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This file contains: To: The President From: Bryce Harlow RE: Brief comments on the points raised in Bob Haldeman's November 7 memorandum. 8pgs [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], no date To: H.R. Haldeman From: Ron Ziegler RE: "Election and the Next Two Years." 11pgs [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 11/16/1970 To: The President From: Bill Safire RE: "Approaches to 1972." 12pgs [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 11/11/1970 To: The President From: John Ehrlichman RE: "The Election and the Near Future." 6pgs [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 11/18/1970 To: The President From: Lyn Nofziger RE: "In Response to Request from H.R. Haldeman." 5pgs [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 11/10/1970

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WHSF: Contested, 45-29
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This file contains: To: The President From: Bryce Harlow RE: Brief comments on the points raised in Bob Haldeman's November 7 memorandum. 8pgs [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], no date To: H.R. Haldeman From: Ron Ziegler RE: "Election and the Next Two Years." 11pgs [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 11/16/1970 To: The President From: Bill Safire RE: "Approaches to 1972." 12pgs [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 11/11/1970 To: The President From: John Ehrlichman RE: "The Election and the Near Future." 6pgs [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 11/18/1970 To: The President From: Lyn Nofziger RE: "In Response to Request from H.R. Haldeman." 5pgs [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 11/10/1970
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Richard Nixon Presidential Library Contested Materials Collection Folder List Box Number Folder Number Document Date No Date Subject Document Type Document Description 45 29 Campaign Memo To: The President From: Bryce Harlow RE: Brief comments on the points raised in Bob Haldeman's November 7 memorandum. 8pgs 45 29 11/16/1970 Campaign Memo To: H.R. Haldeman From: Ron Ziegler RE: "Election and the Next Two Years." 11pgs 45 29 11/11/1970 Campaign Memo To: The President From: Bill Safire RE: "Approaches to 1972." 12pgs 45 29 11/18/1970 Campaign Memo To: The President From: John Ehrlichman RE: "The Election and the Near Future." 6pgs 45 29 11/10/1970 Campaign Memo To: The President From: Lyn Nofziger RE: "In Response to Request from H.R. Haldeman." 5pgs Thursday, March 15, 2012 Page 1 of 1 THE WHITE HOUSE Halow WASHINGTON CONFIDENTIAL DETERMINED TO BE AN ADMINISTRATIVE MARKING E.O. 12065, Section 6-102 By Date 6-4-80 MEMORANDUM TO THE PRESIDENT FROM: BRYCE HARLOW You have already received, I am sure, far better assessments of the elections and the rest than I can furnish, in part because I was preoccupied with the Vice President's campaign and therefore didn't share in your effort or watch it as closely as I otherwise would have. So I will make my comments as brief as I can on the points raised in Bob Haldeman's November 7 memorandum. 1. Your election efforts: a. To all the VP's crew, it appeared that your campaigning did very excellently what the VP wasn't supposed to do and couldn't do -- stir up the general public and pre- empt both the national and local media. Assuming that the main objects of campaigning, aside from fund-raising, are to remind and stimulate, I believe the timing, execution and placement of your efforts are not challengeable even in hindsight. b. I fear we may have been guilty of overkill in such places as Texas (perhaps the only place) ; the heavy involvement of both the President and Vice President may have flushed out more opposition votes than supporters, and I believe it was agreed from the beginning that a small vote was desirable in Texas. Nonetheless, the Bush people have no basis for complaint; you and the VP did precisely as his campaign crowd asked. C. I feel a bit lame in making this point, since I was not in Washington to share in the decision-making and suspect there are considerations I am unaware of -- but I have the uncomfortable feeling that the Vice President had already driven home, powerfully and effectively, the law and order theme by the time you hit the trail and that he had already 2 peaked with that message to the country. So by mid-October all of us might have been better advised to swing away at least partially from this issue we may have already won (even the most radical Democrats had joined us on law and order by that time) and clobber the economic issue, plus bragging on Administration achievements. That is a gut feeling -- sheer smoke-shoveling -- but by the time you took to the road we were already in worried conferences in the VP's group on what to do about newly adverse developments in the economy and farm areas (the announcement of low parity in the closing days of the campaign was a disaster!). In other words, I vaguely sense even now (as the VP did in the last two weeks of the campaign) that we were overstressing an issue we had already won and on which the Democrats had covered themselves, and we failed then to modify course to take on escalating troubles in agriculture and the economy. Bob Haldeman may recall my distraught telephone call ten days or SO before election about the economic problem --- which gave rise to Bill Safire's excellent statement for our candidates to use (and which we did use at Hartford and Tuscon) - but I rather suspect we might well have charged on these other issues in the closing days, or at least given them greater emphasis, instead of sticking overlong to law and order. d. Even if we had done what (c) above suggests, I must concede that local candidates would have raised plu- perfect hell on the ground that you were campaigning too blandly; certainly everyplace the VP went, the local lust was for raw meat. Moreover, the press was hovering about with pencils poised, eager to charge that the campaign had been SO nasty, so bitchy, that you and the VP had to confess wrong-doing and turn tail and run. So even if the country had drifted away from law and order in the closing days, had you and the VP changed subjects or muted the attack, there's no telling what the national reaction might have been. It could have been a disaster for you or the VP or both. There's no way to tell. e. The bottom fell out in the Midwest and West. If that area had held up as I, at least, anticipated, we would have done excellently -- the 5 to 8 seat gain I personally expected in the Senate. The only constants in 3 that region that can explain this collapse, best I can figure, are: unemployment (spotty), high interest rates (epidemic and very basic), inflation (general), farmer surliness (a sleeper; never once even mentioned to us by any campaign manager or candidate in the entire area), and maybe a regional disinterest in law and order, inasmuch as both Democrats and Republicans are law abiding and square in that part of the country. It is easy to particularize on the races out there and conclude that oddities in each state account for the poor showing, but I can't buy that. I believe that, while state peculiarities obviously in- fluenced every race in the western reaches, so also did they in the rest of the country where we fared far better -- so there are bound to be special troubles out west which did us in. I can't help but wonder what might have happened in North Dakota if our thrust had been not law and order, where Burdick was immune, but on the arrogance and cynicism of the Democrats' refusal to pass the farm law. But even there, as you know, both the Farm Bureau and the Farmers' Union oppose this legislation, so that, too, might have been a loser. That tends to force me back to the desirability of the economy argument - that you had wound down both inflation and war while avoiding recession, and the Democrats are plainly incompetent on both counts. It is conceivable that we might have salvaged a race or two in the mountains and plains if we had done that. f. The fact remains, whatever happened, that the whole campaign was directed toward one goal - unshackling you in the Senate. You did precisely that -- a far better showing than the pillar of political gold, Eisenhower, made in 1954 and 1958 - indeed, the best off-year showing of any Republican Administration in memory. So liberal pundits notwithstanding, your object was achieved, and the proof will be seen in 1971 and 1972 in the performance of the Senate. That is all that matters; the rest is only hostile rationalization and yearning. g. Finally, I reject as inane the argument that your campaigning demeaned the Presidency and will plague you through 1972. Never has this been SO before, and unless the media take it upon themselves to make it so (even that won't 4 work, in