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<text>
<title>
(40 Elect) Willkie in the West
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1940 Election
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
September 30, 1940
REPUBLICANS
Willkie in the West
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Last week Wendell Willkie appeared to justify the miracle of
his nomination at Philadelphia. With the gong ringing for the
tenth round, with the wise guys yelling "Take him out!", with his
defenses battered down, he got up off the canvas, and waded back
in, trading punch for punch.
</p>
<p> Nearly everything that could go wrong had gone wrong, either
through the demonic perversities of politics, or because Wendell
Willkie had missed with some haymaker rights & lefts. (Nobody
denied he was good at infighting.) Now he knew better what it
meant to "meet the camp." For daily Franklin Roosevelt threw a
bigger punch in the form of action as President, than Wendell
Willkie could muster in the form of argument as Candidate.
</p>
<p> At that point last week Pollster Gallup came in with a
killer: 55% of the popular vote for Roosevelt, 45% for Willkie;
Roosevelt--453 electoral votes, Willkie--78; Roosevelt--38
States, Willkie--10.
</p>
<p> It was as if the referee had hit one fighter with a stool.
In the corner, Willkie's handlers wept (some of them crocodile
tears) or swore. But the bearlike man from Indiana wouldn't admit
he was licked. Even veteran newshawks begged him to cut down on
his extraordinarily grueling speaking schedule. Smiling, he upped
the pace, talked more, louder, longer. More important, he began
to say things that bit.
</p>
<p> For an amateur getting experience the hard way, Nominee
Willkie's Western trip began to seem perfectly planned--in an
unexpected way. Last week's political errors were made in
rockbound Democratic areas, where Republicans are classed with
horned toads as amusing but unessential creatures. He had found
his voice again in safely Republican Kansas, to the pretended
delight of New Deal partisans (who wisecracked that Nominee
Willkie lost a thousand votes every time he said "Presunistace"
for President of the United States).
</p>
<p> At Tulsa Mr. Willkie drew a tremendous crowd (40,000); at
Amarillo, 10,000 hospitable, curious Texans listened lukewarmly
to his appeal that they exchange their 80-year-old tradition of
voting the straight Democratic ticket for the 160-year-old No-
Third-Term tradition.
</p>
<p> In back-platform appearances across New Mexico the candidate
began to learn to use the microphone. He talked of the New Deal's
"drunken orgy of spending"; promised "honest jobs for honest work
in honest industry"; and always everywhere, blasted the Chicago
"draft," declaring again & again "I am not an indispensable man."
</p>
<p> He went well, generally, although small, presumably, were
his vote-getting results in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona.
</p>
<p> By plane the challenger entered California. His technique
had improved consistently. He had been booed, heckled and hooted
at by scattered partisans throughout the Southwest; but had
turned off the hecklers neatly on most occasions. He had moved in
close to the microphone. He had drawn unprecedented crowds. Still
he had flopped repeatedly. Only in California did train observers
begin to realize that they had set an impossibly high standard
for Wendell Willkie--that they had expected him to leap from
political miracle to miracle until he appeared in a burning bush
on Election Day.
</p>
<p> The amateurs in the Willkie camp were most keenly
disappointed when unpolitical Crusader Willkie tried to be
political. Well he recalled that Candidate Charles Evans Hughes's
failure to shake Hiram Johnson's hand in 1916 had cost him
California, and California had cost him the Presidency. The
moment the candidate crossed the California State line he came
out with a bellow for that "great, fighting, fearless liberal,
Hiram Johnson"--isolationist Senator Johnson, who has opposed
much that Candidate Willkie stands for, particularly aid to the
Allies. To the Willkie overture Senator Johnson made no
immediately audible reply.
</p>
<p> The Republican pros grumbled that Willkie should have
buttered up old Hiram weeks ago, should now have been able to
announce dramatically that Johnson was a 100% Willkie man. "No
organization," they humphed, and continued to let their candidate
carry on alone.
</p>
<p> Through San Diego, Santa Ana, Englewood, Long Beach, motored
the Willkie caravan, through huge turnouts of cheering people.
Here & there high-school children bronx-cheered or shouted
"Hooray for Roosevelt!" One or two of them threw tomatoes, one a
wild pitch above the grinning candidate's head.
