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- <text>
- <title>
- (56 Elect) The Care & Feeding of the Baby
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1956 Election
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- July 16, 1956
- DEMOCRATS
- The Care & Feeding of the Baby
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> "I know that a Democrat is just like a Baby. If it's
- hollering and making a lot of noise, there is nothing serious
- the matter with it. But if it's quiet and still and don't pay
- much attention to anything, why that's when it's really
- dangerous."
- </p>
- <p>-- Will Rogers
- </p>
- <p> With little more than a month to go before the national
- convention, the Democratic Baby last week was uncommonly quiet
- and still. Party leaders nibbled cucumber sandwiches in
- Illinois, collected chigger bites in Iowa, stood at attention
- for the Uruguayan national anthem in Montevideo (Minn.), smiled
- at each other across a table in Manhattan's "21." At national
- committee headquarters, staff members were calmly looking
- beyond the convention, planning to conduct the fall campaign
- with the help of Madison Avenue's Norman, Craig & Kummel, Inc.,
- the advertising agency that made the Maidenform bra a symbol of
- the American Dream. Even in South Carolina, where the
- civil-rights issue is seething, Democratic delegates caucused,
- tut-tutted talk of a third party, voted to seek their objectives
- "within the framework" of the Democratic Party.
- </p>
- <p> Beneath this calm surface, the Democratic situation of 1956
- has the ingredients for as much hollering and noise as the party
- has ever heard before. There is the basic split between
- moderates and radicals on economic and social policy. The fuse
- burns short on the civil-rights issue. And personal bitterness
- grows between the two leading candidates for the nomination:
- Adlai Ewing Stevenson of Illinois and William Averell Harriman
- of New York. The key question as the convention approaches:
- Will the quiet be broken?
- </p>
- <p> Coddling & Joggling. In the preconvention campaign Adlai
- Stevenson has taken a big lead with his moderate,
- brothers-in-arms appeal to party unity. It is his clear
- strategy to coddle the Democratic Baby. He wants no wounded
- feelings or angry yowling. He hopes to lie low in the last weeks
- before the convention while his managers clinch his nomination
- with a starkly simple piece of advice to uncommitted delegates:
- "Jump onto the bandwagon while there are still choice seats."
- </p>
- <p> As the man who must arouse more interest in his candidacy,
- Harriman follows an equally clear strategic plan: joggle the
- Baby. His crucial moment will come when the Democratic
- resolutions committee meets in Chicago Aug. 6 to hammer out a
- party platform. His main effort is aimed at using civil rights
- as an explosive issue to blow the roof off the convention hall--and the nomination out of Stevenson's hands.
- </p>
- <p> Last week Candidate Stevenson was playing to the hilt his
- role of leading candidate, party peacemaker and (with all
- outward confidence) the certain nominee. He traveled to
- Bloomington, Ill. (his old home town) for a cucumber-sandwich
- garden party and a Fourth of July picnic. Acting as though he
- had not a Democratic foe in the world, he threw all his darts at
- Republicans, declared that the Eisenhower Administration is
- "stalled in the middle of the road," that "our prosperity is as
- spotted as a coach dog," and that "evidence is mounting that we
- are losing the cold war while neutralism is on the rise through
- much of the world."
- </p>
- <p> After the picnic Stevenson entrained for Iowa with the air
- of a man who really had nothing much to do. Accompanied by
- 25-year-old Adlai Stevenson Jr., he informed no Iowa
- politicians of his coming. (Said one baffled county chairman: "I
- just happened to hear it on the radio.") His mission was to
- collect farm facts for the fall presidential campaign, observe
- the effects of drought on Iowa's farmers (he was thwarted by a
- rain that fell steadily for three days). His method was to seek
- out farmers and ask questions, prefacing them with the
- explanation: "Folks, my objective in coming here is not to talk
- but to listen."
- </p>
- <p> Goodbye & Hello. As the confident candidate for the
- Democratic nomination in 1956, Adlai Stevenson bears little
- resemblance to the beaten candidate of 1952, who, when asked if
- he would run again, replied wanly: "Examine that man's head!"
- Mused Stevenson last week: "It seemed wholly improbable to me
- that one could be nominated twice for the presidency. It seems
- rather strange that I am about to..." He caught himself,
- hesitated, and finished: "...that I'm a possible nominee
- even this time."