my opinion) the whole orgy of 1970 will be dead and gone except for (1) the wholesome Senate results and (2) the gubernatorial disadvantages, by the time you deliver your State of the Union Message. It is true, of course, that the Phoenix film was a well-rounded disaster, but everybody knows that, and it too is an isolated episode that soon will pass. 2. Presidential posture for the future: Posture I don't think the election of 1970 influences your future posture in any significant aspect other than (1) you can now move more surely in national security affairs; (2) law and order are now politically neutralized unless you wish to test the Democratic commitment to their sudden campaign turn- about; and (3) Party regularity is enhanced a bit by the Goodell shafting. Otherwise, your posture, I believe, should be just what it would otherwise have been anyway - that of a deeply concerned President earnestly devising sensible solutions for overriding national problems, and that will automatically come to be as public and press attention turn to issues in the rump session of Congress and your programs for 1971 and 1972. For the future, I anticipate that your removal of American ground forces from combat will be a vast political plus in 1972 -- that a healthy economic situation will be critical for success, for it will likely be the centerpiece of the 1972 campaign -- and that matters of the environment, race and the cities will be peripheral, though crucial in key spots around the country. I needn't add, I know, that the Policy farm situation requires almost as much attention as the general economy, because so much of your strength resides there, and I would hope for tremendous emphasis on rural development plus a greater sensitivity to farm needs (such as continuation of the ACP, now scheduled for the axe) My hope remains that you will "come clean" with Congress on the economy and the fiscal situation and will brace them with the same hard alternatives that you have had to wrestle with, making them shoulder responsibility right along with you for inflation, 5 deficit financing, full employment troubles and high interest rates -- all versus sharply higher taxes plus a withered federal establishment. I feel the country is incredibly mixed up over all this -- insistent upon vastly costly new programs but adamantly against the high cost of government. If next year you can hit just two or three of the sexiest domestic programs with all your might and main and slough off the rest, and assure adequate financing, 1972 ought to take care of itself. 3. Changed relations with media: Media a. I urge only that you handle them, as you have sought to do, cooly, fairly and at arm's length, excepting your obvious friends who are entitled to special care and feeding. I would foreswear severe retaliatory attempts against journalistic malefactors, because I think this in- evitably backfires, and anyway reporters declared off-limits are seen by your Administration people despite the ban. I do press for more frequent press conferences (once a month, on average), and far less daily concentration on this or that critical column or article or, even, leak. I have long had a feeling that we overreact to daily drivel and in the process not only consume energies and time that could be fruitfully used in other ways, but also in this way we tend to spotlight the very problems we try to smother. Said differently, I feel we ascribe too much importance to a columnist or commentator - that we only flatter them and hurt ourselves when we spend time countering their writings and broadcasts. I do hope your regional backgrounders with the press out in the countryside are carried forward. These, I have felt, are the most rewarding innovation with the media that you have hit upon since taking office. 4. Use of Vice President and Cabinet: a. I have suggested to the Vice President that (a) he work really diligently with minority groups, devoting not less than two-thirds of his time on this (not only the blacks, but also the Indians, Mexicans, etc.) ; (b) he spend half his remaining time on youth (which ties in with the minorities) ; and (c) he use such time as he has left for 6 intergovernmental relations, serving as your political (not operational) nexus with Republican governors and your political counter-weight against the strengthened Democratic governors. On this point, I have told him it is important to avoid operational responsibilities because the problems of governors range across the entire government and require far too elaborate a staff and too much time for him to oversee it. None of the foregoing has his approval, and he may reject all of it. I have urged that whatever he concludes must have, first, your very clear-cut personal blessing - plus, second, hard notice to the Executive Branch and White House staff that whatever areas you agree upon are definitely made the exclusive responsibility of the Vice President. b. I feel the Cabinet has been insufficiently used as such and that the Cabinet members feel isolated from you by layers of staff. The all-important "personal relationship with The Boss" has gone out of it. I urge at least one convention: Cabinet meeting a month (with an Administration- wide agenda, not a technical, specialized topic or program), plus one or two hours set aside weekly for Cabinet officers to visit personally and privately with you on matters of their own choosing whether official or personal. I believe the team-spirit values of the foregoing would well justify this investment of your precious time. 5. Relations with Congress: a. I suggest that a hard decision is overdue here: either use Bill Timmons in keeping with his offial status, or take on someone who will be SO used. I have sensed a reluctance to use Timmons directly with you, in connection with the most important issues and members of Congress. He is often left out of meetings and breakfasts, etc., on Congressional matters in favor of others not charged with Congress -- and contacts with Congress by the White House staff increasingly bypass Timmons instead of going through him. 7 No Congressional man can be worth his salt if the Hill feels he is ineffectual with the President or lacks easy access to the President. Therefore, I urge that Bill be so used, but if this can't be, a more acceptable person should be installed in his place. Success in this area requires not only Bill's open and frequent identification with you, but also acceptance as a prime mover by your Staff -- for example, his inclusion in Bob's eight o'clock staff meeting on the same basis as Ehrlichman, Shultz et. al. The Congressional function is so immensely important to you. If it is kicked around, ignored, or handled as a subordinate White House activity, the cost is excessive. b. Some means needs also to be found to involve the Congressional group more effectively in program formulation, instead of being often used as clerks to cart bad news to the Hill. A great deal of needless trouble can be avoided by the early imput of Congressional people. While this is attempted now, I feel it is inadequately done and intensifies your Hill troubles. Involved here also is the instinctive reaction in every Executive Branch activity (it is chronic in every depart- ment as well as in the White House) that the Congressional side of things is a confounded nuisance, therefore in time it gets pushed into a corner. In my opinion, it should have at least the same attention and emphasis as the press in all areas of the White House. 6. Presidential Travel: Trankl a. I have no competency in this area, other than to state the obvious -- that where you will need the greatest strength in 1972, you should manifest the greatest personal involvement. This would include special identification with agricultural regions over the next two years, adequate attention (with the Vice President also) to the South, continued appeal to blue collar people by open identification with them at var- ious places in the country, an improved relationship with the business community (speeches to business organizations here and there in the country), and some overt actions making very 8 clear your concern for the little folk and disadvantaged in the society. Trips abroad should be, I believe. very widely spaced, because we are entering a season in which national concerns will probably rivet more on domestic problems than on foreign troubles. All in all, I believe you are entering a period in which you will wish to keep on winding down the war as you wind up the economy, get both shipshape not later than August 1972 (earlier if at all possible), and devote your other efforts to proving to the country that you are President of all the people, whether they are for or against you and your Administration. If the country believes you are doing well with the war and the economy and are seeking selflessly for sensible progress in just a few other areas of particular concern, you will, I believe, win going away in 1972. MEMORANDUM THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON November 16, 1970 ADMINISTRATIVELY CONFIDENTIAL MEMORANDUM FOR H. R. HALDEMAN FROM: Ron Ziegler Rz - RE: Election and the next two years These are my thoughts following the 1970 elections THE ELECTION The objective and honest assessment of the 1970 elections must be: 1. The President is better off in the Senate -- he has gained in both party strength and ideological strength. 