home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text>
- <title>
- (72 Elect) The Coronation of King Richard
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1972 Election
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- August 28, 1972
- THE CAMPAIGN
- The Coronation of King Richard
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> There has always been something of the born loser about
- Richard Nixon. Save for his satellite days in the Eisenhower
- sun, he has never known the Roman triumphs of an easy campaign
- or an easeful election eve in all his long political life.
- Considered the favorite in 1960, he lost to John Kennedy and two
- years later was even rejected for Governor by California voters.
- Starting far ahead, he let Hubert Humphrey nearly overtake him
- in 1968, and suffered a setback in the 1970 congressional
- elections because of an unduly strident campaign. Not much more
- than a year ago it looked as if he might become the first
- incumbent President since Herbert Hoover to be turned out of
- office. But now, for the first time in his scar-studded career,
- he bestrides the American political arena like a colossus. By
- every sign, omen and pollster's tally sheet, Nixon and his
- running mate Spiro Agnew have it made. The President may be
- forgiven a touch of vertigo these days.
- </p>
- <p> Inevitably, this week's Republican Convention in Miami
- Beach wears the joyful and slightly smug mien of a coronation.
- It is proudly programmed to praise the man who is going to give
- the Republicans four more years at the helm of the nation, and
- who will perhaps forge the first new alignment of political
- power in the U.S. since the New Deal. The campaign to follow
- looms almost an anticlimax, an exercise in the forms of
- democracy, though it will be the most lavishly financed and
- highly organized in Republican history. Yet it should also pose
- the sharpest choice on basic issues of any modern U.S. election.
- No matter; in the euphoria of the convention, the Republicans
- are acting as if the voting were already over. Four years ahead
- of time, conservatives are maneuvering to put their ideological
- favorite, Spiro Agnew, at the top of the ticket when Nixon steps
- down.
- </p>
- <p> To judge from the convention scene, Richard Nixon, that
- most controversial of politicians, never had an enemy in the
- world. Old rivals were as eager as party job holders to pay
- tribute to the President. California Governor Ronald Reagan, his
- own presidential ambitions behind him, readily agreed to chair
- the convention until Tuesday afternoon. New York Governor
- Nelson Rockefeller, having moved far enough rightward to satisfy
- the President, was happy to put Nixon in nomination.
- </p>
- <p> Unity and punctuality were to be the watchwords of this
- convention--in pointed contrast to the discordant Democrats.
- "The convention will be short, compact and precise," declared
- Republican National Committee Chairman Robert Dole. "We want a
- convention that will be watched--and not just by insomniacs."
- Everything is under control, observes the wry Dole, including
- a "spontaneous floor demonstration for Nixon and Agnew." Dissent
- is muted, polite, served up in small doses. There is no Bella
- Abzug storming around denouncing the nominee: instead Jill
- Ruckelshaus, wife of the director of the Environmental
- Protection Agency, makes a discreet, ladylike case for more
- lenient abortion laws.
- </p>
- <p> Celluloid. The bulky party platform, composed at the White
- House and supporting the President on every imaginable issue,
- is accepted with scant protest. California Congressman Paul
- "Pete" McCloskey, who may have one elected delegate at the
- convention, wanted to be put in nomination for President to air
- his antiwar views, but television time is too valuable for that.
- The Rules Committee last week hastily approved a proposal that
- no one can be nominated unless he is supported by a majority of
- delegates in three states. "Open-door party!" snorts McCloskey.
- "It's like putting five padlocks on it and then cementing it
- shut."
- </p>
- <p> The delegates are assembled not to deliberate--there is
- nothing to deliberate--but to pay homage to the President,
- and to have a good time. The convention delegates have that
- familiar Republican look: white, middle-aged male, a bit
- balding. There are more women this time, 30% of the convention
- as compared with 17% in 1968. Youth representation has jumped
- from 1% to 9% on the floor and even more in the galleries. To
- offset the youthful images of the Democratic Convention five
- weeks earlier, the Republicans have brought in 3,000 people 30
- and under to do odd jobs and cheer themselves hoarse for Nixon.