- </p>
- <p> For two years after 1952, Stevenson traveled (including a
- five-month world tour), made scores of speeches to pay off the
- Democrats' $560,000 deficit. In December 1954 he said goodbye
- ("Now I must devote more time to my own concerns") to nearly all
- political activity, returned to Chicago to open his law office.
- </p>
- <p> But the presidential virus is not that easy to shake off:
- within six months Stevenson was again making speeches, and in
- July 1955 he confided to Harry Truman that he had ideas about
- running again. Truman had reasons for coolness toward
- Stevenson: e.g., he had heard how, in the heat of the 1952
- campaign, Stevenson had said that someone ought to enact a "gag
- rule" to stop Harry's give-'em-hell campaigning. But Truman
- choked down his personal feelings, urged Stevenson to make the
- sort of fight that would return the Democrats to the White House
- in 1956. Truman's specific advice: come out swinging with a 1955
- Labor Day announcement of candidacy. Stevenson insisted that he
- wanted to consult first with his sons, then seek out the
- opinions of Democratic leaders across the U.S. The process
- required months--and Harry Truman was not pleased that his
- advice was spurned.
- </p>
- <p> By lining up party approval before he made his
- announcement, Stevenson hoped to win the nomination virtually
- uncontested. He made plans to work with Democratic
- congressional leaders toward a legislative program he could
- point to in the campaign against the Republicans. He had bright
- dreams of leading a completely unified party into the national
- campaign. Then along came Estes Kefauver--and Stevenson's
- plans went into the scrap heap. To meet Kefauver's challenge,
- Stevenson unhappily entered his name in a few carefully
- selected primaries.
- </p>
- <p> "Now He's a Politician." His first primary was almost his
- last: the stunning Minnesota loss to Kefauver nearly finished
- Stevenson as a serious contender. But he inched back to the top
- of the Democratic heap by way of primary victories in Alaska,
- the District of Columbia, Oregon, Florida, and--finally--a
- crowning triumph (by 450,000 votes) in crucial California.
- </p>
- <p> Adlai Stevenson learned a lot about politics during those
- hard weeks. Always uneasy when speaking without a highly
- polished, typewritten text in front of him, he learned to talk
- with roughhewn notes--and in so doing, he freshened his
- delivery. With considerable effort (often demonstrated by an
- embarrassed or embarrassing quip) he perfected a folksy,
- handshaking, stunt-performing style of campaigning.
- </p>
- <p> In many other ways, Stevenson became far more willing to
- face the facts of political life. Explains his original
- political sponsor, former Chicago Boss Jack Arvey: "In 1952 he
- went to the American Legion convention and pointed out their
- faults. He did the same with labor. He thought he had to do
- this as a part of his integrity. He'd never do it again. Now
- he's a politician."
- </p>
- <p> Most important of all, Adlai Stevenson came to trust in
- professional political managers instead of in the amateurs who
- surrounded him in 1952. And his new-found faith in professionals
- has become the key to Stevenson's drive for the 1956 Democratic
- nomination.
- </p>
- <p> A Job for Professionals. With the prestige he won in
- California, Stevenson again became the Democrat to beat. His
- campaign entered an entirely new phase. No longer was it
- necessary for Stevenson himself to get out and persuade
- California clam diggers and Florida grapefruit growers that he
- deserved the nomination. The job was to convince delegates that
- their political futures rested on backing a winner, i.e.,
- Stevenson. That job was turned over to Stevenson's smoothly
- professional campaign manager, James Finnegan, 55, a leader of
- Philadelphia's potent Democratic organization.
- </p>
- <p> At Stevenson headquarters in the heart of Chicago's Loop,
- Jim Finnegan directs a staff that includes high-level
- volunteers and 18 paid employees. At his right hand is
- white-maned Hyman Raskin, 47, law partner of former Democratic
- National Chairman Steve Mitchell. Finnegan is generally
- responsible for gathering delegates east of Chicago, while
- Raskin works on those to the west. They employ no crunching
- tactics, rely heavily on their knowledge of the best approach
- to individual delegates. That knowledge comes from the
- 4-by-6-in. index cards on which John Sharon, a young Washington
- lawyer, has recorded vital statistics: what each delegate has
- done at past Democratic conventions, what he has said or pledged
- for this year, the policies he is for and the policies he is
- against, who has talked to him about his attitude and vote--whether Adlai Stevenson himself has written, called or seen him.
