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First Debate: Carter Press Clippings
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First Debate: Carter Press Clippings
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The original documents are located in Box 1, folder "First Debate: Carter Press Clippings" of the White House Special Files Unit Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Copyright Notice The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted material. Gerald Ford donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections. Works prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in the public domain. The copyrights to materials written by other individuals or organizations are presumed to remain with them. If you think any of the information displayed in the PDF is subject to a valid copyright claim, please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library. Digitized from Box 1 of the White House Special Files Unit Files at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library AND DGSIDEM has CARTER: COMMENT yours AS a result, Carter nas been alerted to Joseph Kraft what could have been a sensitive prob. hm in the campaign ahead. He will robably be taking some action-per- haps a visit to Archbishop Bernardin, Carter perhaps dispatch of an envoy to the Vatican-which will ease his relations with the hierarchy, and make it possi- ble for the bishops to show all Catholics that they are not letting the abortion is- And the sue go by default. In picking a vice-presidential candi- date, Carter again showed himself open to advice from persons whom he barely knew. One of the reasons Sen. John Glenn of Ohio got as far as he did in the Outsiders vice-presidential race is that he was given a strong endorsement by Major- ity Leader Mike Mansfield. Perhaps the most interesting case of NEW YORK-Jimmy Carter's pas- outside advice comes from the foreign sage from primary to presidential can- policy area-notably in the speech didate presents the most interesting Carter delivered to the Foreign Policy measure of the man we have had to Association on June 23. An early draft date. For Mr. Carter won the nomina- of that speech, prepared by Prof. Zbig- tion with a little band of brothers-a niew Brzezinski of Columbia, empha- general, namely himself, with a staff of sized solidarity between the United half a dozen noncoms. States and its allies in Europe and Ja- To deal with issues and groups re- mote from his immediate staff, he must pan even at the expense of the Third World of Africa, Asia and Latin Ameri- now expand the operation from the ca. tiny wigwam of his familiars to the im- Gov. Carter asked for criticism of mense universe of the Democratic that draft from half a dozen other lead- Party and its associated experts. As an ing Democrats including Averell Harri- occasional critic of Mr. Carter, I am man, George Ball and Cyrus Vance. He pleased to report that so far at least he ordered up and delivered another is navigating this tricky passage draft, which expressed a far different smoothly and at a good clip. attitude toward "the hundreds of mil- Possibly the best example lies in his lions of people on this planet who are dealings with the Catholic hierarchy on living in poverty and despair." the issue of abortion, or right to life. -To be sure, these examples are dis- Just before the convention began, tinctly limited. Reports of a closed sys- Archbishop Joseph Bernardin of Cin- tem in the Carter entourage still cinnati, the chairman of the Confer- abound. Some Carterites have pre- ence of Bishops, issued a strong state- dicted that the candidate will turn for ment criticizing the plank in the Demo- advice chiefly to his fellow Southern- cratic platform which commits the ers. It has, for example, even been sug- party to accepting the Supreme Court gested that Eugene Black, the former decision permitting abortion in certain head of the World Bank and a South- circumstances. erner, might be selected to deal with The inner Carter staff-Hamilton Near Eastern affairs, even though he is Jordan, the political adviser; Jody Pow- well-known as a chief victim of the se- ell, the spokesman; Pat Caddell, the ductive arts of the deceased Egyptian pollster; and Stuart Eizenstat, the is- dictator, Gamal Abdel Nasser. sues man-were disposed to minimize But on the record, at least so far, Gov. the issue. At a press breakfast they Carter has shown unexpected ability to pointed out that Archbishop Bernardin move beyond the little band of broth- was only a single prelate; that he did ers with whom he won the nomination. not speak for the whole hierarchy; and Though a definitive judgment on this that, in any case, Catholics voted inde- highly critical issue cannot yet be pendently, not under instructions from made, Mr. Carter seems to be approach- church officials. ing the transition from a primary to A wave of protests, however, caused presidential candidate with the same Carter to listen to outside advice. He discipline and deliberation that he took counsel, among others, with Ed- showed in developing his strategy for ward Bennett Williams, the Washing- winning the nomination. ton criminal lawyer who is legal repre- sentative for several leading Catholic ©1976, Field Enterprises, Inc. officials. Mr. Williams made an exten- sive canvass of the hierarchy. He reported to Carter that Arch- bishop Bernardin, far from acting only on his own motion, spoke for the hier- archy as a whole. He pointed out that to A large extent the his carchy was under pressure from the athoi laity, cut- reged by tic toler- of portion. NY Times The Contradictions in Carter's Budget Policy 7/11/76 Act of 1976 whose cost would be By EDWIN L. DALE Jr. large although impossible to precisely calculate. Support for the bill-whose WASHINGTON-Is Jimmy Carter a aim is a 3 percent adult unemploy- big spender? ment rate in four years-is prominent This is the most relevant question in the draft Democratic platform. about his philosophy on economic The prospective candidate, it is matters. The prospective candidate important to note, has exp" of this week's Democratic convention opposed perhaps the key featur has spoken in some detail on such the bill: making the Government, if questions as sweeping tax simplifica- necessary, the employer of last re- tion and reform, standby powers to sort in order to make good the guar- control or delay major price and antee of a job for everyone. wage increases, and devices to induce Whatever finally emerges with re- private employers to hire more work- spect to Humphrey-Hawkins, how- ers or to retain them during reces- ever, it is evident that Mr. Carter's sions. All of these are important as commitments in all the other areas parts of economic policy. add up to a very expensive list. But the underlying state of the What is to be made of this? economy four or five years from Ronald Reagan took one view last week. He warned the voters in a now-how much inflation, how high television address: "You don't disci- the rate of interest, the sufficiency of capital formation for new invest- pline an irresponsible and wasteful ment-is likely to depend more than Congress by putting an indulgent friend in the White House." anything else on the magnitude of the Federal budget. Here Mr. Carter's Another view is that campaign promises are not to be taken too various positions may be seen as seriously and that Mr. Carter's stated contradictory. aim of "attenuating the growth" of On several occasions, including his Federal spending as a proportion of economic policy paper issued in The New York Times the gross national product is prob- Pennsylvania in late April, Mr. Carter Preparing Madison Square Garden for the Democratic Convention ably a clearer expression of his stated his aim of a balanced budget philosophy. by 1979 "within the context of full employment." Democratic platform committee (and substantial direct public investment" SOCIAL SECURITY: Here there is Still another possibility is that Mr. Federal Government." The cities In an interview with Fortune mag- the platform about to be adopted is including "entirely new programs" in would be absolved of all welfare an unspecific proposal for "an in- Carter's much-touted revamping of the tax system could turn out to be azine he cited as a goal "a complete very close to the Carter prescrip some areas such as the railroads and costs, with the entire burden to be crease in benefits in proportion to reorganization of the structure of tions). "increased investment levels" by borne by the state and Federal Gov- earnings before retirement," which a means of raising a good deal more There are no dollar figures for the government in local transit. could be enormously expensive. money, which might make possible government, the institution of zero- ernments. his many spending programs in a based budgeting which would screen various proposals. But the Carter THE CITIES: There should be HEALTH: He supports a "national JOBS: Here there is a fairly long budget in balance or near balance. out old and obsolescent programs, list is much longer than generally "countercyclical assistance" at times health insurance program" which shopping list, including incentives The difficulty with this proposition and a heavy emphasis toward a bal- realized. Here is a brief rundown: of substantial unemployment, an in would be "financed by general tax for private sector jobs, funding the is that Congress has shown no ancing of the budget." EDUCATION: The Federal share of crease in general revenue sharing to revenues and employer-employee cost of on-the-job training by private ingness whatever to raise t There is no reason to doubt the financing of public education, which allow for inflation and a new "public shared payroll taxes." business, doubling the public service except in wartime. For the last 30 sincerity of these goals. The ques- was 10 percent in 1974, "must be needs employment program funded HOUSING: There should be "direct jobs program from 300,000 to 600,- years every peacetime tax change tions arise from other positions of increased." by the Federal Government." Federal subsidies and low interest 000, and the new program of "public has been a net reduction. Mr. Carter on specific areas of Fed- TRANSPORTATION: "The task of WELFARE: Although Mr. Carter loans to encourage the construction needs jobs" in such areas as housing As things now stand, the Carter eral Government programs and rebuilding the existing transportation opposes complete Federalization of of lower and middle class housing" rehabilitation and railroad repairs. positions taken together lead to a spending. The most comprehensive system is so massive, so important welfare, he favors "one fairly uni- plus expansion of the present sub- In addition to all of this, Mr. Car- question mark, not an answer to the statement of his positions has come and so urgent that private investment form, nationwide payment" to be sidized program of housing for the ter supports, at least nominally, the question of whether he is at bottom in his presentation last month to the will have to be supplemented with "funded in substantial part by the elderly. Humphrey-Hawkins Full Employment a big spender. 14 TiMes July 19 Thirty Questions WASHINGTON-Eight years ago, in Arab propaganda in America, which is an acceptance speech, a nominee used ESSAY precisely why the law requires his a device that speechwriters call "the registration with the Department of train whistle," as he spoke of his Justice. childhood: "I see another child he By William Safire 3. Mr. Carter's pollster Insists his hears the train go by at night and he $160,000 in oil money in no way in- dreams of faraway places." have contracted with Mr. Carter's fluences the questions posed or areas The other night, the train whistle pollster for thirty questions of their covered in his report, which the Presi- blew again: "Years ago, as a farm boy choice to be added to their "report." dential nominee reads. I am ready to sitting outdoors with my family on the In addition to the total of $80,000 believe him, since Mr. Caddell was ground in the middle of the night from the Saudis, Mr. Caddell's firm ready to let me see the report on listening to the Democratic conven- receives $80,000 from four American a restricted basis, which I would not tions in far-off cities oil companies for his report: Exxon, accept-but is there no potential for Such comparisons of Nixon and Arco, Shell, and Sun. Main business- abuse apparent? Carter campaign and rhetorical tech- getter for Mr. Caddell is his McGovern 4. Mr. Carter's pollster says, "the niques touch a sensitive nerve among campaign associate, Fred Dutton, who confidentiality of my client situation" Carter men. On a street outside a con- is himself on a Saudi annual retainer keeps him from revealing the thirty vention party given by Rolling Stone, of $100,000. questions his Arab clients hired him the newest Democratic house organ, The fact that Mr. Caddell is an agent to ask. Can you imagine the editorial a Carter insider felt called upon to for a foreign principal (let us not use roar of "Coverup!". if a Nixon aide excoriate this essayist, as is his right. the sinister "foreign agent") is duly used that excuse? What infuriated Patrick Caddell; 26, filed at the Department of Justice. 5. Mr. Carter's pollster with Anticipating some conflict-of-interest the candidate and the staff on vaca- the Carter campaign's chief pollster and one of the half-dozen men closest criticism, Mr. Caddell wrote a letter tion this week-asserts forthrightly to the candidate, was any suggestion which was forwarded to the Anti- that his Carter colleagues know all that the Carter staff formed a snap-to, Defamation League, making it appear about his Arab business arrangements, self-righteous "Palace Guard" around that all he was selling was a subscrip- and even approve his plans to solicit their man comparable to the one reg- tion to a report, available to any buyer. other foreign clients. ularly denounced in the Nixon years. Think about that: Jimmy Carter On the basis of that self-serving Missing the point, Mr. Caddell snaps: knows about the foreign representa- letter-which Mr. Caddell will not "We're not a bunch of convicted fel- tion of his pollster-aide-confidante, make public-Arnold Forster, general ons." and he sees no potential conflict of counsel for the A.D.L., last week said interest, He can spy no possible use Let's approach the same point in a he saw "nothing in this that would of the Carter association by a con- different way. On March 8, 1976, Cam- disturb us" when called by a New sultant to sell a service. He accepts bridge Reports Inc., which is 35 per- York Post reporter obviously anxious his aide's explanation that poll-ped- cent owned by Mr. Caddell, signed a to put the story in a light least dam- dling for exorbitant fees to Arabs contract with the Royal Saudi Arabian aging to Democrats. and others who may want a Carter Embassy in Washington. A few things disturb me: connection is not "representation," be- For $50,000 per year, paid in ad- 1. Mr. Carter's pollster claims This cause the press has not yet hollered vance, the Saudis receive four quar- relationship with the Saudis long pre- about it. So much for "moral leader- terly reports on American public dates his identification with the Carter ship." opinion. This is two and one half times campaign. The documents show other- Mr. Carter cannot see the appear- the rate to others of what Mr. Caddell wise: The Saudis knew they weren't ance of impropriety because he knows calls a "subscription" to this service. hiring just another pollster. his aides and himself to be honest, The contract calls for "an oral presen- 2. Mr. Carter's pollster claims he is truthful, God-fearing, upright men who tation of the data," which was recently performing an "educational function" do not intend to do wrong. And that conducted by Mr. Caddell for the in teaching Arabs about American at- is why I blow the sad train whistle of Saudis, and "personal consultations to titudes, and insists no Middle East recent experience: the bright young assist sponsors to understand and em- politics are contained in his questions. men most likely to fall into the great- ploy the information contained " In fact, the information could well be est error are those who are certain For an additional $30,000, the Saudis purchased is help lay the basis for they are olier than thou. W.shugton tost Guly 2, Marquis Childs Glimpses of The Real Carter NEW YORK-As hardened as one Many have found it difficult to work can become through years in this busi- with Carter. Failure to match his stand- ness of columning, there is always ards can bring a cold rebuff, the anger room for a surprise, and I think the fol- that shows in those ice-blue eyes. Pre- lowing personal anecdote is relevant to sent and past associates have been talk- the man who will run for president on ing about these traits. the Democratic ticket. Ironically, in view of his criticism of It was my first face-to-face meeting the lone-ranger style in the conduct of with Jimmy Carter. My recollection is foreign policy, a parallel that comes to that it was some in late February mind is Secretary of State Henry Kis- or March after the New Hampshire pri- singer, who drives his closest associates mary, and the Iowa caucuses had given to the brink with his demands. him a lift from obscurity. In his jack-and-the-beanstalk career We were talking about issues and, as Carter has had few close friends. One I recall it, specifically about full em- of the few is Charles Kirbo, the Atlanta ployment. lawyer, whose wise counsel was invalu- "When will you surface that, Gover- able in the Georgia phase of his career. nor?" I asked. Solemnly, without a trace of the fa- While he said he consulted with per- millar grin, he replied: haps 40 persons about his choice for "Well you see, I'm saving that for my. vice president, it is a good guess that Kirbo was one of the few with roots in inaugural address." I thought this must be a joke. Carter's past based on mutual respect. Not for the speech in next week's pri- Incidentally while he had been ad- vertised as anti-Washington, the way he kept the secret of his choice was evid- "The Republican ence of his understanding of Washing-- ton ways. strategists will hammer If he had told in advance only three or four persons around him, the secret away on the alleged would surely have leaked. By saving it, he kept the speculation going in a con- vention that tended otherwise to be ri- duality of the Carter tualistic and dull. The Republican strategists will ham- personality." mer away on the alleged duality of the Carter personality. It was a favorite line of attack on Nixon: Will the real Ri- mary? Not for his acceptance speech chard Nixon please stand up? The inti- when he was nominated by his party? mation was that no reality existed back Not at all. of the skillful facade of the seasoned— The peanut farmer from Plains; Ga., and ruthlessly ambitious-politician. was in dead earnest. His step-by-step plans, carefully formulated and rarely Will the real Jimmy Carter please disclosed to any but the intimate mem- stand up? Is it the twice-born Baptist bers of his staff, envisaged this ulti- who can preach love and compassion mate step of the path of office for the with true fervor? Or is it the tough re- presidency. And I do not doubt that he lentless office-secker with a pious front knew very well at that point what he of "religiosity?" meant to say in assuming the office. In my opinion the duality is false. Now that the nomination is an ac- Like every man with a driving ambi- complished fact with the demonstra- tion Carter is a complex personality. tion of how well he could keep the se- Being a loner is almost a prerequisite to cret of his choice of Sen. Walter Mon- success in the toughest of all games. dale for vice presidency, Carter's stern It may sound odd to compare the pea- decision-making quality is coming to nut farmer with the president of Prin- the fore. The analogy with Richard ceton University but a close parallel at Nixon is being suggested: a loner this moment is with Woodrow Wilson. driven by ruthless ambition, sur- Wilson was, in his own way, deeply reli- rounded by a handful of associates to glous. whom he delegates faceless authority. Carter's meticulous thought process- In my opinion it is far too early to es, his careful deliberation, his knowl- reach any such conclusion. Certainly it edge of just where he wants to go and took all the drive and the stamina to how, compare with the same qualities get to where Carter is today just as it in Wilson. The presidency is a long took the incessant crisserossing of the gamble and the nomination of Carter is tate of Georgia, shaking 800,000 hands, a first step in the greatest of those gam- I win the governorship in 1970 after bles. is crushing defeat four years earlier. © 1975, United Feature Syndicate. Inc. york Times Yet, in fact, Mr. Carter was by no means a A Pragmatist conservative Southern governor. He displayed en- lightened moral leadership on the race issue. And there is no question that he learned a lot. He began to chide judges and lawyers about the class bias in Labels Won't American law that sometimes subtly subverts equal justice. He began to argue, as he still does today, that those in government are almost always power- ful and affluent and that "their families don't suffer Stick on the when government makes a mistake" although the weak and politically mute do. At a Southern political conference in 1974 he courageously distanced himself from other governors Democrats' who were denouncing "welfare cheaters." Mr. Carter said, "I used to think that all welfare recipients were absolutely worthless, and I guess some-black and white-are. But put yourself in the positions of having three or four children and trying to support Nominee them on $1 a day per person it is absolutely ridiculous to assume that all poor people are lazy." As Candidate, a Different Face Of course, Mr. Carter showed a considerably dif- ferent political visage as a full time Presidential By CHARLES MOHR candidate after January, 1975. But he certainly did not run as a liberal, and felt that 1976 would be a PLAINS, Ga.-When a huge majority of the 3,016 disastrous year for liberals. Nor, significantly, did Democratic convention delegates vote Wednesday he run as the prophet of a new and personally night to nominate Jimmy Carter for President, some devised ideology. will do so with reservations. Liberals, especially, Perhaps the most significant thing he said during may still be troubled by the man they must now the primaries was that in the long campaign he rally around. had learned from voters and "what we learned we Finding a single ideological label for the former gave back to them in a political program that Georgia governor is not easy, and he asserts that reflected what they wanted, not what we wanted labels do not fit him. Several times he has said he for them." This candid admission that Mr. Carter was a conservative on spending and a liberal on believes in saying what people want to hear may human welfare; Mr. Carter did not seem to recog- not be blameworthy, but it does not conform with nize or acknowledge that there may be an inherent evangelical liberalism. contradiction in that statement. Mr. Carter has also shown an essentially mechan- ical bias in politics. The most consistent theme of Mr. Carter, who is endowed with at least a normal his campaign was not programmatic at all. It was political ego, might enjoy being thought of as a a pledge of "competence," of good management. He personality too complex to define. The longer one has never taken the populist view that structural looks at the evidence, however, the less true that changes in society itself were desirable. Instead, he seems to be. His record indicates that Mr. Carter has concentrated on promising "a complete reorgan- is as conservative-or as liberal-as he needs to be ization" of the structure of administration and of at any moment or in any given political situation. bureaucracy. In his 1970 gubernatorial campaign, Mr. Carter Whenever Mr. Carter came close to embracing unashamedly courted the conservative vote in liberal dogmas, on subjects ranging from nuclear Georgia, charging that his opponent, Carl Sanders, energy to full employment, he almost always care- had sold out to "the ultra liberals." fully qualified his remarks to satisfy some conserva- In his sporadic comments on the Vietnam war, tive objections. Mr. Carter seemed to try to avoid stirring up his Mr. Carter clearly wants not only to be a good often hawkish constituents, and committed himseif President, but to be remembered as a great one, to support a conflict which was in its late stages if elected. That will probably require an activist, and seen as a mistake by most Americans when he aggressive and innovative legislative program. Even took office in 1971. In general, Mr. Carter is a if the rhetoric remains careful and middle-of-the- strong liberal on foreign policy questions. road, the direction may be leftward. However, like There are a few mystifying foomotes in his the convention delegates who vote Wednesday, the record as governor. After the Pentagon Papers were country will have to wait and see. published, raising a national uproar, Mr Carter told Charles Mohr is (1 Washington-based correspondent a press conference that he had called a Senator to of The New York Times. discuss "the enactment of Federal legislation that would make news organizations criminally liable" for such publications. When Spiro Agnew was under fire, before he had plea bargained his way out of the Vice Presidency, Mr. Carter told reporters he had telephoned Mr. Agnew, who "needed to hear a friendly voice," and urged him not to resign under pressure. Mr. Carter was usually critical, sometimes bitterly, of President Nixon. But he also seemed to recognize that in Georgia there was considerable sympathy for the beleaguered President until the final stages of the Watergate crisis. Mr. Carter described his own feeling as an "unfavorable reaction" to early de- mands that Mr. Nixon resign. From Aug. 12 to 18, 1973, Mr. Carter made one of his periodic "feedback tours" of Georgia to elicit opinions from citizens, but also to explain himself. A reporter who went on the trip wrote that Mr. Carter had described himself as "a strong conserva- tive," a "conservative businessman" and as one who had vowed to return the Democratic party to "moderate to conservative voters." Washington Stare July 2 20 The Carter vision When someone registered surprise at the flat- elite without our consent or complicity. If they tering epitaph of a known scoundrel, Dr. Samuel were, to cite one major embarrassment, where Johnson wisely observed that "a writer of lapi- were all the dissenting votes where the public dary inscriptions is not upon oath." clamor - when the Tonkin Gulf Resolution No doubt Dr. Johnson's wise saying fits politi- whizzed all but unchallenged through the U. S. cal speeches generally and the acceptance Senate in August 1964? speeches of new presidential nominees especial- We would not labor the point, except that it ly. A freshly chosen nominee, addressing a seems to be one of Mr. Carter's principal party ready to march and hungry for spoil after themes - the theme of intrinsic public inno- eight years, is no more on oath than epitaph cence confounded by arrogant leaders. But we, writers or platform writers. A generous grant of the governed, cannot be absolved of ethical re- poetic license is assumed. sponsibility for what our leaders do for us and to We assume, then, that the first and proper us - unless you believe, as Governor Carter purpose in Governor Jimmy Carter's mind last apparently does not, that our institutions for Thursday evening was to thank the Democratic processing and registering public assent to gov- delegates for their confidence, and then to play ernment policy are all out of whack and need back to them the familiar melodies of the major overhauling. Democratic litany. For, let us remember, ac- In some respects, for all its polish, Governor ceptance speeches are also occasions of reas- Carter's acceptance speech also seemed longer surance. The disgruntled must be gruntled, on inspiration than on means and measures. suspicions of heresy and fears of schism quiet- There are not a few passages in which, on sober ed. All this Governor Carter did most effective- reinspection, ambition overwhelms the known ly. possibilities of action, and sound overbears At the risk of seeming literal-minded, how- sense. ever, we must say that Governor Carter How, for instance, does Mr. Carter propose to revealed quite a bit about the kind of candidate "release civil servants from bureaucratic he is and the kind of President he proposes to chaos," especially where the chaos is of their be. And some of what he revealed must be mild- making? What is a "complete overhaul" of the ly surprising to those who understood him to be tax system, and what features make it not mere- the main preacher of the so-called "anti-Wash- ly imperfect or inequitable but milder words ington" message this year. failing - "a disgrace to the human race"? Do For one thing, he stationed himself solidly in faces flush over this disgrace in Katmandu and the tradition of the activist Democratic Presi- Kiev? dents since Roosevelt, which is to say among the What, also, is "universal voter registration," unblushing wielders of national power. In his and what entrenchments on the prerogatives of characterizations of the Presidents of that tradi- the states would it entail, whatever it is? Just tion there is little that is unorthodox. Thus FDR whose "system of economics sees value or "inspired and restored this nation in its darkest virtue in unemployment"? Isn't it rather the hours," and Harry Truman "showed us that a case that while everyone sees the virtue of full common man could be an uncommon leader." employment, everyone also sees the vice of John Kennedy was "brave" and "young," while "inflationary spirals" and differs as to how to Lyndon Johnson, "a great-hearted Texan," sur- strike the right balance? And last but hardly passed all the rest in advancing "the causes of least, how many of the laudable programs men- human rights." Governor Carter might have tioned by Governor Carter - national health cribbed all this though doubtless he didn't - insurance, for instance - can be achieved, and from any old yellowed brochure at the head- how, together with that "balanced budget" quarters of the Democratic National Committee. which the governor (along with everyone else A second theme, congenial to the picture that who ever ran for President) is "determined to regular Democrats have of themselves, is that see"? Democratic presidencies are closer to "the peo- We started by saying that acceptance ple." We counted no fewer than six references speeches are not uttered under oath. As the to the virtues of the people, and we may have campaign develops, we trust that Governor Car- missed one or two. ter means to outline the means and measures, No presidential candidate will lose votes on as well as the goals, he has in mind. A few price that line of thought. But as columnist Michael tags would help, too. But it may be spoilsport to Novak observed in these pages Sunday, there is ask too many questions now. something disquieting in this slavish tribute to The questions will be asked, however, and it is the moral infallibility of Demos. It is collective a fact that specific proposals tend to be as divi- guilt turned on its head, so that we come out sive as visions are unifying. Properly so. with something like collective innocence. The The elaborate discussion of heavy issues is by second may be as mythic as the first. and large a waste of time in primaries - that is Is it really quite true to say, for instance, that not what the voters seem to be looking for. But tragedies like Vietnam, Cambodia, Watergate presidential campaigns are another story. and CIA miscreancy "could have been avoided There, substance is the thing; and substance in- if our government had reflected the sound judg- vites choosing sides. Governor Carter will find ment, good common sense and high moral an attentive audience as he begins to specify the character of the American people''? It would be policies and proposals that underlie his vision of nice to think so. But it would be mass self-delu- love translated into "simple justice." We are sion. In the first place, these tragedies resulted willing to take Mr. Carter's word for it now that from differing conceptions of what was right justice can be simple. But it often turns out to be and moral. But in any case there is no evidence complicated, and so it may be when Governor that they were thrust upon us by a scheming Carter turns, this autumn, to the fine print. Roscoe Drummond Carter: conservative, liberal, or both? Washington ers who want less stress on civil rights and his own campaign to justify this point. He has detente more of a two-way street, would use Nearly every Democratic liberal who is sup- those who want more, to blacks and whites, to identified himself as conservative on many fis- all our advantages, including withholding or porting his party's presidential nominee, isn't blue-collar workers and to white-collar work- cal matters and liberal in dealing with human granting grain sales, in negotiating with the So- quite sure that Jimmy Carter is a liberal. And ers. problems. He proposes to rigorously reexam- viet Union. He told John Dillin of The Christian nearly every Democratic conservative isn't Carter's view is that individually most ine outdated, costly federal programs. He Science Monitor that in dealing with the So- quite sure that he's a conservative. Americans are not either all conservative or doesn't think that appropriating a lot of money viets his policy would be to "get tough." It It is an intriguing uncertainty. Though cam- all liberal, that they really don't like to be is automatically the best solution to every- seems clear that he would conduct an activist paigning for the presidency for 19 months, ticketed ideologically. He put it this way: thing. He is against overspending and repeat- foreign policy with a strong and large lead- making the long trek through 30 contested pri- "Most Americans, I find, are not reacting in edly affirms that he will aim to get a balanced ership role for America in behalf of the free maries, the uncertainty appears to linger with terms of traditional ideology. In their own federal budget in four years. He proposes zero- world. These are conservative positions. a large number of Democrats. thinking on concrete issues they are neither to- based budgeting, which means that govern- ment departments can't just take last year's He would negotiate in good faith to try to It is puzzling how Carter could simulta- tally conservative nor totally liberal. The is- budget and add to it, but must justify new halt the U.S. -Soviet nuclear arms race and neously win substantial Democratic liberal vot- sues are more complex than that. Voters are would hold out a helping hand to the "third- CS Montor ers and substantial Democratic conservative more complex than that. spending from zero up. He seeks to slim down the federal bureaucracy. These are conserva- world" nations. These are liberal positions. voters without alienating either. "This is why I feel some of my opponents in tive positions. No correspondent can foresee with certainty It doesn't puzzle Governor Carter. I put the the primaries made a mistake in saying, in ef- At the same time Carter supports govern- how a nominee will operate in all particulars question to him in a conversation a few days fect, 'vote for me because I am a liberal' and ment assistance to reduce residual unemploy- when he gets to the White House, but it seems ago here in Washington. He considers it quite thus seeking to appeal to them on narrow ideo- ment, a national health insurance program, clear that Jimmy Carter is a more moderate. understandable that he was able to appeal suc- logical grounds. Most are both conservative and aid to distressed cities. These and others centrist Democratic candidate than any since cessfully to voters who want less government and liberal and so am I." are liberal positions. John W. Davis ran against Warren Harding in and those who want more government, to vot- Carter can cite considerable evidence from In foreign affairs Carter would seek to make 1920. Why Not the Best?" The Enigma of Jimmy Carter Is Real BY DAVID S. BRODER His intricate sentences weave in and out of NEW YORK-In his autobiography, "Why an issue, each strand of words spelling reas- Not the Best?," an awkward, engaging vo- surance to part of the audience. A student of lume that is perhaps more revealing than its psychology and learning techniques, Carter CA Times Okly 14 author intended, Jimmy Carter tells the story employs the principles of selective perception of his boyhood experience, selling bags of and reinforcement-for example, letting crit- boiled peanuts from his father's farm to the townspeople of Plains, Ga. "Even at that early age of not more than ics of abortion focus on his statement that "I He speaks with extraordinary compassion analyze every factor in his environment- six years," he writes, "I was able to distin- think abortions are wrong," but nourishing of the plight of the poor, the uneducated and seek the one job in this world where such to- guish very clearly between the good people their opponents' hopes by adding, a few the victims of prejudice, and sometimes talks tal control is least attainable? and the bad people of Plains. The good pco- phrases later, "I am opposed to any constitu- of redistributing power in a way that would How would a person whose motto is "I do ple, I thought, were the ones who bought tional amendment" in this area. let the victims of our society prescribe their 'not intend to lose" react to an office where boiled peanuts from me!" But there are paradoxes within paradoxes own compensation. both the Constitution and political reality dic- By that criterion. the Democratic conven- of Carter that make one believe he is psych- But if his sociology is that of his humanita- tate that, more often than not, his hopes and tion is filled with "good people." They have ing himself as much as he is his audiences rian mother, his economics are those of his designs will be frustrated by inertia, by oppo- not only bought peanuts, they have bought when he wraps the cocoons of words around businessman father. There is nothing in his sition and by sheer chance? the peanut vendor. But just what is included the hard realities of choices that a politician approach to the relationship of government Deny it as he may, the enigma of Jimmy in that package is by no means Certain-even -or a President-must make. and the corporations and banks that would Carter is real. to the delegates themselves. He is a man who preaches the goodness of cause John Connally to blink. As James P. Gannon noted in his Wall A Washington Post survey of delegates America and its people, and decries the evil Then there are the ultimate paradoxes of Street Journal profile, Carter was not the found that on issues ranging from busing to of its government and politicians-as if the personality that a journalist can only note, kind of governor that his campaign had led the Central Intelligence Agency to oil compa- latter were not a reflection of the former. and not explain. voters to expect, and he probably would not ny divestiture, majorities of those voting for He is a man who speaks for the restoration Why, for example, is the same Jimmy Car- be the President they bargained for. Carter in Madison Square Garden said either of values and the maintenance of institutions ter who speaks SO easily of the redemptive The new leader of the Democrats is a man that they did not know his position or that -the family, the neighborhood, the commu- power of the love of God and man so very of unpredictable consequences for this coun- they thought he agreed with them-even nity. But his own career represents a relent- quick to ascribe the worst of motives to poli- try. They may be good or bad, but they are when those delegates disagreed with each less upward thrust from his rural roots and a ticians who chance to stand in his way? not certain. And the fact that he could be- other. restless urge to restructure every govern- Why does a man who wants to control his no, will be-something that not even he may That finding precisely paralleled earlier ment where he works to the design of the destiny by advance planning-to memorize suspect is what makes his elevation so por- surveys of primary election voters. It showed new tenant-Jimmy Carter. his speeches, computerize his schedules and tentous. that they, too, saw Carter through the prism of their own prejudices-a smiling reflection of whatever policies they cared to project onto him. On Meet the Press last Sunday, Carter filed a disclaimer. saying, like Henry Higgins in "My Fair Lady," that he was "just an ordina- ry man," or, to put it in Carter's words, "no more of an enigma or a mystery than other people." That does him less than justice. There are few people who can match Carter when it comes to weaving a spell with words. He has been called "fuzzy" by his critics, but the truth is that he uses language with extra- ordinary precision of effect-but not to'clari- fv meaning. Atl Con TRB From Washington Jun 15 The Dichotomous Mr. Carter WASHINGTON - Jimmy Carter has "a challenged; that in 30 dreary primaries only streak of ugly meanness - an egotistical about a third of those eligible to vote would disposition to run right over people a vote; or that an almost unknown former disposition to be a sore governor and peanut farmer from Georgia head;" that is the re- could be front-runner for President of the cent testimony of re- United States? spected columnist Jo- In 1972 George McGovern revealed to seph Kraft. astonished politicians how vulnerable mod- He has "a vein of ern parties are to penetration by well vindictiveness" say the organized and strongly activated groups in syndicated columnist primaries where only a minority vote. team of Rowland In 1976 there are more primaries and Evans and Robert direct Federal financial aid to ambitious po- Novak; they quote litical individuals (not parties), and Jimmy "Carter's old enemies Carter has shown how porous such parties back in Georgia" as de- are to penetration by a highly motivated claring that along with intelligence, disci- individual whose cause is ambiguous (un- pline and dedication there is "vindictiveness less, indeed, "love and "anti-Washinton" are extraordinary even for a politician." causes) and who offers the sullen nation a So he is mean and vindictive, and likely fresh face and a striking personality, bla- to be the next president of the United zoned by the all-powerful news media. States! How did we get into this fix? But Jimmy Carter planned it that way. I wait a bit, here is contrary evidence: first met him in the snows of New Hamp- shire last January and liked him and was Sensitive and compassionate analyst astonished by him. I enjoyed the calculated Anthony Lewis of the New York Times says impudence with which he told what he plan- Jimmy Carter "really does see himself ned to say in his Inaugural, and reacted fighting entrenched power, the status quo. with the expected astonishment. I never met He instinctively identifies with the victims a candidate like that before and it was swell of official abuse, the poor, the disadvan- copy. The confrontation of southern and taged." Yes, says Lewis, "He cares about New England cultures was wonderful, too; the powerless in society genuinely, I am when the YMCA-type clean-cut young man convinced." at Durham made the reticent Yankee ladies And here is an unusual character wit- cringe by asking Carter straight out, had he ness, eccentric iconoclast Hunter S. Thomp- been saved? - and Carter answered quietly son ("Hells Angels," "Fear and Loathing on that, yes, he was a "born-again Christian" the Campaign Trail") writing in Rolling and what was the next question? Stone (of all places) June 3, "my first in- Carter started his campaign in Septem- stinctive reaction to Jimmy Carter I ber, 1972 while still governor and after his liked him" and who notes an extemporane- term ended worked full-time at it. He saw ous speech Carter made in May 1974 to big the vulnerable place in the primary system wigs in Georgia attacking special privilege; was right at the start. It didn't matter if it was a "king hell bastard of a speech" (I only a fraction of a fraction voted nor if the assume this is praise); to which Thompson margin was miniscule, the point was to get adds, "I have never heard a sustained piece the headline "Jimmy Carter Wins." He did of political oratory that impressed me that in the precinct caucuses of Iowa, first more." of the year, and in the tiny state of New Let's drop Carter and look at the set- Hampshire. Next, of course, he had to knock ting. It's one of the most astonishing politi- Wallace out in Florida, March 9, and he did. cal years in history. "The United States has He was launched. The press grabbed him. In the most elaborate, complex, and prolonged her remarkable series in the New Yorker, formal system of nominating candidates for Elizabeth Drew tells how it was done, and chief executives in the world," say William her cautious assessment of this "enigmatic 1 Keech and Donald Matthews (Brookings: and hidden man" who is asking us to take ( "The Party's Choice") A system which the such a big gamble. He can talk about "love" € late Clinton Rossiter called "a fantastic and be tough and even ruthless. Was that a F blend of the solemn and the silly." And this grin, a natural honest-to-God grin, he was year more than usual. giving her at one point (not the toothy i For eight years we have had split gov- smile)? ernment in Washington - White House one "It seems to be a natural grin by some- party, Congress another, something no other one who might, after all, have a sense of nation could survive: and before Kennedy humor about himself. "It is odd", she re- and Johnson, Ike had six years of split gov- flects, "to spend time considering whether a ernment. grin just might be natural." Yes, she notes, Now there's near stalemate in Washing- Carter may have "a certain mean streak." ton with Ford's 49 vetoes. Political parties George McGovern fired his left-wing are in decay. Loyalty has SO declined that political operative Alan Baron, who was that when Richard Nixon wins every state quoted as calling Carter "a positive evil, but Massachusetts he still faces a Demo- surrounded by a staff committee with no cratic Senate and House (first time since ideals, like Haldeman and Ehrlichman." Zachary Taylor). Republicans are now This sounds silly and venomous to me. I like weaker than at any time since the Depres- him and still do. James T. Wooten put it sion - probably since the party started in negatively in the New York Times:" the Civil War. He is not a liberal, not a conservative, not a The national mood? Cynical and peni- racist, not a man of long governmental ex- tential; Vietnam and Watergate aren't men- perience, not a religious zealot, not a South- tioned but obtrude their frustration erner of stereotypical dimensions," and everywhere. In 1950 three-quarters of the from such negative deductions, he says, people thought their government was run many have concluded "that Jimmy Carter is primarily for the benefit "of the people" (17 not entirely unacceptable as a presidential per cent said "big interests") now only 38 candidate. per cent think SO and 53 per cent say "big interests." (TRB is the pen name Who would have thought that the Strout, long-time Panama Canal could be an issue; that an correspondent for The incumbent President could be seriously Monitor.) ADORD Steven Brilt Arg JIMMY CARTER'S PATHETIC LIES The heroic image is made of brass Harper Magarine March 1976 McGovern S WE FLEW from Mississippi to Geor- to flood the otherwise sparsely attended cau- gia in a chartered jet one night last cuses with their friends. December, Jimmy Carter settled back "I grow peanuts over in Georgia," Carter be- A and casually volunteered the most re- gins softly, his blue eyes finding each of them vealing statement of our four hours one by-one "I'm the first child in my daddy's of conversation. "You what McGovern's family who ever had a chance." His voice is biggest mistake asked, and contin- humble yet proud- "I used to get up at four ued without waiting for an answer. 'He never in the morning to pick: peanuts. Them I'd walks should have made the Vietnam war an issue." three miles along the railroad track to de- I mentioned that the war might have been one: liver- them. My house had no running water of the issues that gave birth to the McGovern or electricity. But I-made- it to the U.S.- campaign, and not vice versa.