- Explains Stephen Nostrand, a staff director for National Young
- Voters for Nixon: "If the President calls and says, `I need 500
- kids at a press conference,' we can get them there in 20
- minutes." Outside the convention hall, the protesting youths
- (and their elders) that were gathering had a leaner, hungrier
- look than the more casual and less dedicated dissidents at the
- Democratic Convention.
- </p>
- <p> The President is the convention star on celluloid as well
- as in person. Three films are shown on Nixon and family, all
- produced by David Wolper. The camera pans in on the President
- at work. Speaking into an Oval Office phone, he orders: "Get off
- a telephone call or message to Connally. What does he think? I
- suppose he went up the wall." Staffers enter--an act not to
- be undertaken lightly, the narrator warns. "The President must
- be jealous of his time. Whatever they bring him must be
- pertinent and precise." White House Aide John Ehrlichman chats
- with Nixon. Says the President: "What's the matter with these
- clowns? The whole purpose of this is to get property taxes
- down." Replies Ehrlichman: "That's what I thought you'd say."
- </p>
- <p> Others pay tribute to the President, including his
- daughter Tricia. She reveals how her father, too shy to speak
- to her directly, slipped a note under her door spelling out his
- ideas on marriage. Speechwriter Pat Buchanan wonderingly
- recalls: "If you had said to me that in 1972 I'd be in the Great
- Hall of the People in Peking clinking glasses with Premier Chou
- En-Lai, I'd have said you were out of your ever-loving mind."
- </p>
- <p> Pat Nixon is the subject of a 15-minute film narrated by
- old Nixon Fan Jimmy Stewart who explains: "She shows the softer
- side while he negotiates the somber affairs of state." Her "32
- years of political partnership" are briefly detailed. Under her
- guidance, says Stewart, the White House has become a "social
- mecca" where 13,000 guests were entertained for dinner in the
- first two years of the Administration--a record for First
- Ladies. Described as a "force in her own right," Mrs Nixon is
- shown on her various tours around the world as "elegant, but
- never aloof--reachable."
- </p>
- <p> The Republican extravaganza is a faithful mirror of the
- party's supreme confidence, a confidence as great as it was
- when Ike was running and Dick Nixon was considered at best a
- liability--someone was always trying to get him off the
- ticket. Now each succeeding poll shows the G.O.P. candidate
- pulling farther ahead of George McGovern. The news is so good
- that the President's supporters scarcely dare believe it--or
- so they say. "We're really running scared," says a White House
- aide, "for about one inch. People are running around the White
- House telling themselves, `Yeah, yeah, we're scared.'" Not so
- scared, apparently, as to fail to count their chickens in
- advance. "We aren't conceding anything," says Dole. "We aren't
- saying we'll win all 50 states, but we aren't conceding
- anything." Some Republicans talk about gaining control of the
- House in a Nixon landslide, but that is only an outside chance
- since the party would have to pick up 39 seats. Prospects are
- brighter in the Senate, where a switch of only five seats would
- put the Republicans in command.
- </p>
- <p> The role of the President in his own campaign is a curious
- one. It is almost as if he were not needed--or wanted. The
- less campaigning he does, think some Republicans, the better.
- "We blew it in 1960 and 1970, and we almost blew it in 1968,"
- says a White House staffer. "If we can keep Nixon on the job and
- off the road, we'll be better off. But I'm not sure we can do
- it. Nixon loves to campaign, though he's a lousy campaigner."
- For the moment, however, the President plans to stay on the job.
- He will leave the rest of the work to what are called
- "presidential surrogates": a collection of Cabinet heads,
- Congressmen, and others who will carry the Nixon message. They
- will act as shields in the basic strategy: keep Richard Nixon
- the President from having to answer George McGovern the
- challenger. No debates on television, no debates in the press,
- stick to the issues and to what Republican strategists
- characterize--and intend to exploit--as the McGovern
- challenge to America's basic institutions.