- </p>
- <p> P.A.Q. Without H.S.T. The ascendancy of Finnegan and Raskin
- in the current phase of campaign operations leaves little for
- Stevenson to do except stay out of politically compromising
- situations. Stevenson's occasional excursions outside Illinois
- are kept deliberately innocuous, as in last week's Iowa tour
- and in his trip late last month to New York, where he discussed
- campaign finances with Real-Estate Broker Roger Stevens,
- checked with his friend, CBSman Edward R. Murrow, about
- television ideas for use this fall. Most of Stevenson's time
- since the California primary has been spent on his 72-acre farm
- at Libertyville, on Chicago's northwest suburban edge, pitching
- hay, receiving visitors, and reading.
- </p>
- <p> His reading is devoted almost exclusively to papers
- prepared by his research staff on the issues he hopes to argue
- with Republicans after he has won the Democratic nomination. To
- prepare Stevenson for the fall campaign, staff researchers in
- Chicago have compiled material filling 16 triple-drawer filing
- cases. One of the fattest sections is labeled "Ike--P.A.Q."--for Policies, Actions, Quotations. At the researchers'
- fingertips are the speeches of Woodrow Wilson, Franklin Delano
- Roosevelt and Adlai Ewing Stevenson. Conspicuously missing: the
- speeches of Harry Truman.
- </p>
- <p> Angry With Ave. As the candidate whose strategy aims at
- avoiding personal name-calling, party-splitting feuds with other
- Democrats, Stevenson has one particularly trying problem: to
- hide from the public his feeling toward Averell Harriman. That
- feeling goes deep.
- </p>
- <p> Since Harriman said, after his election as New York's
- governor in 1954, that he would support Stevenson for
- President, Adlai feels that Ave has no right to be in the race
- at all. Specifically, Stevenson thinks that both Harriman and
- Kefauver entered the contest only because they thought that
- Dwight Eisenhower's heart attack enhanced Democratic chances
- for November. "I had almost universal encouragement," frets
- Stevenson, recalling how he touched bases with Democratic
- leaders before announcing his own candidacy. "That is, until
- after Eisenhower's heart attack. Harriman rushed out almost
- within the week and said he was no longer supporting Stevenson.
- Kefauver was not far behind."
- </p>
- <p> Stevenson is pained by the Harriman forces' argument that
- 1952 was a sad Democratic showing, and that Adlai would do no
- better this time. There are two sides to the argument about
- Stevenson's 1952 showing. Next only to Franklin Roosevelt in
- 1936 and Dwight Eisenhower in 1952, he received more votes than
- any presidential candidate in history--winner or loser. This
- statistic, however, is tempered by the fact that the burgeoning
- U.S. population almost inevitably results in larger popular
- votes in each succeeding election. The key statistic on the
- other side of the argument: with the single exception of Al
- Smith in 1928, Stevenson got a smaller percentage (17%) of the
- electoral vote that any other Democratic candidate in this
- century.
- </p>
- <p> While they quietly advance the negative side of the 1952
- argument, Harriman's supporters are also advancing experience as
- an issue: "After all, Harriman was a high official of the U.S.
- Government when Stevenson was a minor bureaucrat."
- </p>
- <p> The Harriman Strategy. To win in Chicago, Harriman must
- exploit the splits in the Democratic Party: between himself and
- Stevenson, between conservatives and liberals, between the North
- and the South. In particular, he sees the civil-rights issue as
- the key to his nomination.
- </p>
- <p> Harriman's theory involves these premises: the North and
- South are so far apart on civil rights that no candidate can
- straddle the issue. Stevenson has tried, and won grudging
- support from the South (which considers him as one observer
- puts it, the "least worst"). Therefore, Stevenson is the
- candidate of the South--and that candidate cannot be
- acceptable to the Northern conscience, if properly aroused.
- Therefore, the North must find another candidate. Who's the man?
- Averell Harriman.