= Carter stared Naval-Academy and became a nuclear physi- back blankly and said, That' how cist under Admiral Rickover Then came works:" back home to- the farm. and got interested Carter says he decided to run for the 1976 in community affairs. - In 1970 I became Democratic Presidential nomination in Septem- governor of Georgia with a campaign that ap- ber of 1972, when he was less than. halfway pealed to all people. I reorganized the state through his term as governor of Georgia-be- government and proved that government could fore the revelations of Watergate, the energy provide love and compassion to all people, crisis, the fall of South Vietnam, the economic black and "white-because" believe in it. downturn, and most other events that should Now I want to be your President, SO I can give" shape the '76 race. These issues, however, were you a government that's honest and that's filled irrelevant to Carter's decision, because he knew with love, competence, and compassion he'd run on personality. So far he hasn't And when I am your President," he grins, his changed his mind. eyes lighting up now even more, "I hope you'll come see me. Please don't leave me up there in the White House all by myself." free Sincerity first ing sictory at Madison whare Car- del with matter of fact certainty and blandly T 4:30 IN THE AFTERNOON in the Ad- answering a few questions about energy and miral Benbow Inn in Jackson, Missis- foreign policy, he closes with a request that "If sippi, Carter sits opposite a dozen you have any questions or advice for me, please seventeen-year-olds, asking them to write. Just put "Jimmy Carter, Plains, Georgia' help him become President. Each on the envelope, and I'll get it. I open every let- teen-ager is a leader in a neighboring high ter myself and read them all. - One more school, and the group is there because Missis- thing," he continues, his voice starting to quiv- sippi law allows seventeen-year-olds to vote in er. "If I ever lie to you"-his voice drops off; the January 21 delegate selection caucuses if he waits about three seconds-"or if I ever they will be eighteen by Election Day. Carter's mislead you"-two more seconds-"please Steven Brill. n political writer, is " contributing local organizers, who have been working the don't vote for me." editor o! New York state for months, are counting on the students When the meeting is over. Carter, having magazine. 77 Steven Brill been introduced to the students before his To vanden Heavel and. apparently, his audi- speech, remembers all their names. JIMMY ence, it didn't matter that Carter led the stop- The kids are now Carter converts. One of McGovern forces at the 1972 Democratic con- CARTER'S them, Blake Bell, explains later: "I'm going to vention, nominated Scoop Jackson there, and PATHETIC help him because he's totally sincere, and he's urged a month before that George Wallace be LIES not a politician." the Vice-Presidential nominee; that he has al- Mississippi teen-agers aren't the only ones ways opposed abortion reform, busing, and, un- for whom the personality pitch works. "I'm for til this year, a federal takeover of welfare; that him because of his total sincerity," explains he favored right-to-work laws; that he supports William vanden Heuvel, a former Robert Ken- the death penalty and preventive detention; that nedy aide who has been associated with lib- he opposed federal aid to bail out New York Victnain eral causes and candidates in New York. City; or that in 1972 he sponsored a resolution. Four days after Carter's session with the stu- at the Democratic Governors' Conference- urg- Also dents in Jackson, vanden Heuvel introduced ing all Democratic Presidential candidates not. Nion him to liberal Democratic activists at a Manhat- to make the Vietnam war an issue, because, as tan cocktail party as "someone who has stood he explained to me, "We should have appreci- with us on the right side in every fight that's ated and supported Nixon's efforts." What been important to us over the last two decades." matter, beyond the delight the partygoers seemed to take in having discovered a real live "enlightened Southerner," was Carter's intoxi- cating sincerity-as evidenced by the low-key voice, the Kennedy-like grin, the sixteen-hour person-to-person campaign days, and the way he looks you in the eye. What also mattered was that he looked and talked like a winner. Nationwide, this is his appeal. "Carter is what got me interested in Carter," explains Jim Langford, his Southern states organizer. "He's smart, he's honest, and he's going to win." "No issue brought me here," says Rick Hutcheson, Carter's stone-faced, brilliant twenty-three-year- old delegate hunter. "Just the fact that he's very intelligent and that he's going to win. He can move where I think the Democratic Party is moving." "He's just totally honest," explains Lisa Bordeaux, a twenty-two-year-old who's vol- unteering full time for Carter in Meridian, Mis- sissippi. "And that's what we need. He's better than any politician." This is where we are in 1976. The activists want a winner. The rest of the country wants a saint. As a nation we are tired of fighting over issues like Vietnam or busing, fed up with cor- ruption and an economy that won't spring back, and fearful that the humiliation in Vietnam and the energy shortage spell the end of our ability to control the rest of the world. So we yearn for a hero-an honest, sincere, smart, fresh face who can worry about all of these things for us. Carter seems to understand this better than the other candidates. He more than anyone is convincing people as disparate as Bill vanden Heuvel and Lisa Bordeaux that he is the totally sincere antipolitician they're looking for. It's easy to believe, for instance, that he really does, as he told the high-school students, open all his own mail. I did. until his press secretary told me the next day that the mail sent to Plains, Georgia. is forwarded to the Atlanta headquarters. This is the paradox of Jimmy Carter. His is the most sincerely insincere. politically antipo- Andrew / Black Star 73 gubernatorial CAmpaign litical, and slickly unslick campaign of the year day. Carter called the former governor "Cuff "Jimmy Carter's Using an image that is a hybrid of honest, sim- Links Carl," and one of his TV spots showed a campaign is the ple Abe Lincoln and charming, idealistic John manywearing huge cuff links stepping out of'à most sincerely Kennedy, he has packaged himself to take the private jet and accepting a bucket of cash from insincere, idol-seekers for a long ride. another prosperous-looking man. Repeatedly, Carter told his audiences that the issue of the politically anti- campaign was "Sanders's integrity and how he political, and N 1970, WHEN CARTER RAN for governor of got rich so -fast." Carter had SO built up his slickly unslick Georgia against former Gov. Carl San- peanut warehousing business by then that he one of the ders, the package was different. Accord- may have been wealthier than Sanders. Carter year." ing to his media consultant, Gerald Raf- also charged that Sanders had promised to do shoon, the campaign slogan, "Isn't it time favors for his campaign contributors. He never somebody spoke up for you?" was "directed at substantiated the charge, and, indeed. refused the state's rural working people. We were run- to make his own list of contributors public. ning against the powerful special interests, the (Today Carter says that the list of those who bureaucrats, and people in cities." The cam- gave him money in 1970 is still unavailable.) paign may have been anti-special interests, but Beginning in June, Carter repeatedly claimed it was also anti-mainstream Democratic politics. that he had a "list" of occasions on which San- One Carter television commercial featured a ders, as governor, had used his office for per- Sanders campaign button; when a rag was sonal financial gain. Finally, on August 26, he rubbed over it, Sanders's face turned into Hu- gave reporters the "Carter proof packet" of bert Humphrey's, as a voice warned that San- charges against Sanders. The list, it turned out, ders was really a Humphrey Democrat. On Au- consisted of an allegation that Sanders had in- gust 22, Carter announced that the next day he terceded on behalf of a friend with the Federal would hold a press conference at which he Communications Commission. That allegation would reveal information so damaging to San- was never substantiated, nor in fact was there ders that Sanders would be forced to withdraw any charge of illegality or personal gain. from the race. What he did give the press the Perhaps the lowest blow was dealt by an next day was a copy of a picture of Sanders and anonymous leaflet which showed Sanders, who Humphrey on the same platform, which, Carter had been a part owner of the Atlanta Hawks charged, proved that Sanders was ready to sell basketball team, being given a champagne out the interests of Georgians to the "ultra-lib- shampoo by two of the team's black players erals." On the same day he also accused San- during a victory celebration. The leaflet was dets of selling out to the "big unions" by favor- mailed statewide to white Baptist ministers and insurepeal of right-to-work laws. white barbershops. Carter denies any knowl- On June 21, 1970, Carter told a Georgia re- edge of the leaflet, saying, "The campaign was porter that if he received the Democratic nomi- not involved in any way. However, Ray Aber- nation for governor, "I would run-as a local-nathy, an Atlanta public-relations man who Georgia conservative Democrat. I'm basi- worked for Carter's media director, Rafshoon, cally a redneck:" Nine weeks later, he went out in 1970 says, "We distributed-tha leaflet.It of his way to deny having said that the Supreme was-prepared by Bill Pope. who was Court decisions on school integration and other ter's-press-secretary.-It-was\part-of-an-opera issues were "morally and legally correct." tion-we-called-the-stidktanks." He also says In the runoff primary. Carter received only that Carter's current campaign manager, Ham- 7 percent of the black vote, against 93 percent ilton Jordon, was "directly involved in the for Sanders. His appeal to black voters had not mailing. He and Rafshoon masterminded it." been helped by his well-publicized visit to a Pope, who no longer works for Carter, con- whites-only private academy five days before firmed Abernathy's allegation that the cam- primary days. The school had been established paign was involved but denied his own role. to avoid school integration, and when Carter Rafshoon and Jordon deny any knowledge of told the press that he was there to "reassure the mailing. Georgians of my support for private education," In the 1970 primary, there were three major the implication was clear. Carter also ran with candidates: Carter, who was the conservative: a promise to invite George Wallace to speak Sanders, who appealed to white moderates and before the state legislature, and with the en- liberals and to blacks: and C. B. King. a black dorsement of Roy Harris, a virulent segrega- lawyer who appealed essentially to blacks. tionist who had run Wallace's Presidential cam- Clearly, King took votes away from Sanders. paigns in Georgia, and who had organized the Abernathy also alleged that "Carter's campaign state's White Citizens' Council. financed King's media advertising. I personally Personal attacks on his opponent were as prepared all of King's radio ads while I was on \much a Carter trademark in 1970 as the grin Rafshoon's payroll and supervised the produc- and lowpkey, living-room campaigning are to- tion. And I helped channel money to the com- CAMPANY 79 Steven Brill $13,135,552 in the last fiscal year that he had ers. "I believe all income should be treated the control of the budget -which means he record- same. It's a scandal that a businessman can do- JIMMY ed a net depletion of $47,814,544. duct his S50 lunch but a worker can't deduct the CARTER'S Consistently, Carter talks, as he did one night sandwich in his lunch pail." This sounds like PATHETIC in a Mississippi living room, about a plan un- populist tax reform, including, for example, an LIES der which "I achieved welfare reform by open- end to preferential treatment of capital gains ing up 136 day-care centers for the retarded and a limit to business entertainment deduc- and using welfare mothers to staff them. Instead tions. But, again, when asked later about spe- We fire of being on welfare, these thousands of women cifics, Carter said he hadn't yet worked out the now have jobs and self-respect. You should see details and that he couldn't be sure what he'd Reform them bathing and feeding the retarded children. do with capital gains or entertainment deduc- They're the best workers we have in the state tions. Three days later, he responded to a ques- government This sounds like an excellent pro- tion at a Manhattan cocktail party by sayings TAX gram, and, indeed, Carter was praised for it in he consider taxing capital gains the same as The New York Times Magazine. However, while other income. When the audience moaned, he Policy Carter did establish 134 community centers for smiled and said, "I said I'd consider. it, not that retarded children, the idea of welfare recipients I'd do it." staffing them remains only an idea. According Carter's positions on specific issues are, ti ere- to Derril Gay, deputy director of the state Men- fore, difficult to determine from his campaign tal Health Division, "There is no such program. pitches. But, when forced to articulate them I'm not sure what the Times article was re- during a long interview, he emerges, essentially, ferring to. No one has been taken off wel- as a conservative Democrat, although there are fare and put in any mental health job." Betty enough exceptions to make him difficult to clas- Bellairs, director of the division of benefits sife payments, agrees, saying that there is "defi- He feels that "détente has been pushed too nitely no such program." Jody Powell comment- far, and that the Russians have gotten the ber- ed that "if Carter ever mentioned such a pro- ter of us in every deal we've made with them, gram, I guess he was mistaken." While I ac- including the joint space flight. His main for- companied him, he made the mistake before five eign-policy advisors are Dean Rusk and- audiences in three days. Zbigniew Bezezinski, and his chief military The other aspects of his record Carter men- adviser is his former boss, Adm. Hyman G. tioned while I traveled with him were an up- Rickover. He never publicly opposed the grading of rehabilitation programs in the pris- Vietnam war until 1971, and even now, he de- ons and a strict merit system for cabinet and fines it as a mistake of strategy, not of policy judicial appointments. Both claims are essen- or morality. In 1972, as noted, he argued that tially true. the Democrats should support the Nixon Viet nam policy. He feels that thing tood is to go-and fight even if your thinks HE TANTALIZING promises Carter is immoral," and that-the CIA has- been crip- making are potentially more disillu- pled" by the recent investigations and revela sioning than the myths he is floating tions about his past record. They are vague Carter's welfare-reform plan, he says, would enought to please everyone-for now cut off aid, now given under the Aid to Fami- -and Carter hypnotizes his audience with them lies with Dependent Children program, to chil- SO effectively that most seem to go away con- dren of able-bodied parents who won't work, vinced that all his pledges will materialize about and he thinks chronic alcoholics or drug addicts four hours after his inauguration. should be considered able-bodied. His tax-re- For example, he promises he'll cut the num- form plan includes the elimination of "double ber of federal agencies from 1,900 to 200. As taxation" of corporations by abolishing the cor- he says it you can almost see the red tape being porate income tax. He favors capital punish; Capital slashed and the briefcases Hoating down the ment "in some cases and preventive detention Potomac. But when I asked him to name a few, of "habitual criminals. and he thinks the-Mi- or even one, of the 1,700 agencies he'd abolish, randa Supreme Court decision limiting criminal he said he hadn't worked out the details yet. confessions contained "too many technicalities." Similarly, although he talks passionately about Carter said he would be against any jol.- wiping out government waste and says that the opportunity plan that required the hiring of Defense Pentagon "is by far the most wasteful bureau- specific percentages of persons from minority cracy." he told me that the Pentagon budget groups. and he thinks the union seniority sys- Budget could be cut only "about 5 percent." tem should not be amended to help blacks and About Carter raises his voice when he talks about women. As-for abortion, he is #totally opposed taxes. "The tax system is a dis-grace to the hu- torit" and noted that after the Supreme-Gourt TAX- man race," he told a group of municipal labor- struck down the Ceorgia law=in-the landmark Cont. 82 Policy Steven Brill abortion-case, he had-signed new law that campuses to put down disorder "even-before as restrictive possible consistent with violence erupts"? Is the real Carter the gover- JIMMY the Court's decision. He does not favor a con- nor who told a Congressional committee in June CARTER'S stitutional amendment on abortion, but he of 1971 that he opposed any total federal finane- PATHETIC would not approve any national health-insur- ing of welfare and was against the federal gov- LIES rance plan that includes abortion as part of the ernment bypassing the states to aid cities direct- medical care to be covered. ly, or the Presidential candidate who now says Carter-sayshe-would-support.the-Democratic he favors a federal takeover of welfare and ticket-even-if-George-Wallace-was.on-it-and- wants federal revenue-sharing to bypass the JACKSON states and go directly to the cities? Is the real Mayor that-next-to-myself_Ud-say-Scoop-Jackson-is to be President." Repeatedly Carter the candidate who tells conservative Datey during our talk and in his Mississippi speeches nessmen-in-Mississippi, "Mayor.Daley=is-my he referred to Fred Harris, Birch Bayh, Morris Udall, Sargent Shriver, and Frank Church as agains- fGovernor]-Dan-Walker-for-him," or "the-five-ultraliberalssin-theorace." the-candidate-who-campaigns-against the On some issues, though, Carter is quite lib- erful-politicians"? eral. He favors comprehensive national health There could be legitimate explanations for care, hand-gun control, and tough environmen- these and other contradictions. Politicians are tal and energy policies. He supports strong anti- entitled to grow and change their minds like the trust enforcement, reform of federal regulatory rest of us. But Carter's changes seem to span agencies, and a halt to production of the B-1 the range of basic national issues and corre- bomber. He opposes mandatory minimum jail spond totally with the constituency he seeks. sentences and would pardon all Vietnam-era And they must be considered in the context of draft evaders. He favors repeal of right-to- the pious antipolitics campaign he is running. work laws, although he never tried to repeal More than that, they may be the tip of an as- Georgia's, and ran against repeal in 1970. He yet concealed iceberg of contradictions. At the supports the Equal. Rights Amendment. Georgia State Department of Archives and His- tory there is widespread feeling that, in the Who is Jimmy, what is he? words of one research librarian, "Governor Car- ter and his people censored documents, espe- cially speeches, that should be in the public HE PROBLEM with evaluating Carter's record." According to Frank Daniel, a veteran stated positions is that inconsistent archivist who every four years prepares a vol- statements in his past record, such as ume of the complete public statements of the ones on right-to-work laws, make Georgia governors, his attempts to compile the it difficult to tell if he really means Carjer volume have been Holked or [Car- what he says. In fact, a scanning of Carter's six- tell people They've only sent me the year public record leaves one wondering who speeches they want to include. That's never he really is. happened to me before." Another archivist ex- Is the real Carter the candidate who told the plained, "You can't find any speeches Carter voters in Brunswick, Georgia, on July 31, 1970, made to groups in Mississippi, Alabama, rural Idedogy liberal; I-am-and-have-always- Georgia, or places like that, because they never been conservative," or the one who is now sent them over here. We got a copy of his sched- telling adoring audiences, "Ive-always-been-a- ule every week, so we can see all the ones that rights Is the are missing." For example, after a careful search, real Carter the Presidential candidate who says the librarians were certain they never received Civil Rights the school.integration-decision-and-the-Givil a tape or text of a speech Carter made on Rights-Act-were-the-greatest-things-that-ever- George Wallace Appreciation Day in Red Lev- happened to the South," or the gubernatorial e}, Alabama. Powell explained the absence of candidate who, in 1970; denied saying that the the tape by saying that "The troupers who Supreme Court school integration decision was supposed to record everything that he says out "morally and legally correct"? Is the real Carter of state forgot to record it. I guess." (The local the candidate who wrote in his autobiography newsclips of the event did not report the spe- that our involvement in Vietnam lacked moral cifics of the speech.) principle, or the governor who urged Ceorgians One document that was sent to the archives to protest William Calley's conviction and said suggests that the complete record might be quite he thought Calley was a "scapegoat"? Is the damaging to Carter. On August 4, 1972, Carter real Carter the candidate who, in 1976. has replied to a letter from Mrs. Lena Mae Demp- in-pired rock bands to play benefit concerts sey. who had written to complain to him that he for him, or the one who, seven weeks after the should have endorsed Wallace at the Democrat- Kent State tragedy, promised to send National ic Convention instead of Jackson. Carter wrote Guardsmen with live ammunition onto college back 25 follows: 84 Steven Brill pany Rafshoon used to pay for them. I lators, his regime had none of the phony, cor- don't know if Jimmy knew about it. but every- rupt populism that has marked the Wallace JIMMY one else did." Rafshoon denies the allegation. years in neighboring Alabama. He fought for CARTER'S King, when asked about Abernathy's charge, tough consumer laws and banking regulation, PATHETIC said, "I never knew specifically of that, but it and opened the government to blacks and wom- LIES could have happened. I found out later on en. He developed new programs in health care, that I was naive, and a lot of crass and evil peo- education, and corrections, although Georgia's ple helped me for the wrong reasons." prisons are still terribly overcrowded and lack- Carter beat Sanders for the nomination, and ing in medical and psychiatric care. He con- then ran in the general election with Lester stantly traveled the state listening to citizen Maddox (who had been nominated for lieuten- complaints, and he was the kind of down-to- ant governor in a separate primary). In-Octo- earth officeholder who could strike up a conver- Gubernatorial ber of 1970 Carter said he was "proud to have sation with a prison inmate mowing his lawn, Lester Maddox as my running mate," and that find out that lawyers were bilking prisoners with CAMPAIGN Maddox represented the essence of the Demo- fake promises of parole, and do someth cratic party." On November 3, he was elected about it. gover governor. But whatever good Carter did do aggovernos The easy explanation for Carter's 1970 cam- is blurred now by the legend he is trying to paign conduct is that he had to do and say all make of it. On the campaign trail his re these things, even though he didn't believe in organization of 300 state agencies into twenty. them, in order to be elected in Georgia. That two super-agencies, which indeed made the gav- may be understandable, although it ill befits the ernment more manageable and easier to under- man who wrote in his campaign autobiography stand, has become a revolution in government that one of the biggest-obstacles he faces this that got rid of 278 of 300 state agencies and re- year is that "I don't know how to compromise duced administrative costs by 50 percent. To on any principle." It also raises the question of hear him in Mississippi, it's as if most of the what he's willing to do and say that he doesn't government was wiped out with no loss to the believe in 1976-running this time as the anti- public. In fact, the reorganization merely con- politics sincerity candidate. solidated state agencies, preserving most of them as "divisions" under umbrella super-agen- Warped record cies. (One of them, the Department of Human Resources, has become an unmanageable blob.) When I asked Carter what he was referring to Campaign HE 1976 CARTER STUMP-SPEECH invari- when he said administrative costs had been cut ably begins with him introducing him- 50 percent, he referred me to a member of his self as a "nuclear physicist and a pea- staff, who, as of this writing, has been unable to nut farmer:" Neither claim is entirely point to anything specific. Georgia budget docu- true. His only academic degree is the ments show that funding for the agency most in- standard Bachelor of Naval Science he got at volved with administration-the governor's of- Annapolis. He did do some graduate work, al- fice-increased 49 percent in the four years though not enough to get a degree, but this was Carter was in the statehouse. As for total gov- in engineering, not nuclear physics. Carter's ernment costs, Georgia's expenditures in Car- press secretary, Jody Powell, says, "We're in ter's last year as governor have not been tabu- the process of changing the literature." As for lated yet, but, according to Winford Poitevint, being a peanut farmer, Carter is actually a an analyst in the state budget office, Carter's wealthy agribusinessman, whose income comes spending increased 50 percent in his first three from warehousing and shelling other farmers' years in office, from $1.6 billion in fiscal year peanuts and from commodities trading. He does 1971, to $2.4 billion in fiscal year 1974; during own and live on a peanut farm, but it is run by his four years, the total number of state em- his brother. ployees increased 30 percent, from 52,000 to "I admit the People picture of him shoveling 68,000. Carter's increased spending probably peanuts was a phony," says media man Raf- was the result of inflation and upgraded social shoon. "But those are the only pictures the press programs, but that does not explain his distor- wants of Jimmy." Rafshoon isn't exactly dis- tion of his fiscal record. couraging them. A planned TV ad pictures an Carter also claims that he left Georgia with a overall-clad Carter sifting peanuts while a voice- S116 million budget surplus. (In his autobi- over asks, "Can you imagine any other candi- ography it's $200 million.) When I was with date working in the hot August sun?" him. he usually mentioned this right after he Carter was a good governor. Although his attacked New York City officials for having dis- legislative proposals often suffered because of torted their budget figures. In fact, according to the heavy-handed and, some say, stubborn way the state auditor's office, Carter inherited a sur- he treated Georgia's independent-minded legis- plus of $90.950,096 and left a surplus of FORD RG Steven Brill Dear Mrs. Dempsey: couldn't run for reelection anyway. If so, ev- JIMMY I have never had anything but the highest erything good he did from that point could be pruise jor Covernor "allace. My support jor CARTER'S attributed to a realization that to go national he Senator Jackson was based upon a personaL- had to separate himself from Georgia's Stone PATHETIC request from: our late Senator Richard Rus- sell shortly before death. I think you will Age image. Certainly, this could hold true for LIES find that Senator+Jackson, Governor allace anything he did after September 1972, the point and / are in close agreement on most issues. at which he says he decided to run for Pres- Geo Let me ask you to consider one other jac- ident. This would include his most endearingly tor before I close. There are times when two symbolic liberal act-the placing of a portrait men working toward the same end can ac- Waller of Martin Luther King, Jr., in the State Capitol complish more if they are not completely tied on February 17, 1974-seventeen months after together. I think you will find that Governor he knew he was running for President as an en- Vallace understands this. Please let me know when I can be of ser. lightened Southerner. Samp vice to you or your children in Atlanta hope I have been able to give you a slightly better impression of me. IMMY CARTER has many qualities that JACKSON Sincerely, could make him a good President. He Jimmy Carter has the drive and stamina to take a firm hold of the government, and his two Such letters notwithstanding, Carter became years of house-to-house campaigning known nationally for disavowing the veiled rac- will probably have taught him more about the ism that elected him when he said in his inau- country than most Presidents ever know. Al- guration speech that the time for racial discrim- though you can't tell from his speeches, he ab- ination was over. As governor, he opened jobs sorbs complex issues easily, studies new ones to minorities and initiated a host of programs constantly, and has developed ideas in energy for the disadvantaged. For this he has earned policy and other areas that are original and well the 1976 support of Andrew Young, the At- thought out. He is, in short, a hard-working, lanta Congressman who was a key aide to Mar- smart politician. It is arguable, in fact, that his tin Luther King, Jr. But Carter's civil-rights abilities are such that his phony campaign and record should not be exaggerated. For example, past and present contradictions should be he now says that although he is against busing, winked at because he'd make a good President. he does not favor a constitutional amendment But in this regard, one of his campaign homilies to ban it. But in 1972 he praised a Georgia leg- holds true: "I'll only be as good a President as islative resolution calling on Congress to pass I am a candidate," he often says. Candidacy such an amendment, and he urged Georgians The reason he is right is that his campaign to demonstrate against the assignment of stu- expresses his basic flaw. Carter's friends and en- dents or teachers on the basis of race. On Au- emies agree that, if one thing characterizes Jim- gust 17, 1971, he praised George Wallace's de- my Carter, it is his obsession with Jimmy Car- fiance of a court desegregation order. "Jimmy ter. It is what gives him the ability to portray Carter wouldn't be my first choice for President his opponents, like Carl Sanders in 1970, as rep- or even my fifth," says Georgia State Senator resenting the forces of evil; and it's what gives Julian Bond. "His liberalism is largely a myth. him the drive to get up an hour earlier and The reason he gets such good press is that when- work an hour later than any of the other can- ever the rest of the country thinks of Georgia, didates. "If Jumy Carter decides the wants they think of Lester Maddox. By comparison, something he usually finds a way to gegit, ob- Jimmy looks good." serves Bill Shipp, a veteran Atlanta political John Lewis, a longtime civil-rights leader who reporter. It should be no surprise, then, that heads the Atlanta-based Voter Education Proj- Carter sees issues only as props in the campaign ect agrees that "Carter's liberalism on race is sales pitch, and minor, often bothersome, props overrated." He points specifically to "Carter's at that. This is why he couldn't understand Mc- attempt back in 1972 to get the Democrats to Govern "using" the war as an issue. And it was weaken the Voting Rights Act." natural that, instead of admitting his mistakes Whatever the strengths of Carter's record, or his limited credentials as a one-term governor such things as the letter to Mrs. Dempsey, the of Georgia, he'd try to find a shortcut to get to incomplete records in the archives, the alleged the White House on schedule-that he'd try to compaign dirty tricks, and, above all, the false blur the history of the 1970 campaign and of campaign he is now running as the peanut farm- his record as governor. and run as the new idol er antipolitician encourage the most cynical in- the country yearns for. So he packaged himself terpretation of it. Friends say that the Time cov- as a legend and began campaigning in the name er story written just after he took office, which of peanut-farmer. antipolities sincerity. Jimmv PER'S MAGAZINE labeled him the "voice of the New South," plant- Carter's campaign--hungey. no philosophy, and MARCH 1976 ed national ambitions in his head. (By law he brilliantly packaged-is Jimmy Carter. 88 . Image CARTER/MONDALE CAMPAIGN different view The choice of Walter Mondale over 1 Catho- iic vice-presidential candidate provided 1 fur- ther Index of Carrer's attitude toward the Catholic vote (no need to seek It in this way) and the personality of Carter himself (obses- sive and dutiful as an old-time Catholic). Jimmy Carter Carter, like many a Catholic of his gen- eration, gave himself to God and country, an engineer of cold war defenses, a planner who would waste noching. neither time, scrap paper nor an extra stamp In giv- ing his best. services to the government. Doing his best. it Is the theme of his prayers. Commander in control the coda in his search. distorted in its ex- acmess, for 3. running mate. Would the pre- liminary process for canonization require less scrutiny, or fewer devil's advocates? It was, No, they say, unrolling their polls. Catholics In fact. 3. more secular process, the machin- By Eugene Kennedy do not stand together on issues of their own ery drawn from Rickover's steel-edged plans and their vote cannot be mustered or deliv- for selecting worthy aides, the razor-sharp The hand of Jimmy Carter touches the ered by religious leaders. On almost every hurdles Carter himself had learned to clear oulders of politicians and delegates, of occasion on which Catholics have tried to or- before he served under the father of the nu- angers-on and newsmen alike. It is the hand ganize political pressure over the last decade clear submarine. A process to exact a price, the commanding officer who alone carries - on, for example. the issue of aid to schools a test-how often Carter has spoken of wish- 19 secret orders and wants calm and abso- - they have been defeated. ing to be tested by the American people, test- ite attention when he opens them. There are many who agree with Carter and ed In every aspect of spirit and character - Jimmy Carter is not a pastoral figure but 1 his aides, veteran observers who are ready to yes, a test for any man. no matter how splen- illtary man, a veteran of Adm. Hyman swallow the bitter drait of this revisionist did his lineage or approved his credendals. lickover's discipline and the silence of deep brew, men and women who have felt that the One must speculate on Carter's strength to ubmarine dives, the officer of trim lines and American Catholic church never makes small sustain and administer tests to those who firmer jaw up close than in photographs, mistakes and, in fact. has made enormous would serve with him. the style that will be he engineer comforted by the feel- of well- ones in recent years. Some Catholics who op- come even more familiar to us, an experience trawn blueprints. pose abortion are not completely happy with with power enough to curdle the pancake No, Jimmy is not the leader of a religious the style of some of the literature of the makeup of any politician. evival. Put your ear to his breast and the Right-co-Life Movement or with the Idea of a FOR CARTER 13 a precise technician, 1 ound is that of a finely tuned nuclear engine constitutional amendment to-turn aside the man who understands command and the bai- ready for a hundred days in the darkness un- 1973 Supreme Court decision. They nod some- ance of devotion necessary between captain ler the Ice cap. The metaphor is military what grimly and say that Carter is right and and crew in the crowded bulk of a submarine. other than religious for this extraordinarily that in the long run holding to his present What was needed there was a commander of ntelligent man who made the Democratic positions will prove politically successful But utter self-confidence, a cool and contained convention not into an evangeilcal meeting even these persons. wise as they feel them- out into something more like the Yard at An- selves in the ways of civil and ecclesiastical man, no small man at that, a man younger men could admire and with whom they might napolis filled with shiny-faced and obedient. politics. are not totally pleased with the man- piebes. ner in which Carter's convictions about Cath- forge strong ties of loyalty. Carter may well have heard of the Navy's use of psychology in Commander-in-chilef does not seem too grand olics have been communicated. Indeed, one recruiting personnel for nuclear submarine an ambition for Carter. who in moving to- wonders if the style, invisible our as clear and dury. There was. at one time at least, 3 pref- ward it has taught lessons to everybody. from forceful as a hand raised by a bird colonel to erence for young men from broken homes the professional politicians to the leadership keep the enlisted med from entering the offi- who would be more likely than others to form of the Roman Carholic church. cers' club, may not bring Catholics together 3 strong dependent relationship with the cap- CARTER AND HIS STAFF have taken the in a celebration of allenated rage that may tain. yes. the very thing needed for the 35- measure of Catholic influence, and they are yet deny the White House to Carter. duous trial of close quarters for long days convinced they understand the Catholic without daylight beneath the sea. TIME AND AGAIN during convention week people and their attitudes better than the various ethnic (election-year language for It is a tribute to Carter's wisdom and ag- Catholic bishops do. The Carter camp's ver- Cacholic) groups pressed for meetings with prectation of a staff's unmortgaged devotion sion of American Catholicism is not that of to 1 paternal leader that he has grouped Carter or some member of his inner court. the lumbering but finally effective juggernaut around himself generally young men marked Their requests were uniformly denied, 31- battering political castles or condemned mov- by their personal affection for him, men though In an almost sweet fashion, in South- te houses into rubble but of an army in dis- ready for long voyages on tight rations, their em accents and smiles. array, with uncertain trumpets, and field security resting in their leader's impertur- bable sense of direction and sense of destiny. commanders who cannet effectively organize Jimmy Carter wants men he can count on. their troops for the simplest of maneuvers. men to follow his plans, and he seems to have them. Chicago Sun-Times, 8/29/76 continued THE EASY CHAIR HARPER'S Magazine-August, 1976 THE WIZARD OF OZ FORD Jimmy Carter's nomination by Lewis-h Lapham OR EIGHT MONTHS Jimmy has been mentioned as a prospect for people of this nation better than any F Carter has revolved like a Secretary of State, was Deputy Secre- other human being." mechanical toy in the tary of Defense in the Johnson Ad- The effect of the speech was ein- bright ball of the media, ministration. Their endorsement of harrassing. To men of considerable answering everyman's question and aspiring politicians conveys an aura sophistication Mr. Carter had de- smiling into everyman's camera; and of respectable authority. Even so, the livered a 4-H Club addr- all of yet, even now, hardly anybody knows crowd was inclined to be skeptical. it very stale and very sweet, ut- anything about him. On the day that When Mr. Carter presented himself at terly devoid of feeling or thought. the Democratic grandees conceded the rostrum in the Grand Ballroom, Over the last twenty years I have Mr. Carter the nomination he could smiling for as long as the television listened to a great many politicians still appear to be all things to all lights were on, the audience granted make a great many speeches, but men. In June, as in early February, him a standing but halfhearted ova- never before have I noticed such ..n the public-opinion polls showed that tion. In the words of a dignified gen- absence of emotion among people liberals believed Mr. Carter a liberal tleman on my left, "I can't say that who might have hoped to believe and that conservatives believed him I trust a man who uses a boy's naine, what they heard. The applause at the a conservative. He had taken posi- but, if Doug Dillon vouches for the end was as small as Mr. Carter's tions on both sides of every question fellow, maybe there's something to voice. He had arrived punctually :t that could be identified as an issue. him." 8:00 A.M., and when he left, exactly All the columnists agreed that he had Mr. Carter chose to present him- an hour later, it was as if nobods waged a brilliant primary campaign, self in the persona of the innocent had been there. but few of them could agree as to abroad, a latter-day Billy Budd, bare- Most people immediately began what it was, exactly, that the candi- foot and without guile, wandering to talk of other things -the weather date had said. Not even his admirers around the country in search of love or the morning's business engage- seemed to know who he was, or what and friends. A small and self-con- ments, the cost of their property in be stood for, or why he wanted to be tained man, he gazed* vaguely up- Connectient, or the best way to get President of the United States. Like ward and was careful not to move his to Maine in August. If they took the the Wizard of Oz, Mr. Carter had hands. Like a small boy reciting an trouble to make even a passing men- contrived to remain invisible. Al- inspirational poem he said all the tion of what they had paid $100 to though possibly a useful trait in a dutiful things that a well-behaved see and hear, their remarks implied caudidate, in a President it would child is supposed to say in the coin- an attitude of condescension. They be ruinous. pany of strangers. He told of how he believed themselves capable of see- On the one occasion when ] lis- never "evaded an issue," of how he ing through the paltry charade of tened to Mr. Carter speak, iu early was an "eager student" who was do- American politics in a matter of a May at the Plaza Hotel in New York, ing his best to learn all those com- few minutes, and it amused them 10 he left his audience in a state of con- plicated things that the folks talked look briefly at the new gerilla pass- fusion equivalent to the confusion in about up there in Washington, D.C., ing through town every four years the national press. Most of those of the many telephone calls he'd on the way to its cage in Washing- present were men of weight and been getting from important politi- ton. Together with their counterparts probity, directors of companies and cians, of how it wasn't the American elsewhere in the country, they con- pillars of the community who each people who had decided to do all stitute what might be called the par- had paid $100 to attend a breakfast those "dreadful things" in Vietnam, ty of the indifferent majority. Char- sponsored by such eminent Demo- Cambodia, Chile, the White House, acteristic of their analysis was the crats as C. Douglas Dillon and Cyrus and the CIA, of "the deep yearning following conversation, reproduced Vance. Mr. Dillon had been Secre- for intimacy" he'd discovered out in its entirety, between two men har- tary of the Treasury in the Kennedy there "in this great country of ours," rying toward the elevators. Administration, and Mr. Vance, who of how he had come to know "the Leuis H. Lapham is the editor of Harper's. 10 FIRST MAN Vaguely and without understood the magnitude of na- caring about the response): "Well, tional sense of defeat. He a-sumed, / what did you think of it?" correctly, that the vast majority of SECOND MAN: "The usual the American people, like the two time crook. Another liar.' men hurrying away from breakfast FIRST MAN (Impatiently) "Yes, in the Plaza Hotel, wanted to forget yes, of course, but so what? You can about politics. They were sick to death say the same thing about all of them. of politicians, tired of issues they Think of Humphrey, of Jackson. My didn't understand and which didn't God-Jackson." admit of easy answers, disappoint- Among the few people who re- ed by the chronicle of failure that mained in the Grand Ballroom after seemed to delight the Eastern press. Mr. Carter had left (to continue his In Vietnam 40,000 Americans had portrayal of little lost at a United been killed, apparently to no pur- Nations conference on nuclear war) pose. The Nixon Administration was the disagreement was comprehensive. a disgrace, and so was the god- There were as many opinions as there damned Congress. Even when Mr. were small groups of people coming Nixon had been discovered as the together to exchange theories and in- Antichrist his absence didn't improve terpretations. Mr. Carter had come matters. Within a year of his depar- and gone in a magician's smoke, ture the fine promises about a re- leaving his admirers with an empty newed code of official conduct began canvas on which they could paint the to sound as thin as jukebox music. images of their hearts' desire. The Multinational corporations continued more devout thought that Mr. Carter to pay bribes to Congressmen as well was a saint. They told stories about as to foreign governments; judges his concern for the old and the sick, were still' going to jail; the Kennedys about the tears that once welled up were no better than anybody else; in his eyes when he was told about and the FBI and the CIA apparently a dying child. The candidate's critics had been subverting the Bill of Rights denounced him as a swindling hyp- ever since the Roosevelt Administra- ocrite. From their coat pockets they tion. Even before the advent of Eliz- brought forth newspaper clippings on abeth Ray there appeared to be no which they had marked passages of virtue in the Republic. blatant contradiction. Other people Given the general feeling of dis- spoke of the candidate as religious gust, it was an easy thing for a great zealot or honest farmer, as effective many people to imagine themselves administrator or protégé of the Ku betrayed. Mr. Carter brought them a Klux Klan. A man in a plaid suit focus for their discontent. Were they described Mr. Carter as being "dirt angry and resentful? Did they de- mean," a poor boy from south Geor- spise intellectuals and the Eastern Es- gia who trusted nobody and would tablishment? Were they sick of cor- do his best, once elected President, ruption and bad news? Well, so was to root out the evil that darkened the Jimmy Carter. He hated all the vested understanding of his enemies. interests that a poor boy is supposed to hate, and he meant to do some- thing about it. To audiences con- F MR. CARTER'S presence in- sumed with impotent rage Mr. Carter [III spires such little confidence used the language of Christian piety among people willing to give to convey a sense of the Lord's ven- shim money, then his political geance. Thus the paradox implicit triumph among the larger public in his success. lle presented himself must depend on something other than as the candidate of hope and new the force of his mind or the large- beginnings, but he floated to the sur- ness of his spirit. He isn't an eloquent face of American polities on a tide man, and his visions of America the of despair. In place of a vision of Beautiful have the quality of the the future he offered an image of the gilded figurines hought in penny ar- nonexistent past, promising a safe cades. But he is obviously intelligent, return to an innocent Eden in which and, I suspect, also courageous, American power and morality might greedy, determined, and vindictive. be restored to the condition of imag- He was willing to work longer hours inary grace. and take greater risks than any of the His witness was not much different other politicians in the field, and he from that of Billy Graham and Rev. THE CHAIR Sun Myung Moon. He spoke 10 the heresy; ten years later it had be- themselves, the y that Mr. Carter unhappiness of people wishing for a come the received wisdom. must be admired for his mithlessness world that never was. The popular A recent ston The IT'all Street or his coldness of mind, for his hav- suspicion of government is always Journal mention the large number ing been "born again" in Christ or well-founded. To a greater or lesser of politicians WHO have decided to his successful campaign tactics-for extent, all governments commit quit the government. No fewer than anything and everything that might crimes against the common people. eight Senators and forty-six Congress- rescue them from a sense of their The law is usually unjust, the capital men, many of them younger men own uneasiness. always noisy with fools. No wonder with safe seats, offered various rea- It stands to reason that Mr. Carter that Mr. Carter found so many ad- sons for refusing to stand for reelec- was not closely questioned about un- herents for his crusade against the tion. Politics, they said, was too hard employment, taxes, foreign policy, lords temporal and the kingdom of or too degrading; the hours were social welfare, or the military budget. Caesar. too long, the issues too complex; too He wasn't asked the questions be- His success with the so-called gov- many people looked upon politicians cause not enough people cared if erning class, with people who thought with loathing; they had lost faith in he knew the answers. Probably he they recognized him as a demagogue, the plausibility of representative gov- doesn't, but, at least for the moment, raises a more ominous question. Out- ernment, and they chose to do some- that is something that his supporters side the walls of the citadel the sus- thing else with the rest of their lives. would rather not know. They prefer picion of government can be taken An equivalent feeling of exhaus- the condition of benumbed hope. If for granted. Among people inside tion prevented the Democratic party they look too closely they might find the walls the prevalence of an anal- from offering any resistance to Mr. out that Mr. Carter is indeed the agous feeling, expressed as self-dis- Carter. Of the Democrats eligible to Wizard of Oz., which would make it gust rather than as resentment, sug- vote in the primary elections, only unpleasant to vote for him in No- gests the possibility of a civilization one in five bothered to show up at vember. in decline. Within the past two or the polls. Despite the talk of deny- Nor has the press insisted upon three years I have noticed that a sur- ing Mr. Carter the nomination, no- lines of questioning that might prove prising number of people who hold body could find a moral or intellec- inconvenient. Throughout the eight responsible office, in government as tual ground on which to make an months of his advent, Mr. Carter well as in the realms of law, finance, argument. The party remained di- was excused from anything lut cur- and the press, have acquired the vided into factions, without any co- sory examination. The rules of evi- habit of denouncing themselves as herent objective beyond regaining dence in the national political debate imposters. They distrust their own access to the White House. Under prohibit the taking of testimony about legitimacy, and they look for valida- the circumstances, what was the point a man's character, and so, until his tion in drugs, sex, and Zen. Both in of keeping up appearances? Mr. Car- nomination had been assured, the New York and official Washington I ter bad a new face; he had been press obligingly confined itself to meet people who no longer believe winning primaries; the press accept- meaningless analysis of the candi- themselves capable of directing the ed him at his word; and he would date's shifting positions across a pec- business of the state. When they try do just as well as any other candi- trum of abstract possibility. To do to envision the future they see noth- date. If it was a question of money anything else would have been to ing that doesn't look like a Saturday and jobs, and if the American peo- suggest that the country was still in afternoon rerun of the past twenty ple were foolish enough or apathetic trouble, that the threat to the Re- years. The same slogans, the usual enough to believe the sermons of a public had not ended with the resig- compromises and the old lies -all of rapacious moralist, then why put ob- nation of Richard Nixon. it miserably expensive and none of it stacles in the road to Washington? If Mr. Carter has not yet managed made bearable by the romance of In New York Mr. Carter's sup- to convey a clear sense of himself, youth or the presence of the Ken- porters have a sheepish look about whether by accident or as a result of nedys. Their lack of imagination them, as if they were holding hats deliberate calenlation, then it is fair makes them sick of themselves. over their faces after being arrested to say that he doesn't yet exist as a in a police raid on a brothel. Instead public man. It is conceivable that he of talking about the regenerative doesn't know much more about him- S LONG AGO AS 1965 Sen. clarity of the candidate's political self than the people who invest him Eugene McCarthy had vision, they mention their chances of with artificial images. Obviously he reached a similar conclu- a connection in Washington. The wants to be President. That much :sion. During important more squeamish among them already everybody knows. But as to why he votes on the floor of the Senate it have begun to make excuses. They wants to be President, or what he was his custom to remain in his of- know, or think they know, that Mr. would do with the office once elected, fice, ignoring repeated quorum calls Carter bears an embarrassing resem- I doubt that even Mr. Carter could while making ironic epigrams about blance to Richard Nixon, and they answer the questions with certainty. the pointlessness of it all. A more don't like to be reminded of their His unwillingness to reveal himself perceptive man than most of his con- previous statements (some of them can lead nowhere except into trag- federates, Senator McCarthy was, as as recent as the early spring) about edy. For the better part of a genera- always, in the vanguard of the fash- the necessity of restoring to the White tion the country has suffered the de- ionable sentiment. In 1965 his cyn- House a man of principle. To any- feats that follow from believing in icism was regarded as a dangerous body who will listen, but mostly to what didn't exist. 