2. The President is no worse off in the House than before -- the fact that Republicans lost no more than nine seats can be considered significant when compared with past off-year elections -- but basically there is no change in the House. 3. The Gubernatorial and State Legislature races were determined primarily on local issues and should have little effect on 1972. 4. Incumbency seemed to fall out in two opposite directions in the 1970 elections. The executive (Governor) incumbent seemed to be at a clear disadvantage while the legislative incumbent seemed to have a clear advantage. -2- Only 13 incumbent Congressmen were defeated (10 Republicans; 3 Democrats) out of 392 who sought re-election. However, of the 24 incumbent Governors, seven were unseated (all Republicans). The fact is that the executive had to make decisions that were often unpopular -- i.e. tax increases. This issue defeated Tiemann, Bartlett, it almost defeated Curtis in Maine and helped elect Meskill in Connecticut and probably hurt Broderick in Pennsylvania. 5. Poor candidates hurt us in some areas -- in my view we could have done better than Roudebush, Spaulding, Romney, Gross, Carter, and Burton. We lost Illinois the day Ogilvie selected Smith. NOTE: This raises the question of matter of Karl Mundt. While there is talk about the Senator resigning before the Governor-elect is sworn in, there should also be careful consideration givento who will replace him. Whoever is chosen must be electable in 1972 or we will be giving away another Senate seat. The Administration has said enough about the 1970 elections. We have analyzed them -- sold our point of view some critics say oversold it. We should now move on to other things. The President's efforts in 1970 were necessary and clearly within the campaigning precedent set by former Presidents in off-year election years. Had the effort ended in San Jose or before, the assessment which follows would perhaps be different. THE ISSUES The San Jose incident and the events that followed it have tended to give fuel to our critics -- and they will exploit what they feel is the "Leadership issue" to the fullest. We must develop a strategy to deal with this. -3- It seems to me there are two categories of issues; the first contains the issues of the economy, social unrest and foreign policy (Vietnam, defense expenditures, European troop reduction, approach to East-West relations.) The second category that our critics will attempt to build and exploit in an effort to over-ride the Administration handling of the first category contains (1) The Vice President and his so-called devisive rhetoric, (2) Moral leadership in the context of uniting the country, (3) The development of the issue that the Administration is more concerned with political exploitation and interest than about the National interest. As false as these impressions are, our critics' attempts to build and exploit these points will be assisted by columnist and commentators many of whom are philosophically sympathetic to this point of view. Also, they will see this as a way to strike back at what they feel have been unjust attacks on them by the Vice President. The critics can be expected to base many of their charges on interpretations of Vice Presidential speeches over the past two years and this of course provides good copy. Finally, one of the results of the events following San Jose is that our critics are claiming and will continue to claim with some credi- bility that the Vice President is not an independent spokesman but an echo of the President's view From now on when the Vice President makes a controversial attack we must expect it to be tied directly to the President. THE STRATEGY I suggest we develop a strategy that outflanks our critics -- by that I mean proceed in a way that is totally opposite from what the bias of our critics would lead them to think we would do. While the Scammon-Wattenberg thesis may apply to some of the issues listed in the first category, it is my view that the attitude and direction the President set forth in his Inaugural Address should lay the basis for our strategy to deal with the second category issues. -4- All the staff would be well advised to re-read the President's Inaugural Address and to reflect on how the President has conducted himself in dealing with the many complicated foreign and domestic problems that he has faced over the last two years. From this the strategy and "posture the President should maintain for the period to the end of this year and in 1971" should be self evident. The President has approached every major problem of the past two years with confidence, calmness, grace and a certain amount of mystique -- his decisions have been courageous, and forthright. This posture and attitude should permiate the entire White House staff and everything we do should be geared to maintain this posture in an atmosphere of dignity. The above elements and the President's competence in dealing with foreign policy and his ability to analyze and calmly solve problems facing the country should become the dominate posture of the Presi- dency and the White House. The dignity of these qualities has far more depth and appeal than the shallow charismatic appeal that some will work to project over the next two years. As DeGaulle has said: "The great leaders have always stage-managed their effects -- the statesman must concentrate all his efforts on captivating man's minds. He must know when to dissemble, when to be frank. "He must serve as the servant of the public in order to be its master -- he must outbid his rivals in self confidence. 11 It has also been said that often times what is said and how it is said is more effective than what is done. A fitting bridge for our approach to the next two years I think can be found in these words from the President's Inaugural Address: -5- "Standing in this same place a third of a century ago, Franklin Delano Roosevelt addressed a nation ravaged by depression and gripped in fear. He could say in surveying the nation's troubles: "They concern, thank God, only material things. 11 Our crisis today is in reverse. We have found ourselves rich in goods, but ragged in spirit; reaching with magnificent precision for the moon, but falling into raucous discord on earth. We are caught in war, wanting peace. We are torn by division, wanting unity. We see around us empty lives, wanting fulfillment. We see tasks that need doing, waiting for hands to do them. To a crisis of the spirit, we need an answer of the spirit. And to find that answer, we need only look within ourselves. When we listen to "the better angels of our nature, 11 we find that they celebrate the simple things, the basic things -- such as goodness, decency, love, kindness. Greatness comes in simple trappings. The simple things are the ones most needed today if we are to surmount what divides us, and cement what unites us. To lower our voices would be a simple thing. In these difficult years, America has suffered from a fever of words; from inflated rhetoric that promises more than it can deliver; from angry rhetoric that fans discontents into hatreds; from bombastic rhetoric that postures instead of persuading. We cannot learn from one another until we stop shouting at one another -- until we speak quietly enough so that our words can be heard as well as our voices. -6- For its part, government will listen. We will strive to listen in new ways to the voices of quiet anguish, the voices that speak without words, the voices of the heart -- to the injured voices, the anxious voices, the voices that have despaired of being heard. Those who have been left out, we will try to bring in. Those left behind, we will help to catch up. For all of our people, we will set as our goal the decent order that makes progress possible and our lives secure. 