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- <text>
- <title>
- (52 Elect) Democrats:To the Future
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1952 Election
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- August 4, 1952
- DEMOCRATS
- To the Future
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Six months ago it looked as if Harry S. Truman and Robert A.
- Taft would be the nominees for the presidency. Instead of these
- familiar quantities, the country now has to reckon with two men
- relatively new to national politics, both clearly able, both
- clearly capable to springing lots of surprises. The two meetings
- at the stockyards proved that fresh winds are badly needed.
- </p>
- <p> Different as the two conventions were, they had one striking
- feature in common: intense conservatism. The Democrats' eyes were
- turned back to 1932. A more popular character even than F.D.R. in
- Democratic Convention oratory was the sheriff foreclosing the old
- mortgage. The party mascot no longer seemed to be the donkey, but
- the $.02-a-lb. hog. The almost unanimous party line was contained
- in the phrase "20 years ago." The Democrats' hope is to stimulate
- the fear that the Republicans would (in the words of the official
- campaign song) "take it away." At times it seemed as if the
- Democrats had nothing to cheer but fear itself.
- </p>
- <p> The Good Old Days. Conservatism, which has been defined as
- the worship of dead revolutionists, was present in the factors
- that led the Democrats to pick Stevenson. He was selected in
- spite of rather than because of the fact that he is a new face
- with a new line of talk. What the real leaders of the Democratic
- Party wanted was a man who could repair the North-South damage
- and the mink-coat damage of the Truman regime and thereby put the
- party back where it was when Franklin Roosevelt died.
- </p>
- <p> If the Democrats worshiped a dead revolution, a good many
- Republicans, at their convention two weeks before, seemed to
- worship a dead counter-revolution. Too much Republican oratory
- hankered for a "return to" something--return to the good old
- days of fiscal stability, low taxes, cheap steak.
- </p>
- <p> If the conventions are considered as a debate between the
- parties, the Democrats came out ahead. Backward-looking though
- their line was, it was coherent, consistent and easy for the
- voter to understand. But the Republicans were not really arguing
- with the Democrats; the Republicans were arguing with each other.
- In the deeply earnest conflict over political principle that
- raged at the Republican Convention, it was expedient for both
- sides to sound as conservative as possible, and, as a result, the
- party as a whole sounded far more conservative than it is.
- </p>
- <p> The Better New Days. What was strangely missing from both
- conventions was a sense of the modern American Revolution, that
- marriage of political freedom and technology which promises to
- Americans and to all men the ever-growing hope of better things
- to come. The Democrats are hypnotized into complacency by the
- advances over "20 years ago." This dangerous smugness shows in
- their foreign (as well as their domestic) policy. "Containment"
- is what a diplomat says when he means "Don't let them take it
- away."
- </p>
- <p> Despite the great material prosperity, Americans are not
- feeling smug. Their grousing may spring from something deeper
- than the price of steak (or mink). They may sense that the future
- depends on how the U.S. plays its part in the world crisis and
- that this, in turn, depends on what goes on inside the U.S. A
- better American life--and not merely what the Democrats mean by
- better--could resolve the international deadlock.
- </p>
- <p> The Democratic leaders are blind to that kind of
- opportunity. They shot their bolt "20 years ago" and have no
- dynamic approach to the future. If the Republicans get lost in
- the "20 years ago" debate, they will not grasp the opportunity
- either. Me-neitherism, not me-tooism, is the Republican pitfall.
- </p>
- <p>The Big Battle
- </p>
- <p> Before the convention opened, it was clear that Adlai
- Stevenson, the reluctant candidate, was the man most of the most
- influential delegates wanted. The Kefauver and Harriman forces of
- more or less liberal Democrats formed an alliance, decided that
- what they needed was an issue comparable to the contested
- delegate fight at the opening of the G.O.P. convention. The issue
- they hoped would rouse the convention to their side: Northern New
- Dealism v. Southern conservatism.
- </p>
- <p> Monday. At the first night session they rammed through (by
- voice vote) a resolution requiring all delegations to sign a
- "loyalty pledge," promising to use "all honorable means" to get
- the convention's nominees on the ballots in their states. This
- was designed to make it impossible for the Dixiecrats to run
- their own regional candidate on the Democratic ticket, as some
- Southern states had done in 1948. Chiefly responsible for the
- loyalty pledge move were Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., Harriman
- campaign manager, Michigan Senator Blair Moody, Michigan Governor
- Mennen ("Soapy") Williams, a group which North Carolina's old
- (82), formidable former Governor Cameron Morrison called "half-
- educated boys." Against them were such fierce old eagles as South
- Carolina's Jimmy Byrnes and Virginia's Senator Harry Byrd, who
- were politicians before Roosevelt & Co. could spell "caucus."