12 Election: Comment C-2 Nancy Reagan, Betty Ford Both Assets to Husbands (Barbara Walters, NBC Today Show) Betty Ford is considered by many to be the President's biggest asset. She doesn't always agree with him, indeed on questions like abortion, she disagrees, but that only seems to add to her charm and popularity. She canvasses door to door, attends rallies, goes to cultural centers, she enjoys being with the crowd, but she tires easily. Her campaign style is low-key, and gentle -- in contrast to her often very strong views. Many women identify with her, especially after her operation for breast cancer and her outspoken views on pre-marital sex, marijuana and abortion. Nancy Reagan totally shares her husband's political beliefs and personal ones as well. They say they've never dis- agreed. The Reagans have been married for 24 years. She was a movie starlet and daughter of a wealthy surgeon. Mrs. Reagan likes politics, she almost always campaigns with her husband, often talks with staffers about her husband's plans, but one rarely hears her publicly. She is supposed to be a powerful influence on her husband, although he disputes she is the power behind the throne. -- (3/9/76) On Discussing the Issues (Editorial, excerpted, Houston Chronicle) Perhaps the most smile-provoking aspect of the primaries SO far is the sublimely outrageous manner in which the former governor of Georgia, Jimmy Carter, has turned aside his opponents' attempts to come to grips with him on the issues. To indicate that discussing the issues is a disservice to the country, because such "political bickering" could further sour the public's already negative attitude toward politics, and to get away with it, can only bring wry grins at the frustrated state into which this throws his opponents. Maintaining such an attitude is, of course, ridiculous on its face and we would doubt that it could be carried on for very long. But it is nonetheless perversely amusing to see it tried and to see Carter's opponents try to cope with it. As we said, however, electing a president is serious business and this kind of thing would be considerably less amusing as time goes on. -- (3/4/76) Election: Comment C-11 'We Still Don't Know You, Jimmy' (By Godfrey Sperling Jr., excerpted, C.S. Monitor) The appearance of Democrats of all faiths, kinds, and sizes now surging behind Jimmy Carter is a false one. Here in Washington and around the nation there are a substantial number of Democrats, both key leaders and rank and file, who still harbor doubts about Mr. Carter. Soundings among Democratis leaders in Congress and at the state level -- leaders who in turn are listening to the Democratic voters -- show: -- There are still a large number of Democratic leaders who even as the Daleys and the Jacksons and the Wallaces move behind Carter remain less than enthusiastic about the Georgian. -- The most frequent comment from leaders is that Jimmy Carter is the result of a long, drawn-out primary system which ended up by producing a relatively unknown quantity. They are not saying Carter isn't good -- or might not be even better than that. They merely feel that Carter may have done it more with charm and persistence than by anything else. The questioning about Carter runs particularly deep within the bureaucracy in Washington, heavily populated by Democrats. It is true that some of the doubts come from those who are anxious that they may lose their jobs if Carter takes over and cuts out some agencies and combines others -- as he has promised to do. But several government workers have told this reporter they fear that Carter's approach to government may be over-simplistic -- and that, rather than achieve efficiency, he may merely make the government operation leaner and more streamlined by actually less able to function effectively. Finally the feeling persists among many Democrats that Carter still is less than clear on the issues. The press echoes this point of view. At a time when there appears to be almost unanimity within the party behind Carter, it simply isn't true. It may be coming. But it isn't here yet. -- (6/14/76) The Real Issues ( itorial, excerpted, Baltimore Sun) Appropriately on April Fools day, a whiff of autumn could be sniffed in the springtime presidential rituals. Ronald Reagan was calling Gerald Ford soft on Communism; Morris Udall and Henry Jackson were accusing Jimmy Carter of being beastly to New York. Nevertheless, for a moment it was all as credible as sugar in the salt shaker. There of the announced Democratic candidates -- Carter, Jackson and Udall -- plus that potent perennial, Hubert H. Humphrey, met with Democratic mayors at the Waldorf-Astoria. What they had to say should have reminded everyone that after all the primaries and caucuses and conventions, two presidential nom- inees will at last get to the real issues. LIVE 111 these issues be thoroughly explored on the hustings after conven- tions time. Until then, voters will know there is a lot of April Fool in the issues contrived and exploited during the primary season. -- (4/5/76) Demo Race: Comment C-12 Avoiding Mistakes (Editorial, excerpted, Atlanta Journal) Though all sorts of things can still happen at the Democratic national convention itself, the party's platform committee has come up with a draft which is pleasing to probable presidential nominee Jimmy Carter. As a result, the committee also has avoided making some big political mistakes, which, without the Carter in- fluence, it quite likely would have made. Despite the grumbling of some who view silence on such issues 76) as elevating political expediency above ideals, the platform com- mittee refused to get as far out of step with the majority of the American people as party ideologues tended to do in 1972. It begins to appear that candidate Carter will not have to start the campaign disavowing most of his party's platform. -- (6/17/76) Can FBI Be Trusted? (Editorial, excerpted, Des Moines Register) Jimmy Carter, the probable Democratic presidential nominee, has expressed reservations about an offer by Atty. Gen Levi to have the FBI run background checks on possible running mates. An FBI check conceivably could alert the presidential nominee to factors in a person's background that would make that person an inadvisable vice presidential choice. But the FBI also conceivably could try to blackball somebody the agency disapproved. Carter is properly concerned about the possible consequences of giving the FBI even an indirect voice in the selection process. For too long even presidents were cowed by the FBI and dared not appear to question the integrity of the agency. Jimmy Carter's reluctance to bring the FBI into the vice presidential selection picture is a healthy sign. -- (6/23/76) Carter Twists the Record (Editorial, excerpted, Daily Oklahoman) Now that he has the Democratic presidential nomination vir- tually sewed up a month before the convention, Jimmy Carter is reportedly turning his attention to potential running mates and possible cabinet choices. However, there is the little matter of a campaign and election before Carter can be sworn in as the 39th President of the United States next January. And as the contradictions in Carter's record become more apparent, a funny thing could happen to him on the way to the White House, like it did to Thomas E. Dewey in 1948. NEW YORK A Psychohistory of Jimmy Carter's 'Rebirth' -Born By Bruce Mazlish and Edwin Diamond " Carter's mystical experience is worth examining, not least because his persona is a central issue in the campaign " The time, a decade ago, when Jimmy Carter became even to later, mid-life crises. Personality, in this view a "born-again Christian" was, and remains, a magical, set in concrete at six, or at sixteen. Individuals const mystical experience in many ways. No description of the change and grow. In analytic terms, ego psycholog episode-episodes?-exists in Carter's own autobiograph- pay at least as much attention to the intellectual and ical Why Not the Best? An odd omission for such a care- cognitive processes (the ego) as to instinctual drives (the ful person. There are at least three versions of what may id). The psychohistory we use treats political or religious have happened. Even the dates are uncertain. Carter him- figures-Gandhi, Luther, Kissinger, Carter-as active peo- self, during a recent interview with us, placed the experi- ple functioning in society, not as patients on a couch. ence "in 1966, the period of a couple years, 1967 Still, we want to be clear on two points. First, the bed- But there is nothing vague or uncertain about the con- rock on which all psychoanalysis, as well as psychohistory, sequences of the born-again experience. Carter has told us, stands is a belief in the importance of unconscious, as well and a number of other interviewers, that he believes as conscious, mental processes. Thus, psychohistory tries to he became a "new person, with changed attitudes," though study the inner dynamics of its subjects and to find the with the same basic character. Before, he used people; he recurring patterns of behavior. We may ask, for example, couldn't take defeat. After, he became a servant of people; whether there is a special meaning in the fact that Jimmy he achieved calmness and serenity. He told us he could Carter's autobiography gives the exact age, height, and even take the loss of the election in November with "com- weight of his father, James Earl Sr., at the time of Carter's plete personal equanimity." birth, but not that of his mother, Lillian. Such a "fact" Carter's "born-again" experience is worth examining may be meaningful, or it may not, but in psychohistory it closely for several reasons, not least because his persona, cannot be ignored. Does it fit in with other "facts" to form rather than any ideology or political issues, has become a pattern? Does it reflect unconscious feelings about how a central issue in the current presidential campaign. Car- one parent serves as a model with whom to identify? ter himself says, "I want the American people to under- Second, we take our insights from many sources. Carter stand my character, my weaknesses, the kind of person himself talks about the "complexity" of people. We recog- I am." In his campaign, he tells us that "I've got a good nize that complexity; character does not fit some model in family," and adds, "I hope that you'll be part of my cookie-cutter fashion. In some too neat analyses, Lillian family." It seems useful, therefore, to learn as much about Carter is pictured as the liberal, compassionate influence his family, and its meanings for him, as we can. on Jimmy, and the father as the unfeeling, conservative In an effort to shed more light on both Jimmy Carter's disciplinarian. Our inquiries suggest that the reality may born-again experience and his feelings about family, we be much more ambivalent. Carter's father can also be use here the insights of psychohistory. Since psycho- seen as caring, his mother as self-righteous. history consists of the application of psychoanalytic-that Not too long ago, an investigation like ours would have is, Freudian-concepts to political figures, a classic psycho- triggered a hostility about "shrinks," "psychojournalists," logical biography would concentrate on the first-born ex- and "the president's analysts." But many Americans have perience: infancy and early childhood. However, recent become increasingly well informed about psychological followers of Freud, notably Erik H. Erikson and the ego processes-including Carter. When we talked to him he psychologists, give close attention as well to other life had been reading Doris Kearns's psychohistory Lyndon stages, such as the "identity crisis" of adolescence and Johnson & the American Dream. Psychological analysis need not reduce active adult men and women to oral, Bruce Mazlish is a professor of history at Massachusetts Insti- anal, or genital "stages." Sophisticated audiences also un- tute of Technology and author of biographies of Richard Nixon, and John Stuart Mill and James Mill. His psychohistory derstand that many adult "problems" are part of the of Henry Kissinger, Kissinger: The European Mind in Ameri- normal pattern of development. SOLOMON /BLACK can Policy, will be published in September by Basic Books. What follows, then, is a part of a psychohistorical Edwin Diamond is a senior lecturer in the political science work-in-progress, a story explained-or at least somewhat department at MIT and a contributing editor of New York. illuminated-with the help of Freud and Erikson. 26 NEW YORK/AUGUST 30, 1976 Carter after his convention victory last month: From trauma and tears, a new sense of serenity. " She said, 'Jimmy, you don't sound like the same person. You sound intoxicated. And I said, 'Well, in a way I am' " 'God's Influence' work for about a year" around Massa- that I hadn't experienced be- chusetts and Pennsylvania. fore. I felt then and ever since In September, 1966, Jimmy Carter, Carter's most recent account of his experience, as told to us, doesn't so that when I meet each individual age 41, lost the Democratic primary election for the Georgia governorship much contradict this version as pick it person, they are important to by 20,000 votes out of a million or so up where Ruth leaves off. We had me. I found myself able to say, ballots cast. Some time later, Carter pressed him for the details, time, and circumstances of his born-again experi- "What can I do to make this says, he was attending the Baptist church in Plains, Georgia, when the ence. He replied by offering us what other person's life even more minister gave a sermon with the title he called "very tangible evidence." It enjoyable?"-even people that I "If You Were Arrested for Being a has become central to our inquiry: met on an elevator or in a Christian, Would There Be Enough Evidence to Convict You?" As Carter I went to Lock Haven, Pennsyl- chance encounter on the street. told Bill Moyers in a television inter- vania. I'm not sure about the In the past, I had a natural in- view: "I was going through a state in year May, 1967, on what we clination to say, "What can I get my life then that was a very difficult one. I had run for governor and lost. call a pioneer mission. There from them?" Or, to wipe them Everything I did was not gratifying. had been identified, before I out of my mind. Now it's just a When I succeeded in something, it was went, 100 families of non- different feeling altogether a horrible experience for me. I'd never believers. I was assigned the hard for me to express it. done much for other people. I was al- ways thinking about myself. " And responsibility along with an- so his answer to the question in the other person, Milo Pennington, Inner Meanings sermon was "No." From that time, from Texas, to go into these Carter added, "I changed somewhat While the words may come hard for for the better. I formed a much more homes and explain our own faith Carter, we believe he has made, the intimate relationship with Christ. And and seek their conversion. Milo born-again experience accessible and since then, I've had just about like a Pennington was not well-edu- understandable, even for nonbelievers. new life. As far as hatreds, frustrations, Rereading carefully the various ac- cated. He happens to be a peanut I feel at ease with myself." counts of Carter's born-again experi- So goes Carter's public account of farmer—there aren't very many ence, and replaying the tape of our in- the born-again experience. Another ver- of them in Texas-and he did terview three or four times, the inner sion comes from his sister, Ruth Carter the work and talking. It seemed meanings emerge: Stapleton, the third of four children of 1. As a religious experience, the Lillian and James Earl Sr. and, at 46, to me he was the most inept feelings Carter describes are hardly five years younger than her brother person I had ever known in ex- unique. In his own words, Baptists "be- Jimmy. Ruth Stapleton is an author, pressing himself. He fumbled lieve that the first time we're born as evangelist, and faith healer-a psychol- children, it's human life given to us; and didn't know what to say and ogist of sorts. Her book, The Gift of and when we accept Jesus as our Inner Healing, describes her own psy- I thought, "Oh, I could do Savior it's new life. That's what 'born chic despair in early adulthood after much better. But he had again' means." E. Brooks Holifield, an marriage, four children, and a serious done it before and he was a Emory University historian, explains car accident. that rebirth among Baptists also initi- On an autumn day in 1966, Ruth deeply committed person. ates "a process of personal growth de- Stapleton recalls, she and Jimmy drove signed to impose control over such from Plains to Webster County to go Pennington apparently succeeded in passions as anger, lust, pride, and fear." for a walk in the pine woods. Accord- converting fifteen or twenty families. A comparison of Carter's experience Carter continues: ing to Ruth, "I talked about my aware- with that of another public figure of an- ness of Christ, and I shared with Jim- The whole week was almost a other time, Oliver Cromwell, provides my how it was to come to a place of another context. Cromwell, the great total commitment, the peace and the miracle to me and I felt the sense leader of the seventeenth-century "Pur- joy and the power it brings." He of the presence of God's influ- itan Revolution," wrote of his conver- wanted to know what Ruth had ence in my life. I called my wife sion episode: "You know what my man- that he didn't have. Ruth asked her ner of life hath been. Oh, I lived in and brother whether he would give up his on the phone one night and she loved darkness, and hated the light; I life and everything he had for Christ. said, "Jimmy, you don't sound was a chief, the chief of sinners." Ac- He answered yes. She asked if this in- like the same person. You sound tually, Cromwell's conscious acts of cluded politics. He could not answer sin seem to have been minor derelic- almost like you're intoxi- yes. Ruth says she replied that if that tions: card-playing, some practical were so, he would never find peace. In cated. And I said, "Well, jokes. In Cromwell's case, we can also her recollection he became very emo- in a way I am. It was a new guess at an unconscious fear of uncon- tional and cried. He does not remem- sense of release and assurance troliable anger, either out of narcissistic ber this. Not long after this talk, how- frustrations or out of resentment of ever, Ruth says a born-again Jimmy and peace with myself and a parental authority. But, Cromwell con- Carter "went off and did lay missionary genuine interest in other people cludes, "God had mercy on me." 28 NEW YORK/AUGUST 30, 1976 FORD GERALD Carter talking to voters in New Hampshire last February: An identification with "The People"-with no intermediaries. Carter also seems to exaggerate his Carter have suggested to us that Carter rally as his work shirt and his smile. transgressions, while hiding his anger suffered an "emotional breakdown" of Through the phases of young adult- from himself. In any case Carter, too, some sort after his 1966 defeat. We hood and the approach of maturity, received God's mercy. He was freed know, from his own account, that he men and women are absorbed in their from his sense of sin, whatever its lost some 22 pounds, sending his al- own careers and concerns. Then, at precise nature-and we'll come to that. ready slight frame down to 130 pounds, mid-life, age 35 or 40 or 45, adults He became able "to accept defeat" and and that he was deeply in debt. We typically begin to ask themselves, "to get pleasure out of successes." His can't pretend to know his precise emo- what have I generated, what have I defeat had left him shaken. He had tional state, but what we know of his helped to create? Has my life been failed, badly, for the second time in personal life at the time sounds like productive or stagnant? Can old age his life (the first time, he told us, was one of the normal stages of adulthood. be faced with a sense of integrity-"all when he missed out on a Rhodes schol- Some translations from the confes- in all, I would do this over again"-or arship after Annapolis). In un-Chris- sional to the psychological mode can with feelings of waste and despair? tian fashion, he had wanted to win too help at this point: What legacy or guidance is being left much, for himself and out of pride. Carter told Moyers he recognized for the next generation? Worse, he could not renounce his am- his own "shortcomings and sinfulness. 3. The political interpretation of the bition, as his sister asked. In psychological terms, he was born-again experience has to be our What happened was, first, the valida- depressed. most speculative analysis. Consider that tion, inwardly, of Jimmy Carter's "self- Carter felt filled with pride. "I week in Lock Haven, Pennsylvania. ish" desires and, second, their transfor- was always thinking about myself Here is Jimmy Carter: Annapolis grad- mation. Earlier he felt himself a hypo- The psychoanalytic term for this is uate, nuclear-submarine officer, recent crite. By some "miracle," he was reas- "narcissism." candidate for governor-intelligent, sured of his essential goodness and Carter says that he used people. proud, literate, well spoken. He goes worth. By truly accepting God the Fa- The analyst hears, "I can't love. door-to-door with a poorly educated, ther, through Christ, he also had been Carter says he had "the need to inept elderly man-Pennington, we accepted by God the Father. Such ex- improve. The textbooks talk of learned from other sources, was in his periences are an expected part of the the "crisis of generativity." seventies at the time. The old fumbler Baptist religion. It happens all the time. The conflict between generativity and does all the talking-and it works. 2. As a psychological experience, self-absorption, exemplified, for exam- Converts fifteen sixteen Carter's "rebirth" is also explicable. ple, in Erikson's psychohistory of Mar- twenty the total rolls up. "It's al- Political reporters who have covered tin Luther, seems to fit Carter as natu- most a miracle. Carter is a AUGUST 30, 1976/NEW YORK 29 " Contrary to current notions about his mother, we believe the father to be at least as, and probably more, significant " changed man. He even sounds differ- owes nothing to the politicians, or to As a baby, Jimmy had colic. "He cried ent on the phone. What is the intoxi- Washington; he is his own boss. He a lot," Lillian says. But he was a good cating epiphany? Perhaps it is this: owes everything to the people who baby-"you heard he is perfect," Lil- Carter has been a man of science- vote for him; they have become part of lian said to us with a smile. Still, he had a cultural consolidator, in Erikson's his family. Campaigning in the pri- his problems. First pneumonia, and then, terms. He has integrated the domi- maries, he slept overnight in the homes at age two, he "had colitis and almost nant technological development of his of his supporters; it is part of the shar- died," according to Lillian, who was time-nuclear power-with his own ing experience. Carter's unity with the pregnant at the time. It was only three identity development. And what did people also means that he, like some weeks before her second child, Gloria, Science and Reason and Intellect get family doctor or caring parent, con- was born. Lillian tended her son, him? The voters rejected him! But old stantly takes their pulse-Pat Caddell's changing his diapers constantly be- Pennington is able to reach people around-the-clock polling-and checks cause he was passing so much blood. through feeling and belief. If a reli- up on their feelings. He wants to know In the mid-1920s, most babies with gious missionary-or a political leader what issues might be of the most con- colitis died. But a doctor she had -"gets down" with the people, feels cern to voters. While that may be worked with during her training as a with them, then he can win them over, shrewd politics, it also seems to be nurse gave her the right advice. convert them, lead them. For a politi- psychologically essential to him. Since As for how his parents raised him, cian, that's a miracle. the people are good when not misled, what counts most is what amy re- and know what is good for themselves, members. In Carter's men es, the 'Break Point' it follows, as gospel, that candidates father looms largest. And contrary to do not create the issues. Rather, issues current notions that Lillian, the mother, We have concentrated on what Car- "exist in the minds and hearts of our was the major formative influence, we ter calls his born-again experience, and citizens." By merging with the citizens, believe the father to have been at least what Erikson calls the crisis of genera- Carter enters their minds and hearts. as, and probably more, significant. tivity, because it marks a kind of break The middle-aged Carter obviously His feelings about his father, and his point for Carter-religiously, psycho- solved his psychosocial crisis of gen- mother, were necessarily mixed. Out- logically, and politically. In our own erativity-on many levels. Jimmy and wardly, he worshiped his father, who interview, when we applied the phrase Rosalynn Carter had their fourth child "worked harder than did I or anyone "break point" to the period after the in October of 1967, some fifteen years else and who was excellent ten- governor's race, Carter replied, mildly, after the birth of their third child. He nis player" he could never beat. Jimmy "That's an exaggeration But later won the governorship the next time out says he never considered disobeying he added that, yes, it was a time of a in 1970, surrounding himself with a his father. These feelings were genuine. "psychological problem. Of course, small band of loyal workers in their But with them, we believe, were other we recognize that other, external twenties and thirties. feelings. events during this period in Carter's Still, it wouldn't be very good psy- One night, for example, his parents life helped shape the ways in which chohistory to believe that the 1966 po- had a party for their friends and made he would move to handle the normal litical defeat is enough by itself to so much noise, as he remembers it, developmental stages of life. He en- explain Carter's "new life." Our hunch, that he went outside to sleep in his countered, for example, corrupt, selfish pending more work, is that Jimmy tree house. Later, after the guests de- interests as a state senator in Georgia Carter's rebirth in 1966-67 was actual- parted, his father called to him, but in the sixties. This, too, influenced his ly a third birth. There was, of course, the young boy refused to answer. "The "world view." The lesson was that the his actual "first" birth in 1924. Then, next morning," we are told in Why ordinary people were good, but often there was a kind of "second" birth at Not the Best?, "I received one of the misled by unscrupulous, self-seeking, the time of his father's death in 1953. few whippings of my boyhood, all of "entrenched politicians." With the Only later, in the conversion experi- which I remember so well." We sense right leader, the people will "commit" ence of 1966-67, as we have described the suppressed anger-the boy's and themselves, they will pursue the truth. it, did the "third" birth occur. the man's-at his father for what must Carter also learned, as a state senator, have been perceived as an unjust whip- that his ability to perform effective Carter's Three Lives ping. After all, it was his parents who "public service" was limited by the had made the noise. powers above him; he needed to run The first-born Jimmy was very This anger is confirmed for us in for governor to have real power. As much his mother's boy. He was not a the very next paragraph, which says: governor, he learned the limits of that very big baby-seven to seven and "One of the rare times I ever felt des- office in the face of federal controls. a half pounds, Lillian Carter told us. At perately sorry for my father" was Only as president of the United States first she nursed him, but then had to put when he ordered a tailor-made suit of would he have the real power to do him on the bottle. Although trained as a clothes, the first of his life, and it came good-and to serve ordinary people. nurse, she reports that she was con- "twice as large as my father." But, Jimmy Carter's identification with cerned and nervous about her first Carter writes, "no one in the family the people, we believe, is a mystical child, as most mothers are. (With the laughed" when his father tried it union (as was his union with God) later children, she relaxed.) Everything on. This is a strange juxtaposition of There are no intermediaries. This helps had to be sterile. Jimmy was rigidly narratives. Psychologically, however, explain several elements of his dis- scheduled. "I gave him a bottle ex- the story is very much in the right tinctive political style. He is not happy, actly on time." (What was that about place. The boy-man is allowing him- or adept, at delivering prepared the clockwork presidential campaign self to "get back" at his father, to speeches-other people's words. He and Carter's passion for punctuality?) laugh at him safely. By humiliating 30 NEW YORK/AUGUST 30, 1976 ©COPYRIGHT 1975, BROADMAN NASHVILLE, TENN. ALL RESERVED. THE LEDGER-ENQUIRFR/COLUMBUS, : James Earl Sr., as army officer, World War I; Jimmy as navy midshipman, World War II: "I want to be a man like my father. his father in memory, he gives vent of whipping had to go somewhere, and and, by extension, toward politics- to his anger at the unjust whipping. we speculate that it may have become for power is what politics is about, Because the two paragraphs seemed available for resentment against other, even the politics of love-were ob- worrisomely pat as material for a psy- social injustices-and fueled an iden- viously ambivalent. chohistorian, we specifically asked tification with victims of such injus- So, too, would be his feelings toward Carter if he wrote and arranged them, tices. his mother. She never whipped him, rather than, say, Jody Powell, Jerry The importance of the whippings is though she spanked him. Where the Rafshoon, Hal Gulliver, or any of the underlined when, a few pages later in father was "aggressive," she, as a nurse, other editorial hands who may have Why Not the Best?, Carter returns to was clearly the nurturant, caring figure. worked on the book. Carter assured the same theme. His father, he writes, The father seldom read a book, but us they were his words and his para- Jimmy's mother "was an avid reader, graph order. The original manuscript, was a stern disciplinarian and and so was I." Where the father "was he said, was around to prove it. We punished me severely when I quite conservative my mother was have no reason to think he would lie misbehaved. From the time I and is a liberal." And on the critical to us about it. subject of race, it was the mother who Skeptics of another sort may ask, was four years old until I was welcomed Negroes to the house, cared "So what?" What do Carter's fa- fifteen years old, he whipped me for "dark-skinned people," and favored ther's clothes have to do with his pres- six times and I've never forgot- integration. She was also something of idential candidacy? ten any of those impressive a dowager of the town; in recent years One answer would be that this re- she has driven a series of Cadillacs and membered episode, trivial and "per- experiences. Oldses around the red-clay and black- sonal" in itself, suggests something Extraordinary, it seems to us, to re- top roads. These days she holds court about the formation of Jimmy Carter's member the exact number of whip- on the platform of the train station attitudes toward authority and disci- pings over the course of eleven years. that serves as her son's presidential pline. In our view, he mainly accepted We can make sense of this if we realize headquarters, as tourists and reporters his father's "authoritarianism-rather that what is trivial for a grown-up is snap her picture and interview her. than revolt against it-and internalized momentous for young children, magni- Jimmy Carter obviously took on it. This helps explain the "conserva- fied beyond "real reality" in their many of his mother's values, as well tive," "disciplinarian" side of Jimmy "psychic reality." as his father's. The danger with the Carter (further developed later in the Jimmy's feelings toward his father mother was that a sense of right could navy). Yet the anger at the "injustice" and thus toward authority and power become a feeling of self-righteousness. AUGUST 30, 1976/NEW YORK 31 " It is a salvation in the classic pattern. Luther and Gandhi, the Eriksonian heroes, had made their quest political acts " At its best, of course, the mother's love with his I began to think ter. He can identify with his father would temper the father's discipline. We see a classic case of the child inte- about the relative significance of and mother but especially his father- earn redemption, and secure for him- grating aspects of both parents, in his life and mine. He was an self the love that supports self-esteem. what is, of course, a unique mixture integral part of the community, Psychologically, this really becomes a called Jimmy Carter. That mixture and had a wide range of varied "new life." changed again in 1953, when 29-year- old Jimmy Carter came back from the but interrelated interests and Character-and Risk navy and "took over" from his father, responsibilities. He was his own who had just died. boss. Can such tentative facts and inter- pretations serve as a basis for making Death-and Life His father's death apparently stirred any judgments about Jimmy Carter's strange feelings in Jimmy Carter. Had character? We believe so. Jimmy Carter began his second "new he misjudged the "stern" father? (They There would seem to be at least life" when his father died of cancer. had argued vehemently about race once some reason for concern. In Carter's (In telling Carter's story this way, and could never talk about the subject public smile and his private bal we recognize that important events again; they saw very little of each ing, some see the "macho" are tumbling by, like the pages of a other for the eleven years from 1942 to Kennedy or Lyndon Johnson (the south- calendar used to show the "passage of 1953.) Feelings of guilt and a need ern provincial), or even Thomas E. time" in a 1940s movie: Plains, An- for redemption, both of himself and of Dewey (the overconfident, arrogant napolis, marriage to Rosalynn-so like his father, would be natural. In any little man on the wedding cake). Ruth in many ways-the substitute case, Carter resigned from the navy To some people, to take the scariest "family" of the submarine service, the and returned to Plains. concern, Carter looks like Richard substitute "father figure" of Admiral By the mid-1960s, Carter had become Nixon. In the life of each man there Hyman Rickover-all of these are rich everything his father could have wanted appears to be the "liberal" mother and topics for a full psychohistory.) In for him: farmer, businessman, Sunday- the "conservative" father. Nixon, too, this second life, Carter, then approach- school teacher, state legislator yet had a "conversion" experience, one go- ing his thirtieth birthday, returned to he still sensed that he had failed. ing back to his fourteenth year, when his basic identification with James Earl Why? First of all, as Carter himself his father took him to a revivalist meet- Carter Sr.-an identity he had earlier suggested to us, it seems that he wasn't ing in Los Angeles. Both men believe avoided by leaving home and entering enough like his father. "My daddy in the work ethic. Both are tenacious. the navy. worked hard and was a meticulous Both are supposedly humorless. Both In 1953, as Jimmy Carter recalls, he planner like me," Jimmy Carter said, talk much about roots. Both reassure had "no alternative" except to return "but he was an exuberant man. He had audiences of their "honesty." Nixon home, despite Rosalynn's strong opposi- an enjoyable life, like my brother said, "I am not a crook." Carter says, tion. His mother, Lillian, explains it as Billy. If you know my brother Billy, "I will never lie to you." a matter of economic necessity: The then you've taken a major step toward But we believe these supposed re- family peanut-growing and warehous- knowing my father. semblances are superficial or mislead- ing business was in bad shape. There We know Billy. Everyone who gets ing-or both. Nixon talked religion, is also a deeper explanation. Accord- to Plains knows Billy Carter. He is a but, on the available evidence, he was ing to Ruth Carter Stapleton, on the warm, generous person-a good ole boy not guided by it. Carter really has roots. day their father died, Jimmy had -with a four-wheel-drive van, and a He can drive seven miles down the to notify people around Plains: "We beer can in his hand before 11 A.M. He macadam road and show you family started out in the early morning. We hasn't been inside a church in twenty gravestones dating from the 1800s. He went to black and white." To their sur- years. A college dropout. He could moves out from the South, not away prise they found out, talking to the not wait to break out of Plains to join from it. Nixon's father was a failed family's friends, that their father had the marines. At 4 A.M. the morning man. Nixon's anger and hate ran so supplemented the income of many after his high-school graduation, he was deep and threateningly he had to deny families of both races or helped pay on his way to boot camp. "I wanted their existence completely; he never for college expenses. Jimmy was visibly to be badass," he told us. came to terms with them. shaken by this knowledge. Ruth says Billy Carter and James Earl Carter In James David Barber's study of it was "one of the few times I ever Sr. knew how to relax, to take defeat. presidential character-which Carter saw Jimmy cry." (She seems to be Jimmy Carter didn't know how. He was says is the best book on politics he's there when it happens.) "He began too proud, too self-righteous. And so he ever read-Richard Nixon was classified to review his life," she remembers, failed-himself and his father. as an Active/Negative president. Ac- and "he said, 'I want to be a man And then he is accepted by God cording to Barber, this character type like my father." the Father, and by his earthly father. works hard and long at being president, In Jimmy Carter's account, as his It is a salvation in the classic pattern but, basically, Active/Negatives are psy- father lay dying, hundreds of people of psychohistory. Luther and Gandhi, chologically rigid and eternally dissatis- came to speak to Carter Sr.: the Eriksonian heroes, had made their fied with their accomplishments. They quest for salvation political acts. In nush too much. They are headed at It was obvious that he meant solving their personal problems, they some point for disaster. Active/Posi- turned their faith to service and leader- much to them, and it caused me tives, on the other hand, like Franklin ship. So, too, with Carter. Delano Roosevelt, work hard and enjoy to compare my prospective life Politics means a fulfillment for Car- their White House jobs. 32 NEW YORK/AUGUST 30, 1976 WIDE WORLD WIDE WORLD WIDE WORLD Carrer Stapleton Ruth, Jimmy, and Billy Carter: From the sister, the lesson of commitment. From the brother, the lesson of enjoyment. There was, as it happens, another plicated Jimmy's identity with his par- A bottom line of sorts, then: On the Active/Negative president with more ents. His character was formed, as with basis of the present evidence, our an- than surface resemblances to Jimmy all of us, most fatefully in his family. swer would be that Carter has come Carter: Woodrow Wilson. But what kind of president, a public unusually close to that perilous Active/ Like Carter, Wilson was a South- man, will he make if elected? Active/ Negative character type. Almost mi- erner. Wilson, too, was guided by his Negative, like Wilson, or Active/Posi- raculously, he has saved himself from religion, strict Presbyterianism (his tive, like FDR? The answer depends, in falling over the line. Through the in- father was a minister). Elected as gov- part, on a review of his political record, tense self-scrutiny expressed in his born- ernor of New Jersey by the "conserva- but, even more important, on how con- again experience-and still going on- tive" interests, Wilson surprised them vinced we are of the validity of what Jimmy Carter has learned two car- by his liberal administration. Like Car- we have called his "third" birth. Here, dinal lessons: the ability to love others ter, Wilson also proclaimed himself in a kind of mystical experience, he and the ability to admit mistakes, to independent of party "bosses" and the apparently found himself-actually, a accept failure. He has won his "new "interests." He, too, professed direct "new" self-as well as a new vision of life" by grim effort, though he may suf- links to the American people. Angered the American people. fer occasional relapses-what psychoan- at the Senate's refusal to ratify the In our view, too, Carter's greatest alysts would call regressions. His tem- League of Nations covenant as he pro- present strength-his intimate union per breaks through at times; he still posed it, Wilson took his campaign with the American people-could be can be "prideful." Yet Jimmy Carter directly to the people, lost his battle his greatest potential weakness. He has become a mature person of sereni- -and his health. When he couldn't needs this sense of communion, of one- ty, one with a sense of community that reach the people, he felt crushed spir- ness with the body politic, in the Wil- communicates itself readily to the pub- itually. son mode. Will he feel frustrated and lic. What in others might combine to James Earl Sr., Lillian Kennedy, thwarted by any intermediary agents make fatal character flaws have in him Johnson, FDR, Nixon, Wilson which -the Congress, the courts, the press- become, so far, strengths. one is the real Jimmy Carter? Jimmy, that come between him as president and From the psychohistorian's perspec- of course, is himself. His feelings to- "his" people? Will he, when a major tive, the first-born Carter would not be ward his mother and father and their issue is joined, accept counterbalanc- running for national office. The second- use of authority, love, and discipline ing powers if he should feel, as Wilson born Carter would be a marginal can- must be understood in the larger con- did, that he has a mandate directly from didate. But the third-born Carter, at text of the American South, where race the electorate? For us, that's the char- least provisionally, would get a good polarized political attitudes and com- acter issue. character reference. AUGUST 30, 1976/NEW YORK 33 11 Carter Campaign Image Raising the personality issue By KEVIN P. PHILLIPS Still, say what you like about President Ford, he now stands before us as the sole candidate already Turnabout is fair play, so it's a psychologically certified by hostile partisans, as well as by little hard to agree with Jimmy two safe years in office. If Mr. Nice Guy from Grand Carter's angry protest that the Rapids ever tried to be a man on a white horse, he'd prob- Republicans are committing an ably fall off, and then grin in embarrassment. outrage by attacking him personally rather than discussing In contrast, Jimmy Carter has left a trail of personal jobs or economic policy. tactics, traits and remarks that ought to be catnip for psycho-historians. To start with, he can't stand to lose. Af- After all, emphasis upon ter his 1966 Georgia gubernatorial primary defeat, Carter personal trust rather than specific had something of a breakdown, and then came his big issues was the Georgian's own religious experience. He still won't describe it, except to game in the Spring primaries, and say it "was not a profound stroke or miracle. It was not a he played it coolly and well. From voice