- </p>
- <p> The preliminary platform approved last week was laced with
- anti-McGovern vitriol. It asserted that the Democratic Party
- has been "seized by a radical clique which scorns our nation's
- past and would blight her future," and would turn "back toward
- a nightmarish time in which the torch of free America was
- virtually snuffed out in a storm of violence and protest." It
- piously protests that the U.S. should not perform an "act of
- betrayal" by overthrowing the Saigon government, nor should it
- "go begging to Hanoi." And: "We reject a whimpering `come back
- America' retreat into isolationism."
- </p>
- <p> To finance their massive campaign, the Republicans plan to
- raise some $35 million, and more than half of that amount is
- already in hand. Nixon's chief fund raiser, Maurice Stans, is
- a master of the hard sell. He tells contributors that they
- should give at least 1% of their gross income to the campaign.
- Says he: "That's a low price to pay every four years to ensure
- that the Executive Branch of the Government is in the right
- hands." Such was Stans' zeal that he raised more than $10
- million before the new campaign law went into effect that
- requires the disclosure of the names of contributors of more
- than $10. Democrats are pressing the Republicans to make public
- these anonymous, under-the-wire contributors, but the G.O.P.
- has no intention of doing so, suggesting that the number of
- Democrats on the list would be highly embarrassing to McGovern.
- Unlike 1968, the bulk of the funds will go to the grass-root
- operations, though the grass roots complain that they have not
- received much of anything yet. The amount spent on media
- advertising will be considerably less than the $13.8 million
- ceiling set by the new law; the Republicans do not think they
- need it.
- </p>
- <p> Funds will be distributed by the Committee for the Re-
- Election of the President, an organization that has been
- operating for more than a year. Staffed in part with castoffs
- from the White House and the relatives of key Administration
- people (Nixon's brother Edward is co-chairman of Lawyers for
- Nixon), C.R.P. is regarded as amateurish by the more seasoned
- professionals at the Republican National Committee, who have
- far less money and manpower at their disposal. C.R.P.'s most
- famous exploit to date is its connection with the bugging of
- Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate
- complex. So far, C.R.P. promise outruns performance. The
- President himself has questioned a C.R.P. claim that 125,000
- youths are ready to hit the pavement for Nixon, and at a recent
- breakfast of state chairmen, complaints about the committee flew
- thick and fast. New York State Republican Chairman Charles
- Lanigan told of being phoned by a C.R.P. aide who asked him
- whether the Governor of New York is elected or appointed.
- </p>
- <p> Clark MacGregor took over as campaign manager when John
- Mitchell resigned, and has been bringing some order to chaos.
- Gradually, Republican moguls who would talk only to Mitchell
- are beginning to talk to MacGregor. Not that Mitchell has
- vanished. His law office is located in the same building as the
- C.R.P., and he often drops by or rings up. He takes a particular
- interest in New York, a state he thinks Nixon has an excellent
- chance of winning. Remaining as before a confidant of the
- President, he is a dour and formidable figure. At a recent
- meeting of the presidential surrogates, he praised the President
- in glowing terms and then asked if anybody had ideas for
- improvement. When nobody responded, Mitchell smiled and said,
- "Well, perhaps we've kept you here too long."
- </p>
- <p> At the White House, the campaign is closely run by the
- President, MacGregor, Domestic Affairs Assistant Ehrlichman,
- Presidential Assistant H.R. Haldeman and Special Counsel to the
- President Charles Colson. The presidential aides and other
- senior staffers meet at 8:15 every morning and plot the day's
- strategy. White House watchers are intrigued by the prominence
- of Colson, 40, once the lightly regarded head of the "department
- of dirty tricks." While remaining the hatchet man who keeps
- errant staffers in line and dreams up projects to embarrass the
- opposition, Colson also now mixes in such delicate matters as
- the grain sale to the Soviet Union. He has a sign on his wall
- that reads: "`I hope the Nixon people do to George McGovern what
- the Democrats did--underestimate him. If they do that, we'll
- kill them.'--Gary Hart, Washington Post, May 14, 1972."
- </p>
- <p> Most White House staffers have been given extra chores for
- the campaign, though they are careful not to be seen doing
- them. To get too much publicity is tantamount to disloyalty.