11 The same elements in our society that motivated the above exist in our society today -- perhaps to a lesser degree -- perhaps not. NEW DECADE OF PROGRESS (Suggestion) The President also said in his Inaugural "As we reach toward our hopes our task is to build on what has gone before not turning from the old, but turning toward the new. " We perhaps should use this as the underlying theme for presenting the Administration programs over the next two years -- a series of programs that will lead to the decade of progress in reform, world peace, domestic unity and accomplishment. The Decade of Progress is a phrase that is positive, evocative, far- seeing. It is broad enough to encompass the President's entire foreign and domestic program. Certainly there are other phrases or concepts that might do just as well, but the essential thing is to begin at once with some theme that will build a sense of movement and direction in the national consciousness. Whoever is said to have "won" the election, there is no denying that considerable bitterness has ensued. The Administration has taken on something of a negative look in many people's minds admittedly much of this is the doing of our adversaries and the media, but we have to deal with it nevertheless. The President -7- came in facing some dirty and totally uninspiring jobs -- end the war, end inflation, end the crime wave. With a solid start now made of all these fronts, the time is right to emphasize a spirit of beginning and building, to talk in a more positive and long-range context. The new theme can be introduced in such a way that no shifting of gears will be apparent. We do not say, "Let us have a new decade of progress, 11 but rather "America has begun a new decade of progress, 11 and then we tick off the areas in which beginnings have already been made. This can be done quite naturally in the context of a mid-term progress report to the American people. The "new decade" idea has a mainly domestic thrust, but it also complements perfectly the "generation of peace" note that the President sounded so effectively in Europe, and it fits with the foreign aid reform, State of the World message, and other foreign policy initiatives. Specifics I would make the following specific suggestions: Short Run -- November, December The President should not move abruptly. 1. Press Conference The President should have one press conference before the end of the year. This should be held after Thanksgiving, perhaps the first week of December (December 2nd.) 2. Major Addresses The President should give one major address wherein he outlines his goals for the future of the country. The address should be compatable with the State of the Union but not as specific. It could be philosophical. The National Association of Manufacturers would be the perfect forum. -8- 3. Lame-Duck Session The President should be only indirectly involved in the Lame-Duck session, addressing himself to general concepts of such things as welfare reform. We should allow the leadership, Cabinet members and White House staff (Finch, Ehrlichman, Shultz) to deal with the detailed legislative debate. The blatant partisan changes that are likely to come should be ignored by the White House. We should hold our fire and not get into a rhetorical debate with our Senate critics. This should include the Vice President. Our critics will be trying to draw us in and we should stay aloof from them. The President should devote his time to solidifying his support in the Senate in meetings with the convervative and moderate and liberal factions of the Senate. 4. Travel The President should not travel before the first of the year except of course to Florida for the post Thanksgiving period and to California for the post Christmas period. The trip to New York for the National Asso- ciation of Manufacturers dinner should be the only other exception. Long Range 1. Media Relations We should follow basically the same strategy, i.e. the President should remain somewhat aloof and avoid frequent and personal contacts with the press. -9- I do suggest the following: A. Press conference The President should hold one East Room televised press conference a month and one in-office press conference on three week intervals. The advantages of this are many -- the President sets the line and the tone for the Administration. Administration spokesmen can then bridge off his words. The President's proven ability to handle these sessions and the tremendous effect they have bodes well for following this pattern. The TV sessions allow the country to see the President in charge. The in-office press conference serves our purpose in two ways: It gets the President's line out but it also lets the press in a little closer to the President -- but not too close. It must be remembered the President can and does control these sessions, despite what some say to the contrary. B. Media contacts Television We should cease immediately the Colson type contact. Klein and myself should increase our sessions with the network heads and commentators. More can be accomplished through "friendly persuasion" based on mutual trust than can be accomplished by intimidation of the networks. -10- As a part of this effort it would be most worthwhile for the President to meet with the network heads periodically after the first of the year for general discussion and acquaintance session. We have a lot to overcome to stabilize our relations with the networks -- today they do not trust us. They resent us and emotionally react against us. No Administration ever gets what they consider a fair break from the news media. We perhaps suffer from this more than most. It is my feeling, however, that the way to deal with this adversary is not to confront him head on -- this only gives excuse to their sometimes bias -- but to outsmart him. One never outsmarts the enemy by running at him head-on. The White House staff should meet more freely and openly with White House regulars. For example, instead of just sitting back and decrying a negative report, let's feed him information that he will have to use. HRH can be very effective at this. 2. Use of Cabinet and Vice President Cabinet The Cabinet should be revitalized, built and used. Today it is nothing more than a ceremonial body. I would suggest that the Cabinet not only meet more regularly but that they talk programs and substance and after the meeting on occasion -- the Cabinet officers be put before the press to sell and lobby for his programs. Individual meetings should be set up more often with Cabinet members and the President and then let them go before the press. -11- Example: Cabinet meeting could be held this week -- discuss status of appropriations, FAP, etc. Richardson, Schultz and perhaps Finch could go before press -- this would be a good news story shows President involved but also Cabinet in there fighting for our programs. Vice President I would not attempt to evaluate the effect of the Vice President's activities and statements over the past year and a half it is my opinion, however, that he has built a base of support which is constant and will not expand even if he continues to follow the same pattern. Therefore the Vice President's role should be shifted from that of an outspoken, controversial critic of our society to a hard-working builder of our society, one who takes up the legislative oar and speaks to and works for thoseprograms that will build The Decade of Progress. 3. Relations with Congress We should be aloof to their criticism and statesmanlike and conciliatory to them personally. We understand the Legislative process and two party system. They can do the screening and we will do the building. 4. Travel The President should continue to go to the country. However the staff should take on the responsibility of only presenting him in a dignified Presidential setting. This does not mean elimination of motorcades and crowds. It's the handling of the situation we should address ourselves to. THE WHITE HOUSE Safire WASHINGTON November 11, 1970. MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT From: Bill Safire Re : Approaches to 1972 Postine I. President's Posture Thru '71 All that can be heard among friends and foes alike is how the President must soften his image, return to being President and not candidate, lower his voice. stop shaking his fist. etc., as if windup off-year campaign activity were planned year-round. We would do well to dismiss the straw man of stridency and examine how best to protray the President as what he is: He'is not now, and never likely to become, a beloved figure of benignity, and it would be a mistake to attempt to strike such a pose. He is not a man who believes that national unity is a prerequisite to progress; instead, he has pointed out that progress comes first, and then will lead to a form of unity, or at least a reduction in the level of bitterness. Thus, his posture should be that of a man willing to fight for the kind of progress for which the time is ripe, The representative of "all the people" must not play it so cool as to refuse to do battle for their interests, and those interests are controversial. The posture for '71 cannot be unitarian, apolitical, ameliorating, lofty - - the posture of a Chairman of the Board. -2- The posture should be firm, calm, decisive, certain of where he wants to take the country and willing to damn the torpedoes to get there the posture of a President. I