from heaven. It was not mysterious." New Hampshire on, the big issues have never been the big issue. Jimmy Carter has. Or rather Jimmy Carter's He's tightly wound and intensely disciplined, but OC- casionally a bad temper breaks free. To guard his self character, honesty and leadership capacities. control, candidate Carter has forsworn liquor for the dura- Thus, when Vice President Nelson Rockefeller and tion of the campaign, reportedly declining even a cold beer. As for power and release, back in March, he told a Wash- Texas GOP Sen. John Tower start flinging verbal hatchets ington Post interviewer that he owned and listened to like "ruthless," "dictator" and "messiah" at Carter, they records of surging automobile engines, and that he had may be taking a political risk, but they're also fighting the loved serving on a submarine with its "kind of liberation Democratic nominee on the very field of combat he himself from the restraints of civilized life." marked off in the spring trials. Even friends have openly described him as ruthless. His own mother calls him "a cat with steel claws" and What's more, listening to Carter, you'd think that in- senior advisor Charles Kirbo tells about how Carter quiry into personal character and ego drives of presidential couldn't wait to get to the office to fire people in his first candidates ought to be out of bounds. Not so. After a months as governor. Surely all this is grounds for some of decade of severe character-ego problems in two presidents, that analysis reporter Otten was talking about? Lyndon Johnson and Richrd Nixon, some pre-election in- quiry is clearly in order. Yet press neglect has been woeful, As for the labels of "dictator" and "Messiah," Carter Only the other day, Allen Otten of The Wall Street Journal does fit some yardsticks applied to Oliver Cromwell, Lenin belabored his colleagues: "Perhaps the greatest omission and others by psycho-historian Bruce Mazlish in his new has been the press's failure to attempt any broad analysis study of "The Revolutionary Ascetic." Among the qualities of each candidate's character." such men share are ruthlessness, puritanism, intensity and iron self-discipline. Paradoxically, only three years ago, both the press and the Democratic party were actively encouraging exam- However, a caution is in order: if the Republicans want ination of the psychological and emotional history of a to charge Carter with being a Chattahoochee River Crom- man who might be in line for the presidency. That man well, a likeness also seen by some liberals, they had better was Gerald Ford, and during Congress' autumn, 1973, vice do so with sophistication, presenting careful psychological presidential confirmation hearings, New York psychiatrist and comparative historical analysis. If they merely indulge Arnold Hutschnecker was brought to Washington to discuss in shallow, intermittent namecalling, then I think Jimmy rumors and reports that he had treated Mr. Ford during a Carter's evaluation will be correct. The American people period of difficulty. It was a false alarm. are likely to resent it. Boston Herald American, (8/18/76) CARTER: SOUTHERN APPEAL Carter The los Ange les Times, April 76 Carter's Southern Comfort 8. FORD BY GEORGE F. WILL WASHINGTON-The approach of their sissippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, North Ca- GERALD convention is going to concentrate many rolina, South Carolina. They have 91 electoral LIBRARY Democrats' minds on the fact that one object votes. A Republican candidate needs to start of the preconvention steeplechase is to identi- with a realistic hope of carrying a substantial iv a candidate who can win in November. number of Southern electoral votez to com- Soon the was of this idea will lap like an 11'- pensate for his weakness in the larger states. resistible tide at the origes of the Democratic Otherwise, he starts with more weight in his Party's mind, and it may work to Jimmy Car- saddle than Secretariat could carry. er's advantage. But Carter would start seeking the South's To win requires 270 of the 538 electoral electoral votes with the special advantage of votes. Presulent Ford might have a more dif- a native son in a region that still cares (as, ficult time winning that total against Carter say, the East does not) about having its dis- than against any of Carter's rivals. The nom- tinctive nature acknowledged and accepted. nation of Carter might confer on the Demo- More than any other region. the South still is, cratic Party an effortless "Southern strategy." in fact. a region with a sense of itself. a "mind After their 1960 defeat. some Republicans of its own." The inexpressibly tedious recent cudgeled their brains and produced the brouhaha about Carter's "ethnic purity" re- that 314 that a Republican presidential candi- mark surely heightened Southern awareness dacy is not competitive unless it has substan- of the fact that vocal non-Southerners still re- tial appeal in the South This idea was. and is. gard Southerners as faintly suspect, even dis- far more valid than the rubbishy theory of an agrecable. "emerzing Republican majority" with which A Southerner does not need to be as sensi- it originally was entangled. To understand tive as the Jodrell Bank anterma to detect why, first look away from deep Dixie. anti-Southern prejudice in the jubilant assault Today, Democrats hold governorships in S on Carter as a result of his clumsy expression of the 10 largest states: California. New York, of a housing policy that differs not at all from Pennsylvania. Illinois, New Jersey, Massa- national policy or from his rivals' views. Sud- chasetts, Texas, Florida. These states have denly. on the basis of those few words, it ne- 213 electoral votes. If in 1974 a few thousand came permissible for Carter's critics (most of votes had gone the other way in Ohio and them white) to suggest that Carter is a racist. Marigan (25 and 21 electoral votes, respec- One critic told me that the words prove that tively), Democrats would have all 10 gover- Carter is a "reckdivist"-that is. a racist, who norships. once may have been cured, but whose cure In these 10 states with 259 electoral votes has lapsed. Note the assumption: Southerners (11 short of the winning sum). Democrats in are "hy nature" afflicted with the disease of 1974 elected 162 representative the GOP racism. just 77, a better than 2-1 Democratic advan- It used to be said that anti-Catholicism was tage In addition, in 1072 George McGovern the "anti-Seraltism of the intellectuals": It proved that it is impossible for any Democrat was the "respectable" bigotry. Today. anti- with a body temperature of 98.6 degrees to Southern sentiment is the "respectable Me- lose the District of Columbia's three electoral Carthyian." Among a significant number of votes. (McGovern got 785 of the District Americans (predominantly white, Northern. vote.) liberal) it is good form to assume the worst of Southerners, to casually impute to them vi- Given the disparity between the strengths cious views on race. of the two partics in this bloc, It is sufe to as- If many Southerners take personally the at- sume that the Republican presidential candi- tempted mugging of Carter on the matter of date generally enters the competition there "ethnic purity," and they have a right to do with the odds against him winning a majority so, it will only enhance his candidacy as a of the electoral votes. "cause" in his region. And without substantial extrating Southern strength in that region, the Ford candidacy Lourshind. ":- will be a lost cause. Election: Comment C-21 Can Ex-sub Skipper Run Ship of State? (By Eleanor Randolph, excerpted, Chicago Tribune) Jimmy Carter, who now wants to run the country, was only governor of Georgia for four years, from 1970 to 1974, because state law doesn't allow governors to succeed themselves. But in that short time, the politician-nuclear physicist peanut farmer earned a striking reputation in his home state. Some people, including old statehouse politicians call him "butt-headed." Some, like a determined young conserva- tionist who got Carter's help in trying to save Atlanta's trees, call him strong-willed and principled. In the various assessments by Georgians who watched Carter as governor and predict what he would be like as President, he is honest, determined, opportunistic, inflexible, tough, high and mighty, and sincere. He is a loner who surrounds himself with young aides instead of a few old friends. He is a kind of self-ordained Sir Lancelot who "thinks God is on his side and doesn't give a damn who's on the other." For those who disagreed with Carter, he became more than a standard political adversary. He was an enemy. For those who liked what he said and encouraged him to run for the Democratic nomination for President, Jimmy Carter would be the best chief executive since Harry Truman. In spite of differences with most state legislators, Carter got 90 percent of his programs passed. And the one program that the candidate from Plains, Ga., always mentions on the campaign trail is his reorganization of the Georgia state government. Carter boasts that he reduced 200 agencies of the Georgia bureaucracy to 22 -- a dramatic change that increased the ef- ficiency and cut the cost of state government. If elected, Carter promises that he could carve the federal government's 1,900 agencies down to 200. -- (2/11/76) Election Comment Carter's strong showing surprises friends, foes alike in Georgia By Ted Bryant gubernatorial races, but the two parted Staff Writer ways after Carter made accusations about the speaker's dealings with the relationship with the General Assem- ATLANTA-Weaving through the state pardon and parole board during bly, the House in particular. and the rush hour traffic on Peachtree-st, the the last year of the governor's adminis- failure of some legislation to pass. cab driver, as cab drivers are prone to tration. They have shaken hands once The speaker, however, leaves the im- do, summed up the political situation in since then, Murphy said. pression that he wanted to compromise one pithy statement: Going so far as to say he'll support in favor of big business and the points "Carter's the man. Everybody's say. Carter if he wins the nomination, Mur- he used to criticize Carter would be ing good things about him, SO he must phy predicts Carter will take the Geor- used by others to praise him. be doing something right." gia primary, at least partially on a vote On consumer protection, for exam- While it doesn't tell the full story, the of Georgians supporting their own. If he's right, and polls show he is, that ple, Murphy said Carter's proposals cabdriver's summation is close. Not everybody in Georgia is saying eliminates one threat that was hanging would have put merchants out of busi- ness, a phrase that often crops up from good things about Jimmy Carter, but over the Carter campaign a few months not so many are saying bad things any- ago-the possibility of losing his home opponents of meaningful consumer state. protection or environmental legisla- more. tion. When Jimmy Carter announced in But Murphy still gives a poor rating July, 1974, that he would run for presi- to Carter's performance in the gover- Murphy also blames Carter for leav- nor's office. That only makes him one of ing the state in poor financial condition dent two years later, an Atlanta news- -$135 million had to be cut from the paper editor thanked him for providing many Georgia political activists who a good laugh just when Georgians need- have definite opinions about the former budget last year, the first year of the new administration, and another $55 it. governor, some willing to be quoted and million this year. some not. The thinking inside Georgia's politi- Carter supporters, however, say cal structure was that the former Geor- Carter has picked up the support of Georgia was hit hard by recession dur- gia governor couldn't be elected in his the state's lieutenant governor and attorney general by outright endorse- ing the last two years and the resulting home state again. tax loss was to blame for the budget Now. there appears to be no doubt at ment. According to an aide to Gov. trimming. all that the Plains, Ga., peanut farmer George Busbee, Carter is likely to get Murphy also contends that Carter's and businessman not only will sweep the governor as an active worker after highly-touted reorganization of state Georgia's May 4 primary, but his band- the Georgia primary. government is costing Georgia taxpay- wagon is rolling toward Alabama An aide to Atlanta's black mayor, ers $175 million a year and said the where it could-not likely, but just Maynard Jackson, said the mayor also reorganization bunched up about 50 per possibly-upset George Wallace and was willing to endorse Carter before the cent of all state employes under the pick up some national convention dele- "ethnic purity" statement of two weeks broad state department of human re- gates on the same day in May. ago, but has now backed off. sources. Just a few weeks ago, any thought of Carter beating Wallace in Alabama "That sent tremors through the black "We're really just trying to figure out would have been as funny as his an- leadership," Jackson's aide said. where everything is," Murphy said. nouncement in 1974. One highly placed spokesman for the He also claims Carter approved But instead of laughing, Georgians, Democratic party in Georgia compared raises for 75 percent of the state em- both friendly and unfriendly toward Carter to former President Nixon in one ployes making $10,000 or more without Carter's campaign, are showing a sin- respect, a continuing vengeance toward the General Assembly's knowledge, but gle emotion-surprise. former political enemies. fewer than 15 per cent of those making Few dreamed six months ago that the He never attempted to make up with under $10,000 had raises. former governor could be leading the those who opposed him in the 1970 Carter's record in Georgia, like that Democratic field in quest of delegates gubernatorial race, the source said. of any governor, is being praised and across the nation and be on the verge of condemned at the same time, mostly building an even larger head of steam if The feeling among many party lead- depending on the politics of the person he wins big in Pennsylvania next week. ers and elected officials, down to the talking. county level, is one of "apprehension, a Even Tom Murphy, the crusty speak- great big game of waiting and watch- Regardless of how it will go down in er of the Georgia House of Representa- ing," according to the spokesman, who history, however, the record probably will be discussed in Alabama during the tives who makes no secret of his dislike asked not to be quoted by name. next two weeks, particularly if Wallace for Carter, admits, "He's surprised all Murphy was particularly critical of decides to do much campaigning to de- of us in Georgia very much." the former governor's refusal to com- fend himself here. Carter has been dis- Murphy supported Carter in his two promise, saying it resulted in a poor cussing Wallace's record since the campaign's early beginnings. Birmingham Post-Herald, 4/19/76 The Constitution William Safire Rolling With the Carterwagon WASHINGTON - Jimmy Carter is a running mate like keep-it-flowing insulate the Fed from political domi- no longer merely the Democratic Gurunor Jerry Brown. (Neither Hu- nation. frontrunner. With Pennsylvania in his bert Humphrey nor Scoop Jackson is Although giving lip service to the pocket, he is now likely to be interested in number two, Fed's independence - necessary, the likely Demo- nor is Carter likely to hold still for a while Burns roams - the Carter plan cratic presiden- wild card like Ted Kennedy.) to give a President "his own chair- tial nominee, an On previous form, Carter is more man" would force the presently inde- Emergence that likely to play it safe with the wide- pendent Fed to share a "joint respon- has different ef- spectrum approach, moving left and sibility" with Treasury and OMB to fects on several to an experienced legislator, rather issue a "coordinated report that their groups: than press his antipolitical strength policies are mutually consistent." 1. THE NEW with another young governor. Monetary policy, now wisely decen- "OUTS". The old tralized, would be controlled more Democratic 3. THE IMMEDIATE AD- establishment VERSARY. the media (or, if you tightly by the White House in Carter's like us, the press) will shift gears to politicization. "Ins" are, at the moment, the new "Outs". They will deal with the Emergence. Ever since Such positions are now considered MEGO - my eyes glaze over - but coalesce to form the sort of desperate R. W. Apple Jr. of The New York one day soon this, and other ideas, stop-movement that Nelson Rockefel- Times reported last year that the will be seized upon as typical of White ler threw together behind William Carter campaign was taking hold, the House power grabs worthy of detailed Scranton in 1964 to stop Goldwater, ensuing reaction has ranged from a discussion by a man with a 50-50 and with the same meager result. profound distrust of an unwounded pol chance of going all the way. But the real political purpose of a jesting at scars to a glee at the pros- 4. THE ULTIMATE ADVERSARY. stop-movement is often not SO much pect of writing about somebody al- The fact of a center-right, cool South- to derail a moving bandwagon as to most as deliciously remote as the de- erner as the Domocratic nomlnee induce its riders to treat kindly with parted Nixon. powerfully concentrates the mind of the polls not yet aboard. The ousted Now, however, the same seductive the would-be Republican nominee. powers need to make a show of mystery turns into "the fuzziness From Texas to California in the com- strength in order to be able to acqui- issue." To show that he is not fuzzy on ing month, Reagan will be making the esce in dignity. bread-and-butter issues, Carter re- point that his Southern and Western cently issued an economic position appeal is needed to turn back Carter, 2. THE NEW INS. Carter and his paper. It was ignored, of course, as while Ford will be stirring up talk of people, confronted with the impres- position papers are supposed to be; a sun-belted running mate to counter sion of their own inevitabliity, are they are intended to be tangible evi- the Carterites. likely to adopt new tactics Having dence of unfuzziness, to be pointed to And who might that be? At private stressed the outsider image, they will now become more absorbent and less in interviews as "thoughtful backup", gatherings, Nelson Rockefeller - but not to be examined so soon. After after hinting darkly at Reds under worrisome to insiders. They will alter- the Emergence, however, the press senatorial beds - has been warning nate the stick (You bosses better not will mine the papers for contradic- his friends about a tall, silver-haired gang up) with the carrot (Regulars tions, for a dangerously new idea. Texan that he thinks is plotting to suc- are welcome). ceed him as Vice President. In his economic paper, for example, They will be faced with a strategic Carter puts forward the notion that Considering the way Republican decision: to reach leftward for a tradi- the chairman of the Federal Reserve conventions react to Rockefeller de- tional liberal Vice President, like Mo Board be appointed to a term "co-ter- sires, it could be that Carter Emer- Udall or Fritz Mondale, or to gamble minous with the President's" - not gence could well be followed by the on an all-outsider, all-new ticket, with overlapping, as it presently is, to help comeback of John Connally. Busing: Comment C-4 Ford did. Second, Ford had the Massachusetts primary locked up and, at the time, appeared to be in no political trouble at all. The result of this political gambit has been to raise the hopes of Bostonians only to dash them again two weeks later. Such things cause frustration and anger and give added impetus to the more militant, violent-prone segments of the anti-busing movement. On the other hand, the situation is not without its brighter side. In less than two years, the Boston anti-busing movement has become so influential that it has reached the highest office of the land. This bodes well for the future. We may have been rebuffed this time, but there is clear progress here. As the political organization and strength develop, the truly and effective political victories will come. My guess is that, not in 1976 but probably by 1978, the anti-busing forces will be able to effect changes on both the local and national stages. Then see things happen. -- (6/2/76) Ford Riding the School Bus (Editorial, excerpted, Montgomery Advertiser) It may be just a campaign ploy, or President Ford may really be serious about the matter; but despite his reasons, he's going to find himself mired down once he gets both feet into the busing issue. With Jimmy Carter's popularity in Dixie, the President may want an issue that might be popular to the Solid South. A strong anti-busing stand could also endear the President to sections of the North, where busing to achieve integration has all but destroyed public education. But there is a strong element of liberals and blacks in this country who could never stand for waffling on the issue. The whites who support the monster generally have their children in all-white schools, so its a moral issue rather than a practical matter with them. The Ford plan would end some of the judicial arrogance that has, in some cases, destroyed public school systems. It would take a more practical approach to the matter. As we read reports of the President's proposal, it would follow much of the path taken by the Civil Rights Act. However, this document has been ignored in many cases by federal judges. So, what's to keep them from doing the same to the Ford plan? We have reservations about the President's motives, and also about his chances for success. Is this the action of a sincere, or a desperate man? -- (6/4/76) Carter 1976 In contrast, Carter has come from The Battle nowhere and challenged the old Democrats who are left; yet, here were Carter and Connally together at the Gridiron, talking for the two major For the parties that didn't choose them or want them. Their remarks were off the record, but seldom in the long X history of the Gridiron or the Washing- South ton political Establishment has there been a more bizarre personal con- 4-4-76 frontation. It is interesting and maybe signifi- D By James NTHING Reston cant that the other major candidates for the Presidency declined invitations WASHINGTON, April 3 - Pete to appear on this occasion. Former Lisagor of The Chicago Daily News, Governor Reagan of California was the who may be the best newspaper re- natural choice as spokesman for the porter and wisest television com- Republican Party, and this would have mentator in this town, poked fun at seemed to be the ideal occasion for the Washington Establishment here his ideological and theatrical talents, this weekend. but he passed it up. Washington, he said, quoting Mark Jimmy Carter, on the other. hand, Twain, was a city which believes that never passes up any invitation, if it truth is the most valuable thing we gives him a chance to put his person- have, and therefore should be used ality and political arguments on the very sparingly. Three men could keep line, particularly here in Washington a secret, he added, supporting Ben where he has a national audience. Franklin, if two of them are dead. Normally, the Gridiron weekend has As president of the Gridiron Club, no political significance, but in Presi- which may be the last reluctant rem- dential election years, these annual nant of the old Washington Establish- meetings of candidates, reporters, ment, Lisagor was arguing almost sadly publishers and their guest can be that what the capital needed was a important. sense of humor and a sense of history. Presidential candidates cannot win For 91 years the Gridiron Club here but they can lose at this time, and in has been singing the same theme, the confrontation of Carter and Con- usually off key: We are all in trouble, nally, we may be seeing a battle for fussing with one another most of the the South in November. time, but "America is a tune and must Carter's success in the early primary be sung together." elections has fascinated and troubled Most Presidents are not amused by the leaders of both major political these critical and sométimes savage parties here, and the labor union chief- amateur performances. Presidents tains as well. They don't quite know Nixon and Johnson tolerated them at what to do about Carter, don't know first but skipped them and condemned whether they can control him, and them in their last years in the White wonder whether they can stop him. House. President Ford came around The Democratic Party leaders think this weekend and brought his wife. they can hold the Northern industrial "Once in love with Betty," sang the states with Hubert Humphrey or Henry Gridiron chorus, "always in love with Jackson and maybe even with Carter, Betty." but Carter, they feel, may hold the All the Presidential candidates were South and bring them back to the invited to the Gridiron this year, but White House after eight long years. most of them declined. Maybe it's This worries the Republicans at the same time. They have been making WASHINGTON great progress in the old Confederate states of the South, but as Carter wins one primary after another, they are significant that of all the candidates beginning to think of a Southern and noncandidates, Jimmy Carter running mate for Mr. Ford, maybe agreed to speak for the Democrats, Big John Connally of Texas, and former Gov. John Connally of The thought in Washington recently Texas for the Republicans: has been that the Presidential election This tells us something about the is running toward a Ford-Carter race element of accident in American in the fall, or to a Humphrey-Carter politics. Not so long ago, Jimmy ticket against Ford and somebody else Carter was an obscure and controver- who can balance Carter in the South. sial regional figure, and John Connally In any event, the South is finally and was a prominent national personality, clearly coming to the fore, and may balance. with Mr. Carter's 7ay With Issues Bothers VOLLIN MARION, Ill.-For months ed by the partisan loyalties guage to tint an issue, as he "I don't think body wants of those wedded to other candi- did for instance in Tampa, Fla., now, one of the standard com- it more than he does," one ponents of Jimmy Carter's cam- dates; some of it, predictably, at the beginning of last week. friend has suggested. "I don't Asked if he had promised has arisen from the party's think anybody ever has." paign speech has been a litany to nominate Governor Wallace of American heroes ranging traditionally persnickety and at the 1972 Democratic conven- Opinions Obscured from Washington and Lincoln persistently frustrated liberal tion (as Mr. Wallace has often Given that passion and Mr. to Franklin D. Roosevelt and wing; and some of it is coming said he did), Mr. Carter denied Carter's belief that he can win from nothing more rational that was true and said there only by appealing to voters on Martin Luther King Jr. than regional bias. was proof of that denial in the basis of his personal hon- But last week, before all- a telegram he had sent to the esty and not by trying to rally Many Concerned white audiences in racially in- Alabama Governor. them around some ideological transigent areas of the South, Still, there are substantial "I told him I'd have to decline standard, it is little wonder numbers of other Americans the honor of nominating him," that his rhetoric occasionally the soft-spoken Presidential who are simultaneously im- he said as the television obscures his opinions. candidate, who is favored to cameras whirred and the tape In public, for instance, he win the Illinois Democratic pri- pressed with Mr. Carter's prom- recorders registered his every says that he wishes nothing mary on Tuesday, reportedly ise not to lie but sincerely word. more than for Richard M. Nix- concerned about his consum- Did he use the term "honor" omitted the name of the only on, whose impeachment he black man on the list, his fel- mate political instincts and in his telegram? He was asked. urged long before many other expertise. "No, I'm using it now," he people, will live out his life low Georgian, the late Dr. King. said. in peace. In conversations along the "Did you forget" he was Sincerely or sarcastically? "I pray that he will find trail of his campaign, from Tul- asked on Tuesday, the day that "I used it deliberately," he peace," he said in South Caroli- sa to Boston to Miami and said. na several weeks ago. he won the Florida Demo- here to southern Illinois, doz- But sincerely or sarcastically? Later that day in his char- cratic primary by attracting ens of voters have suggested "Well, if it had been. an tered jet. he told a reporter thousands of votes that went that his most formidable asset honor to nominate him," he that he detested, Mr. Nixon. to Gov. George C. Wallace of -the Uncanny knack of sliding said curtly, "I would have nom- "I've always felt that way Alabama four years ago. inated him. Does that answer softly over and around the about him." he said. "Always thorniest issues and questions the question?" will." "No," he said finally, icy-eyed and, for a change, unsmiling. -could be his most trouble- Leaving an Impression Mr. Carter patiently answers some liability. His apparent intention, before all the questions he receives "No, I didn't forget." "I like him," conceded an the questions became so insis- about abortion, gun control, Perhaps it was only a smail insurance salesman in Miami tent, was to leave the impres- amnesty, pardon and other footnote to the voluminous last week. "I honest-to-God like sion that although he had not issues, explaining in great de- him, but I'm not sure why nominated Governor Wallace- tail over and over again, but chronicle of his quest for the and that really bothers me." he nominated Senator Heary skillfully using his words to White House, but it may also Similarly, a middle-aged wo- M. Jackson of Washington, now offend the fewest on either man in Hickory, N.C., said last one of his major opponents-it side. have been an important reflec- tion of the man behind the Tuesday that although she was not an. entirely unaccep- Pardon. Not Amnesty table idea. now familiar grin, a momen- would vote for him in the De- "I think he wants to have "Amnesty for those who de- tarily vivid example of the best mocratic primary there on fected during the Vietnam war March 23, she was "basically it both ways," one Florida poli- uncertain that he is a man tician said last week. It was mean 'What you did was Right,' and the worst of Jimmy Carter. who has a strong opinion on not meant as a criticism. "He he says. "I don't believe "And," he added after a while, "I won't ever do it anything." does most of the time, too," it was right, so I'm against That, of course, is not pre- he added, "better than most amnesty. I'm for a general par- again." of us." don. A pardon means that it It is with just such a blend cisely accurate for Mr. Carter, the 51-year-old, former Gov- If that is true, it is due doesn't matter whether it was of candor and expedience, at least in part to the fact right or wrong, it's forgiven." ernor of Georgia, holds firm along with his tireless energy views on a variety of subjects. that Mr. Carter may be one But that is not what Mr. and superior organization, that of the smartest men to run Carter believes a pardon con- It is in the manner in which for President in a long time. notes, in the case of either Mr. Carter has blossomed from he states them-or keeps silent He is well read and weil edu- Mr. Nixon or Vietnam defec- anonymous obscurity to front- on them-that the percep- cated, an Annapolis graduate tors. He has said he believes running popularity in the gruel- tion of him as opinionless is out of Georgia Tech who is it has an assumption of guilt, ing, grinding race for his par- registered. fission or existentialism. but he does not say that often In most cases, Mr. Carter ty's 1976 Presidential nomina- comfortable discussing nuclear in public. and his aides have admitted, Ail during his campaign. "But I don't give a damn tion. it is a conscious technique, those who have come to know about those issues," he said But that same clash of blunt and in most cases, they have one day in an interview. "You'll honesty and deftly shaded the- suggested. it is bene ficial to him away from his rallies have never get anybody to agree toric has also become the prom- him and the continuing success come away impressed with the on them. You wen't even get ise of the sizable opposition of his campaign, an effort to breadth of his mind-its thor- a consensus on them." gathering against him. and ough quickness, Its eclectic cur- That may be the reason he catch a broad middle ground omitted Dr. King's name from could very well become the of the party and the country. iosity, his litany of herbes last week, essential, overriding issue of Whether their strategy proves They have also been struck promising never to do it again. his campaign. valid, the style seems to suit by the singlemindedness of his And. when he came here Much of that opposition, un- the candidate. Time after time, present pursuit-the profound to Marion, as racially conserva- the has attempted to use lan- been depths of his ambition to be generat- tive a community as any town President of the United States. in Georgia, he was true to his word. He did not leave out Dr. King's name. He omitted the entire list. washington Post, 76 WEAVE Carter Finds His Words Are By Jules Witcover vulnerability. Doggedly, but Washington Post Staff Writer always with his trademark smile, he answers choosing NASHUA, N.H., Jan. 26 - Watched his words more prudently Jimmy Carter, basking in the now, aware of the higher spotlight of his victory in in better education, better stakes for which he is playing. to expect him to come up with Iowa's precinct caucuses, was family planning programs, "It's an understandable such specifics until he winding up his answer to a the availability of con- position to be in," Carter says, becomes President and can question at the Hillsboro traceptive devices for those "and I'm at ease with it. The make a thorough study, such County Democratic Com- who believe in their use, better close scrutiny that I can ex- as he did in Georgia in mittee's presidential can- adoption procedures to didates' night. The question pect to undergo is reasonable reducing the state minimize abortions. and proper, and if I can't bureaucracy from about 300 was on mandatory school "I recognize that abortion in stand up to the scrutiny and agencies to 22, at an initial (busing, which Carter opposes' every instance almost is a and he concluded by saying: Inswer the detailed questions savings of $53 million in a $1.5 result of failure in the that are put to me in a billion budget. "Voluntary integration, yes. prevention of pregnancy or in reasonable way, then I don't "To have this concentrated Forced integration, no." the failure to induce a mother deserve to be President. U "I attention on myself and the And then he sat down, as to want to carry her child to eyebrows arched upward don't feel inadequate, I don't other candidates by the press delivery when an unwanted at this early stage is really throughout the audience. feel threatened' and I think it pregnancy occurs. I do not extraordinary," he says. "I Forced integration? Surely is becoming obvious I'll have favor the constitutional think this is a development Carter could not have meant to be very careful amendment that would that possibly will make the what he said. Even Gov. Carter's "forced in- prohibit all abortions. I do not press more demanding than George Wallace of Alabama tegration" slip was only the favor the constitutional they should be on final an- wasn't advocating opposition latest in a series of difficulties amendment that would give swers on complicated to integration anymore. he has recently encountered the states local option. questions at the early stage of Only moments earlier, the as a consequence of the closer "Within the bounds of the a campaign. when the ac- former governor of Georgia scrutiny being applied to him. present Supreme Court ruling, cumulation of advisers and had said that "the best thing In Manchester, N.H., last I would consider, in answer to the detailed analysis of major that ever happened to the week, he was quoted as calling a question I got in Iowa, a programs is unavailable to the ride South" was passage of the Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D- general law that would take average candidate who federal civil rights acts. Minn.) a "loser" and, after preventive steps to minimize doesn't yet have the stature Clearly, he must have meant the story went out around the dependence on abortion such and the time of the nomince to say "forced busing." country, complained that his as those I've already himself. I'll just have to be Reporters rushed to ask him remarks had been "in- described - education frank in saying I don't know for a clarification, but he was correctly interpreted as being programs, family planning the answer to a question when out of the hall before they critical of my friend," programs, contraceptive the question is too deman- could reach him. Humphrey. He was only advice and availability and ding." The next morning, Carter saying, he explained, that as adoption procedures." The "logical progression" of told reporters that staff aides one who had been "a losing Carter said the confusion events to accomplish his own had informed him of what he candidate in previous elec- arose in Iowa when a Catholic had said. Of course, he said, tions," Humphrey would have reorganization, he says. is to working for another candidate he had misspoken; he was trouble in another general run with the broad outlines of (unnamed by Carter) charged sorry if he had confused election "unless he proves his that a reprinting of this ad- his program as a key part of anyone and he hoped nobody ability to win in the 1976 his platform. vocacy of a "general law" was misunderstood. primaries." Then, as the Democratic "a misleading statement that A few short months ago, had Of greater moment were led some people to believe that nominee, he would try to get Jimmy Carter made such a remarks attributed to him on I favored a constitutional as many Democratic call- slip, few probably would have the subject of abortion in amendment on this subject." didates for Congress as he noticed. Then he was an ob- Iowa, where a, Catholic Such was never his purpose, could to pledge as part of their scure longshot who drew little newspaper and newsletter had Carter said. He dictated his own campaigns to give the press coverage and even less him saying he was against an exact position on abortion for necessary legislative ap- public attention. anti-abortion constitutional public dissemination three proval to the Carter But today, as a result of his amendment, but would sup- days ahead of the Iowa voting housecleaning. As President, early 1976 success, Carter is port "a national statute" that "so there would be no person he says, he would then un- both the man to watch in the might restrict abortions. in Iowa who voted for me with dertake a 2-1/2-to-3-year study great Democratic presidential Opponents in the Iowa a misconception of my of the bureaucracy. elimination contest and a man caucuses accused Carter .of position on abortion." Carter culminating in the who must watch his words intentionally creating a ran strongly ahead of the field reorganization. more carefully, lest he talk murky view of where he stood, in the state's Catholic "I don't care how much I'm himself into trouble. and thus seeming more anti- strongholds, Dubuque and questioned, I don't care how Suddenly, the soft-spoken, abortion to the right-to-life Carroll County. much the reporters desire it, courtly Georgian who had constituency than the other Still another question he says, "there's absolutely no been methodically working candidates, all of whom were beginning to be asked of way to give a definitive an- the nation's precincts like categorically opposed to a Carter, now that he is taken swer" on any of these some political Willy Loman, constitutional amendment. seriously as a candidate, is questions now. "So, no matter finds his route crowded with This is the way Carter now how he can say he will how demanding people might reporters and television explains that flap: reorganize the federal be, it would be a very serious camerainen, poised with tape The confusion in Iowa did bureaucracy as President by violation of my word of honor recorders and notepads to not originate because of any reducing 1,900 federal if I pretended to know these capture and transmit change of position of my own. answers." agencies to about 200 when whatever says. I've had a very consistent That is Carter's answer he declines to say which As he campaigns through position on abortion for agencies will be terminated whether it will be accepted by New Hampshire in quest of several years, I think that the press and public will be and which kept. another victory in the nation's abortion is wrong) I don't determined in the weeks and To this, Carter insists that it first 1976 primary on Feb. 24, think the government should months ahead. is unreasonable for the press he is interrogated repeatedly do anything to encourage on issues of real or suspected abortion. I believe that be taken CARTER: ISSUES Mr. Carter and the Concorde Wash. Post 8/30/76 INDISCUSSING the Concorde during an interview SST because of its "enormous consumption of energy newspaper recently, Gov. Jimmy per passenger, the enormous cost of the necessary in- Carter was quoted as saying, "I do not favor the use vestment and also the risks it contained for the envi- of supersonic aircraft under foreign flags to the ronment, particularly its noise." Only the last of these United States, in so far as Congress and the govern- reasons seems to us relevant to the present debate ment rejected the SST which could have been built in over landing rights for the Concorde in the United the United States." While it may be that the quota- States. The consumption of energy is heavy but it is a tion lost something in the translation-Gov. Carter drop in the bucket of the world's problem. The in- usually doesn't sound quite like that-the general vestment has already been made by the British and idea seems clear. And it is an idea, in our view, that is French governments and, once that was done, they wrong. were entitled to a fair shot at getting some part of There may be legitimate grounds on which to deny that investment back; unfortunately for them, the re- permanent landing rights to the British and French port on the Concorde's early months of operation is for this particular airplane-the tests now being con- not very promising. As for the environmental ques- ducted will provide the evidence. But the fact that tions raised by the Concorde's flights, we continue to the plane was built abroad is not one of them. Con- believe that Secretary of Transportation Coleman gress, after all, never said the SST could not be built was right to give the owners of the plane a chance to in the United States; it only said that the government meet these in actual operation. Whether or not the would not put up money to help build it. Boeing Concorde is to be a permanent part of aviation over could have continued the SST project with other the North Atlantic is a question that ought to be an- money if it or someone else-had thought that swered on the outcome of that trial period, not on ar- course economically sound. guments that related to the decision of the U.S. Con- Mr. Carter went on to explain that he opposed the gress not to finance its American counterpart. INCENTIVA FOR HARD WORK Carter Aide Sees 8/29/96 Edge Declining Even Further The Associated Press dan said they would be pivo- Jimmy Carter's campaign tal only if "Ford destroys FORD manager savs he expects a Jimmy or Jimmy destroys further decline in his candi- Ford. But I don't think either date's lead in the polls, but of those things will happen." welcomes the narrowing mar- Jordan said, however, that GERALDA gin between Carter and Presi- Carter has more at stake. dent Ford as an incentive for "The variable in the debates harder staff work. is not Gerald Ford. It's Hamilton Jordan added that Jimmy Carter," he said. "It's the planned debates between somewhat predictable how Carter and Ford, now under Ford will appear. The ques- discussion, will probably not tion is how good or how bad be as crucial as many people Carter will look in contrast to think, saying "they've already Ford. been hyped up." "A lot of people have made The easy-going 31-year-old a tentative judgment that key aide was interviewed in Carter would be a stronger his spacious but bare office in president, and I think the the new Carter-Mondale na- election will turn on whether tional headquarters on the top that tentative judgment is floor of a modern Atlanta of- confirmed or withdrawn. If fice building. it's confirmed, Jimmy will Jordan said he was not sur- win. If it's withdrawn, Ford prised by the latest Gallup will win." polls showing Carter with Asked how Carter was only a 49-39 per cent lead HAMILTON JORDAN going to prepare for the de- over Ford, compared with a Doubts Debates Pivotal bates, Jordan responded with 62-29 per cent margin after a laugh: "I don't know - the Democratic convention in the moment," he said. "While maybe drain a pond with the late July. they may be able to pick up, issues staff." "It's not pleasant, but we they've probably overreached More seriously, he added, knew it was going to happen," themselves now, just as we "we've not going to hold up he said. "Our poll figures overreached ourselves." the campaign to prepare for after the Democratic conven- But he added he expected the debates. Jimmy is well in- tion were artificially high. We the margin between the candi- formed, he thinks on his feet, were never really in the 60s. dates would stay approxi- he uses the English language "I think the 10-point spread mately the same until the de- very precisely. We're not. is probably where things are bates. going to take 10 days off to now. But I don't expect to see Ford's rise in the polls get ready." it stay at 10 points. I expect it apparently stemmed from the Jordan also said he was not to slide down below that. shift of Reagan Republicans bothered by last week's inten- The decline in the polls, to the President, rather than sive criticism of Carter by however, has had a. positive any decline in Carter support Republican vice presidential effect, Jordan said, "because among other groups or sec- nominee Sen. Robert Dole, it will get people working tions of the country, Caddell who trailed Carter to the harder." said. American Legion convention He said he had cut salaries He also said his polling in Seattle and to the Iowa of all the Carter staffers by showed that the depth of sup- State Fair 10 per cent the day before the port for Carter was stronger Robert Dole has had the interview to "save a little than that for the President. biggest week of his life," Jor- money and for the psychologi "Our vote is much harder dan said with a chuckle. "It cal effect. than Ford's significantly possibly was his best week, All of a sudden, we're in harder,' Caddell said. but I don't think there will be the big offices," he said. Discussing the debates, Jor- a lot more. "They tell us we're going to win the election. We need to get everybody here on edge." Patrick Caddell, Carter's chief pollster, agreed, saying he was "really glad" to see the drop in the polls. "It's hard to run a cam- paign when you try to say to people that 25-point leads are not really going to exist," Caddell said in his little cubi- cle of an office. "Intellectu- ally, the staff agrees with you and nods their heads. But emotionally, they look at these things and feel very good. "It's good it happened sooner than later because it makes people realize there's a campaign. It's nothing we did- n't expect. I'm not worried about it." Caddell said his latest poll- ing gives a few more percent- age points to Carter than the Gallup poil but added it's "roughly in the same ball park." He said he thought Ford had reached his peak strength in the polls, at least for right now. think they're bumping their heads on the ceiling at we hungton 1081 Jone 24 Carder/ Race Rowland Evans and Robert Novak Carter's Positions on Race Hidden by the new Democratic party in Democratic National Chairman Rob- caucus determined to abandon th.