- </p>
- <p> When the resolutions committee goes to work on the
- Democratic platform in Chicago a week before the convention,
- the New York members aim to touch off a roaring fight on civil
- rights. Stevenson backers will seek a civil-rights plank that
- offends nobody; the Harriman forces will try for a plank that
- will blast all hopes of North-South agreement on anything--including a candidate. They expect help from such enthusiastic
- civil-righters as Michigan's Governor "Soapy" Williams and the
- A.F.L.-C.I.O.'s Walter Reuther. It makes little difference to
- the Harriman people whether they prevail on the committee. If
- they lose, they will send to the convention floor a blazing
- minority report. That, they hope, will rip the convention
- apart, leave Stevenson stuck with the South and give Harriman
- the North--which has more delegate votes.
- </p>
- <p> Although the real Harriman thunderbolts will not come until
- convention time, Harriman meanwhile is missing no chances to
- collect delegates through organizational strength. Top men in
- the Harriman camp are Tammany Hall Boss Carmine De Sapio, who
- digs in the delegate-rich fields of the East; Sam Rosenman,
- onetime Roosevelt and Truman speechwriter, who serves as idea
- man and adviser without portfolio; and onetime (1939-1942) New
- York Post Publisher George Backer, who runs Averell Harriman's
- Manhattan campaign headquarters.
- </p>
- <p> Unlike Adlai, Averell has not turned himself over to his
- managers. He is emphatically his own boss, makes his own
- decisions, and often goes against the wishes of his top
- advisers. Example: the managers wanted him to announce his
- active candidacy on the June 10 Meet the Press television show.
- He agreed, then changed his mind. Telling only a few members of
- his personal staff, and then only two hours ahead of time, he
- tossed his grey fedora into the ring on June 9 at the
- convention of the United Hatters, Cap and Millinery Workers.
- </p>
- <p> "Hold on to Your Hat." Last week, especially in search of
- restive Kefauver delegates, Harriman was in Iowa, North Dakota
- and Minnesota (where he attended a Montevideo fiesta honoring
- Uruguay's Montevideo). From Minneapolis he flew back to
- Manhattan to keep a breakfast date with the man he considers
- most important to his future: returned from European Traveler
- Harry Truman.
- </p>
- <p> Senior Democrat Truman has not--and may never--come out
- in public support of Harriman against Stevenson. But he leaves
- little doubt where he stands, and he is a tough
- behind-the-scenes operator. Walking with Truman along Madison
- Avenue, Harriman took off his hat, displayed it as the one he
- had thrown into the ring. Advised Truman: "Keep it. It's going
- to be valuable."
- </p>
- <p> Throughout Truman's stay, Harriman supporters marched in
- and out of his Carlyle Hotel suite. No working Stevenson backer
- came to call. Sam Rosenman had breakfast with Harriman and
- Truman, escorted Truman to a meeting of the Council on Foreign
- Relations, closed out the day with Harry and Bess Truman at
- "21." When New York Post Publisher Dorothy Schiff (George
- Backer's ex-wife) asked Truman about Stevenson's chances, she
- got a meaningful reply. Reported Publisher Schiff: "Mr. Truman
- pointed out that a once-defeated presidential candidate has
- never won in American history except in the strange case of
- Grover Cleveland." And above all else, Harry Truman wants a
- Democrat to win the White House in 1956.
- </p>
- <p> The Cold Mathematics. Averell Harriman can gain much from
- Truman's attitude. He can keep on throwing missiles at
- Stevenson, from beans to harpoons. He can perfect his plans for
- blowing up the civil-rights issue. But all this may well be too
- little and too late, for Harriman is still confronted by the
- cold mathematics of the delegate count as the convention draws
- close. That count, including first-ballot votes pledged and
- indicated, shows:
- </p>
- <table>
- Stevenson 432 1/2
- Kefauver 195 1/2
- Harriman 140 1/2
- Lyndon Johnson 89
- Stuart Symington 60 1/2
- Favorite Sons 266
- On the Fence 188
- Needed to Nominate 686 1/2
- </table>
- <p> Confronted by Stevenson's big lead, Averell Harriman and
- his forces know that, to win, they must shake the party awake
- and set it to hollering. Adlai Stevenson and his supporters
- think they can keep it still and quiet until the decisive
- ballot. The care and feeding of the Baby, between now and the
- first roll call, may well be the decisive factor in Chicago. </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-