agree with the conventional wisdom that the President must appear "Presidential, " but I do not define that word to mean soothing and not-boat-rocking, as some do I think it means surefooted and certain about goals, reserving final judgment to history. Needed for this now is an Order of Battle: a clearly under- stood line of priorities in both legislation and administration. Iday We should begin twisting arms and publicly fighting for the Family Assistance package. The controversy on the right will position us firmly in the center, and we will have something to crow about that is epochal. We should have a tough-minded state of the union that lays out the great choices that cannot be avoided next year (cut inflation or have full employment at once, spend more on education or insist on reform, take chances on defense with big cuts or push the Nixon Doctrine of peace through strength) and makes the decisions and sells them persuasively. Recognize the controversy and address it soberly and rationally rather than obfuscate it. We should have a fresh, new high-priority program for next year. Health will be the issue; the Domestic Council is now working on a big health proposal; this should be given the major push for 1971. Above all, we should not try to produce a "new image;" the general impression of the first two years is a good one to build on. We should press our strengths: Surefootedness in foreign affairs (driving home its meaning to Ame ricans at home in terms of no more war and no more draft) and placing the public interest ahead of the special interests (where there is much more work to be done showing how we are bringing about a genuine prosperity). -3- Every posture to be effective must have a single underlying Have theme into which all others are fitted. In RN's case it is this: He is the single indispensable force toward bringing about a full generation of peace. II. One Possible Picture in the Summer of 1972 a. All the troops home from Southeast Asia; draft ended; non-Communist regime of some type still in Saigon. b. Middle East still troublesome, but new truce in effect. C. SALT talks moderately successful, but defense spending on rise again because of Soviet conventional buildup and Chinese nuclear buildup. d. Crime rate in US stabilized, but still rising. e. Continued extremist bombings and acts of terror, in- cluding kidnappings. f. Inflation rate between four and five per cent. g. Unemployment rate around five per cent. h. Real GNP growth rate about four per cent. i. Interest rates below 7%, housing booming. j. Budget 15 billion in deficit, President urging spending restraint. k. Environment still an issue, but losing appeal. 1. Presidential approval rating about 50%, having dipped under but recovered strongly after Summit meeting. m. Wallace a factor again, stronger on Huey Long populism this time. -4- n. Lindsay-Gardner fourth party effort negative, now behind Democrats. O. Dems to nominate a centrist like Muskie or Kennedy, with a Southerner for Vice President. Gallup Poll shows President slightly ahead, Harris substantially behind. p. Family Assistance Plan checks beginning to go out nationally with big Demo push for increases. III. If the foregoing is 70% accurate, the Democratic campaign themes will be: a. End violence by "bringing us together" -- without divisive President. b. End inflation with some form of controls. C. "Get the country moving again" -- faster growth, full employment. d. Divert defense dollars to meet human needs at home. e. Massive health and education aid. f. Time for a change. IV. Our likely Appeals: a. Peace without Surrender. b. Prosperity without War. c. Confidence in the President as President. V. The Weakness in our Appeals: a. Peace without Surrender. Biggest weakness here is "What have you done for me lately?" Churchill did a fine job in World War II, but then it was time for Labour. Peace is a powerful promise in time of war or in threat of war (Wilson in 1916: He -5- Kept Us Out of War) but it loses potency in time of peace. Ironically, the achievement of peace is a wasting political asset: The more secure the peace, the less gratitude goes to thos who bring it about. Besides, gratitude for past success is the thinnest reed to lean on in politics. b. Prosperity Without War. ("Oh, there he goes about the war again. Took him three years to get out, and there are still millions unemployed. ") Inflation is always an attacker's issue, and a turn in the rate of increase is a purely intellectual defense -- bread costs more, and that's what counts. People will still remember the boomtime of the Sixties and forget the war causes and hope for the kind of soaring markets and full employment of those days. C. Thus, we will be playing Republican basic strength (keep out of war) at a time when that issue will be losing its gut appeal, while the Democrats will be playing their strength (good times with the party of the people) at a time when their issue will be gaining in appeal. d. Meanwhile, the social issue -- personal security, resent- ment at redistribution of wealth and power by Washington fiat -- will be somewhat blunted by our incumbency. The aginners are agin the Ins. On the whole, we will continue to benefit from our concern with the Forgotten American, but not to the extent of slicing deeply into the labor vote, or in decimating Wallace. e. Confidence in the President as President -- the power of the incumbency -- will continue to be an asset. Undecideds will tend to play it safe with the President they know. But the news f ocus in 1972 will all be on the selection of the Democratic nominee; his campaign organization will be blooded and freshly tested; and he will go into the campaign with the momentum of a convention victory and the mantle of new solutions to all our problems. How, then, should we plan now to make our own appeals unbeatable? -6- VI. The Peace Theme a. The President has already sounded the tocsin for "a full generation of peace 11 This cannot be allowed to be dropped as only a 70 campaign phrase -- it is a phrase central to his Ad- ministration, and must be repeated and reprised by all Administration spokesmen. It should be the title of a USIA documentary; of a book of Nixon foreign policy speeches; of a Kissinger article in Foreign Affairs Quarterly; of Rogers speeches and a Reader's Diget byliner. The Full Generation of Peace should be worked into the Bicentennial planning, it should be the theme of the Christmas Tree lighting and of Christmas sermons across the country; it should also be the new theme of the White House Conference on Children and Youth, because they are the ones who will enjoy it indeed, they will be the "generation of peace" as we succeed. This phrase has in it what the Silent Majority, the Forgotten American, the New Federalism and Forward Together never had a specific, realizable promise of hope. When we in the Administration are completely tired of it, we will know that we have just begun to get it across, and we should then redouble our efforts. This is our own "war to end wars" and we must not let it go. b. Punctuating the Peace. We cannot permit peace to limp in unheralded, causing people to wonder retrospectively, "When did the war end?" Absent a break in negotiations and a formal truce-signing, we must create a war's ending of our own. One time for this would be when the last combat troops left in Vietnam come home next spring -- there should be a national parade, in six cities, with veterans of the war marching alongside the last detachment of troops coming home. Then the following year, when the last of the remaining troops come home, we should declare "Homecoming Day" with appropriate festivities. C. Arms Control. The average American has only the vaguest idea of what the SALT talks are. Any form of success there, which we would consider of the greatest significance, would be greeted by a pleased yawn by the general public. -7- It may be that we have not played up their significance because of the possibility of stalemate; if, however, there develops a likelihood of even partial success, we should dramatize it with a Presidential visit to Vienna and formal signing of Stage I with Soviet leaders. Such a ceremony would at once be contrasted with the Kennedy- Khrushchev debacle in the same city, and the summit meeting would be limited to one subject with success foreordained, A subsequent full-range summit would be possible at a later date. The political tail cannot be made to wag the diplomatic dog, but if progress is forthcoming, we should recognize the fact that the meaning of SALT has not yet begun to permeate the public consciousness, and plan for a much wider understanding of what it means for defense spending and the likelihood of peace. d. The President as Peacemaker. There was a sign in Illinois that Ollie Atkins got a picture of: "Welcome, Mr. Peace. " This is the sign that must