- harmony, Jimmy Carter bowed to pres- ert S. Strauss' search for party peace. Kansas City formula and attempt a de sure and agreed-without resistance— Rules committee-Carter campaign facto quota system not bearing that in. to a proposal that black political lead- decisions reversed carefully contrived vidious label. The resulting ingeniou ers hope will revive the discredited ra- formulations, as follows: Requirements proposal, ironically, was patterned cial quota system for convention dele- for "affirmative action" for minority after President Richard M. Nixon's gates. participation in "all party affairs" (not quota system for construction labor. It "Jimmy was mau-maued, is the just national convention delegates); ex- calls for not merely black "participa widely voiced description, using politi- tension of the new judicial council's au- tion" (wording previously insisted 00 cal slang, of what happened last Sun- thority over all party disputes (not just by Strauss) but "representation" and day at Washington's Mayflower Hotel. the national convention); extension of would require state parties to set "spe" In plain English, the new leader of the proportional representation down to cific goals and timetables." Democratic Party followed the pattern the district level in presidential prima- Soft-spoken, urbane mayor Richard of the past in yielding to black de- ries. These proposals, all subject to Hatcher of Gary, Ind., black strategi & mands rather than risk a black walk- floor fights at Madison Square Garden, on party rules, played the mailed-fist- out. The cost, if any, will be paid later. originated in the party's left wing and in-velvet-glove role as he had in Kan: is Whether Carter's acceptance of were rejected during the two-year rule- City. Unless his proposal were adopted, black terms will result in politically cat- writing process ending at the Kansas Dick Hatcher said softly, the blacks astrophic quotas at the 1980 convention City mid-term convention in December would walk out. is a question for the future. What is 1974. Ready for a long. hard fight, the clear now are these points: Carter will But none of this is as symbolically im- blacks were amazed when Carter aid S not risk a confrontation that could pos- portant as what happened on the incen- immediately accepted their propo: sibly undermine his strong base with diary question of racial quotas, parti- down to the last letter. but with this black voters; his centrist image is be- ally responsible for both the conven- stipulation: Everybody should publi- 'v lied by his left-of-center political aides tion chaos and the election debacle in assert this is not a quota system. In fart, making important tactical decisions, 1972. Strauss' crowning achievement as "goals" for black representation set by and the mystery of where Jimmy chairman is that he junked the quota states would probably become a ra l Carter really stands and who he is re- system for 1976 without triggering re- quota just as the 1972 "guidelines" had. mains unsolved. volt from the left. Uncanny occurrences at the rules Although many party regulars and Hard-boiled realists claim Presid nt committee last Sunday, obscured by labor politicians complained at Kansas Carter would never permit the formala widely publicized rejection of a pro- City that Strauss gave too much away adopted at the Mayflower to become posed 50-50 quota for women delegates, to black demands, the quota system reality. That still leaves the question of have had no public discussion and are stayed dead for 1976. Without manda- who Carter really is: opponent of racial only faintly appreciated inside the par- tory quotas, 1976 black delegates as of quotas, appealing to the old Wal' ty. The truth is that, in a few hours' now are down to around 10 per cent vote; or, George McGovern's political time, Carter's agents presided over the from 1972's 15 per cent-reversing a hcir, whose liberal agents approve ra- liquidation of compromise language long-time upward trend. cial quotas? Perhaps a little of both. painstakingly reached over two years Accordingly, the black Democratic 1975, Field Enterprises, Inc. women 8 Part Mon., June 14, 1976 Los Angeles Times would provide rices to homemak- ers who want to ater the job market. -Oppose any constitutional Carter Forms Panel of Women Advisers amendment to ourturn the Supreme Court decision or abortion. Phyllis Schafly, national chairman BY MARLENE CIMONS Civil Service grades or why only mer adviser to a Washington area of Stop ERA ar a supporter of the Times Staff Writer three women have served in a pres- food chain; Carol Tucker Foreman, Republican presdential candidacy of WASHINGTON-Democratic pres- idential Cabinet in our nation's histo- executive director of the Consumer former Californa Gov. Ronald Rea- idential contender Jimmy Carter, de- ry," he said. Federation of America, and Anne. gan, said Sunday she thought Car- claring a commitment to equality for "I will appoint qualified women Cox Chambers, chairman of Atlanta ter's remarks supporting the Equal women in "every area of government early in my administration and in Newspapers, Inc. Rights Amendrient were inappropri- and every aspect of life;" announced substantial numbers-they will not In a statement released in Wash- ate. the formation Sunday of a committee be in a few token positions at the top ington and Georgia, Carter said also of women to advise him on issues of my administration but in jobs of that, as President, he would: and serve as talent scouts for poten- importance throughout the govern- -Support passage of the Equal "It would be outside his jurisdiction tial administration appointments. ment." Rights Amendment as a top priority as President," she said. "The Consti- Members of the new committee in- of his administration. He called the tution gives the amending process to clude Mary E. King, a Carter cam- ERA "not an elitist issue but a very Congress and the state legislatures- The group is called the Committee paign adviser who is president of the basic matter of social justice." the President and governors have no of 51.3% reference to the propor- National Assn. of Women Business part in this process." tion of women in the U.S. population. Owners; Mary Mize Anderson, a for- Mrs. Foreman, a member of the Carter said the women would advise mer Tenncssee state senator; Joan -Enforce laws prohibiting sex dis- him on "not only such traditional erimination in hiring, job advance- new committee, said she was pleased Tobin, a Washington businesswo- women's issues as health and educa- man; Midge Costanza, vice mayor of ment, education, credit and housing. by Carter's statement regarding the tion, but in all issues-war and Rochester, N.Y.; Odessa Komer, vice -Support legislation to end sex "inequities of the tax and Social Sc- peace, the budget and the economy discrimination in health and disabili- curity systems." president of the United Auto Work- and other matters of importance to 'ty insurance. "My husband and I bo th pay into ers; Rep. Patricia Schroeder (D- the Social Security system and when the American people." Colo.); Betty Talmadge, a business- -Support an end to sex discrimin- we retire we can either di aw his or He said committee members would woman and wife of U.S. Sen. Herman ation in the Social Security system mine-whichever is higher -but not also help him find qualified women E. Talmadge (D-Ga.); Eleanor and in income taxes. both," she said. "Because vomen are for high government positions. Holmes Norton, New York City com- --Support child-eare legislation. traditionally paid less than 1 nen, i.e., "I see no reason why women missioner of human rights; Esther flexible hours and the creation of than their husbands, they ( an say should comprise only 2% of the near- Peterson, consumer adviser to Pres- more part-time jobs and the "dis- goodby to their Social Security input. ly 10,000 employes in the top three ident Lyndon B. Johnson, now consu- placed homemakers bill," which Is that fair?" New york TiMes July 12 Mr. Carter's Economics In his well-planned and shrewdly executed campaign facing the nation. He hastens to add that inflation is the for the Democratic Presidential nomination, Governor number two problem and, once the unemployment slack Jimmy Carter has sought to avoid making the two funda- had been taken in, he would reinforce anti-inflation mental mistakes on economic issues that hurt Senator measures, if necessary, with an incomes policy to keep George McGovern so badly in his contest with Richard wage and price actions more in line with the growth of Nixon in 1972. real output One mistake Senator McGovern made was in exposing There is little doubt that the election campaign has himself to attack, however unfair, as a radical populist- already been an intense learning experience for Mr. as a foe of business who, it was alleged, would foul up Carter. He is setting no interest-rate targets; whatever the American economy in his effort to take from the rich populist convictions he may once have had about very (and the middle class) to help the poor. His other basic low interest rates seem to have disappeared into a mistake in the field of economics was to get bogged down broader understanding of the relation of interest rates in the details (imperfectly mastered and presented) of to other economic variables. complex proposals, especially for welfare and tax reform. Mr. Carter has been extremely cautious about disclos- Governor Carter has gone out of his way, over and ing the specifics of programs to reform' the tax system, over, to reassure the business community by stressing his improve the welfare system, aid the cities, strengthen respect for the private sector as the best means of solving Social Security, expand public health programs, conserve national problems. For instance, to get rid of unemploy- energy or develop new resources. His caution appears to ment, he has said that "whenever there is a. choice derive from a desire to avoid exposing himself to the between channeling jobs in the private sector or the opposition of groups who may think they will be hurt by public, I would favor the private." This priority for the particular proposals, when these are revealed piecemeal. private sector has won Mr. Carter the reputation of Having won the Democratic nomination by avoidance being a "conservative"- or at least, more conservative of details and a generally moderate tone, reassuring to than the other Democratic candidates whom he defeated widely diverse groups. Mr. Carter will be understandably in the primaries. tempted to pursue the same tactics during the election Yet a careful look at the entire Carter position dis- campaign against his Republican opponent. In our view, closes that he is not a conservative in the laissez-faire this would be a mistake. sense. He would actively employ public means to solve Although it is not necessary to spell out every detail national problems, and his ranking of problems is of his programs before the election, the country has a dramatically different from that of the Ford Administra- right to know with more exactitude than it now does tion. He has made it clear that he considers unemploy- where Mr. Carter stands on the major economic issues, ment, rather than inflation, the number one problem and how he means to solve them. Democratic Campaign: Comment Abroad, the Question Is Still "Jimmy Who?" In the rest of the world, as at home, 200,000 U.S. troops now in Ger- Jimmy Carter is an enigma to many. many? Would his policies main- In every major capital, puzzlement tain the pace of the economic over what Carter stands for is mixed recovery in the U.S. and other with concern over the direction in industrialized nations? which an untested President would lead the U.S. GENEVA Most leaders abroad expect a Swiss experts worry that Carter White House to change only Carter might retreat in the the style, not the content, of Ameri- anti-inflation battle by bringing can foreign policy. But they are not in costly new social welfare and full- take time to study America's prest- certain. As the magazine's foreign bu- employment programs. dential race. reaus report, confidence and trust are If that happens, they say, inflation Nevertheless, most Arab nations, tempered by skepticism and doubt. in the U.S. could zoom toward dou- particularly Egypt and Saudi Arabia, ble-digit figures. A Zurich banker feel that they fare better with Repub- LONDON warns: "That would be bad for Amer- licans in the White House. Britons are intrigued by-and a bit ica and the whole Western world." In Israel, in contrast, officials tend apprehensive over-Jimmy Carter. to lean toward Carter. They distrust On one hand, his down-to-earth ROME the Republicans and suspect that a manner has appeal. On the other, Many Italians. are favorably dis- GOP victory in November would there is anxiety over what is seen posed toward Carter, but are mysti- work against Israel's interests. here as his glossing over of issues. fied by his policies. To some Britons, he is too glib. To Turin's leading newspaper, La TOKYO others, he is imperious. Some even Stampa, commenting on what it Japanese experts predict that suspect he is really an isolationist. called his "cold, ruthless ability," said Carter, if elected, would launch bold One London expert sums up Brit- Carter could not have been successful new moves to reassert America's ish reaction this way: "The confusion "without possessing such qualities as world leadership. Among them: about assessing Carter comes from leadership, intelligence. good instinct A tougher posture toward Russia: the fact that nobody here is quite and a realistic view of the problems." renewed demands that Allies bolster sure who is advising him. There is military contributions to NATO: in- danger that a new President as un- MOSCOW creased pressure on Japan to tried as Carter will attempt to assert Russia's reaction to Carter's nomi- strengthen its defense forces: a trade himself in the first few months of nation: wariness and suspicion. policy that would include import quo- office and commit some blunder." The Soviet press, which mirrors tas to protect U.S. industries. Kremlin thinking, has three main PARIS concerns: BUENOS AIRES The French are waiting eagerly to That Carter yielded too much to Jimmy Carter was a nobody on this learn exactly where Carter stands. "cold war" proponents in drawing up continent until he began talking So far, French officials seem as- the Democratic Party platform: that about Latin America. sured that a Carter Presidency would he straddles the fence on too many Now newspapers headline his bring no abrupt change in American sensitive issues; that in trying to re- promises of co-operahon-between the policy toward Europe and Russia. build the ethnic-voter blocs of the two Americas. Says a leading Argen- Also, the prospect that more-tradi- Democrats, he might "run against" tine economist: tional diplomacy will replace Henry Soviet control over Eastern European "Carter won't be preoccupied with Kissinger's one-man approach is ap- satellite nations. Russia. China and Europe. He will peaing to many. look at Latin America and Africa." Major unknowns: whether the U.S. CANBERRA under Carter would recognize Com- Australian officials wonder whether OTTAWA munist China. and what initiatives he Carter would be as tough as Ford. For most Canadians, Carter's would take for a Mideast peace. This is particularly important now strongest asset is the impressive way that Prime Minister Malcolm Fraser he has grabbed the leadership of his BONN opposes a Soviet naval presence in party. Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, him- the Indian Ocean. It would be a se- Admiration overrides any uneast- self facing national elections in Octo- vere setback for Fraser if the U.S. ness because of his lack of foreign- ber, is confident that Carter would softened its determination to counter affairs experience. back a militarily strong Atlantic Alli- Russian strength in the region. Says one official: "Any guy who can ance even while seeking greater re- come out of nowhere and take com- laxation of tensions with Russia. CAIRO mand has an excellent reading of the Two big unanswered questions: The Middle East is so preoccupied political system and is clearly attuned Would Carter withdraw any of the with its own woes that few leaders to the times." U.S. U.S. News & World Report (7/26/76) Cardiolense Washwaton Past July28 Carter Cautions on Reliance On 1st-Strike A-Capability By Helen Dewar strike because for all practi- changes unilaterally from Washington Post Staff Writer cal purposes atomic subma- Washington," he said. But PLAINS, Ga., July 27- rines are invulnerable" and he emphasized that he and Jimmy Carter cautioned to- many airborne aircraft his advisers agreed that a day against U.S. reliance on. would survive, said Carter, a coordinated effort between a first-strike nuclear capa- former nuclear submarine Washington and the states bility and called for a mas- officer. must be made to improve sive overhaul of the nation's Democratic vice presiden- the quality and the coordi- military reserves as he con- tial nominee Walter F. Mon- nation of military reserves. tinued intensive brainstorm- dale, who is joining Carter Asked if this meant ing sessions with his policy in the three days of brief- "drastic change." Carter advisers. ings. agreed, saying the key responded: "I would guess The Democratic presiden- to the nation's defense pol- that is true." tial nominee's comments on icy should be maneuverabil- military policy grew out of a ity of weapons and their de- meeting Monday with his livery systems. defense advisers. A press Mondale also cited man- briefing was held for report- cuverability as the reason ers after Monday's session why he voted to authorize and Carter answered ques- the B-1 bomber program in tions on the meeting this the Senate. Carter opposes a morning. go-ahead on production of Carter met with nine eco- the bomber but favors con- nomie advisers late this af- tinuing research on the ternoon, but a press briefing project. Mondale said today on the meeting was post- he agrees with that posi- poned until Wednesday tion. Discussing whether the On the question of armed United States should de- forces reserves, including velop a first-strike nuclear state National Guard units, capability against the Soviet Carter said their readiness Union, Carter said today for combat is "doubtful," that while both countries their weaponry is "poor" have such a strike force, its and they are "quite often use would invite an intolera- shot through with politics." bie retaliatory blow from "I don't believe you'll ever aircraft and submarines that have a President who's polit- would survive an attack. ically strong enough to run "There is no way to pre- over a governor, or run over vent a massive retaliatory -50 governors, and institute carder! Taxes A-8 The Washington Star Friday, July 23, 1976 Candidate Backs Multinational Corporations Carter Assures Business of Caution on Taxes New York Times News Service and independents - the When he spoke to the States. "At this point, my Replying to a question NEW YORK - Jimmy former Georgia governor business group, after cock- inclination would be to about his plans for staffing Carter has told a group of spoke as a former business- tails and luncheon, Carter eliminate these tax defer- the government if he should leading corporate execu- man, rather than in the emphasized that he planned rals," he said. be elected president, Carter tives that, if elected presi- populist tones that rang no rash actions to change said, "I would intend to dent, he would move cau- through his acceptance the tax structure. "I would IN RESPONSE TO a have a substantially re- tiously on tax reform and speech at the Democratic not make any substantive question about his attitude duced White House would retain the credit on convention. change in our tax law, or toward multinational cor- The hosts at the meeting foreign taxes paid by propose any as president, porations from W. Michael were J. Paul Austin, chair- American companies. "I'VE NEVER had a until at least a full year of Blumenthal, chairman of man of the Coca-Cola Co.; Returning to New York goal for government to very careful analysis," he the Bendix Corp. who was Edgar Bronfman, chair- for the first time since he dominate business," he as- said. special representative for man of the Seagram Co., won the Democratic presi- serted. While he backed the trade negotiations in the Ltd.; and Henry Ford II, dential nomination last The Democratic nominee present credit on U.S. taxes Kennedy administration, chairman of the Ford Motor week, Carter also came out inserted his business lunch- given to American corpora- Carter responded: Co. The three men, who strongly in favor of multi- eon between meetings with tions that pay foreign taxes, "I would continue, and paid the cost of the lunch, national corporations and of labor leaders, news publi- Carter said after the meet- strengthen if possible, support Carter for presi- the free enterprise system. cations and a brief ing that he opposed tax American involvement in dent and there were indica- In his 18-minute talk at a conference with Mayor deferrals on profits of foreign countries and vice tions that the gathering private lunch at the 21 Club Abraham D. Beame and American companies earn- versa," adding, "I would would lead to the formation to 52 top business leaders - former Mayor Robert F. ed overseas until the money not do anything to minimize of a Businessmen-for-Car- Democrats, Republicans Wagner. is brought into the United this." ter committee. Chicago Tribo Carter says he won't make pardon an issue By Bill Neikirk Plains this weekerd for strategy talks. Prior to that, the Carter and Mondale Chicago Tribune Press Service staffs will meet in South Carolina start- PLAINS, Ga.-Jimmy Carter said ing Wednesday to make campaign Tuesday he will not personally. make plans. Richard Nixon's pardon a campaign is- Carter said the campaign will get un- sue this fall but he added that his run- der way right after Labor Day. Even ning mate, Sen. Walter Mondale, is free though Ford is his likely opponent, Le to come out swinging. said he would be ready for Reagan, too. "I would not try to dominate Sen. "The inclination of Gov. Reagan to get Mondale," Carter said when asked if he militarily involved in Panama, in Leba- would discourage his running mate from non, and in Rhodesia will certainly be using the Nixon pardon in the presiden- an issue if he is the nommee," Carter tial race. said. At the same time, Carter said he ex- On other issues, Carter: pects President Ford will win the Re- Defended Mondale for sponsoring a publican presidential nomination over special tax break for a Minnesota firm, Ronald Reagan. He said he will, for Investors Diversified Services. Carter now, plan his campaign strategy on that said Mondale had not done anything im- assumption. proper, had made his action public, and AT A press conference in front of the still supported Carter's call for compre- Plains High School under a hot Georgia hensive tax reform. midday sun, Carter answered questions Defended his poilster. Patrick Cad- for more than half an hour, then went deil, for providing services to the Saudi into a campaign strategy session with Arabian government. Carter said Cad- key advisers, the first since he won the dell is not in any policy position and, Democratic nomination. furthermore, should not be denied mon- Only a day earlier, Ford defended the ey from customers other than the Carter Nixon pardon and said lie would do it all campaign. over again. But Carter said he would not have pardoned Nixon until after a Said he would be dealing with the trial and all the facts were known. so-called "Catholic problem" as the He said he accepted Ford's explana- campaign progresses "I really think tion that the pardon was designed to end my strength among American Catholics the agony of Watergate. "I don't intend is substantial,'- he said. to criticize him because of it. I don't Said he would nc sending a new think there was any secret deal made farm bill to Congress if be is elected. It between President Nixon and President would encourage maximum production, Ford. Obviously they were very close. and adequate and aggressive overseas He felt deeply indebted to President sales. "I don't favor high price sup- Nixon for choosing him." ports," he said. MONDALE HAD raised the issue in Carter will spend most of his time in his acceptance speech in New York but Plains in the next several days, but he Carter said his position on the pardon is does plan to go to New York on Thurs- preferable politically. day for a meeting with busmessmen "The American people know who par- who support his enndidney doned Richard Nixon. They know the He said that next Wednesday he will circumstances. They don't need to have get an in-depth briefing: from the Cen- it raised for political advantage." tral Intelligence agency "on matters of Carter said Mondale will come to security importance.- Washington lost Stephen S. Rosenfeld A Carter Challenge To Ford's Foreign View Jimmy Carter's new speech ensures traditional military, political and eco. that, if President Ford is nominated, nomic issues but with issues of third- the presidential campaign will be the world stability and development and of setting for a debate between two seri- lifestyle. The various negotiations with ous and distinguishable conceptions of the Russians would flow from, not to, America's role in the world. this enhanced alliance of the democra- If Ronald Reagan is nominated, we cies. will have no simllar debate. For Reagan Perhaps the prevailing frustration has no conception of America's role in with detente would have turned any the world. He seems to have only nos- new administration, even a Republican talgia for the period when we could im- one, in this direction-as a political ges- pose our will on others without evident, ture if not also as a negotiating gambit. cost. Undeniably, a good number of Ameri- Carter, though, by whatever combi- cans identify a focus on the Soviet- nation of deliberation and advice with American relationship as a hangover which he proceeds in these matters, from the cold war. Many Americans has come up with a statement which is are reluctant to be told that the Rus- at least as good a guide to his general sians may make it tough for us. approach as was Richard Nixon's For- In this new speech-though not in eign Affairs article of 1967. He should some past pronouncements-Carter is tell us more about sub-issues. But he is at pains to convey the impression that now moving better to meet a serious we can have our cake and eat it too: candidate's responsibility to present his that we can keep closer company with basic views. the democracies and avoid showdowns Against the Nixon-Ford-Kissinger with the Russians. What remains for policy aimed at a Soviet-and American- him to do is to demonstrate just how built "structure of peace," Carter offers our allies-who are in inany ways weak an American-led "partnership" among countries without the means of much the world's democracies, especially self-reliance-can render extra help. those in Western Europe and Japan. Furthermore, I think Carter exagger- It is not a radically new or surprising ates the slack, in our relations with al- policy but it does represent enough of a lies, that is available to be taken up. I refitting of familiar elements to qualify assume that's why he has to go back as a viable alternative to the adminis- fully five years, to the "Nlxon shocks" tration's approach in the last eight and John Connally, to fault administra- years. That the administration itself tion policy toward allies. has-in frustration or insight-antici- Finally, Carter would approach third- pated Carter in various respects in the world poverty with the premise that last year or SO does not detract from rich country-poor country tensions are what he's now done. "often based on legitimate economic There are several big differences: grievances." Granting the legitimacy of First, the Carter approach is explic- such grievances is the necessary pre- itly grounded in American moral val- condition to any sustained effort to ues; the Ford-Kissinger approach, less ease them. This has been done only hes- explicitly, or only implicitly. Whether itantly and incompletely by the current this would make a difference in the fi- administration. nal policy result remains to be demon- This seems to me potentially the larg- strated. John Kennedy, after all, car- est difference of substance that Carter ried his explicit pursuit of freedom to offers. The various measures he would Cuba, Berlin and Vietnam. Would a support in this area of policy add up to President Carter, who is very strong on what he calls "a more stable and more Japan, squeeze South Korea on human just world order." One notes, by the rights so hard that Japan's balance, way, that the United Nations is not which is closely tied to the American mentioned here or, for that matter, position in Korea, would be tipped? elsewhere in the speech. Evidently In any event, only part of American Carter would follow the underlying foreign policy has to do with the policy Ford policy of trying to steer third- result abroad. The other part is domes- world business into more businesslike tic: Many people want the policy, what- forums. ever its effect, to reflect their values. For the moment, I would add only Foreign policy is not only diplomacy, one thing. In regard to foreign policy, it's therapy. Carter recognizes this. He Ford is running on his (and Kissinger's) may even believe it. After Nixon and record: it's out there for everyone to Kissinger, enough people want an ex- see. Carter is necessarily running on his plicitly moral foreign policy to make it speeches-and on his vibes. The worth a politician's while to offer it to speeches can be scanned minutely for them. themes and nuances. But they're not Second, Carter flatly rejects the only statements of his ideas. They're Ford-Kissinger premise that the first campaign documents and, beyond that, requirement of American policy is to they're arenas in which his various ad- cope with Soviet power. Instead, he visers and staffers are vying for influ- would tighten links with the democra- ence and future power. So read them cies in order to deal not just with the with care. Card IT WILL LIKELY be less appealing among Midwest grain farmers. although many Midwest dairy farmers In the seem to like the idea. A majority of Midwest farmers seem to agree with Butz and the American Farm Midwest Bureau Federation [the biggest tarm group) that high price guarantees would stimulate a return to surplus I By Richard Orr production and government paternalism. Rural Affairs Editor This attitude was reflected in a recent Prairie Farm- er magazine opinion poll. Farmers were asked how they feel about the government getting out of the grain Carter offering business in the last three years. including the elimi- nation of government-owned grain stocks and acreage controls. farmers a break Responses indicated that 74.9 per cent of Illinois farmers and 78.8 per cent of Indiana tarmers think a "free" marketing system works best. The Carter campaign eifort to nail Butz on charges JIMMY CARTER. who expects to become the Demo- of being "unpredictable and unresponsive" to farmers cratic nominee for President at his party's convention and partial to consumers is related partly to the export in New York this week, has made no major policy embargoes and to the secretary's opposition to high statement on agriculture. But the strategy for winning price supports. Butz was opposed to the embargoes but the rural vote for the Georgia peanut. farmer and was overruled by other administration advisers. includ- former governor is becoming clear. ing Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and former Secretary of Labor John Dunlop. The candidate's speeches and comments of his advis- ers indicate that Carter's campaign for rural votes can BUTZ CAN POINT to the fact he has been under be summarized in these six points: attack by most consumer groups. which contend he tavors farmers over their interests. Raise federal price guarantees for major farm crops to cost-of-production levels. Establish a "reasonably small" grain reserve. at least half of which would be held and controlled by farmers. Expand farm export markets. Attack the Ford administration for its grain C.\- port embargoes of 1975 and 1974 which followed a Nixon administration embargo in 19731. Chicago TRibur Attack Secretary of Agriculture Earl Butz and his department as "unpredictable and unresponsive" to farmers and partial to consumers. Promote Carter as the first genuine farmer to seek the White House since Thomas Jefferson. 906/12 As might be expected. only in the matter of expand- ed exports will any of these points find agreement in the camps of President Ford and his Republican chal- lenger. Ronald Reagan. The Ford and Reagan farm policies, incidentally. are virtually indistinguishable. Both Republican candidates favor a "market-orient- ed" agriculture with a minimum of government inter- ference in pricing and production. Both favor expanded farm export markets, as does Carter. Early in his campaign Reagan got off to a somewhat shaky start on agricultural matters with remarks in- terpreted by some farm leaders to indicate he might favor restricting grain sales to the Soviet Union. An American Farm Bureau Federation official notified Reagan that his organization considered restrictions on exports to any nation harmful to agriculture. and the candidate thereafter refrained from making any more such statements. CARTER'S CRITICISM of the Ford administration's embargoes on grain exports to the Soviets and to Po- land will fall on a lot of sympathetic ears among Midwest farmers. Ford has attempted to mollify the discontent among farmers on this issue by repeated statements that chances of more embargoes in the nest year or two are "virtually nil." However, many grain farmers are still sore about it, particularly those in the Great Plains wheat areas. "The administration asked furmers to plant fence to fence, and after they did that their export markets were shut off for a time. which cost them money and caused them to lose confidence in Washington." said Robert J. "Pud" Williams, Illinois director of agricul- ture. Williams. named last week to coordinate Carter's rural campaign in 12 Midwest states, said the embar- goes will be a major issue. Carter's call for crop price supports at cost-of-pro- duction levels also may gain favor among a lot of farmers. particularly in the South and Great Plains, and especially among members of the National Farm- crs Union and National Farmers Organization. Montor July 20 Effect of Carter win on your pocketbook By Harry B. Ellis Jimmy Carter, in his speech accepting the Staff correspondent of Democratic presidential nomination. The Christian Science Monitor How does this square with the Democratic Party platform calling for a "framework of na- Washington tional economic planning" and committed to - "I see clearly," said the presidential candi- among other things - a reduction of "adult date, "the value of a strong system of free en- unemployment to 3 percent within 4 years"? terprise" and the "minimal intrusion of gov- "Forget the platform," said a senior Demo- ernment in our free economic system." cratic economist crisply, "except as it pro- Is this a Republican speaking? No, it is vides the general atmosphere within which ] [Mr. Caiter] must work.' Specific economic goals, he suggested. will develop as the campaign progresses and as a Carter economic task force, now being assem- bled under the leadership of Lawrence R. Klein, swings into action. Dr. Klein, president-elect of the American Economic Association and chairman of the Wharton Econometric Forecasting Association, "is a very pragmatic economist," noted a task- force member. He is committed - as is Mr. Carter - "to most [new] jobs ending up in the private sector Please turn to Page 6 Effect of Carter win on your pocketbook Continued from Page 1 Task-force members foresee Mr. Carter en- "For a long period of time," said another dorsing only "step-by-step," cautious govern- task-force member, "Carter has been getting ment intervention in the economy, as need dic- his economic guidance from Klein." tates. Thus, said the task-force member, "I expect Dr. Klein's task force includes at least one (Mr. Carter) will put more stress on solving business-oriented economist, Albert Sommers unemployment than the Ford administration, of the Conference Board, Inc., and noted liber- but also will recognize the problem of in- als, including Charles L. Schultz, senior fellow flation." at the Brookings Institution and director of the This assessment, buttressed by talks with U.S. Budget Bureau under President Johnson. other Carter task-force members, appears to (Dr. Schultz's trenchant critique of Humphrey- put the Democratic nominee at variance with Hawkins was a major cause of its present revi- Senator Hubert H. Humphrey (D) of Minnesota sion.) and Rep. Augustus F. Hawkins (D) of Cal- Others serving on the task force include ifornia, authors of the pending Humphrey- Nancy Teeters, chief economist of the House Hawkins Bill. Budget Committee, and Arnold Packer, who This bill, now undergoing amendments in holds the equivalent job on the Senate Budget both houses of Congress, is the inspiration and Committee. centerpiece of the economic section of the Moving to Carter headquarters at Atlanta, Democratic Party platform. Georgia, to coordinate economic "input" is Some liberal economists - not to mention Jerry J. Jasinowski, now a key staffer on the Ford administration critics - believe Hum- Joint Economic Committee. he campaigns against the Republicans this fall. phrey-Hawkins, with its emphasis on public Mr. Carter, said a task force member, cer- jobs programs at high wages, might be dan- tainly wants an unemployment goal - "about gerously inflationary. 4.5 percent of the labor force," compared to With influential Democrats in both houses today's 7.5 percent jobless rate. trying to write a less inflationary bill, Hum- But, said the adviser, that goal "would be phrey-Hawkins, said a key congressional staf- achieved with no major public employment fer, "has less than a 50-50 chance of reaching programs," if Mr. Carter has his way. the Senate floor this session." "Competition," said Mr. Carter in his accep- Thus, Mr. Carter may not be saddled with a tance speech, "is preferable to regulation." new law setting rigid unemployment goals, as Your Money's Worth The Georgian nas spoken in grandiose terms about our national tax system as a "disgrace," has pledged Carter Would Try to Reform Tax System a tax reform program that would reduce the tax rate by 40 to 50 percent and shift the tax load to a much By Sylvia Porter income would be taxed instance, he would use has said he favors taxation tem. He would attack the greater extent to Ameri- more than once; (4) Hun- Fourth in a Series mortgage guarantees to as- of corporate income only system's financial prob- cans who earn high in- Special to The Washington Star dreds of tax incentives that sist you as a homeowner once in contrast to today, lems by taxing your income comes. If Democratic nominee, have been added "tempo- said and done, though, per- when mortgage interest when corporate income is at a higher level. Today, SS He frequently refers to Jimmy Carter were to be- rarily" to the system in mits this outline for you and rates rose above a specified taxed when earned and then taxes are levied on only the Joseph Pechman - an come U. S. President Car- level and would have the the dividends paid to stock- first $15,300 of your income; internationally respected ter, what would it mean to past decades would be me. To you, as a: wiped out. Homeowner counting on government pay the differ- holders out of that taxed he 'would tax the first authority on federal taxes, you, a taxpayer in any in- your mortgage interest as a ence between the free mar- corporate income are taxed $20,000-$22,000. Broadening recognized liberal on tax come tax bracket in our country? BUT CARTER HAS no tax deduction. Along with ket level and the fixed in turn. the taxable income base illusions on how quickly he other tax incentives, Carter lower interest rate level. "I would tax that income this way, he says, would A: An all-out effort to overhaul, reform and sim- could put through this would like to eliminate the at the corporate income "make sure that Social Se- plify the entire U.S. tax "complete tax reform." He income tax deduction for RECIPIENT OF capital point or dividends I would curity has enough money reform and a member of system with four prime frankly confesses: "I don't home mortgage payments gains. Your capital gains like to keep that option going into the reserve fund the Brookings Institution - goals: (1) All income would know how to be specific because he says the deduc- would be taxed as other in- open," says Carter. "I don't to meet obligations." as a tax adviser. be treated the same; (2) yet I am just not tions are more beneficial to come - wages, salaries, favor taxing the same AS TO Social Security's The tax rate would be made qualified yet." He even high income than to low- etc. - is taxed. Capital income twice." long-range problems, the HE ALSO frequently talks of postponing a "tax middle income homeown- gains no longer would be A higher-salaried worker Democratic nominee be- refers to his accomplish- much more "progressive," reform package" for two ers. He would substitute given favorable treatment paying Social Security lieves the solutions lie in a ments in reforming meaning it would hit the higher tax "brackets the years or more after he has other homeowner incen- as in today's law. taxes. Carter is adamant on reduction in the inflation gia's "inadequate" tax entered the White House. tives more favorable to Earner of corporate divi- maintaining the soundness tem and declares that what hardest 27/1 the lower tax of our Social Security sys- See PORTER. A-11 he has done in his home brackets the softest; (3) No What Carter already has lower-income groups: For dends. Repeatedly, Carter Continued From A-10' state can also be achieved with federal tax laws. rate and the unemployment rate to below 4 per cent - How far he would get both developments that with his explosive, contro- would rebuild the Social Se- versial tax reform ideas is curity reserve. now and must long remain Chief executive of a cor- a big question mark. But he poration operating in other is on the record. In this nations as well as the U.S. area as well as in others. Carter would remove the the Democratic nominee is incentives that encourage by no means as fuzzy as you U.S. multinational corpora- may have thought tions to manufacture prod- ucts in foreign countries Sunday: Carter and the Washington Stac. July 15 when "their own employes consumer. in this country are out of work." In brief, he wants to discourage corporations from locating plants abroad while U. S. workers are going jobless at home. Policy ny Times Day Carter's Foreign Policies Continued From Page 1, Col. 2 nLiberal Democratic Vein speaking slowly and deliberate- ly, explained how he would propose to attain his goals in foreign policy. By LESLIE H. GELB He said he would constantly consult with Congress on the Special to The New York Times formulation of policy, but WASHINGTON, July 6-Jim- Contrary to the strategic would also "make every reason- my Carter says that he expects doctrine of the Ford Adminis- able attempt to preserve the foreign policy to be a major tration, Mr. Carter does not be- prerogatives and authority of issue in the Presidential cam- lieve in the real possibility of the President." He opposed ef- paign, and he seems ready to limited nuclear war. He said forts by Congress-such as the run with a program that de- it was his belief that once Jackson amendment, tying a grant of equal trading status, cidedly places him in the liberal nuclear weapons were used, for the Soviet Union to Jewish wing of the Democratic Party. all-out nuclear war was likely. emigration from that country- His program includes making GAgain differing from the to legislate foreign policy. public the budget of the Central Ford Administration's practice, Mr. Carter said he would be Intelligence Agency, not trying he said he would use economic the nation's "spokesman" but to cover up divergerft view- leverage to deter potential So- not his own secretary of state. points in his administration, viet intervention in the third While coordination "would be nonintervention in the internal world. "I would not single out my responsibility, I would like to let the Cabinet officers run food as a singular product," he their own departments," he Excerpts from the interview added. "It would be a total added. with Carter, page 12. withholding of trade." He seemed to assume Whereas the Administration throughout the interview, as struggles of the developing has made general statements did his aides and some of his about its commitment to the advisers, that he could make world, minimizing Soviet-Amer- men of diverse views work to- ican competition and focusing survival and security of Israel, gether through "my normal, on economic issues and human Mr. Carter said he would con- careful, methodical, scientific or values, and rejecting the cur- tinue economic and military aid planning approach to longer- rent practice of building new indefinitely, although he would range policies." make "an annual judgment on Sensitive on the Subject nuclear weapons to bring about agreements on arms control. the amount of aid that was Like Harry S. Truman, Mr. Mr. Carter's views were elic- absolutely necessary." Carter would approach the Ited in a recent interview with qHe operred the door to nego- White House with little back- tiations with the developing na- ground in foreign policy. He The New York Times and sep- and his aides, somewhat sensi- arate interviews with his aides tions on debt rescheduling and tive on this subject, are aware and advisers, and by reviewing a common fund to stabilize that he will have to prove him- his public statements. export earnings, thus going be- self in this area. Some of the main points yond the Administration's posi- The aides acknowledged that about foreign policy made by tion. Mr. Carter's decision to formu- In the interview Mr. Carter, late a liberal foreign-policy Mr. Carter in the interview platform was made in the wake were these: Continued on Page 12, Column 1 of the 1972 Democratic con- vention. It was there, they said, that he came to believe that the liberal wing of the party was dominant and would con- tinue to be so, and was deeply committed to a change in for- eign policy. Knowing few foreign-policy experts and scorned by some he sought to contact, Mr. Carter began his education with for- eign travel and talks with for- eign leaders and by enlisting the services of former Secretary of State Dean Rusk. After a year or so of seminars and con- versations arranged by Mr. Rusk, the Carter camp learned that he was considered anath- ema by some liberal Demo- crats, and the contacts ceased. Expedient Action Denied Many pro- and anti-Carter people who have known the candidate over the years in- sisted that his new stance was not a maiter of expediency but of conviction. To back this up his aides and advisers cited a con't con't from: ny Times Cloly - arter's Foreign Policies Follow Liberal Democratic speech he gave in Tokyo over -that he believed that the gressional leaders and the a year ago, long before he "rough equivalency is a very public" even during crises, full gathered specific knowledge of good posture to maintain." The disclosure of "the Lockheed where the liberals stood and similarity seems to end there, involvement in the bribery or before he acquired a few ad- however. other illegal influence on for- visers. That speech corrtains every recurrent foreign-policy "Overwhelming Capability' eign officials." He said he would make major theme: concentration on consul- Asked about possible Soviet alternatives available on the tations with such allies as advantages in certain strategic Pentagon budget and weapons Japan and the Western Euro- areas, he answered, "I think systems, and "if there was a pean countries, not on Soviet- that the overwhelming capabil- difference of opinion between American byplay; no military ity of both nations to wreak the Secretary of Defense or the intervention in the internal af- havoc on the other nation is Joint Chiefs of Staff about the fairs of others; openness in such an overwhelming consid- level of funding, I would have policy-making; promotion of eration compared to whether or no objection to those officials human rights and humanitarian not one nation has a slight presenting the alternatives to concerns. advantage in a subjective anal- the Congress." Shift of Policy Focus ysis, to me removes that as a Mr. Carter gave his usual list major consideration." "It is likely in the near future of advisers, including former From this premise Mr. Carter top Democratic administration that issues of war and peace argued against the possibility will be more a function of eco- officials like Cyrus S. Vance, of a limited nuclear war and George W. Ball and Paul C. nomic and social problems than the "bargaining chips" ap- Warnke. He added that he of the military-security prob- proach to nuclear negotiations lems which have dominated in- would guess that he had spent -both central tenets of the Ad- ternational relations in the ministration. These considera- world since World War II," he tions have provided the main said. justification for building new more time with either Henry Owen of the Brookings Institu- "We can now turn our atten- systems of nuclear weapons. tion, Prof. Richard N. Gardner tion more effectively toward Asked about the wisdom of of Columbia University or Prof. matters like the world economy, spending $6 billion on anti- Zbigniew Brzezinski, also of freedom of the seas, environ- ballistic-missile defense to in- Columbia, than with any of the mental quality, food, popula- duce the Russians not