- </p>
- <p> Tuesday. The "half-educated boys" began to suspect that they
- had gone too far, agreed to soften the pledge by adding a proviso
- that, "for this convention only," it would not be binding if it
- interfered with state laws. But Virginia, South Carolina and
- Louisiana still refused to sign.
- </p>
- <p> Wednesday. On the floor, it became apparent that there was
- no seam in the North-South fight. Reason: the issue that divided
- them was "white supremacy," and "white supremacy" is no longer a
- live slogan in the U.S. One of the Democratic convention's most
- important achievements was to make this fact clear. Few delegates
- really wanted to force the South into a walkout. Said Virginia's
- Harry Byrd: "We'll just sit here, and maybe they'll have to
- throw us out."
- </p>
- <p> Thursday. On nominating day the delegates, not unlike a
- family taking the kids to the circus, eager and just a little
- apprehensive, brought a full arsenal of convention democracy--placards and pennants, paper hats and noisemakers, confetti and
- enthusiasm, Dick Russell was first. Then that great tribal dance
- known as the demonstration for the candidate broke loose, with
- waving banners, music shouting. Nominating speeches for Kefauver,
- Kerr, Fulbright, Harriman, Ewing followed. More shouting, more
- music, more posters. Then Stevenson.
- </p>
- <p> In the midst of the nomination hoopla, the North-South
- battle erupted again. Louisiana's Governor Kennon insisted that
- his delegation could not sign the loyalty pledge. "So, I suppose
- I shall have to say goodbye and God bless you." Maryland's
- senatorial candidate Lansdale Sasscer moved to seat Virginia
- even though it had not signed the pledge. The Harriman-Kefauver
- forces fought it all out. For a while, it looked as if they would
- win this test, Stevenson's own Illinois voted 45 against seating
- Virginia 15 for. But by the time the roll passed Pennsylvania, it
- became clear that the Kefauver-Harriman bloc did not include the
- bosses. Pennsylvania voted 57-13 for seating Virginia. That was
- the tip-off to other states that a vote for the motion was a vote
- for Stevenson. Pro-Stevenson leaders frantically worked up & down
- the aisles, urging delegates to switch. After a wave of
- corrections and switches (including Illinois), the vote was 615
- for seating Virginia, 529 against.
- </p>
- <p> The Harriman-Kefauver forces, beaten again, decided they
- needed an adjournment to rally their strength and prevent a
- ballot that night. Senator Paul Douglas, like a man possessed,
- shouted, "Mr. Chairman! Mr. Chairman!" In a hoarse, weird croak,
- he moved adjournment. When it looked as if Chairman Rayburn might
- let the convention dispose of the matter by voice vote, Douglas,
- his face contorted in frenzy, shouted, "Roll call! Roll call!"
- The roll was called, and the convention decided to stay in
- session.
- </p>
- <p> While Governor Byrnes was being harassed with questions on
- the loyalty pledge, smoke and flames rose from among the tightly
- packed crowd of delegates. In short order, the firemen put out
- the flames, Jimmy Byrnes rose to say dryly; "I want to announce
- that I did not set the place on fire."
- </p>
- <p> The convention laughed. His remark did much to ease the
- tension of the fight. By voice vote the convention seated South
- Carolina and Virginia. At 1:55 a.m. after 14 1/4 hours, the
- delegates scrambled for their cars and buses.
- </p>
- <p> The Kefauver-Harriman strategists called a caucus at the
- Congress Hotel: F.D.R. Jr. seemed dazed. "Let's see," he rambled...We were dealed out and gaveled out of victory...Life
- is not always a bowl of cherries but...I promise you this:
- I'll be back..."
- </p>
- <p> Friday. There were no more noisemakers, no more streamers.
- The musicians left their seats. It was the day of reckoning and
- the arithmetic was to be more dramatic than the speeches.
- </p>
- <p> Kefauver spurted ahead at the start. There were no major
- surprises. The favorite-son states stuck to their candidates. The
- Southern states held a solid front for Richard Russell. Result of
- the first ballot: Kefauver 340, Stevenson 273. Russell 268,
- Harriman 123 1/2, Kerr 65, Barkley 48 1/2.
- </p>
- <p> On the second ballot, some favorite son strength melted
- away, but there were no major breaks. Both Kefauver and Stevenson
- gained. The position at the end of Ballot No. 2: Kefauver 362 1/2.
- Stevenson 324 1/2. Russell 294. Harriman 121, Barkley 78 1/2.