- Speechwriter Raymond Price Jr. has enlarged his staff, while
- Pat Buchanan and William Safire have left Price's operation to
- write directly for the President. Herb Klein continues to move
- quietly among the media explaining the President's policies.
- Nixon seeks advice from a variety of ideological sources. On the
- one hand, he listens to Deep-Dyed Conservative Buchanan. On the
- other, he sends liberal-leaning Leonard Garment as an emissary
- to the intellectual community.
- </p>
- <p> The campaign will stress the President's record. By all
- reports, Nixon has finally faced up to the fact that he will
- never be a well-loved President. So he has consoled himself
- with maintaining that he is at least a respected one who has
- proved that he can handle the job. The campaign will attempt,
- in the words of Ehrlichman, to build up a "mosaic of competence"
- around the President. Speakers, literature and commercials will
- emphasize these areas:
- </p>
- <p> FOREIGN AFFAIRS. The President has wrought a historic
- change in relations with the two hostile superpowers, China and
- the Soviet Union, opening fresh chances for accommodation and
- peace throughout the world. His creative statesmanship was all
- the more remarkable for its turnabout from his own record of
- narrow anti-Communism and for being accomplished even while the
- Vietnam War continued.
- </p>
- <p> DISARMAMENT. While the Democrats talked about limiting
- nuclear weapons, Nixon got the SALT talks going and has begun
- a chain of agreements. He showed that he is willing to
- compromise but not give up an American advantage without a quid
- pro quo.
- </p>
- <p> VIETNAM. Though the President has so far failed in his
- promise to end the war, he has at least ended the American
- ground combat role: 500,000 Americans have come home, casualties
- have been reduced to fewer than ten a week. But the heavy
- bombing of North Vietnam and other areas of Indochina goes on,
- and so does the killing of Asians. There still seems to be no
- early return in sight for the American prisoners of war in
- Hanoi's hands.
- </p>
- <p> THE ECONOMY. Belatedly, the President took command by
- imposing a wage-price freeze that has worked better than most
- critics said it would. Inflation has been slowed, and the G.N.P.
- is beginning to rise at a brisk rate. By devaluing the dollar,
- the President showed that he could be as flexible as he had to
- be in handling the economy.
- </p>
- <p> For all the emphasis on issues, staying out of the
- political fray will not be easy for an old gut-fighter, however
- much reformed. When Nixon hears the bell, his first impulse is
- to come out punching. One skeptical liberal Republican expects
- the campaign to be "very presidential in the beginning, but
- pretty soon there will be lots of Democratic bait. Nixon will
- rise to it." But so far, so gentle. As an illustration of the
- style now in favor, neither the President nor his press
- secretary responded to Ramsey Clark's broadcast from Hanoi
- accusing the U.S. of bombing the dikes. The counterattack was
- delegated to Secretary of State William Rogers and Defense
- Secretary Melvin Laird. "We have to watch out that the
- kick-'em-in-the-nuts urge doesn't become so great that we give
- in to it," says a White House aide known for some expert kicking
- in his time.
- </p>
- <p> Spiked Mace. Even Spiro Agnew is to be reined in. For much
- of Nixon's first term, the Vice President's principal duty
- seemed to be to go after the Administration's enemies and
- critics with a spiked mace. In alliterative swings he denounced
- Democrats, liberals, the Eastern Establishment, even dissident
- members of his own party, with an assiduousness and acidity that
- would hardly have been becoming of the President. There were
- liberal Republicans who though it unbecoming even in a Vice
- President, and who saw in Agnew few qualities that would make
- him a suitable President of the U.S., should the need arise.
- They urged Nixon to choose a new running mate for his second
- term. But the President, secure in the polls and mindful of
- Agnew's loyal and noisy constituency on the right, decided not
- "to break up a winning combination."
- </p>
- <p> During the campaign, Agnew will continue to address those
- $1,000-a-plate dinners where Republican fat cats come to devour
- the Veep's red meat. But Agnew has been instructed not to
- become any more of a campaign issue himself than he already is
- thanks to past rhetoric. "Give the Democrats hell," the
- President advised him, but judicious hell, and lay off everybody
- else, particularly the press. Agnew will not, of course, take
- the high road. That is still reserved for the President. Agnew
- will have to find something in between, perhaps what McGovern
- sarcastically calls "low-road remote control."