to build others individually. tion, peace, conservation of ir- such missiles, he responded, Speaking of the American replaceable commodities and "Arryone who thinks that the people, he said that foreign the reduction of world arma- ABM construction effort was policy was not "a mysterious ments." well-advised-looking at it in circumstance removed from A Unifying Theme retrospect-to me is foolish." their daily existence." What Mr. Carter's new ad- On the use of force generally "They look upon it as a prac- visers provided him, beginning he laid out positive and nega- tical approach to the difficult early this year, was a unifying tive injunctions. "If the alterca- questions that are decided most theme: "We must replace bal- tion was internal, a struggle often on an individual basis," ance-of-power politics with for the control of the govern- he said, "and I think they con- world-order politics." ment, I can't errvision any cir- sider that someone who is ca- cumstance under which I would Secretary of State Henry A. pable of managing the affairs Kissinger and Senator Henry send troops," he said, but he of a state or a federal govern- would use force where "na- M. Jackson, Democrat of Wash- ment on a domestic plane is ington, among others, would tional security interests were very likely to be qualified to consider this approach naive directly endangered," to evac- deal with foreign affairs as and unworkable. To them the uate American citizens, or if well." dominant factor in world poli- the Russians invaded a country like Costa Rica. tics remains the Soviet-Ameri- can equation. Unless the Soviet On the Middle East, his pre- threat is marraged and the bal- viously outlined approach has ance of power maintained, in been to give Israel complete their view, all else will fail. confidence in its relations with Mr. Carter's position on deal- the United States-as the way to ing with the Russians is com- bring about Israeli territorial concessions and an over-all plex as well as untried. peace settlement. He has not proposed absolute reductions in defense spending. Condemned Aid to Israel His call for a 5 to 7 percent To this he added two points: cut in the Pentagon's proposed that even in the absence of a $115 billion budget, according peace settlement "I would con- to his aides, would still allow tinue the economic and military a modest increase in military aid to Israel indefinitely," and outlays over last year. More- that he might consider using over, he made it clear in the American forces to help guar- interview that he would give antee a territorial settlement advance warning to Moscow of but would prefer not to. economic sanctions in the event On relations with developing of another situation like that in rations, he went further in the Angola, where the Communists interview than before, saying backed the winner. that he did not consider the Although Mr. Carter, in the demands of the poor nations interview, rejected the basic unreasonable. Nixon-Ford-Kissinger strategy The candidate also detailed on the strategic nuclear bal- what he meant by openness: ance of power, he said-here making his final decisions pub- he concurs with Mr. Kissinger lic, "involvement of the Con- Officers run their as judged by the America. total nuclear capability you own ments. voters. the judgment about the tion on the Jackson end- Q.1 How do you feel about Q. Do you think that the advantage of accuracy and ment that effect tied most- your Presidential appoint White House perceives for- flexibility, security of the favored-n 1 treatment for ments expressing their own eign policy as your weak suit launching sites, like on sub- the Soviet onion to emigra- views about foreign policy politically? marines compared to overall tion, Jewish emigration in if they differed from your A. The White House pos- number of launches and particular, and the Steven- own, say in testimony before sibly does. Our comprehen- row-weight-these are sub- son amendment that limited Congress? sive polling that we have ctive assessments, and I export credits to the Soviet A. Well now, I certainly done continuously all year think that the overwhelming Union? would be willing to accept does not reveal that as a capability of both nations to A. I think the Jackson some differences of a view- concern among the Ameri- wreck havoc on the other amendment and the Steven- point. If the difference was can people. When the speci- nation is such a overwhelm son Amendment were mis- so great that it would allow fic question has been asked, ing consideration compared taken. If the ultimate goal us disharmony or consterna- on a nationwide basis, our to whether or not one nation was to continue to amend the tion or lack of purpose with- poll results indicate that the has a slight advantage in a rate of out-migration of in the department itself, that people think I have enough subjective analysis, to me Jews from Russia, here was would be damaging to the common sense and enough removes that as a major an instance where I think the nation's strength. And I eloquence to represent this consideration. Soviet Union would have would not permit that. country well in discussions Outlook for Nuclear War been much more amenable to But I hope that my normal, of international affairs, and I careful, methodical, scientific Q. So you don't believe quiet but firm diplomatic think most people don't look or planning approach to long- that there is a real possibility negotiation than the highly on our foreign policy as a er-range. policies involved of a limited nuclear war? publicized pressure placed on mysterious circumstance re- would serve to remove those Once you start using these the Soviet Union by an act of moved from their daily ex- weapons, you are likely to Congress. disharmonies long before istence. get into an all-out war? Q. Can you conceive of a they reach the stage of actual They look upon it as a A. That is my belief. situation in the third world- implementation. And this is practical approach to the dif- Latin America, Asia and Af- the way I have been able to ficult questions that ar de- Q. A question about nego- rica-where you would send perform as Governor and I cided most often on an indi- tiating strategy: You are American combat forces? think it would be an unlikely vidual basis, and I think they probably aware that over the prospect that at the time of consider that someone who years there has been a lot of A. Well, obviously, that is implementation or presenta- is capable of managing the criticism of the Administra- such a broad-ranging ques- tion of a budget to the Con- tion on the grounds that it tion-obviously, if the So- affairs of a state or a fed- gress or in state of crisis has used bargaining chips in viets had troops in Costa because a mistake had been eral government on a do- mestic plane is very likely to dealing with strategic arms. Rica, I would do the best I made, that myself and the be "qualified to deal with You mentioned the ABM could to defend that country major Cabinet members would foreign affairs as well. treaty. We spent over $6- or in Panama or- have that much of a disagree- Q. You have criticized billion developing ABM, sup- Q. But in an internal war, ment. posedly with a view toward a war between regional My own method of con- various aspects of détente. using the development as a powers in Africa or Latin ducting the affairs of state, particularly the wheat deal way of getting the Soviets America, one that did not in- of the state of Georgia, as with the Soviet Union. What about the SALT I agreement, to limit ABM's. Do you think volve the active participation Governor, has been to have the agreement we reached in that is an effective and sen- of the Soviet Union, there as broad a range of opinions sible way to bargain on stra- were no Soviet troops in- as possible presented to me, 1972, interim limitation of let me assimilate the infor- offensive missiles. Do you tegic arms-to build in order volved or Chinese troops think that was a good agree- to put ceilings or to reduce, involved- mation that I don't have but build first? A. If the altercation was through my own experience, ment for the United States? A. Well, anyone who thinks internal, a struggle for con- and then make a judgment A. Yes, I do. I think any time We have had an agree- that the ABM construction trol of the Government, I for my own posture as I ment that limited atomic effort was well advised - can't envision any circum- thought it was best. And I would like to keep this pro- weapons in a practical way looking at it in retrospect- stances under which I would oedure as a normal method has been a good one and I to me is foolish. So my an- send troops. If there was a swer is no, I don't think that war begun between countries for conducting the affairs of think at that time we were the White House. is an advisable procedure. and I felt that our own na- much superior to the Soviet There may be times when it tional security interests were I don't like to get tied Union in nuclear capability down or dependent upon a and armament limitations as would be adopted, but as a directly endangered, I would particular point of view from expressed then have proved general principle, I think it certainly consider sending a single individual. is a foolish approach. troops. to be advisable. Q. Do you know if foreign Q. In the case of the Soviet Conditions for Intervention The Impact of SALT policy is going to be an issue Union doing things like in- Q. You mean national se- in the campaign, whether it Q. The SALT I agreement tervening in Angola, would "-is Governor Reagan or Presi- you favor using our economic curity interests beyond the was criticized by a number leverage and urging our safety of American civiliza- dent Ford? of people on the ground that tion? A. Yes, either one. it provided for superiority in allies to use their economic A. That is right. There may Q. Why do you think so? the number of launchers for leverage to try to get the be circumstances that would And will it be a major issue the Soviet Union. Does that Russians to cease and desist? -I hesitate to answer a in the campaign? make any difference to you A. Yes, I would. A. I would guess that it Q. Would that include the hypothetical question on -whether the Russians had would. It is almost inevitable cancellation of grain sales? things like this, because you more missile launchers than that this be the case. When a we do? Do you think that is A. Well, obviously the ear- put me in the posture of lier that you can have a thinking of every possible campaign is run against an a factor of any strategic sig- incumbent President. for in- nificance or diplomatic sig- leverage applying, the better eventuality. There may be your chances are of success. times when I would send stance, on foreign affairs and nificance? the conduct of foreign affairs, A. Well, it is one factor. If you wait until a commit- military planes into a national it is obviously a matter that But I think that we now have ment by Russia is already capital to evacuate American is of intense interest to our confirmed, it makes it very nationals whose lives were a rough equivalency in over- difficult if not impossible for endangered or send a ship nation. all nuclear strength. The Soviets have some advan- them to withdraw that com- into a port to perform an Using Foreign Pollcy tages in land-based rocket mitment because of any de- evacuation process, so there Q. Do you think President sites. We have an advantage, tectable pressure from us. So are some circumstances in Ford would use the powers still, in submarines. We have I think the real myth of the which I would certainly use of his office to do things in relationship that we have our military forces. the technical advantage of foreign policy for his own had- with individual nations Q. What about a U.S. guar- more accuracy. They have political advantage? the advantage of heavier under the Ford-Kissinger Ad- antee of Israeli security in A. Yes, I think so. Almost ministration has put us in the context of an overall set- warheads. any incumbent President We have more warheads the posture quite often of tlement-would you favor would do that, and things having to face an accom- that? because of the MIRV capa- that he would do would bility. Russia is rapidly ac- plished fact of an adjustment A. I have discussed this naturally be inclined toward quiring it. I don't think it of our interests. with a lot of the-with sev- what is best for this country, The singling out of food eral of the Israeli leaders, would be possible from this as a bargaining weapon is with the present and the point, certainly not for me, to say that we or the Rus- something that I would not previous Prime Ministers, the sians have a decided advan- do. If we want to put eco- Foreign Minister and others. tage over the other. nomic pressure on another I have never yet had an And I think this rough nation under any circum- Israeli leader respond to my stances, to use it as a lever direct question that they cont from: equivalency is a very good posture to maintain. The ina- by withholding our products. would favor using American bility of either nation to de- I would not single out food troops under any conceivable as a singular product. It circumstance. If there was a fend itself against a first strike is probably the greatest would be a total withhold- mutual agreement between deterrent to nuclear war and ing of trade. Israel and all her neighbors LAY Times so I don't feel concerned Before Positions Are Firm and the only basis on which about it. they could declare nonbel- Q. Then you would put Q. So we don't need over- ligerency and recognize the them on notice in advance? all numerical equality or existence of Israel, perma- A. Yes, I would. I think equality in numbers of mis- nently and resolve the Pal- that - and before the guns estinian question and leave July 7 siles or equality in throw- - above the confrontation Israel in a defendable pos- weight? where-- firm positions are A. I don't believe so. I ture and carve out a perma- don't believe any one of established is well known by nent peace through the the rest of the world and those factors would be a temporary presence of Amer- there has to be a loss of face ican forces in certain areas prime requisite for an agree- or a breaking of a prior com- within the territory, I might ment. So you know I would like mitment in order to accom- consider it. to, if possible, to reach an inodate a peaceful relation- But I would prefer that until those forces be United No Carter's Fore n Policy Talk and Replies to eries policy Fol! wing are excerpts from .he prepared text of We may not welcome these Jimmy Carter's speech here Monetary Renovation nges. We will certainly Nature of Warfare Changed yesterday before the Foreign But we must do more. The encourage them. But we In recent years, new mili- Policy Association, and from international monetary sys- respect the results of tary technology has been de- a question-and-answer perio tem should be renovated so democratic elections and the veloped by both sides, in- that followed. The questions that it can serve us well for right of countries to make cluding precision-guided mu- and answers were recorded the next quarter of a cen- their own free choice if we nitions, that are changing by The New York Times tury. Last January, at a are to remain faithful to our the nature of land warfare. through the facilities of ABC meeting of the leading finan- own basic ideals. We must News. cial officials agreement was Unfortunately, NATO's ar- learn to live with diversity, reached on a new system, senal suffers from a lack of The time has come for us and we can continue to CO- standardization, which need- based on greater flexibility to seek a partnership be- operate, so long as such po- of exchange rates. There is lessly increases the cost of tween North America, West- litical parties respect the no prospect of any early re- NATO. and its strategy too ern Europe and Japan: Our democratic process, uphold turn to fixed exchange rates often seems wedded to past three rugions share economic, existing international com- -divergences in economic plans and concepts. We must political and security con- mitments and are not sub- not allow our alliance to be- experience among nations are cerns that make it logical servient to external political too great for that. But we come an anachronism. that we should seek ever- direction. The democratic still have much much to There is. in short, a press- increasing unity and under- concert of nations should ex- learn regarding the effective standing. clude only those who exclude ing need for us and our allies operation of a system of to undertake a review of I have traveled in Japan themselves by the rejection fluctuating exchange rates. NATO's forces and its strat- and Western Europe in re- of democracy itself. We must take steps to avoid egies in light of the charging cent years and talked to large and erratic fluctuations, On Mutual Security military environment. leaders there. These coun- without impeding the basic The second area of in- Even as we review our tries already have a signifi- monetary adjustments that creased cooperation among military posture, We must cant world impact, and they will be necessary among na- the democracies is that of spare no effort to bring about are prepared to play even tions for some years to come. mutual security. Here, how- a reduction of the forces that larger global roles in shap- It will be useful to strengthen ever, we must recognize that confront one another in Cen- ing a new international or- the role of the International the Atlantic and Pacific re- tral Europe. der; Monetary. Fund as a center gions have quite different Balanced Reductions In addition to cooperation for observation and guidance needs and different political betwee: North America, of the world economy, keep- sensitivities. It is to be hoped that the Japan and Western Europe, ing track of the interactions Since the United States is stalemated mutual-force-re- there is an equal need for among national economies both an Atlantic and a Pacific duction talks in Vienna will increas d unity and consulta- and making recommendations power, our commitments to soon produce results so that tion between ourselves and to governments on how best the security of Western Eu- the forces of both sides can such democratic societies as to keep the world economy rope and of Japan are insep- be reduced in a manner that Israel, Australia, New Zea- functioning smoothly. arable from our own security. impairs the security of neither. land and other nations, such Beyond economic and po- Without these commitments The requirement of balanced as those in this hemisphere, litical cooperation, we have and our firm dedication to reductions complicates nego- that share our democratic much to learn from one them, the political fabric of tiations, but it is an impor- values, as well as many of another. I have been re- Atlantic and Pacific coopera- tant requirement for the our political and economic peatedly impressed by the tion would be seriously weak- achievements of the Japanese maintenance of security in concern: ened and world peace endan- and the Europeans in their Europe. Ending One-Man Diplomacy gered. domestic affairs. The Japa- As we look to the Pacific Similarly, in the SALT There must be more fre- nese, for example, have one quent consultations on many region, we see a number of taxes, we must seek signifi- of the lowest unemploy- levels. We should have peri- ment rates and the lowest changes and opportunities. cant nuclear disarmament odic su'nmit conferences and crime rate of any industrial- Because of potential Sino- that safeguards the basic in- occasional meetings of the ized nation, and they also Soviet conflict, Russian and terests of both sides, leaders of all the industrial seem to suffer less than other Chinese forces are not jointly The democratic nations democr cies, as well as fre- urbanized peoples from the deployed as our potential ad- versaries but confront one must respond to the challenge quent Cabinet-level meetings. modern problem of rootless- In addition, as we do away ness and alienation. another along their common of human need on three with or 3-man diplomacy, we Similarly, we can learn border. Moreover, our with- levels. drawal from the mainland of First, by widening the op- must once again use our en- from the European nations Southeast Asia has made pos- portunities for genuine north- tire foreign policy apparatus about health care, urban sible improving relationships south consultations. The de- to re-establish continuing planning and mass transpor- between us and the People's veloping nations must not contacts at all levels. Sum- tation. mits are no substitute for the Republic of China. There are many ways that only be the objects of policy habit " cooperating close- creative alliances can work With regard to our primary but must participate in shap- ly at the working level: for a better world. Let me Pacific ally, Japan, we will ing it. Without wider con- There are at least three mention just one more, the maintain our existing security sultations we will have area of human rights. Many arrangements. so long as that sharper confrontations. A areas in which the democrat- continues to be the wish of good start has been made ic nations can benefit from of us have protested the vio- the Japanese people and Gov- with the conference in inter- closer and more creative re- lation of human rights in ernment. national economic coopera- lations. Russia, and justly so. But Korean Withdrawal tion, which should be First, there are our eco- such violations are not limit- strengthened and widened. nomic and political affairs. ed to any one country or one I believe it will be pos- sible to withdraw our ground To Lower Trade Barriers In th realm of economics, ideology. There are other our basic purpose must be to forces from South Korea on countries that violate human Secondly, by assisting keep open the international a phased basis over a time those nations that are in rights in one way or another span to be determined after direst need. system in which the ex- -by torture, by political per- consultation. with both South change of goods, capital, and secution and by racial or re- There are many ways the ideas arrong nations can con- Korea and Japan. At the ligious discrimination. democracies can unite to help tinue to expand. same time, it should be made shape a more stable and just We and our allies, in a cre- clear to the South Korean world order, We can work to Increased coordination ative partnership, can take Government that its internal lower trade barriers and among the industrialized de- the lead in establishing and oppression is repugnant to mocraci can help avoid the make a major effort to pro- promoting basic global stand- our people and undermines vide increased support to the repetition of such episodes ards of human rights. We re- the support for our commit- international agencies that as the inflation of 1972-73 spect the independence of all ment there. now make capital available "and the more recent reces- nations, but by our example, We face a more immediate to the third world. "sions. Both were made more by our utterances and by the problem in the Atlantic sec- severe by an excess of expan- various forms of economic This will require help from tor of our defense. sionist zeal and then of de- Europe, Japan, North Amer- and political persuasion avail- The Soviet Union has in flationary reaction in North ica and the wealthier mem- able to us, we can quite sure- "America, Japan and Europe. recent years strengthened its ly lessen the injustice in this bers of OPEC for the World forces in Central Europe. The Though each country must world. Bank's soft-loan affiliate, the Warsaw Pact forces facing make its own economic deci- International Development We must certainly try. sions, we need to know more NATO today are substantially Association. The wealthier Let me make one other about one another's interests composed of Soviet combat countries should also support point in the political realm. and intentions. We must troops, and these troops such specialized funds as the Democratic processes may in have been modernized and avoid unilateral acts, and we new International Fund for some countries bring to pow- reinforced. In the event of must try not to work at Agricultural Development, er parties or leaders whose war, they are postured for which will put resources cross-purposes in the pursuit of the same ends. We need ideologies are not shared by an all-out conflict of short from the oil-exporting and most Americans. duration and great intensity. not agree on all matters, but developed countries to work we should agree to discuss NATO's ground combat in increasing food production all matters. forces are largely European. in poor countries. We might We should continue our The U.S. provides about one- also seek to institutionalize, efforts to reduce trade bar- fifth of the combat element, under the World Bank, 2 riers among the industrial as well as the strategic um- "world development budget," countries, as one way to com- brella, and without this in order to rationalize and bat inflation. The current American commitment, West- coordicate these and other Tokyo round of multilateral ern Europe could not defend similar efforts. trade negotiations should be itself successfully. pursued to a successful con- cluston It is also time for the Soviet Union, which donates 0: Iv about one-tenth of 1 reent of its G.N.P. to for- Ore or the new commit- eign aid-and mostly for ments that I should be political ends-to act more made is an uncoulvocal, con- con't from: generously toward global stant commi to the economic development. world that is understood Third, we and our allies by all people that we guaran- ny Times must work together to limit tee the right of Israel to the flow of arms into the exist, to exist in peace, as a developing world. Jewish state. Concern Over Arms Sales I think there's been too much equivocation about june The north-south conflict is that and doubt cast upon that in part a security problem. factor by public statements sovereignty over the Panama A: long as the more power- made by leaders of our coun- Canal Zone; that we should ful nations exploit the less tries in the last few months. have control as though we powerful. they will be repaid That ought to be one basic had sovereignty, that we by terrorism, hatred and po- change. should have limited arms and tential violence. Insofar as "I believe, also, that we troops placements there; that our policies are selfish or should pursue aggressively there should be an adequate cynical or shortsighted, the effort as spelled out un- payment to Panama for the there will inevitably be a der United Nations Resolu- use of the canal. day of reckoning. tion 242 that the individual I think this is a basis on I am particularly con- countries surrounding Israel which we could continue our cerned by our nation's role should negotiate directly negotiations. I would never as the world's leading arms with Israel, recognizing two give up full control of the salesman. We sold or gave things: one, the permanent Panama Canal as long as it away billions of dollars of existence of Israel, and sec- had any contribution to make arins last year, mostly to ondly, adopting a position of to our own national security. developing nations. For ex- nonbelligerency toward the But I believe the Panaman- ample, we are now begin- State of Israel. ians will respond well to open ning to export advanced We, I think, can play a and continued negotiations arins to Kenya and Zaire, role that's presntly been re- and the sharing of sovereign- thereby both fueling the quested of President Ford by East-West arms race in Afri- Mr. John Rabin and others ty and control, recognizing of Israel, which I don't know their rights in that respect. ca even while supplanting if it's been pursued yet or I would certainly look with our own allies-Britain and not. I would maintain our favor on the possible reduc- France-in their relations tion in the number of bases with these African states. strong naval forces in the that we have in the Panama Sumetimes we try to justify eastern Mediterranean. this unsavory business on I would let it be clear to Canal Zone, possibly a re- duction in the number of mili- the cynical ground that by the Soviet Union and others rationing out the means of that neither we nor they nor Lary forces we have there. anyone else should prospec- I would certainly look with violence we can somehow control the world's violence. tively plan on involvement favor on a continued increase in any Middle Eastern con- of payments for the transport The fact is that we can- not have it both ways. Can frontation that includes com- of materials through the WS be both the world's lead- bat. I think we should Panama Canal Zone. I think ing champion of peace and strengthen our commitment it's accurate to say that until the world's leading supplier to give Israel whatever de- two or three years ago the of the weapons of war? If I fense mechanisms or eco- rate of payment for a ton of become President, I will nomic aid is necessary to let cargo transported through work with our allies, some of them meet any potential at- the canal had never been whom are also selling arms, tack. increased since the canal was and also seek to work with I would certainly never opened. We've had one major the Soviets, to increase the consider sending troops to increase since then and an- emphasis on peace and to re- Israel. I've never met an Is- other one is under contem- duce the commerce in weap- raeli leader who advocated plation there now. o: s of war. that. I would also favor, Policy on Southern Africa Questions and Answers whenever Israel and the other countries are ready, Q. Governor, what would Question. This is addressed the pursuit of a general ap- your policy be toward south- in the third person. How proach to the Middle Eastern ern Africa, including Rho- would President Carter estab- question rather than a step- desia as well as South Africa, li full diplomatic relations by-step approach. and what do you think we with China without abandon- But in the meantime, en- can accomplish? ing our commitment for the courage Jordon, perhaps A. I personally agree with defense of Taiwan? Syria, Lebanon when their the recent posture taken by Answer. You ask me a crisis is over, to negotiate Secretary Kissinger as re- question that nobody yet has with Israel on a mutual basis. lates to Africa. This is a been able to answer, but I'll Position on Panama Canal long delayed interest that's do the best I can. been expressed at the top I think that ultimately the Q. Governor Carter, please levels of our government in first step would be one that clarify your position on the the acts in question, as was already has been taken by current U.S.-Panama negotia- the case in Angola, where we Japan, or perhaps Canada, to tions. Will you, as President, waited too late and clung to tiy to have guaranteed to the continue the current thrust the Portuguese until they People's Republic of China a toward a new treaty? left and had no continuing continuation of noninterfer- A. This is one of the ques- relationship with the Angolan ence in the affairs of Taiwan, tions, along with others that people there. to have strong trade relation- have been asked somewhat I personally favor majority ships with Taiwan, and to frequentlyd an 18-month rule. I would do everything I establish full diplomatic re- campaign around the country. could to let, for instance, Intionships with the People's It would possibly be sur- Great Britain, who still Republic of China. prising to some of you to claims dominion over the When that time might know that even back 16 or Rhodesian area, play a major come in the future, I'm not 18 months ago, when I cam- role in outside influence. i prepared vet to sav. But that paigned through New Hamph- see no reason for us to play ought to be the ultimate goal shire or through Oklahoma a pre-eminent role. of our country. or through Iowa or Florida, I would do everything I 30 or 40 percent of the ques- could to encourage this tions at least related to inter- change toward majority rule national affairs, which is a with peace, and let our pos- Guarantees for Israel very encouraging insight into ture be maintained through the consciousness and atti- open expressions of our con- Q. Governor Carter, what tude of the American people. cern and throaugh-as ex- new ideas do you have, be- The Panama Canal question pressed in my talk-legiti- side the present declared has been made vivid in its mate use of economic or U.S. policy, concerning Mid- political importance by Gov- political pressure. dle East questions? ernor Reagan in his campaign So, ultimately majority Well, I made a major against President Ford. rule, acquired as early as pos- statement on the Middle East I think the American peo- sible: minimum of conflict in Elizabeth, N.J., two or ple have lost sight of the or bloodshed, and using our three weeks ago that spells fact that the early agreement influence through peaceful out nly positions. signed in the 1900's under means and letting other na- the aegis of President Theo- tions who have a more direct dore Roosevelt spelled out relationship play the preemi- that Panama should have nent role. Carter Medges an Open Foreign Policy By JAMES T. WOOTEN Without mentioning Secre- ternational adventure" per- Jimmy Carter pledged him- tary of State Hen: 1. Kis- haps a foreshadowing of the self yesterday to an open for- singer, Mr. Carter riticized anti-Administration theme he cign policy that would encour- him as a "Lone Ranger" caught would sound in the election age a more active participation up in a "one-man policy of in- campaign if Mr. Ford should by other democracies in the become the Republican candi- resolution of international date. problems. Now apparently assured of "The time has come for a his own party's nomination, new architectural effort," he Mr. Carter seemed at ease be- Excerpts from Carter address fore the more than 2,000 peo- ple who crowded into the appear on Page 22. grand ballroom of the Waldorf- said in an address before the Astoria Hotel to hear him. In Foreign Policy Association his speech and later remarks, here, "with a growing cooper- Mr. Carter did the following. ation among the industrial "Pledged continued Ameri- democracies its cornerstone, can control over the Panama and with peace and justice its Canal. constant goals." "Recommended assistance to In the third major speech on Italy from the, United States global affairs of his campaign and Western European nations for the Democratic Presidential after electoral gains by the nomination, the 51-year-old Communist party there. former Governor of Georgia re- "Suggested an emulation of iterated many of the themes he Japan's mutual relationship has sounded in the past, criti- with China and Taiwan. cizing the Ford Administra- Chided the Soviet Union tion's foreign policies as "se- for its relatively small amount cretive" and "amoral." and of foreign aid. promising a new diplomatic Called for a modernization posture that he said would The New York Times and standardization of the de- reflect "the decency and gen- Jimmy Carter addressing fense forces deployed by the erosity and common serse of Foreign Policy Associa- North Atlantic Treaty Organi- our people." tion at the Waldorf. Continued on Page 22, Column 7 'Live With Diversity' Continued From Page 1, Col. 4 'Partnership' Stressed Similarly, he said that while That emphasis on alliances zation. with other democracies calls most Americans might not wel- But the underlying thesis of for a "partnership between come the rise to power in other his speech yesterday was his North America, Western Eu- democracies of parties or lead- emphasis on new and continu- rope and Japan." Mr. Carter ers whose ideologies seem in- said, asserting that those re- compatible, "we must learn to ing alliances between the United gions "are prepared to play live with diversity and to ccop- States and other democracies- even larger roles in global mat- erate" as long as such parties the "natural allies" of which he ters." and leaders respect the demo- has spoken so frequently during The Democratic candidate cratic processes, uphold exist- his campaign. outlined the dimensions of the ing international commitments cooperation he was suggesting and are not subservient to ex- More Productive Aproach by calling for new combined ef ternal political direction. Such relationships would be forts in economic and political "The democratic concert of the focus of his foreign policy affairs, increased attention to nations should exclude only if he is President, Mr. Carter mutual security and a plural those who exclude themselves commitment to the alleviation by the rejection of democracy suggested. and from such liai- of poverty. itself." he added. sons would evolve a more pro- Such "creative alliances' With respect to China and ductive and effective aproach would also have a beneficial response to a question from the to international tensions, food impact in the area of humah audience-that Japan's diplo- shortages, overpopulation, pov- rights, he said. matic steps were worthy of erty, the arms race and alloca- American emulation. Japan, he tion of resources. n "Many of us have protested said, has managed to establish He recommend periodic con- the violation of human rights a productive relationship with ferences of the leaders of the in Russia, and justly so," he both governments without dam- world's industrial democracies continued. "But said he "de- aging its ties with either. and said that "as we do away plored the recent bloodshed in He also said that "Italian with one-man diplomacy" South Africa," and traced its political problems have been another jab at Secretary Kis- roots to the "long season of caused by the underlying social singer - "we must once again malaise of the country," and use our entire foreign policy racial inequities" there. suggested that any solution re- apparatus to reestablish contin- "We respect the independ- quires "patient and significant uing contacts at all levels." ence of all nations," Mr. Carter assistance from Italy's Western Summit conferences, he said, said, "but by our example, by European neighbors as well as "are no substitute for the habit our utterances and by the vari- from the United States." of cooperating closely and con- ous forms of economic and po- Mr. Carter's speech yester- tinuously at the working level litical persuasion available to day was the product of his of foreign diplomacy.' us, we can quite surely lessen study group on foreign policy, Mr. Carter also expanded an- the injustice in this world." but it was essentially the crea- other of his campaign themes- tion of Zbigniew Brzezinski. the need to include other the 48-year-old Columbia Uni- governments in the process of versity professor who has been joint policy-making. advising Mr. Carter on foreign "Our Western European al- policy for several months. lies have been deeply con- cerned, and justly so, by our unilateral. dealing with the Soviet Union, he said, recom- mending that future dealings should "reflet the combined views of the democracies, thereby avoiding suspicions that we may be disregarding their interests." ssues 14 CARTER CAMPAIGN Mr. Carter on the Family T HERE IS SOMETHING in the spirit of our times Obsolete and misguided public policy often makes that is rapidly eroding the most ancient and dur- matters worse, as Mr. Carter observed. Welfare aid to able of institutions, the family. It is like the effect of air families was originally designed, more than a genera- pollution on medieval statuary; you can argue about tion ago, for the case in which a father died leaving his the precise source of the trouble, but the damage is be- widow and children without support. Today families in yond dispute. In their platform writing in Kansas City, a great variety of circumstances turn to welfare, but the Republicans have lavished special attention on the half of the states still have rules denying aid to families problems of the American family and on what the gov- in which the father is present. The rule puts pressure ernment should-or should not-do to help solve them. on the father to desert. With the father gone, the fami- For his part, Jimmy Carter had already established the ly's chances of getting off welfare drop sharply. The interrelationship-between the American family and rule is intended to limit the welfare rolls, but it can federal government programs as a main theme of his have precisely the opposite effect. The thrust campaign. Federal policy, he suggested in a speech the welfare rules is no small element in national social other day, needs to be realigned SO that it works to hold cy. One out of every 20 Americans is, at any given me- people together rather than sometimes helping to pull ment, living on welfare. them apart. That's quite true-although it's also true that the social changes here run at a level deeper than A President can't do much about the basic marriage governments can easily reach. and divorce rates, and it's questionable whether he The reasons for the current epidemic of dissolving even ought to try. But he has a responsibility to see that families is, generally speaking, pretty clear and most federal government does not add to the strain. The Americans are ambivalent about them. They are, after whole subject has fallen into profound neglect since all, very commonly the other side of the new freedoms, the collapse of the family assistance plan that Mr. the opportunities and the unprecedented mobility that Nixon proposed seven years ago. But Mr. Carter evi- our generation enjoys. Those freedoms and opportuni- dently has a good deal more in mind than welfare re- ties also constitute a formula for great social turbu- form. lence and instability. The impact on families is even more severe than Mr. He speaks of reviewing the influence on family sta- Carter suggested. One out of every six American child- bility of regulations in areas as diverse as taxation, So- ren lives with only one parent or neither. Among black cial Security, urban renewal, and even the armed children, 43 per cent live in one parent (or no-parent) forces' assignment system. Whether the next Presio households. Families break up most frequently, as you is Mr. Carter or one of the current combatants at might expect, where unemployment and poverty are sas City, he will have to take account of a widespread most common. But these trends run, in one degree or uneasiness in this country over the rates at which fami- another, through the whole population and they seem lies break up. Mr. Carter is promising too much when to be accelerating. For every five marriages that have he suggests with assurance that a Carter administration taken place in the United States this year, there have would be capable of reversing the present trends. But been three divorces. There have been fewer marriages he is right when he says that federal law and regulation this year than in the same period a year ago, but the need to weigh consistently on the side of those families number of divorces has risen. that are struggling to stay together. Washington Post, 8/18/76 AU iT 27, 1976 KEY CARTER STAFF Hamilton Jordan, Campaign Manager Met Carter in 1966; managed Carter's 1970 gubernatorial campaign; Executive Assistant to Carter, 1971-74; Executive Director of the Democratic National Campaign '74 Committee (which Carter chaired) in 1974; Carter's presidential Campaign Manager. Jody Powell, News Secretary Driver and advance man for Carter's 1970 gubernatorial race; Press Secretary while Carter was governor; News Secretary to Carter since announcing for President. Patrick Caddell, Pollster Headed George McGovern's survey research while still a student at Harvard in 1972; Chief of Cambridge survey research firm; head pollster for Carter since Florida primary and close advisor. Charles Kirbo, Senior Advisor Lawyer from Bainbridge, Georgia; represented Carter in 1962 State Senatorial recount case; V.P. selection coordinator; laison between Carter and the general staff; his law firm in Atlanta represented Coca-Cola. Robert Lipshtz, Campaign Treasurer Atlanta lawyer who has been with Carter since 1966; served on Human Resources Board in Georgia under Carter; raised funds for travel expenses for Carter to utilize as Chairman of the Democratic National Campaign Committee, 1974; was Chairman of the Citizens Committee for Democrats in 1974, ostensibly formed to campaign for all Democrats, but was used to establish Carter's campaign network. Gerald Rafshoon, Advertising/Media Strategist Operates Gerald Rafshoon Advertising, Inc. in Atlanta; worked with Carter in 1966 and has been with him since that time; serves as media aide. Stuart Eizenstat, Issues Director Harvard law graduate on leave from a successful law practice in Atlanta; served in same capacity in Carter's 1970 gubernatorial campaign; coordinates Carter's task forces. 2 FORD (TERAGE Betty Rainwater, Personal Secretary and Deputy Press Secretary Worked for Carter during 1970 gubernatorial race; joined the Carter campaign in the middle of 1975. Greg Schneiders, Personal Traveling Aide Washington, D.C. restraunteur before joining the Carter staff as personal aide in the Democratic primary campaign. Rick Hutchison, Deputy Campaign Director Chief delegate hunter during primary campaign; served as assistant director of political research at the Democratic National Committee when Carter was Chairman of the Democratic National Campaign Committee. Landon Butler, Campaign Political Director Graduated from Washington and Lee University, 1963, and Harvard Business School, 1968; met Carter in 1970 and later developed the "Goals for Georgia" during Carter's term as governor. Peter Bourne, Campaign Aide British-born psychiatrist who met Carter while working with Mrs. Carter on mental health reform in Georgia; headed anti-drug abuse program under Carter; presently developing Carter's National Health Care plan. Mary King, Campaign Aide President of National Association of Woman Business Owners; heads up a commit- tee of women designed to advise Carter; advises Carter on health programs; she is married to Peter Bourne. Frank Moore, Congressional Laison Began working for Carter during 1966 gubernatorial campaign; succeeded Hamilton Jordon as Carter's Executive Secretary in 1973; served as Southern Campaign Director during the Democratic primary campaign. Morris Dees, Fundraising Advisor Directed George McGovern's direct-mail fundraising, 1972; defended Joanne Little in the controversial North Carolina murder trial; serves as lawyer for the Southern Poverty Law Center; well-known Civil Rights attorney in Montgomery, Alabama. 3 Jerome Cohen Professor of International Affairs, Harvard University; expert on East Asian Affairs; strongly critical of government repression in South Korea. OTHER ADVISORS Anthony Lake - Director of International Voluntary Services Henry Owens - Brookings Institute Fellow Harold Brown - Former Secretary of the Air Force Barry Blechman - Brookings Institute Fellow Lynn Davis - Professor, Columbia University James Woolsey - Washington, D.C. lawyer Walter Slocombe - Washington, D.C. lawyer AUST 31, 1976 CARTER ECONOMIC ADVISORS Lawrence R. Klein Chief economist on Carter's economic task force. President-elect, American Economic Association; Benjamin Franklin Professor of Economics and Finance, University of Pennsylvania, Wharton School; Heads Wharton Econometric Asso- ciates; member of the Eugene McCarthy's economic team in 1968; signed Communist Party Card, and in 1940's considered a post-Keynesian mainstream econom- ist by former professor Paul Samuelson of MIT; stresses fact that neither he nor any economic advisors are monetarists. Willis J. Winn President, Cleveland Federal Reserve Bank; former dean, Wharton School. John Bowles IV Vice President, Kidder, Peabody and Company; acts as intermediary between economic advosors and political staff. Lester Thurow Professor of economics at MIT; was member of 1972 McGovern campaign and represents leftist economic thought on the task force; advocate of a "life- time-accessions" tax; working on agricultural policies and income distribution for Carter's task force. Mortin Feldstein Professor of economics at Harvard, specializes in urban issues; critic of social security and unemployment compensation; views on health insurance, the indexing of tax rates, and social security are close to those of Milton Friedman. Michael Wachter Professor of economics, University of Pennsylvania; specialist in labor, wage, and unemployment issues. Bernard Anderson Professor of economics, the Wharton School; the only Black on the task force; specialist in labor, wage and unemployment issues. 