appear everywhere in 1972, without our inducement; the President should become known next year as "Mr. Peace. " At a commencement speech next June he should be introduced as such, not by a university president but by a student. This, of course, can never be officially sponsored or used by Administration officials, but it should be welcome d when used by supporters. In this way, the President will be the personification of lasting peace. (The use of the term "Mister" can be highly effective: RN used it in his nomination of Goldwater in taking him from "Mr. Conservative" to "Mr. Republican" to "Mr. President". ) Mr. Peace. of course leaves all other Misters behind. It is a sobriquet that will ring true as he actually brings the world closer to peace and specifically ends our involvement in a war. e. The President as Peacekeeper. The preservation of peace, in these times, requires a strong defense. "Only a Strong America can Keep the Peace" should be the theme with which we confront those who would slash the defense budget; "penny-wise and lives foolish" is what we call those who invite war through US weakness. Evocations of Wilson, FDR and Truman on preparedness necessary. -8- We must bridge the gap between making the peace and keeping the peace to overcome the "what have you done for me lately" syndrome. The threat of war will be real after Vietnam; we cannot allow a complacency to settle in, or an attitude to develop that says "You did just fine at what you are best at (ending a war), now let's give the Democrats a chance to do what they re best at (ending unemployment). " Despite summits, despite possible detentes, we must continually point out the continuing dnager to the peace that requires a vigilant, strong President to counter. There is nothing phony about this: The threat will exist, and it is proper national policy to make sure the public knows it. The temptation to say "we've made peace" should be resisted, and replaced with "we've taken the first step -- now the next steps are all-important. 11 VII. Prosperity Without War If we do pretty well in slowing inflation and pretty well in reducing unemployment, we could still lose on this issue because (a) it is always attackable as "not enough" and (b) the Democrats have greater public confidence as the party of boom. Therefore, we merchandise all we do here not only as precedent- shattering (nobody really cares about how tough it was for us to do) but in terms of how much better off the average man is and in what danger he would be in if the reckless types go t in again. To the workingman, our sell should be "You never got a real raise in the Sixties, but you did get a real raise in the Seventies and even bigger real raises are in store. 11 On unemployment, much as this distresses the purists, we must break away from the old way of figuring unemployment. Total unemployment is a phony figure, since "full" employment starts just under 4% -- but 4% unemployed sounds too much like a lot of people out of work involuntarily, and is too easy a political target. The only unemployment figure that counts is breadwinner unemployment -- married men -- and that is a figure that must be -9- established as "priority unemployment" and that is the figure we can expect to see heading downward in '71 and '72. There will be screams of rage, but let us change the basis for com- parison we have a good case to make, economists know it, and it is about time we began judging our efforts in terms of "real" unemployment and setting aside part-timers, teenagers, voluntarily unemployed job-hunters and the rest. Another aspect of unemployment we must remember is this: It is not so much the number of unemployed that gets the news play, it is the direction of the trend. It is better politically for a 5.5 rate to drop to 5.0 in 1972 than for a 4. 0 rate to rise to 4. 5. Thus, it is not only economically right for us to take our lumps early next year, but it is politically right as well. The stock market is important politically. It would be far better for it to sit for a while and then begin a long climb starting toward the end of next year. It will go up when money is easier to borrow and investors are convinced that you are determined to see good times in '72, with a sound basis laid for a genuine prosperity in '73. For that reason we should not seek to change the game plan now it would appear to be a panic result of the '72 elections. We suffered this year for doing the right thing, now let'sget the nourishment out of it in '72. One selling theme in '71 should be "at last you can make plans for the future. 11 We have a relatively stable dollar, and we're chipping away at breadwinner unemployment this spells real security at last. Another theme should be "prosperity for all the people" reminding the fixed-income people how they suffered in Democratic "prosperity. 11 To get this across, the President should do some fireside chats in 1971 -- FDR's fireside chats were almost always on the subject of the economy, and they gave people the impression he was getting something good done against great obstades. The speeches were not simplistic: he flattered the public by talking a little over their heads on economic affairs. The important thing is not to thoroughly educate, but to instill confidence that we're moving right along and things are steadily getting better. -10- This area, I think, is where the Vice President and the Cabinet should spend a lot of time. Not right away - the message will not sustain two years of banging away, no message will. But as soon as a turn becomes more evident in 1971, we should begin to hit hard on how right we were, and how wrong were those who would have turned the nation toward rationing and black markets. (Note: We should never talk about "controls" which are popular; the results of controls are not, and we should concentrate on them. ) VIII. Use of the Vice President The VP doesn't need selling to his supporters, for he can do no wrong in their eyes; nor can he be forgiven by committed partisan Democrats he tagged with "radical liberal. 11 To widen his support in the middle, we must overcome the sloughing-off of him as a joke by some. The attack on him that would sway many people is not so much that he is a divider (the other side of that coin is that he is a scrapper and a fighter for his beliefs, which will gain him affection) but that he is ludicrous. So: no more big words, no more alliterative flourishes, and no more jokes about him by other members of the Administration, even about golf. He is an "homme serieux" and should undertake a series of speeches and articles probing social concerns at great length and with profound seriousness. In this way, he would not be backing off his image of the stern pointer-outer of defects in the body politic, but he would be much harder to attack as inconsequential or frivolous. His views would have to be countered by long and sobersided tracts, and we should seek out print "debates" on the counterculture, on apathy, on elitism, on the real meaning of intellectualism, on the future of federalism and the like. It may get a little boring, and it will not make the front pages as much, and it will require the hiring of a good, deep thinker-writer to help out, but it will fit philosophically and it will let some wounds heal over time. By '72, he will be stronger than ever for a political campaign. "Lying low" would be a mistake; digging deep would be the most productive course. -11- IX. The White House Glow Image 1971 should be a year of expanded social, cultural and educational activity in the White House itself. It should be the center of news- worthy activity and a frequent dateline, especially with TV film coverage of innovative events. We already have a plan ready to go on a series of White House lectures by eminent historians and political scientists to an Administration audience every third week in the East Room. This will take a minimum of Presidential time (perhaps two welcomes in the entire series) and be a source of continuing stories. We should have at least one Duke-Ellington-type night a month. For each Irving Berlin salute, there should be a Burt Bacharach salute; for each Bob Hope or Jackie Gleason, there should be more modern comics to poke fun at ourselves; for each "1776" there should be a non-musical dramatic presentation, from both on and off Broadway. The guests at these functions should no longer be limited to fat cats or Administration staff or old friends; they should include TV news editors, society columnists from Detroit and Los Angeles who have never been to a White House function, sports reporters and columnists at functions honoring sports greats, etc. One of our troubles is that we try something new, it works, and then we drop it before it has a cumulative impact. Case in point: The astronauts dinner in Los Angeles. We should do at least four major state dinners in