</p>
<p> But when Willkie reached Log Angeles, the city went crazy.
Torn paper & ticker tape showered down, a steady, deep-toned roar
followed his car for many miles, and at the City Hall the
swirling crowd jammed around him so frenziedly that he never got
within 50 feet of Acting Mayor Robert Burns and the dignitaries.
</p>
<p> That evening, in the clear California night 70,000 people
crushed into the Los Angeles Coliseum, watched a Flag Day
parachute bomb shoot up, heard The Star-Spangled Banner, watched
the flag raised, chanted the pledge of allegiance to the flag,
bowed heads in prayer, roared approval as grizzled G.O.P.
Oldtimer Joseph Scott introduced "the next President of the
United States."
</p>
<p> Out of the Coliseum tunnel moved the Willkie car; a band
played "Back Home Again in Indiana," spotlights cut through the
dark, and the crowd's cheers settled into the powerful, hypnotic
Philadelphia chant of "We Want Willkie!" over & over.
</p>
<p> Then something happened. In ten minutes Wendell Willkie had
lost his audience. The speech was logical, well-argued,
businesslike--but not the stuff for a throng that wanted
emotion, excitement, slambang oratory. The applause, at first
hopeful, then despondent, finally narrowed down to the reserved
seats. That night Willkie's shaken assistant kept from him the
news of the Friday Gallup poll.
</p>
<p> If Willkie was shaken by the Gallup figures, he did not show
it publicly. Next day he went on, as hard as ever..."the
glory of the United States is business." At Fresno and at
Stockton boys and young men booed and heckled him. But everywhere
the crowds were big--to the pros, unexpectedly big. Day after
day the big round-shouldered amateur learned: how to roll with a
punch, how to throw a hook. Most important, he never quit.
Grudgingly, the newshawks came to respect his bull-like
persistence, his obstinate honesty, the deep strength of his
convictions, which he could not lay aside each evening as
practiced politicians do. "This guy means it," one correspondent
wired.
</p>
<p> More significant than the gloom among the sedentary,
grumbling Republican professionals was the continued parade of
bolters to Willkie, evidencing the belief that this man's cause
was just, even if he was a successful businessman.
</p>
<p> Biggest bolt was the New York Times supporter of Franklin
Roosevelt in 1932 and 1936, and a bolter only twice before in its
history--both times against William Jennings Bryan, 1896, 1908.
The Times gave 2,500 reasoned words for its shift, but to the
public and the rest of the press the simple fact was sufficient.
</p>
<p> Other bolters-of-the-week: Walter N. Rothschild, director of
Abraham & Straus, huge Brooklyn department store; the Oregon
Journal, traditionally Democratic Portland paper: Bess Streeter
Aldrich, best-selling novelist and Hollywood scenarist; former
Democratic Governor Charles H. Martin of Oregon, former
Democratic Governor William A. Comstock of Michigan, Roman
Catholic Bishop Joseph Schrembs of Cleveland.
</p>
<p> With these new seconds in his corner, Willkie came through
at San Francisco with a wholly successful speech. This time he
struck clean, solid blows. Said he:
</p>
<p> "I charge that this Administration has contributed to the
downfall of European democracy. I charge it must bear a direct
share of the responsibility for the present war...." He flatly
accused Franklin Roosevelt of having wrecked the London Economic
Conference of 1933: "For a short time after his inauguration he
did indeed regard the London economic conference with favor. He
did not, however, see it for what it was: A magnificent
opportunity for the leader of the world's greatest democracy to
do something tangible to rehabilitate the democratic world.
</p>
<p> "On the contrary, after his delegates had arrived in London,
Mr. Roosevelt, violently and without warning, repudiated the
instructions he had given them. Sitting in a boat off the coast
of Maine, he hastily adopted a brand-new experimental monetary
program for the United States. He denounced the proposal of the
conference as a `specious fallacy'....
</p>
<p> "This rash decision wrecked the conference, and put an end
to any immediate hope for stabilized international exchange...It thus weakened the structure of the democratic world and
opened the way to the aggressive designs of Hitler.