- </p>
- <p> Estes Kefauver sat in his grubby bedroom in the Stock Yard
- Inn, a bottle of beer in his hand and a sandwich on his lap. His
- sleepy eyes were fixed on the TV screen. As he watched the first
- two ballots, his spirits revived. "I've never been more delighted
- in my life," said he.
- </p>
- <p> Then James Roosevelt, Governor Menen ("Soapy") Williams and
- Senator Blair Moody appeared in the little bedroom to tell
- Kefauver the facts of life.
- </p>
- <p> He had done better then they expected, but he could never
- hope to get enough Stevenson or Russell votes for a majority.
- Truman, who was having dinner on the floor below, had just seen
- Paul Fitzpatrick of New York and Governor Dever of Massachusetts.
- Within minutes, Dever would announce his own witchcraft.
- Fitzpatrick the withdrawal of New York's Harriman. It was all
- over.
- </p>
- <p> Kefauver tried one more fantastic grandstand play. With
- Senator Douglas, he slipped out of the inn and headed for the
- arena, flanked by bodyguards and reporters. They ran into a
- police cordon, thrown around the amphitheater because of Harry
- Truman's impending visit, pounded on a closed door. No one would
- let them in. Then someone led them back to the inn, through a
- pantry and the crowded taproom, into the hall.
- </p>
- <p> The third ballot had reached Colorado. Up the center aisle,
- elbowing aside the ushers, came a small procession. The delegates
- strained to see who it was. They could hardly believe their eyes:
- it was Kefauver and Douglas, heading straight for the platform.
- </p>
- <p> Later Kefauver explained: he wanted to withdraw in favor of
- Douglas, and then Douglas would withdraw in favor of Stevenson.
- But Sam Rayburn led the invaders to the back, behind a chain
- shutting off the front end of the platform. Cried Rayburn: "Never
- in the history of a Democratic Convention has a roll call been
- interrupted for any purpose."
- </p>
- <p> Kefauver and Douglas sat down sheepishly as the roll call
- went on. Kefauver's hard core still stuck to him, and individual
- delegates still shouted slogans ("I am happy to cast my vote for
- that man of destiny from the mountains of Tennessee").
- </p>
- <p> Sagging Balloon. Michigan's 40 votes were the first big
- switch to Stevenson, followed inexorably by a gain of 83 1/2 from
- New York. The roll call dragged on, as delegate after delegate
- asked that delegations by polled. Theoretically, this is done
- when anyone questions the accuracy of the vote announced by the
- chairman. Actually, most of those who said they questioned the
- accuracy were fibbing; they did it partly for the record, partly
- for a brief moment in the TV glare.
- </p>
- <p> At the end of the roll call, Stevenson was still 2 1/2 short
- of the majority. Kefauver finally got the floor. "I, and I know
- all my friends, will join to...elect Governor Stevenson as
- President of the United States," he said, in a low voice. Utah's
- switch put Stevenson over the top. The final vote: Stevenson 617
- 1/2, Kefauver 275 1/2, Russell 261, Barkley 67 1/2.
- </p>
- <p> At the rear of the platform stood Nancy Kefauver, an orchid
- on her shoulder, tears in the corners of her eyes. An official
- asked her to come forward. "No, I don't want to," she said.
- </p>
- <p> Later, someone remembered that it was Kefauver's 49th
- birthday, and the convention dutifully burst into
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>...Happy birthday, dear Estes,</l>
- <l>Happy birthday to you!</l>
- </qt>
- <p>Hail & Farewell
- </p>
- <p> Within a space of days, old (74) Alben Barkley was swept
- into such riptides of excitement, wild hopes and shattering
- delusion as few men ever know in a lifetime. On the very eve of
- the convention he heard heart-lifting news: the Administration,
- fearful that Stevenson could not be drafted, uncertain of other
- candidates, was turning at the eleventh hour to him.
- </p>
- <p> He hurried to Chicago, buoyed by a strong old man's fierce
- pride, strutted five blocks through heat and applause, and girded
- himself to grasp the ultimate prize. Then, with cruel suddenness,
- the prize was snatched away. The Stevenson boom had never really
- died; when Barkley invited some labor friends, among them the
- C.I.O.'s Walter Reuther and Jack Kroll, to a friendly breakfast,
- they carelessly told him the awful truth: he was too old.
- </p>
- <p> Forgiveness. No man knew better than he that there was no
- appeal from the cold dictates of expediency, but the knowledge
- was salt in his wounds. He issued a bitter public reply and
- locked himself in his room. The party had not meant to hurt him,
- but having done so, it could not rest without obtaining his
- forgiveness. He must, it urged, come forth and be saluted. In a
- sense it was a terrible request; the party now had nothing to
- offer but mocking sound, but it asked that he return thanks and
- praise before the world. He agreed.
