and also appealed for a united front. He
- praised Jackson's address as "one of the most remarkable
- speeches in modern times." After noting his own strong record
- on civil rights, he said amid cheers, "I do not ask you today
- simply to join us in the campaign, but in Government, in the
- courts and in the cabinet." Any large-scale defection of
- Mondale delegates apparently had been stemmed.
- </p>
- <p> As the Wednesday-night balloting approached, only one
- substantive question remained: What kind of message would Hart
- deliver in his prime-time convention swan song? As it turned
- out, Hart paid obeisance to Mondale without explicitly
- abandoning his forlorn quest for the nomination. He praised his
- opponent's "unsurpassed grit, perseverance and determination."
- He told the loudly applauding delegates that whatever their
- nomination choice, he would "devote every waking hour and every
- ounce of energy to the defeat of Ronald Reagan." And he added a
- nice line: "This is one Hart you will not leave in San
- Francisco."
- </p>
- <p> Still, Hart could not resist some not-so-veiled echoes of
- his earlier complaints about Mondale. "We have failed when we
- became cautious and complacent," he said of his party. He
- criticized "the policies of the comfortable past that do not
- answer the challenges of tomorrow." His followers gave Hart a
- warm ovation, and some wept in the realization that his
- candidacy was over. Others in the hall felt he had been less
- than gracious in defeat.
- </p>
- <p> The actual roll call proved anticlimactic. The final
- tally, before Hart made the traditional motion for a unanimous
- decision, was Mondale, 2,191; Hart, 1,200; Jackson, 465. Mondale
- had fallen just nine votes shy of the 2,200 targeted by his
- staff and was a comfortable 224 votes above a majority.
- </p>
- <p> Now the remaining suspense centered on personalities and
- performance. In a convention of blazing oratory, how would the
- nation's first woman vice-presidential candidate stand up to
- her first big test? How would the reserved Mondale measure up
- against the forceful Cuomo and mercurial Jackson? The answers,
- when they came on Thursday, were pleasing to the Democratic
- Party.
- </p>
- <p> As the convention's versatile band played the theme from
- New York, New York, the slender woman stepped with poise into
- the hall's glaring lights to accept the historic nomination and
- one of the emotional convention's most spirited ovations. Once
- again the faces of delegates, beaming or moist or both,
- reflected the excitement of the breakthrough.
- </p>
- <p> "My name is Geraldine Ferraro," she said in a low-keyed
- but firm voice when the tumult subsided. "I stand before you to
- proclaim tonight: America is a land where dreams can come true
- for all of us." Her selection, she said, sent "a powerful
- signal to all Americans. There are no doors we cannot unlock. We
- will place no limit on achievement." Stressing the openness of
- her party, she declared, "Change is in the air, just as surely
- as when John Kennedy beckoned America to a New Frontier; when
- Sally Ride rocketed into space, and when Rev. Jesse Jackson ran
- for office of President of the United States." More cheers.
- </p>
- <p> On campaign issues, Ferraro said that as an assistant
- district attorney in New York, "I put my share of criminals
- behind bars...If you break the law, you must pay for your
- crime." She charged that because of the Reagan Administration,
- "the rules are rigged" against too many Americans. "It isn't
- right that a woman should get paid 59 cents on the dollar for
- the same work as a man." Turning to cuts in student-loan funds,
- Ferraro bluntly addressed Reagan: "You fit the classic
- definition of a cynic; you know the price of everything, but the
- value of nothing."
- </p>
- <p> Mondale was introduced by a fit-looking, relaxed and
- sardonic Edward Kennedy, who lashed Reagan with Boston clubhouse
- punches. "Send him back to Hollywood, which is where both Star
- Wars and Ronald Reagan really belong," shouted Kennedy, who went
- on: "By his choice of Geraldine Ferraro, Walter Mondale has
- already done more for this country in one short day than Ronald
- Reagan has done in four long years."
- </p>
- <p> In his acceptance speech Mondale avoided the high-pitched
- delivery that sometimes sounds shrill on television, speaking
- more slowly and in more natural if nasal tones. Mondale
- contended that "the drowsy harmony of the Republican Party"
- contrasts with the open debates of the Democratic Party, and he
- claimed that there was another difference: "They are a
- portrait of privilege, and we are a mirror of America."
- Addressing anyone who voted for Reagan in 1980, he said, "I
- heard you. And our party heard you." He had learned since then,
- he conceded, "that America must have a strong defense, and a
- sober view of the Soviets...That government must be as well
- managed as it is well meaning...that a healthy, growing
- private economy is the key to the future." Added Mondale: "If
- Mr. Reagan wants to rerun the 1980 campaign, fine. Let them
- fight over the past. We're fighting for the American future--and
- that's why we're going to win this campaign."
- </p>
- <p> "By the end of my first term," he vowed, "I will reduce
- the Reagan budget deficit by two-thirds." Mondale said he would
- use his veto power to check needless spending if Congress did
- not. "To the corporations and the freeloaders who play the
- loopholes and pay no taxes," said he, "my message is: your free
- ride is over."
- </p>
- <p> Mondale also promised "a renaissance in education, in
- science and learning," advising parents to "turn off that
- television" so students can do their homework. On foreign
- affairs, he pledged that he would "work for peace from my first
- day in office and not from my first day of campaigning for
- re-election."
- </p>
- <p> Buoyed by their rousing reception on their night of
- triumph, the two Democratic candidates moved onto the floor to
- shake the hands of delighted delegates, while the band struck
- up rock tunes designed to appeal to the younger generation that
- the Democrats are courting. They returned to the podium for the
- traditional show of unity, with the defeated candidates closing
- ranks behind the winner. The delegates swayed once more in
- unison as a black Broadway musical performer, Jennifer Holliday
- belted out The Battle Hymn of the Republic. Rabbi Jacob Pressman
- pronounced the benediction.
- </p>
- <p> Months of strain within the party--the bitter primary
- fights, the wrenching divisions between blacks and Jews, the
- philosophical struggles between old-style liberals and
- neoliberals--seemed to fade in that joyous, convention-ending
- tableau. Democrats being Democrats, however, at least some of
- those strains are likely to come back in sharp focus before
- November.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-