</p>
<p> "Four years after the London Conference, after Mr. Roosevelt
was inaugurated a second time...there were two things that
the United States should have done. First, we should have assured
the domestic recovery that the democratic world was waiting for.
And secondly, we should have taken immediate steps to repair the
damage in 1933 at the London economic conference. We should have
adopted a vigorous policy for the promotion of trade and
commerce. We should have set about creating a strong and
prosperous era of peace.
</p>
<p> "But on Jan. 20, 1937, when Mr. Roosevelt was inaugurated
for a second term, what did he undertake as his first great job?
A scheme for packing the Supreme Court of the United States.
</p>
<p> "And we all remember what happened as a result of that
scheme. The totally unexpected and totally unnecessary
controversy about the Supreme Court split America in two.... While Hitler's power increased from day to day, we presented to
the world the spectacle of a great people, the greatest of the
democracies, torn asunder by a broil over one of our most
fundamental principles.
</p>
<p> "That was the time when Franklin Roosevelt had his golden
opportunity to save world democracy in the eleventh hour--and
don't forget that the very next year was the year of Munich."
</p>
<p> He quoted the tellingly apt words which Britain's Winston
Churchill had spoken in 1937: "There is one way above all others,
in which the United States can aid the European democracies. Let
her regain and maintain her normal prosperity.... The quarrel
in which President Roosevelt has become involved with wealth and
business may produce results profoundly harmful to ideals which
to him and his people are dear....
</p>
<p> "Those who are keeping the flag of peace and free government
flying in the Old World have almost a right to ask that their
comrades in the New World should...set an example of strength
and stability...."
</p>
<p> Wendell Willkie went on: "The loneliness of the United
States is a direct result of the foreign policies of the last
eight years. If Britain falls we are utterly and savagely alone.
No nation on earth, except Britain, owes us anything but
disillusionment and ill will.
</p>
<p> "We must--we desperately must--rid ourselves of the
fallacy that democracy can be defended with words, with poses,
with political paraphernalia designed to impress the American
people and no one else.
</p>
<p> "We must send, and we must keep sending, aid to Britain our
first line of defense and our only remaining friend. We must aid
her to the limit of prudence and effectiveness, as determined by
impartial experts in this field.
</p>
<p> "In the Pacific our best ends will be served by a free,
strong and democratically progressive China, and we should render
China economic assistance to that end. In addition I favor
exploring the acquisition and development of Pacific air bases
for the protection of our interests in that ocean.
</p>
<p> "I favor the building of a defense system adequate to
protect our soil from aggression from any quarter--a defense
system so strong that none will ever dare to strike....
</p>
<p> "We are a commercial people, and we must therefore build up
the commerce of the world. We are a peaceful people, and we must
therefore strengthen peace by giving other peoples--democratic
peoples--our economic support...."
</p>
<p> The impact of that speech seemed to hit not only his San
Francisco hearers but the nation, and hit hard.
</p>
<p> North he traveled, into Oregon. State of his antithetic
running mate, cool, bourbon Charles Linza McNary. And here he
pulled off the first great triumph of his campaign, when he met
head-on and without a single weasel word the most dangerous issue
he had to face: power--the public power he had fought against
even more vigorously than Senator McNary had fought for it.
</p>
<p> Said he: "Wendell Willkie will presumably go out here with a
spade and dig up Bonneville and Grand Coulee.... The United
States Government has $270,000,000 invested in Bonneville and
Grand Coulee and I have more conception of the value that that
investment represents that all the New Deal crew put together and
piled up double.
</p>
<p> "I have some conception of what $270,000,000 means in the
way of concentrated sweat and labor of men.... It is my belief
that the power generated in connection with such projects should
be sold for the benefit of the people and that the people of the
areas affected should determine whether it should be distributed
through privately or publicly-owned local utilities.
</p>
<p> "If you people want it distributed through private
distribution systems, that is your business. If you want it
distributed through publicly-owned distribution systems, that is
also your business, and if you want to take over the private
utilities, that is your business, too....
</p>
<p> "Don't let any bunk artist come along and tell you Wendell
Willkie's views are any different from that. And I may say I know
how to operate such things for the benefit of those for whom I
work and I shall be working for the people of the United States."
</p>
<p> Wendell Willkie was learning fast.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>