- </p>
- <p> On the night the ritual was to be enacted, the
- amphitheater's galleries were jammed to the rafters with crowds
- which sat ghostly and half revealed behind the slanted, dazzling
- shafts of brightness from the television lights. When Barkley
- came down the stairs at the end of the platform, stiffened his
- back, lifted his chin and advanced unsmilingly to the speaker's
- stand, the restless rumble of the crowd became a roar. The
- ovation went on for 20 minutes.
- </p>
- <p> Occasionally, Barkley forced a grin. Occasionally, he lifted
- his thick arms for the beelike clusters of photographers below
- him. But for the most part he remained motionless and impassive,
- his hands clamped on the stand. Behind him in the mezzanine his
- pretty wife stood, surrounded by applauding women, stared
- expressionlessly straight ahead. She licked her lips as if her
- mouth were dry. Then, finally, the uproar hushed and Alben
- Barkley began to speak--his vigorous, harsh, measured and
- practiced voice carrying to the farthest corners of the huge
- hall.
- </p>
- <p> He was interrupted almost at once by applause. He was, he
- cried "more firmly convinced in the righteousness of the
- Democratic cause than...ever before in my entire life..."
- He was not a candidate. But as he went on, it was impossible not
- to conclude that he was making a hopeless, last-ditch attempt to
- bring about some improbable stampede of delegates, to set off
- some improbable rallying of the television audiences. He spoke
- without a text. "Not," he said, "from a piece of paper, but from
- the heart." Bathed by applause, he fell into that half trance in
- which the old-fashioned political orator achieves communion with
- his fellow men.
- </p>
- <p> No Lightning. Too old? Only last November, he recalled, he
- had visited U.S. troops upon the "snowclad mountains" of Korea,
- had eaten a humble meal from a mess kit in the open. He had
- celebrated his last birthday in Korea, but it was not the last
- birthday he would enjoy. He spoke as if he did not really believe
- he would return "to the shades and shelters or private life..."
- </p>
- <p> In effect, he repeated the points made by almost every
- orator at the convention--but none had said them as
- passionately, as dramatically, or with such skill. The Republican
- crusade? "We," he cried, "are not beginning a crusade. We are
- continuing a crusade...(for) a happier and fuller life for all
- mankind in the years that lie before us." He ended by speaking of
- "2 1/2 billion human beings bowed down...by war and fear of
- war," predicted that "the day shall come when they shall all
- rise...and stand erect before Almighty God...as free men
- and women. God grant that it may come in your day and mine. Thank
- you...and goodbye."
- </p>
- <p> As he ended, the hall erupted sound. He stood, arms
- widespread, beaming finally in what seemed genuine delight. His
- wife made her way down to stand and wave beside him. Dignitaries
- rushed up to shake his hand--pink-domed Jim Farley, the
- Roosevelt brothers, Jimmy and Franklin, James Caesar Petrillo,
- scores of Senators, bosses, party leaders. The clamor went on for
- a full 50 minutes. But no lightning struck. No change of heart
- gripped the milling thousands--then, or later in the convention.
- As he left the platform and disappeared into the mezzanine after
- his two hours in the limelight, the crowd was singing: "My Old
- Kentucky Home...good night."
- </p>
- <p>Vigil on Astor Street
- </p>
- <qt>
- <l>Farewell, my friends-farewell and hail!</l>
- <l>I'm off to seek the Holy Grail.</l>
- <l>I cannot tell you why.</l>
- <l>Remember, please, when I am gone,</l>
- <l>'Twas aspiration led me on.</l>
- <l>Tiddleyly, widdlely, tootle-oo.</l>
- <l>All I want is to stay with you.</l>
- <l>But here I go, Good-bye.</l>
- </qt>
- <p>-- Clarence Day
- </p>
- <p> Three days before he was nominated, Adlai Stevenson went to
- earth at the William McCormick Blair home on Chicago's most
- aristocratic lane, elm-shrouded Astor Street. What happened after
- that was enough to make Gold Coast matrons stare as they strolled
- by with their neatly clipped poodles and haughty Chihuahuas.