cities around the nation next year, bringing the full panoply of pomp and circumstance into action in different regions. It will have ten times the impact it gets in Washington and locations and invitations can be picked for the greatest mileage. Our goal is not recapture Camelot, or to exude a chi-chi image; our aim should be to reflect the excitement of a spectrum of American life and make sure that reflection is adequately disseminated. The war is ending. Let's turn on the lights. -12- X. Focus for Hope and Idealism The Bicentennial Commission, after a year of horsing around, is beginning to come to grips with a plan for the years leading up to 1976. The President should identify himself as interested in this project and be the center of two events as yet unplanned: Thomas Jefferson's birthday on April 13 and the Fourth of July 1971. A speech about the full generation of peace from the steps of the Jefferson Memorial, and an event on the Fourth of July in Philadelphia should bring into focus the President's ideas about what he wants for the nation and what he thinks the American spirit is all about. We have posed all kinds of questions in our "national goals" report; the President should begin answering them next year. In addition, at least one of the President's daughters should be- come closely associated withthe Commission's activities as they begin to generate interest. The White House Conference on Children and Youth can also be a springboard for our concern with idealism and the American future. The President should give a formal speech here and then make some surprise visits to smaller seminars to listen as well as speak. Out of this conference should grow a National Youth Service, a project RN promised in the '68 campaign, and one which can channel some energies into worthwhile projects based on voluntarism. THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON Ehelichna November 18, 1970 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT FROM JOHN EHRLICHMAN RE THE ELECTION AND THE NEAR FUTURE I. Analysis of the President's election efforts We have a ball which must be played from where it lies. Or, rather, from where the media has ma de it appear to be. The weekend TV and press and last week's newsmagazines establish a common theme: The Vice President's efforts were fruitless and, in fact, turned off many undecided voters. The President discovered from polls that Republicans were in danger of serious defeat and decided to campaign all-out. The Senate victories were the President's. Lack of further victory was, say the media, because the line adopted by the Republicans was negative, founded on fear, divisive, etc. Many contrasts between your Phoenix speech and Muskie's rebuttal are being featured. The comparison puts you on the political path and Muskie on statesman street. The net result: A gain in the Senate for two years and a short-run p.r. loss for the Administration. The concerned media criticism probably won't be very sustained. The election is not the public's favorite subject at this point. -2- II. Posture the President should maintain postue A. November and December 1970 During the next 60 days everyting possible should be done to ce-establish the public attitude toward the President and counter the media's negative barrage. We should pre-empt the statesman's high road image from Muskie, et al. For instance, such devices as a Thanksgiving service at the White House, a visit to West Point for a Saturday parade, a visit with HHH and wife to welcome them back (builds him, shows magnanimity, appeals to the independent), a TV special on a state visit, allowing film of the whole thing, the schedule should be constructed to hit this theme. A press conference is past due, will permit you to occupy the high ground on questions of interest and has maximum visibility. You can dispel the false media image, direct to the people (Political) The image being developed for the Democrats as being "resurgent" should be demolished, For example, they owe $9 million. We should cause them to be sued by dozens of creditors. Byrd should be encouraged indirectly to oppose EMK for Whip. B. Year 1971 Tactics 1. Fireside chats 1972 will be a political year. 1971 is, therefore, the most credible time for a series of talks, low key, on issues of the day. The expressed purpose will be to help people understand better the Nation's defense requirements, the problems of the economy, tax and budget problems, etc. There is, I feel, a strong national demand for this kind of "leadership" by the President. A poll on this question might be a good idea. -3- 2. Speeches on the issues Accept invitations providing a forum for speeches which are actually position papers on central domestic issues. 3. Take government to the people Hold Cabinet or Council meetings around the country but permit them to be televised live. This will require some extraordinary preparation but should pay real dividends. 4. The National Parks tou 1971 is the right year for this. 5. An image of probity, open-mindedness, interest in people and their individual problems (e.g., we are concerned change about the man and his family who are out of work VS. "the problem of unemployment"), the foreign policy and defense expert, the statesman, the family man, the man who has brought down crime in the District of Columbia; interpreter of the issues, expert in management of government. But, primarily, The President in all aspects. Never the individual, the party leader or any other narrow role. Never an action, an event or a comment that is non-Presidential. Yet, at the same time, Presidential by presumption, indirection and inference, never by self-serving statement or action. To be avoided are first-party references to the power of the Presidency. These are widely misinterpreted as self-serving, regardless of context. media III. Relationship to the Media It should be merely correct. Continue to never let them use you; never let them create a useful issue needlessly. Force their coverage to be favorable by careful planning. Be subtle in rewarding friends and cutting enemies among the press. Be Presidential about it, never petty or partisan. Do press conferences about once a month. It's your very best platform. It's highly Presidential. -4- IV. Use of the Vice President and Cabinet The Vice President is "used merchandise" just now and needs a few victories in agreeable areas. Some might be: Veterans' health care Reading Water pollution Mexican-Americans and Indians Customs and immigration procedures Labor Relations with Canada National Parks Better use of Federal land Signs along highways Cancer/Heart research He tells me his strong suit is politics, not the issues. I strongly disagree. If he sticks to the merely partisan he will quickly lose all credibility and will end up with a narrow, vocal following of small influence. eab. The Cabinet should continue to be treated as "the family" and as a speaker's bureau. As said above, a televised Cabinet meeting or two, out of town, where an issue is thoroughly discussed live and in color would be effective and would focus on Presidential leadership. V. Relationship with Congress Long Presidential, Constitutional, as non-political as is possible. Your effective power over Congress is your ability to unleash public opinion. You have this power because you are everyone's President, and for only that reason. Thus, to be effective, you must build that particular capacity. You should "go to the people" as frequently as there are key Congressional issues on which you must act. -5- Generally, either sign or veto (not let a bill become law without signature). Consider the use of a sign-board tally of Congressional over- spending. Entertain Congressional families rather than just the Members. It precludes much business talk and makes a most lasting favorable impression on the Congressman. Organize task forces of the younger Congressmen to give them intensive schooling on some key issues: - taxation -- revenue sharing -- wage and price controls -- environment so they can speak, write and fight for our position in these areas. George Shultz and I will give you a schedule of our dinners we are going to have with Senators and Representatives this Fall. You might pick an early one to drop-by (here in the West Wing). This word will get around and give them greater significance without your actually being at any others. SUMMARY For the entire two years (November 1970 - November 1972), you must always be the President, never a politician, never a candidate, never anything else. It is the high ground, and we must never let anyone else get close to it. All of your instincts and predispositions will impel you to become a candidate or, at least, a manager of the campaign. I think that would be dangerous, indeed fatal. It would move you from a position of strength and broad appeal to one of relative weakness. -6- When