2 Carolyn Shar Bell Katherin Coman Professor of economics, Wellesly College; on Executive Committee at the American Economic Association; specialist in women's rights and ghetto economics; working on labor markets for the task force. Richard Cooper Professor of economics and former Provost, Yale University; former deputy assistant Secretary of State for monetary affairs under Lyndon Johnson; staff economist, Council of Economics Advisors, 1961-1963; Carter's inter- national specialist on the task force. Irving Kravis Professor of economics, University of Pennsylvania; specialist in foreign trade, commercial, and tariff matters. Julius Edelstein Dean of urban policy and programs, City University of New York; not an economist; considered one of top "urbanists" in the country; member of economic task force. Albert T. Somers Vice President and Chief Economist, The Conference Board; forecasts business trends with a tolerance for qualitative credit controls as a member of the task force. Rendigs Fels Professor of economics, Vanderbilt University; studying impediments to competition as they contribute to inflation. Arnold Packer Staff economist, Senate Budget Committee; working part-time on budget policy. Nancy Teeters Staff economist, House Budget Committee; working on budget policy on a part- time basis. Charles L. Schultze Senior fellow, Brookings Institute; Professor, Brandeis University; former assistant director of Budget Bureau 1962-1965, director, 1965-1967; working on budget policy. 3 Jerry Jasimowski Senior researcher on leave from the Joint Economic Committee; working on coordinating and drafting final economic pos ition papers and adapting them for Congressional acceptability. Arthur Okun Senior fellow, Brookings Institute; Vice President American Economic Asso- ciation, 1973, staff economist, Council of Economic Advisors, 1961-1962; tax laws expert. Joseph Pechman Director of Economic Studies, Brookings Institute, 1962-present; economist, Council of Economic Advisors, 1954-1956; consultant, Council of Economic Advisors, Treasury Department, 1961-1968; tax laws expert. Stanley Surrey Professor of tax law at Harvard; Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for tax law, 1961-1969; tax laws expert. Benjamin Friedman Professor of economics, Harvard University; former economist for Morgan Stanley and Co.; advocates government reform to coordinate monetary policy and political Democratic principles; developing programs on Capital Reforma- tion and sources for capital funds. Gary Fromm Member of National Bureau of Economic Research; examining restrictions of Council of Economic Advisors. Walter Levy Oil consultant; consultant, policy planning staff, State Department, 1952- 1953; consultant, Office Under Secretary and Assistant Secretaries of State, 1960-present; economic energy expert. AUGUS 31, 1976 CARTER ENERGY ADVISORS David Boren Governor of Oklahoma; held various government related positions when not practicing law; formed latest oil divestiture policy (no divestiture; rather tax individual levels of operation to insure competition). Harris Arthur Director, Navajo Coal Development Impact Project in New Mexico. Thomas H. Bethell Research director of the United Mine Workers (UMW). Joan Claybrook Director, Ralph Nader's Congress Watch. Thomas Sigler Vice President of Continental Oil Company. Joseph Browder Executive Director, Environmental Policy Center. AUGUS 1976 CARTER FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND DEFENSE ADVISORS Zbiginiew Brzenzinski Professor of International Affairs at Columbia University; consultant to the State Department since 1962; policy planning council, State Department; Citizens for Johnson 1964; Chief Advisor to Carter; has serious reservations as to the benefits of detente with either the Soviet Union or Red China; does not feel a defense budget increase necessary to maintain the security or bargaining power of the United States. Cyrus Vance Deputy Secretary of Defense under L.B.J., 1964-1967; Secretary of the Army, 1962-1964; Special Counsel to Senate Armed Services Committee, 1957-1960; counsel to Senate Committee on Space and Astronautics, 1958; negotiator at the Paris Peace Talks, 1968-1969. Paul Warnke General counsel to Department of Defense, 1966-1967; Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs, 1967-1969; partner with Clark Clifford in Washington, D.C. law firm since 1969. Paul Nitze Counsel to FDR and Truman on war efforts in both a military and economic capacity; Director, Office of International Trade Policy, 1946-1948; Secretary of the Navy, 1963-1967; Deputy Secretary of Defense, 1967-1969; Representative for U.S. in Strategic Arms Limitations Talks; generally considered an advocate of defense spending increases. George Ball Undersecretary of State 1961-1966; Ambassador to the United Nations, 1968; Counsel to the Treasury Department, 1933-1935; partner in Lehman Bros. Taw firm (N.Y.C.) Richard Gardner Professor at Columbia University; former Yale University Provost; U.S. repre- sentative to U.N. commission on Peaceful Use of Outer Space, 1962-1965; involved in various U.N. committees, 1962-1965; member of President's Committee on International Trade and Investments Policy; member of the Committee on Sea Law. 2 Clark Clifford Secretary of Defense 1968-1969; Naval Aide to the President, 1946; special counsel to the President, 1946-1950; presently with law firm in Washington, D.C.; coordinator for JFK Administration for transition from Eisenhower Administration; advises on Ford-Carter transition as well as foreign policy matters. Milton Katz Professor at Harvard Law School; served as advisor to many State Department Commissions including NATO (1950-1951), OSS (1943-1944), and also HEW (1967); member of White House Conference on International Cooperation, 1965. Ruth Morgenthau Professor at Brandeis University; specializes in African Affairs, but has no previous government experience; prepared Carter's position papers on U.S.- Angola relations and U.S. relations with the developing nations of Africa. Samuel P. Huntington Various advisory positions with foreign affairs committees, expecially Latin American and Southeast Asian affairs; co-editor of Foreign Policy Quarterly. Dean Rusk University of Georgia Professor of Law; special assistant to the Secretary of War, 1946-1947; Director, Office of U.N. Affairs, State Department, 1947-1949; Assistant Secretary of State, 1949; Deputy Under Secretary of State, 1949-1950; Assistant Secretary of State for Far EAstern Affairs, 1950-1951; Secretary of State, 1961-1968; formed Carter's initial foreign policy positions but has played a relatively insignificant role recently. Averell Harriman Ambassador to Russia, 1943-1946; Ambassador to Great Britain, 1946; Secretary of Commerce, 1946-1949; U.S. representative to Europe, 1948-1950; special assistant to the President 1950-1951; Director, Mutual Security Administration, 1951-1953; Governor of New York, 1955-1958; U.S. Ambassador-at-large, 1961 and 1965; Assistant Secretary of State for Far Eastern Affairs, 1961-1963; Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs; Representative of the President to the Paris Peace Talks. Richard Holbrook Vietnam veteran; White House staff, 1966-1967; consultant to the Paris Peace Talks, 1968-1969; presently managing editor of Foreign Policy Magazine. 3 Tim Kraft, Field Organizer Former organizer for successful National Democratic telethon; Executive Director of Democratic Party in New Mexico in 1971. Andrew Young, General Advisor First black Congressman from Georgia (Atlanta) since Reconstruction; Executive Director of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference under Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.; first black co-ordinator of voter registration for the Democratic Party; chief Civil Rights Advisor but is expected to play a subdued role in the upcoming campaign. Lawrence Klein, Chief Economic Advisor Professor at the Wharton Business School and is recognized as one of the leading econometricians in the country; considered an economic conservative and has endorsed the Humphrey-Hawkins Bill only with strict qualifications. Zbigniew Brzenzinski, Chief Foreign Policy Advisor Professor at Columbia University; has been a consultant to the State Department since 1962; was a member of Citizens for Johnson in 1964; considered a conserva- tive, with reservations as to the benefits of detente with either the Soviet Union or Red China, but thought to be a balance to Paul Nitze, another foreign policy advisor, who favors defense budget increases. Jimmy Carter Washington Post July 18 Scenario for the Presidency By Neal R. Peirce W HETHER Jimmy Carter could succeed in fulfilling the bold promises he has made in an open question. There can be no question, however, about Carter's immense energy and drive - not just to be President. but to use the "bully pul- pit," as Theodore Roosevelt once de- scribed it, to gather support for and carry out: Stem-to-stern reorganization of the federal bureaucracy. Historic breakthroughs in mak- ing government open, responsive and effective. Broad initiatives to meet the needs of the kind of poor and voice- less people, black and white, among whom he spent his south Georgia boyhood. If his record as governor and cam- paigner is any guide, he would bring to the job rare political acumen and tenacity. Associated Press He would be strongly goal-orient- ed. committed to bold programs and "The nation is best served," Carter ambitious government planning. The record bears out that contention. has said, "by a strong, independent and While campaigning against waste But could a Jimmy Carter. ambitious aggressive President, working with a and lethargy in the bureaucracy, he and intent on being a strong chief exec- strong and independent Congress I would fit the traditional mold of utive, avoid the perils and pitfalls of have great respect for the Congress, Democratic presidents by spending the "imperial presidency"? but the Congress is not capable of lead- more money on social programs. I pressed Carter on the point, and his ership. I think the founding fathers ex- Government might be better organ- response showed his awareness or the pected the President to be the leader of ized and its budgeting procedures problem. our country." improved. But it would not be small- He pledged that as president he But Carter is smart enough to realize er. would seek to make to make the execu- that poor relations with Congress could He would make a strong effort to tive branch more open, its members doom his major programs, and he observe constitutional limits, protect more accessible to the press, Congress scems determined to start off on the civil liberties and civil rights and as- and the people. right foot. He pledges advance consult- sure high ethical standards in gov- "I favor strong sunshine legislation," ation in the formulative stages of legis- erninent. he said. "Also, I intend to restore fre- lation. Carter would seek "harmony" and quent press conferences. I would say And he does not believe he should advance consultation with Congress every two weeks, at least 20 times a 1ry to influence the Senate or House to on new programs. But if he failed 10 year. And also restore the format of the install his allies in leadership posts. "I get cooperation. he would not hesi- fireside chat. attempted that a couple of times in tate to attack Congress. or to appeal Open presentations to the people, Georgia as an ostensible demonstration over its head to the people. Carter said, would be "very self-discipli- of my strength," he says. "It was a mis- The process by which Carter ar- nary" because they would require him take." rives at decisions on a major issue to reexamine his positions before they Carter's friends believe that over tells much about him. During the were made public. He would institute four years as governor he did become "input" stage he is open and flexible frequent discussions with congres- somewhat more tolerant of legislators' - reading widely. calling in experts, sional leaders on major forign and do- foibles, did learn that when he con- discussing alternatives with staff or mestic policy change. he said, predict- sulted in advance with key groups in task forces he may have set up. ing that these would have the same the legislature he had a much better beneficial effect. chance of success. Fireside Chats Another safeguard, Carter said, But in his book "Why Not the Best?," would be "to maintain a staff with free 17 HEN THE TIME for decision written after he was governor, Carter access to me an encouragement of an had scarcely a positive word to offer comes, however, it IS usually almost unrestricted debate within about the legislature. Instead, he told of made by Carter alone. And once de- White House circles." He said he per- his constant disillusionment with the cisions were made in Georgia. it took mits and even encourages staff mem- archaisms of the legislative process and heaven and earth to make Carter hers to tell him, when they think so, legislators' unwillingness to give tough change his mind or compromise. that he's wrong on an issue. secutiny to government programs. Most That raises the question of Relations With Congress importantly, he described his despair whether a President Carter might be about the power wielded over legisla- S0 stubborn that he could reach an N PREPARATION for his hoped-for tors by special interest lobbies. napasse of the sort that Woodrow presidential honeymoon with the In 1974, frustrated over the defeat Wilson faced with the Senate over Democratic Congress, Carter was on he'd suffered in trying to pass broad the League of Nations. Of his experi- Capitol Hill even before his nomina- consumer protection legislation, Carter ence III Georgia, he says: "I can't re- tion, exchanging pledges of love, re- attacked the 1974 Georgia legislature as member any instance, minor or ma- spect, consultation and harmony. the worst in the state's history and its jor, where an adamant position on But any senator or representative deliberations as "an absolute victory my part doomed a desirable goal." who thinks Carter would defer to Con- for every selfish interest and lobbyist gress on an issue he deems important that ever set foot in the capita!." hasn't read the Carter record or lis- tened to his words. cont. . . Z full He never gut his consumer legisl In choosing his Cabinet, Carter's in- tion passed, for instance. But on an clination would be to look for new amazing percentage of his priority bills, faces, and he would look for them in Carter did prevail. He did compromise state and local governments. on major bills, including reorganization He at pointed unprecedented num- albeit only at the last moment, when bers of blacks in Georgia, and it would be was convinced be had squeezed as not be surprising to see him name a wo- Cont from reach agreement out of the legislature man to the Supreme Court and blacks as he possibly could. to Cabinet and other top jobs. He has Strong Cabinet said his appointees to regulatory com- Wash. Post missions would please Ralph Nader. I an easier time with Congress. There N ONE SENSE, Carter might have If you want a clue to a Carter Cabi- net, watch his policy advisers between is no single figure on Capitol Hill who now and November. He says he will could do him as much harm as Lester seek out promising candidates so that Maddox, who as lieutenant governor he can observe their work. Quey 18 and presiding officer of the state Sen- So far, Carter's game plan has suc- ate during Carter's tenure spared no ef- ceeded brilliantly, but the big questions fort to scuttle Carter's programs. can only be answered after the elec- In 1977. there will be fresh leadership tion. If Carter wins, will he be able to in both the Senate and House and prob- carry out his pledge to reorganize the ably a strong desire among Capitol Hill government? Can David slay the bur- Democrats to show how effective they eaucratic Goliath; will Carter be forced can bc. with a Democratic president, in to settle for a compromise reorganiza- passing major legislation and tackling tion that is mostly window dressing? tough problems. Carter's Georgia reorganization plan, The White House under Jimmy which consolidated a hodgepodge of Carter would probably be a contradic- some 300 agencies and commissions tory blend: blue jeans. bare feet and into 22 departments, went far beyond country music, long hours and con- window dressing. Former Georgia Men- certed purpose, a boss who's a stern tal Health Association president Bev- taskmaster. erly Long says that Carter "overhauled Carter says that he would name a and made sense of a state government strong Cabinet, give its members a lot that had been proliferating into an in- of independence, and administer the credibly complex mess." Carter, in interviews, has expressed federal government directly through them, not through his staff. He prom- the belief that as president he could re- ises to give a "major role" to the vice president. peat bis Georgia success. Immediately There would be no single White on taking office, he would ask Congress House chief of staff, and Carter has for sweeping authority to reorganize promised to reduce the staff's num- the federal government. His plans would have the force of law unless re- bers. jected by either the Senate or House Other Presidents have made similar within 60 days. pledges on the role of the cabinet and vice president, and/or the power and Not Pinned Down size of the White House staff, only to find themselves compelled to change C ARTER WOULD appoint joint citi- course. zen-civil servant reorganization The difference with Carter might be task forces to draw up specific plans. that he has previously been a chief ex- He says that the process "will require at ecutive of a state - the first, if he's least a year," and that 1,900 federal elected, since Franklin Roosevelt. agencies could be telescoped into about 200. Within his personal staff when Carter was governor of Georgia, infor- Beyond that, Carter refuses to be mality was the key. Carter chose bright pinned down on elements of a reorgani- young aides and gave them much re- zation plan. But if the Georgia record is sponsibility. any guide, whole new cabinet-level de- "He doesn't get involved in details or partments would be likely to emerge, try to do your work for you," says Ger- others to disappear. Thousands of fune- ald Rafshoon, his longtime advertising tions would be merged. an ector." In Georgia, Carter first persuaded Carter could uncharitably slice up a the legislature to give him the author- staff member who handled a problem ity to reorganize, subject to veto in ei- incompetently, but he rarely if ever ther house. He then appointed some 100 turned his anger on associates for tak- young executives from industry, cam- ing independent points of view. pus and state government to work on Carter was often called cold or im- his reorganization task forces. personal in his dealing with subordi- Major new departments were set up nates, but in areas that aroused his par- in such fields as human services, natu- ticular interest - reorganization and ral resources and community develop- penal reform, for instance - associates ment. Old agencies weren't just found his leadership inspiring. grouped under "umbrella" secretariats, Carter believes that as president he Carter claims; they were actually abol- could tolerate the exceptional degree ished, their functions shifted to the of dissent from administration policy new departments. State planning and that James Schlesinger demonstrated budgeting were combined in a single as secretary of defense. But commonly office under the governor's control. agreed-upon basic commitments and Concurrently, Carter instituted zero- long-terms goals, he says, should pre- based budgeting, a method to identify vent "a strategic difference developing overlapping or obsolete government between myself and one of my Cabinet functions members." cont EON jam: Wash tost Yuy 18 If Georgians thought Carter's reorg- that the United States need keep UP anization would make state govern- with or exceed the Soviets in all weap- ment smaller, they were disappointed. State payrolls rose 24 per cent, the ons systems. A secretary of state in a Carter ad- budget 52 per cent. The Carter camp ministration could expect to have sub- argues that without reorganization, the stantial discretion in administering for increases could have been larger, and that those years (1971-75) were marked eign policy, but nothing approaching the broad latitude that Henry Kissinger by inflation and general government has enjoyed. growth across the United States. Cart- Asked to name the recent secretary er's administration dramatically in- of state he considered a "model," creased the scope of state services in Carter mentioned Dean Acheson and mental health centers, alocoholism and George Marshall, who served under narcotics treatment centers, prisons, Harry Truman. They were "very halfway houses and education. strong" secretaries of state, Carter said, Many Georgians still say the reorgan- "men of conviction, of sensitivity, of ization overreached itself in its mam- competence and authority." But, he ad- moth new Department of Human Re- ded, "I don't think there was ever any sources, a "catch-all" combining wel- doubt in the minds of the American fare, public health, drug abuse, voca- people about who was responsible ulti- tional rehabilitation and mental health. mately. It was the President." The laudable objective was to substi- A traditionalist tone marks many as- tute "one-stop shopping" for "pillar-to- pects of the Carter approach to foreign post referral" for people proved a affairs. He has talked of restoring a bi-. nightmare of administration, especially partisan foreign policy of the kind that in its first years. characterized the Truman years. He Carter told me that his Georgia re- places strong emphasis on restoring organization was "drastic" and "ex- what he believes is a "severely dam- tremely controversial because it was so aged" relationship with the United profound." That was no accident - it's States' "natural allies and friends - the the way Carter likes to cause change. democratic nations of the world," in He abhors "incrementalism." If a gov- cluding Europe, the British Common- ernor or president tries to effect re- wealth and Japan. form "one tiny little phase at a time," For his foreign policy task force, he says, "then all those who see their Carter has turned to the East Coast for- influence threatened will come out eign affairs establishment of Wall of the ratholes and they'll concentrate Street lawyers and bankers, Ivy League on undoing what you're trying to do." academics, foundations, and think tank experts - the same group which has dominated U.S. foreign policy for dec- ades. Carter promises that if he's elected Despite his expressed intent to make he won't "use foreign affairs or foreign Congress a fuller partner in foreign af- trips as an escape mechanism to avoid fairs, Carter says he would resist giving responsibilities on the domestic scene." up the traditional "prerogatives and au- That doesn't mean, however, that a thority of the President" in the na- President Carter wouldn't step confi- tional security arena. But he hopes con- dently into his role as the nation's chief sultation can prevent run-ins. diplomat and commander-in-chief of Where Carter might differ most dra- the armed forces. matically from other Presidents would "The No. 1 responsibility of any Pres- be in opening up a "domestic window" on foreign affairs. He believes foreign and domestic issues are becoming in- creasingly interrelated and that such ident, above everything else," he says, cabinet officials as the secretaries of "is to guarantee the security of this the treasury, agriculture, commerce country - freedom from fear of attack and defense all have major foreign pol- or blackmail, the ability to carry out a icy responsibilities. legitimate foreign policy." Beyond that, Carter believes the He believes the nation should have United States and the other world de. weapons systems sufficient "to meet mocracies can learn much from each the strategic needs of our country and other. "I have been repeatedly im- to meet our legitimate obligations to pressed by the achievements of the our allies." But he rejects the notion Japanese and the Europeans in their doinestic affairs," he told the Foreign Policy Association in New York last month. As an example, he pointed 10 Japan's low unemployment and crime rates and its relative immunity from modern problems of rootlessness and alienation. The United States can also learn much from European nations. Carter suggested, about health care, ur. ban planning and mass transportation. Mary King: A Key Carter 'Brain Truster' From the Beginning By KANDY STROUD Special to The New York Times WASHINGTON, July 7-It was like called because women comprise that so many other mornings during the last percentage of the country's population) four years. Jimmy Carter awoke in was Miss King's brainchild. When she Mary King's Capitol Hill townhouse, and suggested it to Mr. Carter in a memo, at 8 A.M. bounded down the celadon he scrawled across the top of it, "excel- green carpeted stairs for his usual cup lent, proceed," and she has. So far of coffee and piece of toast. The for- she has recruited more than 100 women mer Governor of Georgia sat across the leaders from the worlds of politics, kitchen counter from Miss King, his business, finance and education to serve collar open, sleeves rolled up, red-pen- on her national advisory board. ciling the seventh draft of a major pol- To find qualified women for possible icy speech on health. Government posts, Miss King says she Mary King, like her husband, Dr. is using the "ice-pick system," that is, reducing thousands of résumés to com- Peter Bourne, Mr. Carter's deputy cam- puterized cards. paign manager, is a Carter intimate. "I want to make sure," she explained, And like Mr. Carter himself, she is soft- "that for every appointment Carter spoken, sugar-mannered and crystal- makes as President he will have the eyed with an inner core of anthracite. résumé of at least one completely quali- fied woman. He won't be able to say, She is described by friends and co-work- as other Presidents have, that he ers as effective but cunning, cooperative couldn't find a woman qualified but shrewd, idealistic but ambitious, and enough." spiritual but, when required, ruthless. Miss King said she sees or speaks to Outside the family circle of Carter wom- Mr. Carter about once a week, and en, there is probably no woman closer works with him on major speeches. The to the Georgia peanut farmer than the King-Carter alliance is due in part to sophisticated, 35-year-old Miss King. the fact that Miss King's husband, Dr. Peter Bourne, a psychiatrist, is one of It is rare in any Presidential campaign Mr. Carter's closest friends. Dr. Bourne that, any one woman has had as com- was the first person to urge Mr. Carter plete access to "The Man" both as con- to run for the presidency more than sultant and comrade, and rarer still in this Southern-saturated core of advisers four years ago. At the time, Dr. Bourne was the then Governor Carter's State that any Northerner (Miss King was Director of Mental Health. born in Manhattan) has been permitted to penetrate. In fact, Hamilton Jordan, Her Office Is His Headquarters Mr. Carter's campaign manager, grum- bled to Miss King the other day, "You Both Miss King and Dr. Bourne have see more of Carter than I do." worked tirelessly to generate interest in Miss King is considered one of the the previously unknown Southern gov- Carter brain trust, on the same level as ernor, wining and dining the Washing- his foreign policy adviser, 'Zbigniew ton press corps over the last four years. Brzezinski, and his economist, Lawrence Miss King, who has her own manage- Klein. She steers several Carter policy ment consultant firm, Mary King task forces, including children's rights Associates, which provides technical and youth services, disabled and handi- assistance and conducts research in capped, and health. As a delegate to the health care and community services for government and nongovernmental 74 Times Democratic National Convention from the District of Columbia, she has been clients, offered Mr. Carter her office. It asked by Mr. Carter to present the has since been expanded into the regular party's platform plank on health at Carter campaign headquarters. Madison Square Garden. Mr. Carter acknowledges that Miss King and Dr. Bourne have been his Director of Women's Group July 8 entree in Washington. Miss King is also Mr. Carter's chief "They know and understand the inter- adviser on women and was recently relationships between people in Wash- named director of the newly formed ington," he said. "And whenever I've Committee of 51.3 Percent, a group of had a question on women's rights or elected women officials and leaders health care, Mary has been very knowl- who will provide Mr. Carter with a edgeable and helpful. She's one of the speakers bureau, advise him on a wide key people who helped me put together range of national issues and help him my ideas on national health care. She'll "search aggressively for able qualified be one of my closest advisers on health women from every section of the land care in the general election and in the 0 serve at the highest levels of my future." dministration." Seated in campaign headquarters at The Committee of 51.3 Percent (so- a desk neatly stacked with voluminous cont lines NEW YORK times/ ercsa would be prohibitive. I helped him understand the outlandish expenditures pink message slips and yellow legal under our current system could be ab- to find "greater freedom in the pulpit sorbed and controlled by national health pads and surrounded by pictures of John to speak out on race." She credits his insurance." and Robert Kennedy, Mr. Carter and the outlook with sharpening her sensitivity Changed His Views on Abortion poignant faces of poverty she has pho- to the plight of minorities, both blacks tographed herself, Miss King talked and women. She said she also believes she has brought Mr. Carter around on abortion. about her first impressions of Mr. Car- A Moralist-Activist in College "I helped him understand abortion as an ter and the forces that molded her own "I grew up with a sense of outrage," alternative to failed contraception," she life. Wearing a green and white Diane she said. "It sounds pious and dopey, said. "He had only looked at it before von Furstenberg dress, and making but I took my father's sermons seri- as an ethical issue." points with perfectly manicured hands ously." Miss King is now writing a major speech on women that both Mr. Carter glittering with diamond and ruby rings, By the time she entered Ohio Wesley- and his wife, Rosalynn, have helped on. she looked more like a starlet than a an University, she had become a moral- speech writer. ist-activist. "Very left wing? No. To me "I always consult Rosalynn as an liberalism is just applied Christianity." expert," Miss King said. "Her under- Impressed by Speech He Made She took part in sit-ins and demonstra- standing of women's problems is real tions, spent Christmas of 1963 in an and pragmatic because of the way she Miss King said her passionate com- mitment to Mr. Carter stems from a Atlanta jail for protesting a. black grew up. She was never raised on silken friend's right to be served at a coffee pillows. She worked out of necessity, speech on mental health reform she heard him deliver in 1971 when he was shop, became communications coordina- SO she has a good grasp of the way the still Governor. tor for the Student Non-Violent Coordi- world looks to women who have to "I had never before heard an elected nating Committee in Georgia and Missis- work to support their families. sippi, and in 1964 organized the Missis- "This is what Jimmy wanted me to official speak with such compassion and sippi Freedom Democratic Party chal- include in the speech. He is most con- feeling about human suffering. And true to his word he developed an absolutely lenge to the Democratic Party conven- cerned about the plight of women who outstanding record on mental health in tion in Atlantic City. work in mills and factories and on Georgia," she said. In 1965 she published a "manifesto" farms for low wages and still have Miss King, the daughter of a Method- calling for the rights of women and another life to cope with at home." ist minister and a nurse/teacher, said blacks; she says it provided the basis Miss King insists that Mr. Carter is she "always had a strong sense of pub- of the first women's meeting in Chicago a "natural feminist" and is quick to lic service and working to make my life in 1966 and helped give impetus to the answer those who call him sexist for count for something." In that respect, women's liberation movement. greeting women on the campaign trail Dr. Bourne said, "she is also like Carter. with "Hi, beautiful" or "You're so From the radicalism of the sixties, That is his driving force-to do some- pretty." Miss King turned to Government for an- thing consequential." swers to human problems. In 1968 she "It's anachronistic," she admitted, Miss King said her Virginia-born fa- joined the Washington branch of the "but it's Southern courtesy. It's a mal- ther fled the segregated South to pre- Office of Economic Opportunity where ter of style, not substance." serve his own Christian principles and she spent four years planning and de- She also has an explanation for wom- en's groups that have railed at Mr. Car- ter for allowing a watering down of a women's caucus resolution at the recent Democratic Party rules committee hear- veloping comprehensive health care pro- ings that would have given women 50 grams for both rural and urban low- percent representation at future con- ventions. income families. One of her projects was the Atlanta 'An Open Process' Southside Comprehensive Health Care "Carter disapproves of the mathemat- Center, where she first met Peter ical approach," Miss King said. "He Bourne. wants an open process. In the District of Columbia, for example, four out of "I'll never forget the night we met," six delegates elected were women. With Dr. Bourne said. "Mary had come to deal a 50-50 approach, women would have with a hostile black community group. come out with one less." The group was angry with O.E.O., with Emory University and with the director Miss King said she believes women of the health center. She calmed every- will fare "better than anyone dreams" one down. She let every side have its under a Carter administration. say. She was the perfect intermediary "Rosalynn has a great impact on his and negotiator. I knew then this was thinking and she is a natural proponent the person I.wanted to marry." of women," Miss King said. "I think he'll see to it that the Equal Rights Field of Health Amendment will pass. He'll work for Another of her projects was Beauford- day care, too. That and mental health Jasper, in the flatlands of South Caro- WR be Rosalynn's projects. She's al- lina where Miss King recalls Senator ready investigating them. Ernest F. Hollings weeping at the sight "I anticipate he'll have at least two of infants infested with worms and women in his Cabinet. He wants to ap- dying of malnutrition. She also recalls point women throughout the Govern- being impressed that Jimmy Carter was ment in high level posts. Ambassador- the only Governor at the 1972 Southern ships, Federal judgeships, the Supreme Governors Conference who "left the Court, the Federal Reserve System. He beaches to come by helicopter to in- wants to see women fully involved spect the project and to encourage the will be a total package approach." health personnel there to carry on their work with the poor." If there is one area in which Miss King feels she has had an influence on Mr. Carter, it is in the field of health. "Two years ago," she said, "he was worried about a comprehensive national health care system. He felt the costs Jashugton loys your 11 A Carter White House: Fast and Tough By Jules Witcover on his massive rganization pledge. those who stand in his way, if it comes Washington Post Staff Writer An early gesture of conciliation to to that. ATLANTA-Jimmy Carter, with the set a tone of compassion for the new A rigidity on matters regarded by Democratic presidential nomination administration. Carter has already Carter as issues of principle, with an unwillingness to negotiate in such apparently assured, still has some dis- said, for example, that if elected he areas or to horse-trade in the tradi- tance to go to get to the White House. would issue a blanket pardon to all tional political sense. But his success so far and the deep di- Vietnam era draft-resisters - not de- A no-nonsense climate in the White vision within the Republican Party serters-as one of his first executive have inevitably raised questions about House, with Carter setting an example acts. what a Carter administration would be of long hours and attention to detail. A tough, aggressive posture toward like. Congress, with a determination and Early pursuit of an agenda of na- Based on discussions with Georgia willingness to take a no-compromise tional goals, drawn up after a series of legislators and other state officials stand on key proposals and risk defeat, public hearings around the country, who-observed his four-year governor- similar to his "Goals for Georgia" dur- agreeing to compromise later on only ship of Georgia at close range, the na- when it has become clear that defeat is ing the early phase of his term. tion could probably expect from a Car- the alternative. Frequent direct communication ter administration: Reliance on a few loyal and with the electorate, over the heads of A fast start. with a flurry of legis- equally determined legislative liaison Congress and the press if necessary, to lative proposals and possibly some dra- aides to push administration programs, build popular support for administra- matic administrative shakeup of the with resort to personal persuasion of tion proposals that run into trouble in bureaucracy of a symbolic nature, to Congress by Carter in critical situa- Congress. demonstrate that he means business tions-and possibly direct attacks on See ADMINISTRATION, A12, Col. 1 ADMINISTRATION, From A1 At the very outset of his term, Car- ter with these two acts made two pow. Heavy use of volunteer task forces erful enemies-Lt. Gov. Lester Mad- from the private sector, in government dox, just retired as governor and pre- reorganization and other executive un- siding officer of the state senate, for dertakings. the anti-discrimination statement, and These and other approaches are sug. Senate President Pro Tem Hugh Gillis. gested by Carter's comments as a cam- Maddox took dead aim on Carter for paigner and by the way he functioned the duration of his term. making the as governor of Georgia from 1971 senate a potential ambush for all Car- through 1974. ter legislative proposals. Also arrayed The image of Carter as a tough, give- against Carter was not only the no-quarter antagonist toward the legis- younger Gillis but also the senate ma- lature conflicts with statements he jority leader, Gene Holley. a law part- made last Thursday to Democratic con- ner of former Gov. Carl Sanders, gressional leaders during a day's talks beaten by Carter in the Democratic on Capitol Hill. runoff for governor. Then, he said that while he intends Yet these two early actions also had to be "an aggressive, strong" Presi- a symbolic and psychological benefit, dent, he would consult with Congress other Georgia legislators say now. The on preparation of legislation, lean on inaugural speech got his administra- Congress for advice in many fields and tion off on a note of progressivism. in all ways seek to work in harmony and the removal of Gillis served notice with the legislative branch. that Carter's plan for reorganization of But friends and foes alike who government would go forward worked with him in Atlanta when he promptly and in earnest. was governor agree that his style was "Mr. Gillis sort of symbolized the to push hard for everything he sought, old machine politics in Georgia," says not surrendering until the last possible Sen. Pierre Howard, assistant adminis- hour, only compromising grudgingly. trative floor leader in the senate and a He began his term with two acts that strong Carter ally. "Also, he was get. -pulled both the legislature and the ting older and there was some thought public up short, then followed them that the department ought to be reorg- with what both friends and foes de- anized." scribe as a relentless assault on the ex- In both these early Carter gestures, isting order of things at the state capi- he demonstrated no reluctance to take tol. on tough opposition, and in fact The first act was his dramatic inau- seemed to court it. It was the same gural address declaration that "the penchant for engaging established time for racial discrimination is over" power as a means of casting himself as -a declaration that came unexpect- a fighting underdog that marked his edly on the heels of a generally con- 1976 campaign for his party's nomina- servative gubernatorial campaign in tion. which Carter carefully avoided anta- For his first two years in Atlanta. gonizing the George C. Wallace vote. the battleground was Carter's much- The second act was the summary dis- heralded reorganization plan, and the charge of Jim Gillis, longtime en- trenched state highway commissioner and father of the then president pro tem of the Georgia Senate. Gillis, in his late 70s. was technically appointed can't by a state highway board. But Carler pressured the board into getting rid of the old man. who had become a power in Democratic politics by virtue of his job, a sinecure from which political fa- vors were dispensed. vii warming Pogl your opposition was centered in the Senate, that Carter's handling of it illustrates dominated by Maddox, Gillis and Hol- his worst fault: "exaggeration" of his ley. (Gillis, bowing to the inevitable, achievements. now says he will vote for Carter for One of the Carter holdovers, James President and declines to talk on the T. McIntyre Jr., director of the Office record about him). of Planning and Budget, says of Carter "A lot of the opposition to Jimmy and compromise: "He understands was not based really SO much on the compromise, and he also knows that if issues," Howard says, "but just on the you really want something, you have fact that Jimmy was sponsoring it to hold fast for it for a while. This was It was a knee-jerk response. If Jimmy not just a surface change. He went af- was for it, they were going to be ter structural change, management im- against it." provement and immediate implementa- But despite this lineup and attitude, tion. I don't know of any other gover. Carter got most of his reorganization nor who has pulled that off. If being program through. "He was winning by stubborn is what it takes, he had it." narrow margins." Howard says, "but Another aide who worked closely he was winning on every vote." with Carter on reorganization, Jack The result was an atmosphere of Burris. says he would inform Carter contentiousness that made Carter that 80 per cent of what he was seek- highly unpopular in the state capitol, ing had been obtained from the legisla- and gave him the reputation as an un- ture and Carter would reply: "I'm not bending zealot who wanted things his going to compromise. I promised the way or no way at all. Actually, several people I would try to get it all, and legislators say, he did compromise- that's what I'm going to do." but only after taking his best shot at For all this acknowledged tough- getting the whole hog. mindedness on Carter's part in dealing "That's the thing about Jimmy that with the Georgia Legislature, there was different from a lot of politicians are few here who think Congress we had before," Howard says. "He was would be beyond his taming. willing to do that sort of thing in the "How is Carter going to deal with face of what he knew would be strong Congress" former State Sen. Bobby political opposition. There were times Rowan asks. "Carter will be far more when he could have traded for votes progressive than Congress, and as'a re- by agreeing to do certain things for sult he'll be leading Congress. Con- certain people, but he just refused to gress is going to have to straighten up do it." its act, because Carter will be on the One of Carter's most outspoken foes side of public opinion." in the legislature, State Sen. Julian Carter's successor. Gov. Busbee, was Bond, agrees on Carter's attitude. hut senate majority leader during the Car- from a different perspective. "I think ter administration. He says Carter he's learned something since he dealt learned the hard way the value of com- with us," Bond says, "but he was very promise, and that if hc could work rigid. It was, 'Here's my plan, take it.' with the Georgia Legislature with He was a sort of my-way-or-no-way Maddox and other foes against him, he man. He once called us the worst legis- will be able to work with Congress. lature in the United States, which was Busbee says a Carter administration not the way to win friends in Washington would begin with a se- "He was one of these guys who not ries of specific legislative proposals. only wouldn't compromise on matters and with a new emphasis on federal- of principle-you admire him for That state cooperation in administration of -but wouldn't compromise at all. This federal programis. is a business where you have to give to Beyond that, he says, fears of North- get. and he wouldn't give." ern liberals that Carter's staff would Carter did blast the Georgia Legisla- be dominated by conservative Geor- ture as the worst. in a press confer- gians would not bc well founded. As ence, hut, according to one Carter in- governor, Busbec says. Carter brought sider, the attack, while angering legis- in numerous outsiders with problem- lators, stimulated legislative response solving skills and experience, and to his demands for action. could be expected to do the same in For most of his term. Carter fared Washington. well with the Georgia House by strik. Another influential Georgia senator, ing an alliance with George Smith, the Ed Gerrard, cites one other thing to longtime speaker. But when Smith look for in a Carter presidency, a char- died, his successor, Tom Murphy, drew acteristic that most others interviewed Carter's criticism for lack of leader- also mentioned: toughness. "He's a ship. and Carter ended his lame-duck hard politician," Gerrard says. "He term in continuing conflict at the state smiles a lot. but behind that smile he's capitol. hard. He remembers his friends and Carter was by all odds an effective never forgets his enemies. It's not one-on-one persuader, but one who much of a politician who can't sepa- dealt strictly with the issues before rate the two." him and not the wants of those he Yet. for all that. none of the Demo- sought to bring over. "A back-slapper cratic legistators interviewed said they could have passed a lot of the bills he found Carter to be a personally vindic- never got through," says Duane Riner, tive man. The senate's current speaker an Atlanta Constitution reporter dur- pro tem. A.L. (Al) Burruss. says. in ing the Carter regime who has since fact, that "that was the biggest argu- become press secretary to Carter's suc- ment we had. Ididn't think he was vin- cessor. Gov. George Busbee. dictive enough. I've always believed if But Carter tried to pass legislation you have a position and you have a with the facts and his own determina- friend and an enemy equally qualified. tion. "He is the consummate planner," you give it to the friend. He wouldn't Riner says. "He has a personal ethic even go that far." that says the day Is made to achieve a Carter, from all testimony here. was certain number of goals, and Jimmy is an odd breed of cat who descended on determined to achieve them. That Atlanta as governor in 1971. He was doesn't leave time for back-slapping or determined. and incredibly self-disci- low-level politics." plined. and if the legislature didn't Though some critics. such as Repub- like the medicine he served up-and lican state Sen. George T. Warren II, hy and large it didn't-he at least got dismiss Carter's state reorganization it to hold its nose and swallow. as a mere lumping together of existing "I wouldn't vote for him again for agencies under broader "umbrella" su- governor." says state Sen. Floyd Hud- per-agencies, most-including critic gins. "1 don't think he used the office Bond-say the reshuffling was, overall, the way you should. lle tried to reform "helpful." Says Bond: "If you or any things best left to the legislature. But other citizen has a complaint, you I'm going to vote for him for Presi- know pretty well who to go 10." dent. I believe a man has to stand for But he says the reorganization was what he thinks is right. and he'll stand not a moneysaver, that the budget and by himself if he has to. He won't bend state employment rolls increased, and until hell freczes over." CARTER: PROBLEMS / kw this June 01 AnN.E.A. Endorsement of Carter Would Be a First By GENE I. MAEROFF The emerging political con- separate Secretary of Education, selves voting more and more sciousness of the nation's equity in teacher retirement na- for Democratic candidates." Special to The New York Times teachers will also be demon- MIAMI BEACH, June 28- tionwide-will not accomplish According to a confidential strated by the presence at the The National Education Asso- themselves." poll of the membership of the Democratic National Conven- National Education Association, ciation, a 1.8-million-member tion of more than 200 teachers The expected endorsement of teachers organization that has who will participate as dele- Mr. Carter, to be made officially 43 percent of its members are later this summer, is an out- Democrats, 30 percent are Re- gradually increased its political gates and alternates. growth of the disenchantment publicans and 26 percent have involvement, will take the final In addition, the National step into partisan politics this of the teachers organization no party affiliation. Education Association plans to with the records on education Teachers say that they see year with the almost certain make endorsements and allot of the Nixon and Ford Admin- no conflict between trying to endorsement of Jimmy Carter $730,000 in contributions istrations. maintain neutrality in the class- for President. through a political arm in at Despite the 118-year-old as- room and becoming involved Such a move by a group that least 350 Congressional races sociation's conservative roots, with politics outside of school. less than a decade ago es- throughout the country. it has been gravitating steadily "My politics is not apparent chewed political partisanship is "Electing candidates dedi- toward the Democratic Party in the classroom," said Barbara seen as the full extension of cated to meeting the needs of and spokesmen expect that Plumb, a second grade teacher its new policy of putting money education isn't a goat, it's a more than 80 percent of its Con- in Boise, Idaho, who is going and its members' time into the means to an end," said John gressional endorsements will be to the Democratic National campaigns of candidates con- Ryor, the association's 41-year- on behalf of Democrats. Convention as an alternate sidered "friendly to education." old president. "Republicans simply do not delegate pledged to Senator Political muscle is a prime Mr. Ryor continued: "Our vote for educational issues," Frank Church. concern of the 11,738 teachers goals, the things need to said Mary Magill, a first grade Mrs. Plumb, who was wearing gathered at the Convention enable us to teach more effec- teacher in California who was a button saying, Dropou Center here for the week-long tively and to live more comfort- elected to go to the Democratic Ford," also said, "Since the annual meeting of the Educa- ably - things like one-third National Convention as a dele- quality of education is based tion Association, which has Federal funding, collective bar- gate pledged to Governor Ed- on money, the only way to im- never endorsed a Presidential gaining legislation in every mund G. Brown Jr. "Even our prove education is to elect candidate. state, national health care, a Republican teachers find them- education-minded candidates." CAMPAIGN BRIEFS session of a two-day Republican Na. tional Committee meeting in Wash- continuing to line up behind former Gov. Jimmy Carter of Georgia. Ten Big Donations ington, Milbank said that four years of 19 picked in Colorado congression- ago more than 700 persons had con- al, district caucuses and a state con- tributed an average of $50,000 to re- vention in Denver back Carter and to GOP Decline elect President Richard M. Nixon but eight of 16 selected at a state Demo- this year only 105 persons had given the party gifts of more than $10,000. cratic meeting in Bismarck. N.D., From Times Wire Services The new election laws prohibit indi- also are committed to the Georgian. The Republican Party is $16.5 million vidual gifts to presidential candidates Carter now has 1,539 delegate votes after they are nominated-the cam- for the Democratic presidential nom- short of its $25 million fund-raising paigns will be financed by the ination, according to an Associated goal this year because big contribu- government-but allow political Press tally. That is 34 more votes tors "are holding back." according to committees to funnel part of their than he will need for a first-ballot GOP Finance Chairman Jeremiah funds to presidential nominees. victory at the Democratic National Milbank. In addressing the closing Anticlimax Dept.: Delegates are Convention, which will be held in two weeks in New York. 20 C THE NEW YORK TIME Carter Makes Peace With Black Leaders and Renews Pledge of High-Level Jobs Paterson to Be Retained In a National Party Post By PAUL DELANEY Jimmy Carter made peaace Mr. Carter committed himself yesteerdaya with a group of 30 to a voter reistration campaign black Democrats that included in the black community similar ny Times several who haad bitterly op- to the major drives of the posed him up to the meeting. 