- </p>
- <p> There are signs, in fact, that Agnew is learning, though
- critics would say mainly from his own mistakes. "He didn't go
- to Harvard," says someone who knows him well. "Washington is
- full of educated people, and he has had to play catch-up ball."
- On his trips overseas, he may have stumbled less then the press
- has suggested; certainly they were publicity flops, in part
- because of his own hostility to the press, but they were not
- necessarily failures from the point of view of Nixon's foreign
- policy. A high ranking State Department official feels that in
- general Agnew has handled himself well. "He is courteous and
- articulate. He understands and reflects nuances. He has always
- been able to establish rapport with leaders of foreign
- governments." Though Agnew has gone out of his way to defend the
- colonels in Greece, the official feels that there, too, the Vice
- President carried out the orders he was given. But Agnew does
- not always perform so well. When he visited South Korea for the
- first time, he got into such a row with President Chung Hee Park
- that he was treated with cool disdain when he paid a second
- visit.
- </p>
- <p> At home, Agnew has been busy building up his own
- constituencies. Often feeling unwanted at the White House, not
- even let in on key projects like the President's journey to
- Peking, he has sought out groups where he would be more
- popular. As head of the Office of Intergovernmental Relations,
- he has ingratiated himself with many Governors and mayors round
- the country, Democrats included, who credit him with fighting
- hard for revenue sharing. That does not mean they would like to
- see him become President, but at least they have learned that
- he does not bite--them, anyway. Higher roads are obviously
- available to the Vice President if he chooses to take them.
- </p>
- <p> It may be easier for the Republicans to restrain their
- aggressive tendencies this time round because they feel that
- McGovern has made haymakers unnecessary. They can scarcely
- believe their luck in having an opponent who laid out his whole
- program in vulnerable detail before the main campaign was under
- way. For months, Republican strategists have been picking it
- apart and storing up ammunition. Nixon has told his campaign
- planners: "Our people don't have to go around talking about our
- budget deficit. Talk about how much McGovern's programs would
- cost." He also intends to throw the blame for the deficits on
- the Democratic Congress, pointedly using the veto between now
- and Election Day to underscore the point. He began last week by
- vetoing a $30.5 billion appropriations bill for social services
- because it was almost $1.8 billion more than he had asked for.
- </p>
- <p> Nixon instructed his campaigners not "to let McGovern off
- the hook." If he has changed his mind about something, forget
- it and play up what he said originally. McGovern, for example,
- has backed away from his proposal to give every American $1,000
- as part of a program to redistribute income, but Republicans
- intend to remind middle-class voters how heavily they would have
- been taxed under that abandoned scheme. In case any campaign
- workers are unaware of the McGovern record, they will be able
- to consult a handy reference guide covering the Democratic
- nominee's positions on everything from amnesty to women. Says
- a researcher for the Republican National Committee: "I can't
- imagine how he could survive all this stuff, if we use it
- right."
- </p>
- <p> McGovern will be portrayed as a man too radical for even
- the Democratic Party, a prisoner of what the Republicans call
- the beads-and-sandals set, the pot smokers, the gays, the
- abortionists, the crazies. Republicans will hammer away at what
- they call the "incredibility factor." Says a White House man:
- "The Democrats made it absolutely beyond belief that Goldwater
- could possibly win in 1964. This year Republicans are going to
- do the same thing with McGovern. We ought to get just so
- confident that nobody even thinks of George McGovern in the
- context of the White House."
- </p>
- <p> The Republicans are going to do their best to pick up the
- Democrats who break with McGovern, to separate Democrats from
- McGovernites. "We want to solidify opinions now held across an
- unbelievably broad spectrum of the electorate," says MacGregor.
