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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>