- </p>
- <p> Shirtsleeved reporters and photographers, gnawing
- sandwiches, drinking coffee and sitting on the curb, took up the
- vigil outside the red brick Georgian mansion. From time to time,
- William McCormick Blair Jr., a Stevenson assistant, came out of
- his parents' house to survey the scene uneasily. He decided to
- open up the garden between the Blair house and the four-story
- brick home of his 93-year-old grandmother, Mrs. Louise de Koven
- Bowen. She wouldn't be disturbed; she was up at the family house
- near Waukegan. In the garden the Blair butler, Herman, set up a
- makeshift bar and plugged in a portable radio for the reporters.
- </p>
- <p> Serpents in the Elms. But this did not quiet things down on
- Astor Street. Reporters need telephones. So half a dozen
- telephone company trucks roared up, electricians swarmed up into
- the Blair elms, foremen raced up & down the street, cables
- streamed out of the trees like boa constrictors, and nine pay-
- telephone booths were set up outside the garden wall. A mobile
- unit with six more pay phones hummed at the curb.
- </p>
- <p> The Chicago Transit Authority was asked to set up portable
- toilets on Astor Street. The gold Coast was spared this indignity
- when the Maryknoll Brothers, across from Blair house, opened
- their bathroom to the press on a 24-hour basis.
- </p>
- <p> The man inside the Blair house was much more interesting to
- cover than the usual candidate; it looked as if he could get the
- nomination, but he had not agreed to take it. In the garden and
- on the street, reporters and neighbors recalled Stevenson's long
- indecision. In April he had said: "I could not accept the
- nomination for any other office this summer."
- </p>
- <p> Last week Stevenson had described himself as
- "temperamentally, physically and mentally" unfit for the
- presidency. When a friend asked him what he would do if the
- convention drafted him, he quipped: "Shoot myself, I guess." All
- the while, however, he never said he would not accept a draft,
- and his friends kept working furiously.
- </p>
- <p> "I Shall Go." Inside the Blair house, Stevenson alternately
- watched television on the first floor, then worked in a second-
- floor room while listening to the radio. He was deeply moved by
- the demonstration that roared through the convention hall when
- his name was placed in nomination. He sent out a statement: "I
- had hoped they would not nominate me, but I am deeply affected..."
- </p>
- <p> As the balloting and the roll calls of states and the
- bickering went on, Stevenson and his friends had moments of
- depression. A man who decides to bow to a draft wants a good
- strong one. The draft he got was only so-so. Two extreme Fair
- Dealers, Minnesota's Senator Hubert Humphrey and Michigan's
- Governor G. Mennen Williams, telephoned, talked to Stevenson.
- By midafternoon of the last day, he was working on his acceptance
- speech. One of his friends who had seen part of the
- speech marched into the living room and asked how to pronounce
- "schizophrenia"--the malady Stevenson would diagnose in the
- Republican Party.
- </p>
- <p> Just after midnight of the third day, the vigil on Astor
- Street ended. The convention had spoken, and the nominee strode
- before the microphones on grandmother Bowen's veranda. His first
- words were for the reporters and photographers. "First let me say
- how much I regret the inconvenience that all of you newsmen have
- suffered." Then he turned to the subject of the hour: "...I
- have never been more conscious of the appalling responsibilities
- of the office. I did not seek it. I did not want it. I am
- however, persuaded that to shirk it, to evade, to decline would be
- to repay honor with dishonor. I shall go now to the convention
- hall and accept the nomination of the Democratic Party.
- </p>
- <p> Then the nominee's caravan moved off to convention hall.
- Before long Astor street was quiet again except for the excited
- buzzing of the well modulated voices from the mansions along the
- street. They would go on for quite a while.
- </p>
- <p>The Speech
- </p>
- <p> Harry Truman had just finished speaking when Adlai Stevenson
- walked down the steps on to the rostrum. Truman led. It was the
- first glimpse most of the delegates and most of the U.S. had of
- the man who Democratic orators told them fervently would be the
- next President of the United States. When Truman introduced him,
- Stevenson stood ramrod stiff behind the President occasionally
- rising on tiptoe. Then he began reading his speech. After 4 weeks
- of turgid oratory, Truman's included, Stevenson's words struck an
- entirely new deeply appealing note. Most delegates had never
- heard anything like it.
- </p>
- <p> Excerpts:
- </p>
- <p> "None of you...can wholly appreciate what is in my
- heart. I can only hope that you may understand my words...
- </p>
- <p> "I would not seek your nomination for the presidency because
- the burdens of that office stagger the imagination. Its potential
- for good or evil now, and in the years of our lives, smothers
- exultation and converts vanity to prayer.
- </p>
- <p> "I have asked the merciful Father of us all to let this cup
- pass from me. But from such dread responsibility one does not
- shrink in fear, in self-interest, or in false humility.