- Although Lyndon Johnson endorsed McGovern last week, several
- L.B.J. intimates have come out for Nixon. In Washington, John
- Connally has set up shop for Democrats for Nixon; he has been
- joined by L.B.J.'s former press secretary George Christian as
- well as former U.S. Information Agency Director Leonard Marks
- and Commerce Secretaries John Connor and C.R. Smith. Other
- Democrats who have defected: Frank Fitzsimmons, president of the
- Teamsters Union; Judge Mario Pracacino; former California
- Congressman James Roosevelt; Frank Sinatra; Sammy Davis Jr.;
- Mickey Mantle. The Republicans like to point out that there are
- no organized "Republicans for McGovern," though McGovern has
- promised such a group is forthcoming.
- </p>
- <p> The very elements, in fact, that have made up the
- Democratic coalition for 40 years are now threatening to desert
- to the G.O.P., and the Republicans are doing everything possible
- to make them feel at home. The so-called white ethnics, largely
- Catholic voters, have been pleased by Nixon's opposition to
- abortion and his support of aid to parochial schools. The blue-
- collar voter has been treated to a variety of favors. The New
- York City construction unions have been placated by an easing
- of the demand that they hire more members of minority groups.
- Transportation workers are happy that the President has stopped
- pushing a bill that would submit crippling strikes to
- compulsory arbitration. The maritime unions are expected to go
- Republican because the President has increased federal subsidies
- to the shipbuilding industry. One welcome windfall was a Nixon
- endorsement by the National Marine Engineers' Beneficial
- Association, a small but financially potent union that gave
- COPE, labor's political arm, its single largest contribution in
- 1970.
- </p>
- <p> Blacks have been put off by the President's stand on
- busing and his coolness toward integration, but they also have
- been courted with federal jobs and aid to small business. After
- receiving a pledge of $14 million for his Soul City housing
- project in North Carolina, one-time CORE Director Floyd
- McKissick announced for Nixon. He was labeled a "political
- prostitute" by Georgia Legislator Julian Bond, though he
- retorted that his decision had nothing to do with the grant.
- </p>
- <p> Special attention has been paid to the Chicano vote. As
- far back as December 1969, Nixon set up a Cabinet Committee on
- Opportunity for the Spanish-Speaking, now headed by Henry
- Ramirez. Numerous federal jobs, many of them high ranking, have
- been given to Spanish-speaking citizens. Ramirez exhorts his
- fellow Chicanos to give up the "Chevy mentality," the kind of
- attitude that repeatedly accepts the same old car, or the same
- party's choice for President. Yes indeed, you can buy a used
- car from this man.
- </p>
- <p> All these various ethnic enterprises are directed by what
- is marvelously named the Heritage Division at the Republican
- National Committee and the Ethnics Division of the C.R.P.
- Brochures are sent out in the appropriate language detailing
- all that the Nixon Administration has done or promises to do for
- a particular group. As far as Republicans can tell, no race,
- creed or color that makes its home in America has been
- overlooked. For that matter, age categories and occupations are
- also targeted. At the C.R.P., there is a Director-Jewish, a
- Director-Youth, a Director-Elderly, a Director-Doctors, a
- Director-Lawyers, a Director-Business and Industry, a
- Director-Airline Pilots. Somewhere, for all anyone knows, there
- may be a Director-Effete Snobs.
- </p>
- <p> This hastily contrived, jerry-built structure may or may
- not suffice to win the election, but will it endure beyond that?
- Republicans as well as Democrats have their doubts. It rests
- on too flimsy a foundation--political gimmickry rather than
- enduring political principle, lack of an attractive alternative
- candidate rather than adherence to Republican precepts. It
- lacks so far the kind of sustained vision or creative programs
- able to turn a minority party into a majority one. The flesh may
- be willing but the spirit is weak. Today the President may be
- the favorite of the schoolteacher, the auto mechanic, the
- Catholic father, the Jewish rabbi or--more usefully--the
- Jewish businessman. But tomorrow?
- </p>
- <p> Bonus Plan. The evidence as the convention got under way
- was not reassuring. While the President was preparing his
- acceptance speech at Camp David last week, efforts to broaden
- the party base met with defeat. The party did not stand
- completely still. After hearings chaired by former Florida
- Representative William Cramer, the Rules Committee voted some
- long-sought procedural changes. From now on, party caucuses to
- select delegates must be open to all qualified Republicans.