Nixon organizations in the states are formed and are discovered by the press you should never comment on them or have personal contact with them. Others may do these political things but you are President of everyone -- especially the non-political, non-partisan citizen (who is more inclined to vote for a man than a party or political organization). Only at the 11th hour in 1972 will you move to partisan campaigning and then as President, asking for a personal mandate in re-election. **** THE WHITE HOUSE Notagica WASHINGTON November 10, 1970 MEMORANDUM FOR THE PRESIDENT FROM: Lyn Nofziger R In Response to Request from H. R. Haldeman 1. The President's Election Efforts. I believe his decision to help was 100 percent correct. I believe the average American appreciates a fighter and a man who is loyal to those under him. Too often, loyalty is thought of as a one-way thing from the troops to the leader. The President has made loyalty a two-way street; it will pay-off in the long run. I think there is some merit to some of the second-guessing. First, instead of making Vietnam pretty much of a nonissue, it is possible we could have made it more our issue, although, in Tennessee where Brock did it, he didn't win SO big. Secondly, everyone I have talked to says Muskie won the Monday night TV presentations. The criticism of our presentation has been that our production was poor technically and that Muskie came off as the reasonable man. Overall, however, I believe the President's campaigning was a tremendous plus. I believe the question to be asked of the critics is: Would you have had him do less? The fact is, if he had done less and if the Democrats had won more, they would have been kicking him around for not having done enough. The image of the President now is of a fighter. That is not a bad image; it is one that breeds respect. If we equivocate, we lose that respect. 2. The President's Posture. It has to be one of continue to fight for Pot the things and principles in which he believes. I do not think he needs any change in his modus operandi. However, a sterner public stance - 2 - toward inflationary actions by both business and labor might be helpful, for the fact remains that most employed persons are not members of unions. Cong His posture with Congress should be one of wanting to work with Congress, but at the same time absolutely refusing to surrender to it. I believe it is better to fight and lose than not to fight because win or lose the buck always winds up on his desk. 3. Relations With The Media. My feeling is that the President should have more televised press conferences. meda 1. He handles them well. Each one to date has been a plus. 2. The media is going to beat him over the head with this issue, saying he is afraid to face them and/or that he is denying the public the right to know. 3. He will eventually reach the point where, when he has a press conference, the media will say that he knuckled under to pressure. 4. All told, the scarcity of press conferences is creating an anti-Nixon issue which we don't need. 5. I don't think we need one every week, but certainly once every 4-6 weeks is not unreasonable from our point of view. It is infrequent enough to keep the press unhappy but frequent enough so they don't have an issue. I like the idea of meeting with small groups of friendly columnists from time to time. I think it should be extended to small groups of friendly reporters who write for individual papers. For instance, Jack Jarrell from the Omaha World Herald; Ray McHugh from Copley, Lou Hiner from Pulliam, George Embrey from the Columbus Dispatch, and others. I do not believe in rewarding the President's enemies in the media; it does not make friends of them. 4. Use Of The Vice President And The Cabinet. VP The Vice President. The Vice President, I think, has functioned effectively. However, recognizing always that he and we are up against a hostile media, his effectiveness can be nullified if he is used solely as a "hatchetman" because he will be labeled as such. Obviously, we - 3 - need a hatchetman, but he should not be exposed as the only one. The National Chairman should carry a much larger share of this burden in the future. At the same time, the Vice President should be given some positive assignments during the next year to year and a half, so that he will be more effective when he takes the stump in 1972. Considera- tion might be given to making him the major day-to-day spokesman on domestic affairs, thus taking some of this burden from the President. The Cabinet. From p.r. and political standpoints, the Cabinet is a weak one. For instance, not one has aroused enough excitement to be considered in the press today as a possible successor to the Vice President or a possible Presidential nominee, The only one who has built any kind of a political name is Hickle, who did it in opposition to the President. It is obvious that they cannot all run around getting headlines, but we might consider arbitrarily picking two or three of them, and set out to build their political images so they can be used effectively in 1972 and thereafter. I do not believe we should leave the building of strong party spokesmen to chance. The President can build two or three Cabinet officers and half a dozen members of the Congress, but it must be a deliberately planned and executed effort. It must be a continuing thing. Regardless, I believe all members of the Cabinet should continue to be utilized on a programmed basis, and be provided with political speaking engagements and political input. We need not only to sell the President, but also to sell the Administration. If we minimize the issues for the Democrats we minimize their chances, regardless of who their candidate is. 5. Relationships With Congress. Relationships with the Congress have gotten better as this Administration has become more familiar with the attitudes of Congressmen of both Houses. A never-ending effort is needed, however, to keep relations good. I believe the President al- ready is accessible to members to about the maximum. However, we should assure that senior staff members and Cabinet and subcabinet should also be accessible and cooperative, especially where Republicans are involved. I cannot see any reason to do anything drastically dif- ferent, but I believe our people must be kept continually aware of the need to be accessible and courteous. even if we can't do anything for the individual Congressman at the time. Dave 6. Presidential Travel. I believe there should be as much as possible without it appearing that the President is neglecting his duties. - 4 - 1. It takes the government to the people and this should be the approach. 2. It counters the "isolation" charge which may be phony but which must be countered. 3. It builds confidence in the people when they see that the President can move about with impunity. It is good for the country, and if the President is doing something that is good for the country it is good for him. 7. The New York Election. It is apparent that the Buckley victory was a Republican victory; not a Conservative victory. The Conservative Party was poorly structured, and there was much internal bickering. As a result the Buckley campaign was staffed, organized and run largely by Republicans. The Conservative vote in New York is largely a dis- sident Republican vote. I would suggest wrapping Jim Buckley close to this Administration, in the hopes that we can use him to build a strong middle-of-the-road base for the New York Republican Party, with which we can wrest the Party from the liberals four years from now. I think we can do better by bringing the Conservatives back into a middle-of-the-road Republican Party then we can by creating a permanent three-party situation there. 8. The Negative Aspects Of The Next Two Years. I believe, still, that more people vote against than vote for. I believe we must, therefore, begin actively to collect and disseminate information that will give people reasons to vote against Muskie, Kennedy or whoever the Democratic nominee for President may be. I believe we must do the same thing in the key Senatorial races. Our perennial weaknesses have been: 1. poor research 2. poor use of research 3. failure to attack on a continuing basis; people forget easily We must say again and again and again that Muskie is a polluter, that he is already running for President, that he has no standing in the Senate, etc. We must never let the public forget Chappaquidick, or that there is insanity in Tunney's family, or that Stevenson, McGovern and Ramsey Clark are cop-haters. We must magnify and repeat the stories of their every mistake and misstep. - 5 - This will take: 1) good research; 2) a few spokesmen who are willing to attack regardless of the cries of outrage; 3) a continuing dissemination of this stuff to the media and through the media. We must begin now in all areas.