- </p>
- <p> "So, `If this cup may not pass from me, except I drink it.
- Thy will be done'...
- </p>
- <p> "And now that you have made your decision, I will fight to
- win that office with all my heart and soul...
- </p>
- <p> "But I feel no exultation, no sense of triumph. Our troubles
- are all ahead of us. Some will call us appeasers; other will say
- that we are the war party. Some will say we are reactionary;
- other will say that we stand for socialism...
- </p>
- <p> "But we will hear nothing that we have not heard before. I
- am not too much concerned with partisan denunciation, with
- epithets abuse...Nor am I afraid that the precious two-party
- system is in danger. Certainly the Republican Party looked
- brutally alive here a couple of weeks ago, and I mean both
- Republican parties! Nor am I afraid that the Democratic Party is
- old and fat and indolent. After 150 years it has been old for a
- long time, and it will never be indolent as long as it looks
- forward and not back...
- </p>
- <p> "What does concern me, in common with thinking partisans of
- both parties, is not just winning this election, but how it is
- won...I hope and pray that we Democrats...can campaign
- not as a crusade to exterminate the opposing party, as our
- opponents seem to prefer, but as a great opportunity to educate
- and elevate a people whose destiny is leadership, not alone of a
- rich, prosperous, contented country as in the past, but of a
- world in ferment.
- </p>
- <p> "And, my friends, more important than winning the election
- is governing the nation...When the tumult and the shouting
- die, when the bands are gone and the lights are dimmed, there is
- the stark reality of responsibility in an hour of history of
- strife, dissension and materialism at home and ruthless,
- inscrutable and hostile power abroad...
- </p>
- <p> "Let's face it. Let's talk sense to the American people.
- Let's tell them the truth, that there are no gains without pains,
- that we are now on the eye of great decisions not easy decisions
- like resistance when you're attacked, but a long, patient, costly
- struggle which alone can assure triumph over the great enemies of
- men--war, poverty and tyranny, and the assaults upon human
- dignity which are the most grievous consequences of each.
- </p>
- <p> "Let's tell them that the victory to be won in the 20th
- century, this portal to the golden age, mocks the pretensions of
- individual acumen and ingenuity. For it is a citadel guarded by
- thick walls of ignorance and mistrust which will not fall before
- the trumpets' blast or the politicians' imprecations...(They)
- must be directly stormed by the hosts of courage, of morality and
- of vision, standing shoulder to shoulder, unafraid of ugly truth,
- contemptuous, of lies, half truths, circuses and demagoguery.
- </p>
- <p> "The people are wise--wiser than the Republicans think. And
- the Democratic Party is the people's party, not the labor party,
- not the farmers' party, not the employers' party--it is the
- party of no one because it is the party of everyone.
- </p>
- <p> "That, I think is our ancient mission. Where we have
- deserted it, we have failed. With your help there will be no
- desertion now. Better we lose the election than mislead the
- people: better we lose than misgovern the people...
- </p>
- <p> "I ask of you all you have. I will give to you all I have...in the staggering task that you have assigned me, I shall
- always try `to do justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly
- with my God.'"
- </p>
- <p>Prize Specimen
- </p>
- <p> After Stevenson finished his speech, he withdrew for a
- little serious politicking. In a low ceilinged room behind the
- rostrum, the candidate and the President gathered with Democratic
- leaders to pick a Veep. The others present Illinois' ex-Senator
- Scott Lucas, House Majority Leader John McCormack, Sam Rayburn,
- National Committee, Chairman Frank McKinney, Jack Arvey.
- </p>
- <p> About 40 "witnesses" paraded through the room to give their
- opinions on who should be Veep. The field quickly narrowed down.
- Out went Kefauver (unacceptable in the South), Russell
- (unacceptable in the North), Barkley (too old). Oklahoma's Mike
- Monroney (not well known enough). The final choice: Senator John
- Sparkman of Alabama who, though no Dixiecrat, failed to support
- Truman in 1948. Later, one of the men present explained:
- "Stevenson made his decision with Harry Truman's help."
- </p>
- <p> A few hours later, at noon, the convention met once more,
- nominated Sparkman, labored wearily through one more
- demonstration. Said Stevenson: "You have inspected some of the
- finest political livestock in the U.S. (But) we've reserved until
- this morning the prize human animal for your approbation."
- Stevenson was keeping up his record of an aphorism a day. To New
- York Publisher Dorothy Schiff, at the height of the convention
- tiredness, he had said: "intellectual rigor mortis has set in."