- Unless they are required by state law, assessments can no longer
- be charged to delegates, who sometimes have had to pay as much
- as $1,000 for the privilege of attending the convention. Party
- leaders and elected officials can no longer be automatically
- selected as delegates; they will have to submit to the
- nominating process. Finally, the delegates will not be permitted
- to name their own alternates, a practice that led in the past
- to many husband-wife and father-son teams appearing at
- conventions.
- </p>
- <p> But on the more important issue of delegate allotment, the
- conservatives proceeded to turn back the clock. Last April a
- U.S. district court declared that the Republican practice of
- giving bonus delegates to states that had gone Republican in
- the previous election is unconstitutional. But that did not
- stop conservatives from approving a variation of the bonus plan
- initiated by Texas Senator John Tower and New York
- Representative Jack Kemp. The new formulation favors Southern
- and Western states because Nixon is more likely to win them.
- These states would be overrepresented in 1976. Complained
- Charles Lanigan: "This plan freezes the Republican Party into
- the same sectional politics that has torn us apart in the past.
- I fear the party has forgotten how to be a national party."
- </p>
- <p> Considering the scope of the Goldwater disaster in 1964,
- it was surprising how many Republicans displayed overt hostility
- to the larger states, as if they had not learned the
- impossibility of maintaining a viable political party without
- them. Much of the conservatives' opposition was directed at any
- attempt to impose a quota system, or what New York Senator James
- Buckley called "the impulse to McGovernize the party." And,
- having seen how quotas divide the Democrats by favoring one
- group at the expense of another, liberals were as hostile to
- them as conservatives. The liberals simply argued that a greater
- variety of people must be drawn into the party, and this can
- best be accomplished by enlarging the big-state delegations.
- </p>
- <p> Behind the battles over arithmetic were maneuvers aimed at
- controlling the convention in 1976. Some conservatives accused
- the liberals of trying to push Agnew out of contention for the
- presidency by reducing his power base in the South and West,
- where his photograph figures more prominently in Republican
- offices than the President's. It is true that two of the
- leaders fighting for larger delegations, Charles Percy and
- William Brock, are known to harbor presidential ambitions. But
- Oregon's Bob Packwood denied that it was a "dump-Agnew movement.
- It will become one only over my dead body." Liberals pointed out
- that Agnew has strength among the ethnics in the big cities who
- would benefit from a delegate shift. Said Percy: "If Agnew wants
- to win elections as well as nominations, he will have to go
- where the people are."
- </p>
- <p> If the convention is any indication, the Republican Party
- could be heading for another fateful divide. It has been proved
- that only a consensus Republican candidate--an Eisenhower, a
- renovated Nixon--can appeal to enough groups to get elected.
- In a party that claims the allegiance of only 30% of the
- nation's voters, a divisive candidate inevitably goes down to
- defeat. Yet Agnew and the forces behind him are following the
- same well-trodden sectarian route that leads nowhere except to
- a certain ideological satisfaction. It would be an irony indeed
- if in the very year that Longtime Loser Richard Nixon finally
- joins the roster of the big winners, his party should start
- throwing away his hard-won gains.
- </p>
- <p>What Nixon's Second Term Might Be Like
- </p>
- <p> For nearly three decades Richard Nixon has been running
- for office, a paradigm of the professional politician. Attaining
- the White House in 1969 did not slake his ambition, but turned
- it to ensuring his re-election this year. If he wins in
- November, Nixon in a sense will be a free agent for the first
- time in his long public life. With no more worlds to conquer,
- he can move and act completely out of conviction and contemplate
- his place in history, rather than worry about his standing in
- the polls. How he might use those four years is a question that
- fascinates--and puzzles--even those in the White House and
- his party who know him best.
- </p>
- <p> "Does he have a rendezvous with destiny or a rendezvous
- with himself?" asks New York Senator Jacob Javits. No one really
- knows what Nixon's view of history is, what he would like the
- historians to say about him. Is the real Richard Nixon the
- statesman who opened new worlds with his missions to Peking and
- Moscow, or is he the shrill and narrow partisan of the 1970
- congressional campaign? There are those who argue that the
- President suppressed some of his more conservative convictions
- during his first term because they were not politically
- palatable. So he might be tougher, and he might also settle
- some old scores. Asserts one Republican: "Having prevailed and
- been ratified, having nothing further ahead of him politically,
- why wouldn't he grind his enemies under his heel?" Others
- foresee a very "relaxed" second term under a mellower Nixon,
- presiding over a healing "era of good feeling" in the nation.
- That, of course, would require a quite different use of Spiro
- Agnew, a less rhetorical and more substantive role for himself
- in domestic programs.
- </p>
- <p> Beyond such fundamental matters of temperament and tone,
- some specific second-term strategies and policies are already
- discernible. Nixon's enduring interest is foreign affairs, and
- in conducting them he aims toward an "enduring monument of his
- Presidency," says Henry Kissinger with his characteristic
- modesty. In his first term, observes the President's foreign-
- policy architect, "the President swept away the previous
- structure of foreign policy and laid new foundations. In his
- second term he will put up the house." Elements: an end to the
- war, the diplomatic recognition of China, major trade and arms
- agreements with the Soviet Union, a reduction of tensions in
- the Middle East and between the Koreas, a new set of world
- economic relationships. What Nixon hopes to prepare, as he has
- often said, is "a generation of peace."
- </p>
- <p> At home the agenda is less ambitious, both out of
- necessity and philosophy. The top priorities remain the
- unfulfilled legislation of the first term: revenue sharing,
- welfare reform, health insurance and Government reorganization.
- As one White House aide said: "There'll be no innovations, no
- new programs." Why? "There will be no money." Indeed, with an
- anticipated $35 billion deficit this year, one of the first
- painful decisions Nixon may have to make in his second term is
- how much of a tax increase to seek. To avoid a tax increase, one
- group of presidential advisers favors a major cutback in
- Government spending. If Nixon is reelected, says one aide, he
- will "clean house. He'll zap some of those federal failures,
- programs that eat up revenues and don't accomplish anything.
- He'll set about eliminating some of those crazy Great Society
- programs. I'll bet he'll cut billions out of federal spending."
- </p>
- <p> Given a second term, predicts one aide, Nixon "will bite
- all sorts of bullets, especially in the labor area." The
- President, he explains, has always felt that much of the
- economic lag and inflation can be traced to the power of labor
- bosses. Two programs being worked up deal with property tax
- relief and a value added tax to finance education. Other
- proposals include such notions as a Hoover-type commission to
- diminish the size of the Federal Government, a national service
- corps of young volunteers, and a "conservative Brookings
- Institution" to increase the flow of conservative ideas for
- government. Says White House Aide Pat Buchanan: "We still do not
- have control of the federal bureaucracy. We need to develop our
- own philosophical roots there."
- </p>
- <p> A second term is bound to bring a fresh team. Defense
- Secretary Melvin Laird wants out. The President might replace
- him with his old law professor, Kenneth Rush, now Deputy
- Secretary of Defense, HEW Secretary Elliott Richardson or New
- York Governor Nelson Rockefeller. HUD Secretary George Romney
- wants to return to private life; his post could go to Donald
- Rumsfeld, presently director of the Cost of Living Council.
- Treasury Secretary George Shultz, Labor Secretary James Hodgson
- and Transportation John Volpe may bow out. Likely to stay on are
- Commerce Secretary Peter Peterson, Interior Secretary Rogers
- Morton and Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz, all Nixon favorites.
- Secretary of State William Rogers is certain to leave and is
- possibly due for the next Supreme Court vacancy. There are those
- who believe Kissinger would like to move over to Foggy Bottom
- and institutionalize his unique modus operandi. There are also
- those who think Democrat-for-Nixon John Connally wants State.
- If he gets it, Kissinger would probably soon resign, but the
- short-term collision of the Connally and Kissinger egos over
- who's in charge of the nation's foreign policy could provide the
- most spectacular fireworks display of the Nixon era.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-