- </p>
- <p>The Special Interests
- </p>
- <p> Harry S. Truman last week explained again the secret of his
- party's past successes. "You know" said he "the real reason the
- Democrats Party gives the American people the kind of government
- they want." The platform which his audience had adopted only two
- days before suggested that there was more to the President's
- statement than met the eye.
- </p>
- <p> The 1952 Democratic platform does not address itself to the
- American people as a whole. Unlike progressives of an earlier
- day. Fair Deal Democrats conceive of politics not in terms of
- "the people" versus "the special interests," but in terms of the
- people as the sum of innumerable "special interests."
- </p>
- <p> Accordingly, the 1952 platform contains clauses offering
- something to:
- </p>
- <p>-- Farmers, consumers, taxpayers, civil servants, investors,
- organized labor, doctors, advocates of socialized medicine,
- hunters, fishermen, conservationists, small businessmen, migrant
- workers, airline operators, automobile owners, shipowners, miners,
- veterans, students, immigrants, the crippled, the blind, the
- aged, the sick, the unemployed, and widows & orphans.
- </p>
- <p>-- East Germans & West Germans (the hope of unity), Poles,
- Czechs, Hungarians, Rumanians, Bulgars, Albanians, Lithuanians,
- Estonians, Latvians (the hope of liberty), Indians, Pakistanis,
- Japanese, Filipinos, Australians, New Zealanders, Israelis
- (continued aid), Arabs ("measures for the relief and
- reintegration of the Palestine refugees"), Latin Americans,
- Puerto Ricans, Alaskans, Hawaiians; Virgin Islanders, American
- Indians and residents of Washington, D.C.
- </p>
- <p> Digging really deep in the barrel, Democratic platform-
- makers had also come up with one of the finest special-interest
- appeals yet, a "baby-sitting" clause which urged that day care
- for children of working mothers "should be provided and
- adequately financed."
- </p>
- <p> The Democrats seem pleased with their platform and
- Republicans should be pleased with one aspect of it: the
- Democratic platform proves to the hilt the Republican contention
- that no aspect of life is outside the Fair Deal's view of the
- Federal Government's domain.
- </p>
- <p>The Women
- </p>
- <p> The Democrats did not overlook the fact that they had some
- wonderfully interesting female exhibits: two lady diplomats, one
- lady treasurer, two lady vice-presidential aspirants and one
- world-famous lady delegate to the United Nations. Unlike the
- Republicans, the Democratic program-makers managed to give the
- impression that they were proud of their women leaders. However,
- the Democratic women speakers, like the Republican women before
- them, tended to take off from the phrase "we women" in discussing
- all problems--as if women were either class B or class AA
- citizens.
- </p>
- <p> The two lady diplomats were not howling oratorical
- successes. Mrs. Perle Mesta, party-giving U.S. envoy to
- Luxembourg, called her speech "Women as Partners." She began by
- saying: "This is one of the most exciting moments of my life," a
- line which might have been lifted straight from Call Me Madam, a
- musical comedy about her. Sample cliches from her address: "It is
- a great thing to be an American woman...In America today
- women are a tremendous force." Mrs. Mesta wore a chic black dress
- and liberal strands of pearls and looked, withal, as though she
- had just come in from cooking over a hot stove.
- </p>
- <p> The Babble. All the ladies were forced to talk into a
- dismaying babble from the delegates. Minnesota's handsome, fair
- Mrs. Eugenie Anderson, U.S. Ambassador to Denmark, did achieve
- one moment of triumph. During a slight lull she cried that the
- Democrats had to go on demonstrating that basic policies were
- "made by our civilians...and...not...by generals--
- in or out of uniform!" The crowd gave her a rousing hand.
- </p>
- <p> There were few on the floor and undoubtedly few among
- televiewers who did not stare with interest at pert, grey-haired,
- 52-year-old Mrs. Georgia Neese Clark, the Treasurer of the U.S.
- The reason: it is one of Mrs. Clark's duties and privileges to
- affix her signature to the lower left-hand corner of all paper
- money. She hoped, she said, that everyone in the hall had "many
- dollar bills with my signature..."
- </p>
- <p> Hefty, hearty Mrs. India Edwards--vice chairman of the
- Democratic National Committee and a woman with an eye on the
- vice-presidency--gave the convention a change of pace. She
- tramped to the speakers stand splendidly corseted, and garbed
- in lacy black. She clasped her hands over her head and mitted
- the crowd. Then she cried--of its treatment of the other women
- speakers--"you were exceedingly rude!" Amid the startled
- applause she fogged in some fast opening lines.
- </p>
- <p> The Gavel. "I come to you not just as an official of the
- Democratic Party. I come as a woman, a wife who wore a Gold Star
- in World War I and a mother who wore a Gold Star in World War II..." She abhorred war, she said, but called on her sex to
- demand that the U.S. live up to its military responsibilities.
- When the crowd grew noisy she seized the gavel and whacked away
- with it like a section hand driving a spike. When she was done,
- half the delegates came to their feet to cheer. "I would have
- appreciated a little silence more," said Mrs. India Edwards
- grimly. (She made many a delegate wonder who Mr. Edwards might
- be. He is Herbert Phrelkeid Edwards Acting Assistant
- Administrator of the Motion Picture Service of the International
- Information Administration of the Department of State and Mrs.
- Edwards' third husband. Her first, Dan Sharp, died in action in
- World War I. She was married again in 1920 to John Mofield a
- Chicago broker; they were divorced in 1937.)
- </p>
- <p> The biggest ovation was reserved for Mrs. Franklin D.
- Roosevelt, whose new frizzy hairdo made her look like a genial
- golliwogg. She was introduced by Massachusetts' Governor Dever as
- the "first lady of the world." Her arrival also set off a
- startling display of acrimony from Southern delegations, many of
- whom snubbed her pointedly by remaining seated during the 20
- minutes of cheering which followed her entrance. Her speech
- seemed anticlimactic--an earnest, highschool debating case for
- the U.N. Most of the delegates joined in a tremendous outburst of
- applause when she was done.
- </p>
- <p> In 32 years since they got the vote, women had never before
- cut such a swath at a national political convention. Besides the
- big-name women, there were 525 women delegates and alternates.
- </p>
- <p>Domestic Issue
- </p>
- <p> When the Democratic Convention nominated Adlai Stevenson for
- President, it gave him another position: he became the most
- eligible unmarried man in the U.S. That status will not ease the
- nominee's burden from here to November. Almost every time he is
- seen in public with a woman, or a feminine acquaintance mentions
- his name with what her listeners consider a special inflection,
- tongues will wag and columnists' typewriters will clatter.
- </p>
- <p> Last week, even before he was nominated, at least four women
- were being mentioned as prospective Stevenson brides. All four
- rumors were wrong. The fact is that Stevenson has no intention of
- remarrying.
- </p>
- <p> "Incompatibility." Adlai Stevenson married Ellen Borden, one
- of CHicago's most attractive debutantes, on Dec. 1, 1928. They
- have three sons, Adlai III, 21 (recently enlisted in the
- Marines): Borden, 20: and John Fell, 16. In 1949, less than a
- year after Stevenson became governor of Illinois, his wife sued
- for divorce. The unhappy governor told reporters: "Although I
- don't believe in divorce, I will not contest it...Due to the
- incompatibility of our lives, Mrs. Stevenson feels a separation
- is necessary."
- </p>
- <p> Now, some of Stevenson's friends are concerned about what
- his ex-wife might say and do during the presidential campaign. He
- does not share this concern; it was not a factor in his
- reluctance to run.
- </p>
- <p> Last month, Mrs. Stevenson announced that she would vote
- Republican, no matter whom the Democrats selected. Said she: "I
- feel another four years of Democratic Administration would ruin
- the country." But last week she penned a carefully worded note:
- "Dear Adlai, Congratulations to the Democratic Party for choosing
- the finest available Democrat...All good wishes to you
- personally." She handed it to a family friend who carried it just
- four doors up Chicago's Astor Street from her home to the Blair
- house, where the governor had established his waiting
- headquarters. After he read the note, a happy Stevenson scribbled
- a reply on the envelope and sent it back to her. "That's grand,"
- he wrote. "Many thanks."
- </p>
- <p> A Sensitive Test. As the first divorced presidential nominee
- (of a major party) in U.S. history, Stevenson will face an issue
- never raised before. Last may, Pollster George Gallup took a
- reading on the question. Results: 81% of those interviewed said
- they would vote for a qualified candidate for President even if
- he were divorced; 16% said they would not. (At the same time,
- another Gallup poll showed that 70% said they would vote for a
- military man; 25% said they would not.)
- </p>
- <p> Some support for Mr. Gallup's finding appeared last week in
- Chicago among politicians who could be considered highly
- sensitive to the divorce issue. At a caucus of the Massachusetts
- delegation, predominantly Roman Catholic, one delegate brought up
- the divorce question. Another said Stevenson couldn't be blamed
- for the divorce, because his wife divorced him. Said the
- delegate: "Hell, half of our wives would divorce us if they
- could." A roar of laughter swept the caucus room. On the third
- ballot, Massachusetts cast 25 of its 36 votes for divorced Adlai
- Stevenson.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-