1960s. This, Mr. Diggs said, The group met for nearly an means funding for black organ- hour with the former Governor izations, such as the Voter Ed- of Georgia in his suite at the ucation Project, to conduct such Americana Hotel. Its leaders drives. said they were satisfied with Guly13 Plea Made for Bradley severaal promises he had made, particularly the retention of The group also pressed Mr. Baasil A. Paterson of New York Carter to nominate a black for aas vice chairaman of the Dem- Vice-President. Mr. Diggs and ocratic Nataional Committee, in Mr. Hatcher said they consid- a Carter administration. ered it an insult that Mr. Car- Black leaders were angered ter had mentioned Mayor Tom over reports that Mr. Paterson Bradley of Los Angeles several would be relieved of his duties, weeks ago, but had not met and they had made the issue a with Mr. Bradley as he had priority item for discussion with other prospective candi- when the meeting was arranged. dates. Democratic sources reported "He told us that his Vice- that Mr. Caarter had planned Presidential candidate would be to replace Mr. Paterson with from Washington, and that Ben Brown, a Georgiaa State eliminated consideration of any Representative, who is a close Mayor," Mr. Diggs commented. Carter aide from Atlanta. Both Mr. Hatcher and Mr. After the session, Mayor Rich- Diggs said they were satisfied ard G. Hatcher of Gary, Ind., with that explanation. who as a chairman for the co- Other blacks at the meeting alition of blacks, said the included Representative Charles. group was unanimous in its B. Rangel of Manhattan; Rep- support of Mr. Carter. This was resentative Andrew Young of the Mayor's first endorsement Georgia; Mayor Maynard Jack- of Mr. Cartaer. son of Atlanta; Sterling Tuck- Others at the meeting who er, chairman of the Washington had not announced their sup- City Council; Lieut. Gov. port, or whose support had George Brown, Colorado, and been lukewarm, included Jesse C. Dolores Tucker, Pennsyl- L. Jackson, the civil rights vania Secretary of State. leader; Antonio Harrison, Ala- Some Lingering Doubts bama state representative, and One Democratic leader said Representatives Charles B. Mr. Carter had expressed desire Diggs Jr., of Michigan and for a meeting's such as today's Yvonne B. Burke of California. after reports that some blacks Blacks Promised Jobs were concerned that he would Mr. Carter issued no state- be vindictive towards those ment after the meeting. The leaders who witheld endorse- black leader, who called a cau- ment of him. The leader said cus of all black delegates to there also was concern over the report on the session, said that lingering doubts the holdouts Mr. Carter had renewed his held about Mr. Carter's com- pledge 10 name blacks to high- mitment to minority issues. level jobs, including positions "His statements startled me. in areas in which blacks have am completely satisfied with not served. him and found him to be sin- "These are jobs outside of cere," Mr. Diggs remarked. traditional black areas in [the "He wants to be known as Department of] Health, Educa- the President who made sub- tion and Welfare and Housing stantial steps towards a color- and Urban Development and less society. Under that con- the areas of civil rights," Mr. cept, blacks could end up in Diggs said in an interview. any position in his administra- Mr. Carter Lold the group 10 ton, the Michigan Democrat submit to him within two weeks continued. a list of jobs that should go to Mr. Tucker, the Washington blacks, as well as the names of councilman, said: "He was say- potential appointees. In April, ing to us that he planned to Mr. Carter had told black lead- do for blacks much more than ers to do that at a meeting in we expect from him, even more Charlotte, N.C. Mr. Diggs said than we think he should do for the list had not been put to us. That was my impression of gether, "but it'll be done now. what the meeting was all Further, Mr Digsg reported, labout." Coashington tost Puly 20 AFL-CIO Chieftains Return To Party Fold, Back Carter Associated Press AFL-CIO President George Menay described himself as "very happy" with Jimmy Car- ter yesterday as he announced the labor federation's official endorsement of the Demo- cratic presidential nominee. Meany declared Carter would have labor's all-out sup- port and said its vast political organizing machinery "will go right into action tomorrow morning." The move was in contrast to the 1972 election in which the AFL-CIO made no endorsement. "I think he's a very warm human being," the 82-year-old labor chief said of Carter. "I don't think he's satisfied the way things are and I think he wants to change the whole economic picture, and that's what we're interested in." Meany announced the en- dorsement at a news confer- ence shortly after the AFL- CIO's 35-member Executive Council voted unanimously to back the Democratic ticket. Before meeting with report- ers, Meany said he personally phoned Carter in Plains, Ga., to tell him of the action. He quoted Carter as say- ing, "You'll be very proud of me." The endorsement represent- ed a return of the 14-million Associated Press member labor federation to the old coalition of labor, Meany on Carter: "He's a very warm human being." blacks. liberals and the left that helped to elect every paign will be formally cer- eration's endorsement of Democratic president since tified today by the Federal the Democratic ticket of Franklin D. Roosevelt. Election Commission, a Jimmy Carter and Walter In 1972, Meany and the fed- move that will enable the F. Mondale. eration stayed neutral in the Democratic candidates to Meany was admitted for presidential campaign, refus- receive $21.8 million in "three or four days" of ing to work for Sen. George federal funds for their cam- tests in connection with a McGovern. This divided la- paign. persistent bronchial condi- bor's ranks and helped add to By accepting the federal tion, "which has been nag- the landslide reelection of funds, they will not be al- ging him since last Febru- Richard Nixon. lowed to accept private ary," an AFL-CIO spokes- This year the AFL-CIO of- contributions. man said. He had arranged ficially stayed neutral during The Republican nominee with his doctor during the the primary campaign. is also expected to accept weekend for admission to Although only the Demo- federal funding. cratic nominee has been the hospital, the spokesman Meanwhile, the Social said. chosen Meany said the coun- Democrats USA, which until ci! acted now because the Re- four years ago was Ameri- publican convention next ca's Socialist Party, passed month will only pick be- a resolution Sunday sup- tween "Tweedledee Ford porting the Carter-Mondale and Tweedledum Reagan." ticket. Meany's only public com- Calling the Democratic ments on Carter before the endorsement were that he ticket "forward looking," the resolution said the considered him an accept- able choice. Privately, he was Democratic Party platform known to be cool toward the is a commitment "to deal former Georgia governor. Yes- forthrightly and in a terday he acknowledged that thoroughgoing way with America's most serious do- he originally didn't expect Carter "to be a serious candi- mestic problems." date" and added that he didn't really know him. "I'm very happy with Car- ter," he said. predicting that while the campaign will be tougher then the polls cur- rently show, Carter and his vice presidential running mate, Sen. Walter F. Mon- dale, will win in November. The Carter-Mondale cam- Thusdelphia Inquire July Just more of the same Carter moves to appease the liberals By George F. Will with affection and enthusiasm for phased assumption of a portion of the NEW YORK-A's is well known, Morris Udall as he released his dele- states' welfare costs. gates to vote for Carter. immy Carter plans to build a New Revenue sharing? Increase it; ad- erusalem on the rock of love. That From the moment two years ago just the formula to add to the incen- that Walter Mondale withdrew from tive for local governments to raise s, of course, devoutly to be desired. the nomination race, Udall was the taxes; and add a new "emergency But first things first, and first he odds-on favorite to become what he anti-recession" aid program for cit- vants to do something about his well- did become, the choice of the liberal ies. Education? More federal aid. ounded suspicion that the people he activists. Twelve hours after Udall, Housing? More direct subsidies; will depend upon to campaign for at Madison Square Garden, officially more subsidized loans. dropped out, Mondale, at Carter's him-liberal activists who dominated Rural America? More subsidized the convention floor-are not aglow side, dropped in again, to the delight loans for electrification and telephone of those who the night before had with enthusiasm for him. cheered Udall to the rafters. facilities, more funding of develop- Carter watched television coverage ment programs. These liberal activists are well to of events Wednesday night, when the Farmers? More subsidized credit. convention was suddenly suffused the left of the party rank and file. Environment? They constitute the unconquered re- "Substantially" doubt, where liberal orthodoxy is pre- more research and development spending. served in undiluted clarity. They Transportation? "Substantial direct have harbored ill-founded suspicions that Carter is bent on departing from public investment" and (this is my that orthodoxy. favorite plank) "whatever action is necessary to revitalize railroads." To help them rest easy, and incite There is a banner to which honorable them to heroic exertions on his be- half, Carter has given the most in- persons can repair: Extremism in pursuit of revitalized railroads is no tense liberals all that they asked for vice. and more than they could have de- manded. Carter has plighted his troth All political parties are, in Felix to Sen. Walter Mondale, the most li- Frankfurter's phrase, "organized bera¹ person on Carter's final "short appetite," but the Democrats should iist" of seven possible running mates. be reminded that gluttony, even con- Thus, Carter's first and most im- cerning government services, is a portant decision as nominee was an deadly sin. Certainly Mondale's mis- act of appeasement, bold only in that it revealed more clearly what al- ready was clear enough to anyone with eyes to read. The choice of Mon- sion in life is not to remind anybody dale is additional and probably re- of that. And today, after the selection dundant evidence that Carter's creed of Mondale, there is even less evi- is reflected in the Carterized plat- dence than there ever was that it is form, which is remarkable only for Carter's mission. its degree of fidelity to party ortho- Carter says he has "absolutely no doxy. doubt" about having made the right The economy? The platform en- choice, which makes this choice like dorses "national economic planning," almost everything else in Carter's including rendering the Federal Ro. mind. There can be little doubt that serve System "responsive" to the this choice shows that Carter is con- politicians. tent to paddle along in the Demo- It also contemplates "direct gov- cratic mainstream in the wake of the ernmental involvement" in wage master. Hubert Humphrey. and price decisions, and a "broad When Humphrey became Vice range" of new public jobs programs, President in 1964, the man who was including programs to allocate aid on placed in Humphrey's shoes as Min- the basis of race and sex to heip mi- nesota senator was Mondale. And all norities attain business ownership. this year the second name on Hum- The platform suggests a federally phrey's list of ideal Presidents (right sponsored "domestic development behind the name "Hubert Hum- bank" and federal insurance for state phrey"), has been the name "Mon- and local bonds as incentive for in- dale." creased state and local spending. Carter says there is "no discernible Expanding the welfare state? The difference" between his and Mon- platform endorses comprehensive, dale's views on sensitive issues. universal and mandatory national Given that Mondale is one of the two health insurance financed by new or three most liberal senators, Car- payroll taxes and general tax reve- ter's choice of him should still Demo- nue. It says the federal government crats' fears, and dash others' hopes, should relieve local governments of that Carter presents a break with the all welfare costs and undertake a party's Humphreyite past. The Rauh-Carter Estrangement Joseph L. Rauh Jr., now 65, has been the most prestigious local figure on the national political scene and a major force in the American civil rights movement for more than a quarter century. But in Johnson, as President, Rauh found a Today he is the last leading holdout among civil congenial battler for civil rights. Today on Rauh's rights proponents from the Jimmy Carter presi- law office wall is a photo of Rauh and the dential campaign, SO much so that for the first NAACP's Clarence Mitchell in the Oval Office time since 1948 he did not attend this month's with Johnson's autographed tribute to Rauh as "a Democratic National Convention. fighter." Below are pens used to sign two historic Yet both Rauh and Carter, each in his own way, bills both men fought for, the 1964 Civil Rights Act has worked fon the same long-term goals in the and the 1965 Voting Rights Act. It was LBJ who civil rights field. In recent years, at least begin- made up with Rauh in 1904, when he needed ning with Carter's term as governor of Georgia, Rauh's help, by inviting him on Air Force One and they have been/ in effect, partners in the same wining and dining the Rauhs at the White House. cause without either acknowledging it. In the end, perhaps, it will be that way with Why, then, the estrangement? And will they get Carter, if he wins the presidency. But right now together in the end, as Rauh did with another man the "chasm" seems vast. whose vice presidential nomination he angrily op- The Carter-Rauh differences began, both agree, posed-Lyndon B. Johnson? The Rauh-Carter con- fliet thus far resembles the Rauh-Johnson conflict: in April 1975, when the ADA convention in Wash- ington invited all the then candidates to speak on On one side is a political activist who is also an ide- the 18th. Everybody pleaded a conflict or some alist, intolerant of expediency, unyielding on prin- other excuse. Rauh, however, says that he "blud- ciple; on the other side is a powerful politician, a geoned" Morris Udall, Fred Horris and Terry San- presidential candidate, who seems to Rauh to pay ford to come that day On the promise that, if they more attention to the means of politics than to the did, no rivals would be allowed to speak at any ends of idealism. other session. Carter, however, showed up the In mid-June, flying home to Georgia, Carter told next day, Rauh recounts, at the ADA banquet- reporters that "I don't understand Joe Rauh. He didn't understand me. There's a chasm that ex- cocktail party and asked to speak. Rauh felt he had given his word. and 50 he objected. But ADA ists." The candidate said he didn't feel "at home" chairman Donald Fraser, the Minnesota Demo- with the Americans for Democratic Action, the cratic congressman, overruled Rauh, and Carter liberal organization in which Rauh has SO long did speak. Rauh says he had no words with Carter been a major figure. Carter told how he had come and he denies he was "screaming" at the candi- to Washington to meet ADA leaders and how, date. But Rauh is a speaker of force, and he can when he got up to speak, "Joe Rauh was scream- make a point louder than most. ing at the top of his voice, 'Hell, no, don't let him Rauh believes that there is more to the "chasm" speak. He wouldn't come when we invited him, and we don't want to hear him.' Carter added than that incident, however. He cites two other that "I don't understand somebody like that. To matters. For one, he says he signed a Udall fund- me, that's just a different world." Some of these raising letter that was "very much an attack On Carter quotations appeared in The Washington Carter." The other incident was more complex. Post, the others in the Los Angeles Times. And in Early in the campaign. Bauh says, the ADA was New York magazine, a "close adviser" to Carter worried that Sen. Henry M. Jackson might get the (identified by Rauh as press secretary Jody Pow- nomination. So he and two others found a young ell) was quoted as saying: "If Joe Rauh wants to writer-lawyer named Steven Brill who was com- come to the White House, let him take the public missioned to do a study of the Jackson domestic tour." voting record. What he wrote was published by One observer has remarked that Rauh has "a ADA to prove the contention that Jackson was not great passion for politics but no gift for it." But that is the generalized pragmatist's view of the ideologue, and in Rauh's case it is not correct. The record shows that Rauh has used well the political at all the liberal he had hour given credit for forum to make major contributions in the civil being. rights movement from the day in 1943 when he Brill, without Rauh's knowledge, went on to was the first to challenge the District of Colum- write an anti-Carter article for Harper's magazine, bia's closed Democratic primary system and went published under the title "Jimmy Carter's Pa- on as a delegate to the convention. There he wrote thetic Lies." This article, news of which became the minority civil rights plank with which then- public last February, created a considerable fuss Mayor Hubert Humphrey first forced the Demo- and some rough ripostes by the Carter camp cratic Party to face forward instead of backward. against Brill. The point here is that by then, Rauh It was Rauh who used the loyalty oath issue at the says, he and Brill were friends and the Harper's 1952 convention to force Southern Democrats to piece "really scared me" about Carter. put the party's presidential candidate on the bal- Also, by then, Rauh was backing Udall as the lib- lot and bind electors to him (as many had not done eral hope in the primaries, although he admits to the thought that a deadlocked convention could mean Humphrey's nomination. Yet. says Rauh, he has "my own problems" with Humphrey, as for Truman four years earlier). It was Rauh who Rauh's critical review or Humphrey's memoirs in used the 10 per cent minority report rule in the 1964 convention to bring before the convention the issue of the Mississippi Freedom Democrats and give them seats, thus breaking the racial bar- rier for that state for the first time. It also was Rauh who in 1952 ran Averell Harriman's winning District of Columbia primary by persuading him to run on a then daring civil rights platform. In 1960 at the Los Angeles convention Rauh bit- terly and vocally opposed the choice of Lyndon Johnson as John F. Kennedy's running-mate. The choice, said Rauh, was a "betrayal." The platform that year promised majority rule in the Senate but later, when, as Vice President, LBJ balked a change in the Senate's filibuster rule, Rauh charged that Johnson "has demonstrated once again that his first loyalty is to the Southern rac- ists." Pot 26 Con't from: Wash. Post tuey 26 une July 24 New Republic demonstrates. (It 111. cludes a Rauh charge that in 1968 Humphrey agreed to get him out of Texas on a ruse because John Connally, then still a Democrat, refused to tour the state with Humphrey "if I were aboard" the candidate's plane.) There was another factor, too. Rauh says he re- spected Robert M. Shrum, the former George McGovern speechwriter who worked briefly this year for Carter before quitting with a blast at the Georgian. "Shrum frightens you about Carter," says Rauh. And: "If they're both (Brill and Shrum) telling the truth, there are very serious problems. Ican't brush off Brill and Shrum." Still, Rauh now says he is going to vote for the Carter-Mondale ticket, especially since "one of my proteges (Sen. Walter F. Mondale) is going to he. come Vice President" and "I have a lot of friends in the Carter camp." Furthermore, as Rauh told the New York Times in June, "Anyone who's grown up in the civil rights movement as I have is going to show a little humility for the position of blacks, who are very pro-Carter." -Rauh says he didn't go to the Madison Square Garden convention "because I didn't want to exac- erbate the situation, to become the most famous critic" of Carter in what he felt would be inevita- ble television interviews. "I don't want to be the last anti-Carter person." As to the idea that he IS suffering from a cultural gap, he says: "The fact that he's a Southerner, an outsider and against the establishment are all things I think are great." Rauh also has been rowing with Democratic Na- tional Chairman Robert Strauss who, like Carter, made it his major task to bring all elements of the party together. Rauh's explanation of their differences, which are wide as Strauss made clear in an interview in New York, go back to Strauss' appointment as party treasurer. Says Rauh: "I didn't think John Connally's closest associate" should have that post. The Rauh-Strauss differences are fundamental To Strauss, Rauh is "well motivated" but too "fer- vent." To Rauh, "Strauss believes in a centrist Democratic Party, and I believe in a liberal one. Rauh adds: "I believe in the issues alone." Lyndon Johnson believed in a "centrist" party and evidently SO does Jimmy Carter. On the issues, at least on civil rights, the one closest to Rauh's heart, LBJ as President also was a liberal, but he had to prove himself first to satisfy Rauh. Appar- ently, Carter, however close his civil rights stand may seem today to be to Rauh's views, also will have to prove himself. In the exigencies of a presidential campaign a candidate asks that a lot be accepted on faith. That's not Joe Rauh's way, however. He is the quihtessential liberal, out there on the fringe, a noble, often lonely, figure of great intellectual force. His conflict today with Carter, though no doubt exacerbated by third parties, is the classic confrontation between the idealist, yes the ideo- logue, and the pragmatist. But then, for a long time so was Rauh's conflict with Johnson. Catholics Seen as Problem for Carter Washington Past Guly ! 16 "The platform makes it official. By Haynes Johnson The Democrat Party doesn't want Yet, as Father Drinan remarked Catholics. Oh, it will accept our Washington Post Staff Writer today, here at the convention, it votes. It will condescend to permit NEW YORK July 15-In the clos- us to be poll-watchers and precinct isn't that Catholics in such areas ing moments of Jimmy Carter's captains. But as far as real power as Boston or New York are against proudest day, when he won his in the party goes, the Democrats Carter, but they feel "rather an un- party's presidential nomination, a have decided to revive the Nativist easiness. They don't know him." slogan: no Catholic need apply. For older Catholic voters parti- seene of unnoticed drama and sym- They have read us out. of the cularly-and they are the ones who bolic significance occurred on the party." historically vote in the greatest podium. It spelled trouble for Car- Leading Democrats here do not proportions - the prospect of a ter with a critical clement of the Southern Baptist fundamentalist, a "born-again" Christian reflecting voters. Catholics. the old Protestant evangelical tradi- Scheduled to give the benediction, agree with so flat an assertion. but tion. awakens old doubts. Doubts at this most harmonious Democratic there does exist common concern about the South and the Klu Klux convention in memory. was the Rev. about Carter's appeal to Catholics. Klan and appeals to old prejudices Robert N. Deming of the Cathedral It is a complex equation, com- against the presumed menace of of the Immaculate Conception in America being dictated to by. the Kansas City. Mo. Out in Missouri, pounded by the lack of knowledge Pope in Rome. members of Father Deming's church about the candidate, by conflicts were bewildered when he failed to Further complicating the question appear. His place before the dele- within today's evolving Catholicism, has been the recent awakening of gates and the nation was taken. uncertainty over the nature of the ethnic pride and resulting political campaign to come and increasing action among many Catholies in the North-Irish, Polish, Italian-Ameri- criticism by some Catholics. instead. by a New York City priest, cans among them-and tension and In an interview shortly after conflicts between them and blacks the Rev. Leo J. Daly. Carter announced his vice presiden- in the big cities. Earlier in the day Father Deming tial choice of Sen. Walter F. Mon- Although the public focus of had quietly submitted a letter- dale today, the candidate's chief Democratic officials explaining why he felt unable, as a matter of con- pollster, Patrick Caddell, conceded Catholic protest against Carter at science and principle, to fulfill his a certain amount of unease over this convention has been on abor- assignment. He could not agree the Catholic question. Carter, he tion, in private a number of Demo- said, faces "a potential weakness, Commentary a softness" among Catholic voters crats rae worrying about losing the support of Catholics who do not either with the party's adopted posi- identify with the candidate's back. tion on abortion, or with their ground. Caddell. for instance. sees candidate's statements on that issue. the possible problem as being more The incident went unreported. the one of culture and style than of Democrats who knew about it main- CONVENTION ideology. tained silence. and the nominating There are, however. soine tough night ended on a note of euphoria political facts that every practical and wkic predictions of victory in Democratic politician must recog- November. But among the hard- nize. See CATHOLICS, A19, Col. 1 In America today some 29 milion especially in the key Northcastern Catholies are registered to vote. Nearly 7 out of 10 of these voters are industrial states. CATHOLICS, From A1 concentrated in 12 large states. But, he insists, the actual cam- Those states contain 271 electoral cyed political realists here, both the paign will prove Carter's appeal to votes. That's one more than needed platform event and numerous others voters in the large Northern cities. to elect a President. are creating what is commonly Caddell also reacted strongly. and It is in these areas that Carter still seems least well known. or being described as a sense of un'- personally, to talk about Catholic understood. easiness about Carter and the difficulties for Carter. and about Catholics. the existence of a "Catholic vote." Others here are recalling addi- tional figures. In 1960. Richard The unease goes far beyond all "As a Catholic, I'm offended by Nixon received about 22 percent the idea I should be appealed to the clamor between the opposing of the Catholic vote cast, and nar- as a slogan or as a symbol of my camps on abortion. For the first faith. I'm an American voter first." rowly lost. In 1968, he took 33 per time in 16 years, the old American He, and others, make another cent of that vote, and narrowly won. Four years ago, for the first time question of politics and religion- point, one backed up by political statistics and recent history. There in at least 40 years, the Republican church and state-is being debated is no such thing as a monolithic candidate carried a majority of the again. There is sharp irony in this. Catholics-and won in a landslide. Sixteen years ago, in a vastly dif- It's not surprising, then, to find Democrats today discussing this ferent America, it was the Southern Catholic vote. A generation ago Ca- question, and saving that Carter Protestants, led by Baptists, who tholies spoke with one voice, and has serious work ahead in the urban placed John F. Kennedy, the Catho- areas of the North. one authority. That is no longer so. lic candidate from the urban North, Within the range of Catholic What the peanut farmer from in his most difficult political posi- Georgia must do, they are saying, thought and practice, enormous di- is to demonstrate to the voters in tion. Today, it is Catholics who are versity of opinion exists-from the those areas that he understands looking critically at Carter, the militant liberalism of Father Robert their problems of crime and trans- Southern Baptists from the rural Drinan, the Jesuit who serves in portation and pollution and housing South. and hunger and unemployment, and Congress from Massachusetts, to a can do something about them. Then In an otherwise rambling nomina- William F. Buckley, representating any so-called Catholic issue could tion speech for anti-abortin candi- markedly differing conservative be as irrelevant in 1976 as that date Ellen McCormack last night, views. earlier, and quite different one, delegate James Killilea cited one In the last decade Catholics have proved to be in 1960. Catholic view as posing a warning taken leading roles in the civil for Carter and the Democrats this rights movement of the Deep South fall. Killilea quoted an editorial by and in the antiwar protests. Others the Rev. Edward O'Donnell in the have reacted equally strongly St. Louis Review as saying: against sudden changes within both the church itself and American So- ciety at large. Abortion Plank Gives Carter Problem of Wooing Catholics By LAWRENCE M. O'ROURKE Of the Bulletin Staff The abortion issue is but one facet of New York - Jimmy Carter should what Strauss, in a breakfast meeting make his peace with the nation's in the Statler-Hilton Hotel with a Roman Catholics on the abortion group of reporters, said was a poten- issue, Democratic National Chairman tial for Carter trouble this fall with Robert S. Strauss says. Roman Catholic voters. But Carter, while agreeing he has Strauss said that Archibishop Ber- "a potential problem among Catholic nardin's statement "disturbed me." Evening Bulletin voters," said he sees no need to give Catholics special attention any more Asked what he'd do about it, Strauss so than he would give it to Protes- said, "it occurred to me, I'd call on tants, Jews and nonreligious believ- Archbishop Bernardin for openers. ers. "I hope he (Carter) sits down with The former Georgia governor, glid- July appropriate groups in the Catholic ing toward the Democratic nomi- Church, lay people, and comes to nation for President Wednesday night, grips with that." sidestepped a suggestion by Strauss Strauss said that the abortion issue that he hold a private meeting with was a "problem, but not insur- Archbishop Joseph L. Bernardin, of mountable, and I hope it won't be Cincinnati, a spokesman for the U.S. blown out of proportion." Cathollc Conference, the organization of Roman Catholic bishops in this In a separate interview with The Bulletin former Democratic Chair- country. Bishop Bernardin last week critized man Lawrence F. O'Brien, who is at- the Democratic Party's platform tending the convention, agreed Carter plank on abortion. The plank took a does have a problem with Catholics. middle ground. It takes no position on O'Brien has worked with the reli- a proposed constitutional amendment gious Issue before - but from a differ- that would allow states to prevent ent direction. He was a principal ar- abortions. chitect of the 1960 election campaign On NBC's Meet the Press yesterday of John F. Kennedy, the first Roman Carter left himself maximum room for maneuvering on the abortion issue. He said he thought abortion was Catholic elected President. tist church provides in a pr litical wrong and that he favored a com- It was in September 1960 that Ken- campaign. prehensive program to reduçe both nedy made his appearance in Houston Some Catholics and Jews believe abortions and the need for them. But, before a ministerial association domi- the fundamentallst orientation of the like the Democratic Party's platform nated by southern Baptists and ad- southern Baptist church is hostile to plank on this issue, Carter took no po- dressed claims that his religious be- them. sition on a proposed constitutional liefs - and Rome directly - would O'Brien said that among some Cath- amendment that would allow states to influence, if not control, his presiden- olics there is "an uneasiness" about outlaw abortions. tial decisions. Carter. He listed sex instruction, access to O'Brien said that Carter's problem Carter had a mixed record among contraceptives for those who want is "almost the reverse" of Kennedy's. Catholic voters in the primaries and them, and improved adoption pro- Carter calls himself a "born-again state conventions. He lost heavily cedures. christian." He is a southern Baptist. Catholic Massachusetts and Mary- "Abortion is the result of a failure of contraceptive technique," Carter On television yesterday, Carter ob- land. He did not do well in Phila- said. served that President Harry Truman delphia although he did run well in What he did not change on the tele- was a Baptist who was able to "exem- Catholic districts in southwestern Pennsylvania, gaining an edge that vision program was his position on the plify a compatibility between reli- key question - the constitutional gious beliefs and public service." gave him victory in the state. Carter lost heavily Catholic Rhode amendment that would reverse the He also noted he "never had any Island, but carried Illinois including January 1973 decision by the U.S. Su- trouble" with his religious beliefs dur- its Catholic wards in Chicago. perme Court which struck down state ing his prior government experience The religion issue has emerged here laws prohibiting abortion. as Georgia's governor. as one that worries politicians. They The court held that a woman and Politicians - including Carter and are hard pressed to articulate their her doctor could arrange an abortion his aides - are reluctant to discuss qualms, other than to say that Car- during the first three months of preg- the potential for mischief that Car- ter's fundamentalism may upset their nancy without governmental in- ter's membership in the southern Bap- constituents. volvement, that the state could regu- late, though not restrict, abortion for the next three months, and could "prescribe" or forbid it during the final three months, unless the woman's doctor held it necessary to the woman's health, physical or men- tal. Walt Street Gouenal MUST Read Poly8 Carter and the Catholics By ALBERT R. HUNT class Catholics. "Jimmy Carter's language among Catholics, is confident that most is different, the symbols he uses are differ- Catholics will express this year their tradi- Back during the primaries, the word got ent," says a Democratic politician. Fur- tional Democratic preference. "There is a around that Jimmy Carter was heavily op- thermore, he adds, "there's an attitude of problem," says Mr. Caddell, "but that vote posed by Jewish voters. Soon Mr. Carter moral rearmament about Carter which has to be taken away, and I don't think was showing up at synagogues, declaring never has been part of Northern urban pol. Ford or Reagan is strong enough to do it, his support for Israel and collecting en- Itics.' Another man who doesn't consider Mr. dorsements from Jewish leaders. One reason Catholics are hesitant about Carter's Catholic problem insurmountable Mr. Carter's efforts seem to have Mr. Carter is his tendency to make public is Rep. William Green, the Democratic strengthened him with Jewish voters, but displays of his "born-again" Baptist be- Senate candidate in Pennsylvania. In the the significance of the whole affair proba- liefs. "Catholics don't make a point of primaries. Mr. Green notes, "there were a bly has been exaggerated. Jewish voters lot of blue-collar, ethnic, working-class make up less than 5% of the electorate, and most of them are likely to vote this In his remarkable surge Catholics who were oriented to Jackson or Humphrey, but that doesn't necessarily year, as always, for the Democratic nomi- towardthenomination, Jim- mean they were against Carter." nee-even if unenthusiastically. my Carter hasn't done well To help attract the urban Catholic vote, Meanwhile, Mr. Carter has a much with this group, which Mr. Caddell has argued that Jimmy Carter more serious problem. largely unnoticed-so should consider as his vice presidential far and probably much harder to over- comprises about 27% of the running mate a Catholic, namely Sen. Ed- come. He is having trouble appealing to general electorate. mund Muskie of Maine. But the pollster Catholics-particularly, to Northern. ur- says that even if Sen. Muskie isn't chosen, ban, ethnic, working-class Catholics. Catholic voters, while not a monolithic wearing their religion SO much on their Mr. Carter still has other ways to attract Catholics. bloc, comprise about 27% of the general sleeves, and they get a little uneasy about anyone who does," says Connecticut Con- "Many of these Catholics tend to be par- electorate. Most of them are urban North- erners whose once-solid ties to the Demo- gressman Christopher Docid. tisan Democrats," says Mr. Caddell, "and cratic Party have loosened in recent years. Adds Father Greeley: "A man with I think that we can identify with their con- that style touches very deep suspicions. cerns. This would involve stressing issues In his remarkable surge toward the nomi- There's a cultural residue. Many Catholics such as economic problems and health nation this year. Jimmy Carter hasn't done care." well with this group. remember the Southern opposition to "Carter's major weakness In the Demo- Al Smith and Jack Kennedy (Catholics Adds Mr. Miller: "Carter must develop issues that affect these Catholles' economic cratic coalition Is with urban Catholics," who were the Democratic nominees in says Andrew Greeley, a sociologist and 1928 and 1960). They know that some survival, as well as avoiding cultural is. sues that exacerbate Catholic fears of Catholic priest who writes about Catholics Southern Baptists have been vehemently and politics. "I don't know if the folks anti-Catholic." hlm." He argues that this can be done Mr. Miller notes Mr. Carter's "con- without exploiting racial tensions. down in Georgia know anything about Catholics or how important they are to the stant mention of the separation of church Some Touchy Questions Democratic coalition. Carter may be able and state," calling It "a coded negative On the touchy questions of abortion and to win without Catholics, but he would be message, which Catholics perceive as court-ordered school busing, Mr. Carter taking a hell of a chance." being directed against them." Mr. Miller may be on safe political ground by stress- Mr. Caddell's Opinion says that historically, Baptists have em- ing his personal opposition but refusing to Some Carter aides dismiss the idea that phasized the church-state issue as their favor constitutional amendments to pro- justification for opposing Catholic poll- the candidate has a problem with Catholic hibit abortion and busing. ticlans. voters. One who takes it seriously, how- One stand Mr. Carter already has taken The Republican presidential nominee, ever, is a man who should know: the can- whether it's Gerald Ford or Ronald Rea- that will appeal to Catholics is his favoring didate's pollster, Patrick Caddell. "Jimmy of federal aid to parochial education. At is perceived as very much of a Protestant gan, seems certain to try to capitalize on Mr. Carter's weakness with Catholics. In- the Democratic Party platform delibera- candidate," says Mr. Caddell. "That cre- tions last month, the Carter forces quickly deed, one of Mr. Reagan's strongest ates some real problems with Catholles pitches with uncommitted Republicans just accepted a provision In the platform that that we're going to have to work on." now Is that he best could appeal to the so- backed some forms of aid to parochial With the exception of a few Western cial conservatism of many ethnic Catho- schools. Some analysts believe a similar states where he didn't campaign hard, Mr. Carter has run weakest this year in heavily llcs through his stands on issues such as position helped President Nixon attract Cathollc states: Massachusetts. New York, busing. And some Ford advisers believe Catholic voters in 1972-even though he never made much of an effort to deliver on New Jersey. Rhode Island and Maryland. their candidate's strength among Cathollc In the latter three states, his poor showing voters would give him a good chance to his promises. will the general election by beating Mr. Mr. Carter likely will be helped with among Catholics might be attributable to Carter in some Northern industrial states. Catholic voters, too, as labor organizations the popularity of California Governor Jerry begin to work for his candidacy and as he Brown. a former Jesuit seminarian. But Based on recent election results, some begins to stress various issues of Impor- even Rep. Morris Udall, a Mornion, ran analysts figure a Democratic presidential tance to labor, such as improving mine well against Mr. Carter in Catholic areas nominee must get more than 60% of the safety and increasing the minimum wage. of Connecticut and Michigan. Catholic vote to be elected. Hubert Hum- phrey received 59% in 1968, while barely It's probable. however, that Mr. Cart- "If Carter can't carry Catholics against losing to Richard Nixon; George McGov- er's problems with Catholic voters result Udall, what will he do against Jerry Ford, who has far more appeal" among Catho- ern got only 48% of the Catholic vote four as much from style as from substance. If lics? asks Jlm Miller, a New York political years ago, when President Nixon clobbered so, the solution may be for him to down- him. The 60% standard may be unfleces- play his own personal religious beliefs researcher, who has analyzed Mr. Carter's sarlly high for Mr. Carter, however, since while concentrating on becoming more fa- standing with Catholic voters. Polls fre- it's assumed he will do better than Demo- miliar with working-class Catholics. quently show the President scoring well with Catholic voters: analysts as- cratic nominees traditionally do in attract- "Carter must spend some time talking sume it's because of his Image of decency ing Protestant voters. to urban Catholic politicians," says Father and honesty. Mr. Miller says he believes Nevertheless, the Catholic vote could be Greeley. "He must go Into Queens or the that many Catholics feel a "real antago- crucial to Mr. Carter's chances in several Southside of Chicago and talk to Poles. nisin" toward Mr. Carter. big industrial states. In New York, for CX- Irish and Italians. They must come to feel Mr. Carter's problems with Catholles ample, Catholics comprise more than one- that he knows what thev're about." may be as much cultural as religious. The third of the electorate. former governor of Georgia has had rela- The Carter pollster. Mr. Caddell, while Mr. Hunt, a member of the Journal's tively little contact with urban, working- acknowledging his candidate's weakness Washington bureau. covers politics. CARTER: EDITORIALS ? CON Colitorial-Cod Carter Garry Wills D/pres w star 3-26-76 Why Carter is different Jimmy Carter continues Willkie had the whole slates, or been able to cam- FORD to call his shots, and not Time-Life-Fortune appara- paign after Maryland in- only make them but do bet- tus working for him when stead of being shot, he ter than his own high that kind of thing still would have arrived in predictions. He said a year counted. His main rivals, Miami with a bloc of dele- LIBRARY ago he would beat Wallace Dewey and Taft, were still gates that would have in Florida, and he did it too young to mount a seri- caused a stop-Wallace coali- even though Henry Jackson ous challenge to the incum- tion to form around Muskie came in strong after Massa- bent Roosevelt. Carter has or Humphrey. chusetts to drain votes from no such kingmakers As it was, Muskie undere- him (with the help of a promoting him. He is stimated the caucuses. Humphrey advertisement). practically self-created. Humphrey overestimated He said he would win the the power of labor to swing Illinois "beauty contest"; There are some similar- delegates at the last minute but he also took three times ities to Kennedy's 1960 con- under the new rules. And the delegates that he was test for the nomination. Larry O'Brien went along expected to. Kennedy started early, with with McGovern tricks at the his own team, and made his convention. Carter's is the most personal charm more astonishing surge by a long important than the issues. McGovern never had the shot since Wendell Willkie's He was an outsider as a strong stand in national effort in 1940. It is difficult Catholic - yet that very polls that Carter is already to say just why Carter has fact helped him with urban showing - so strong that he caught on so well. and labor voters. He was runs nearly equal with the Willkie had some of the seen as sophisticated, yet president, or a little ahead Carter qualities. He was an with roots in a traditional of him, already. Besides, outsider as a politician - a religious culture of the McGovern had, like Kenne- self-made millionaire from "ethnics." Carter, in the dy, made a prior move at Indiana, bright but with a same way, plays off his the prior national conyen- country air. Willkie had Baptist country background tion. Carter's skill at getting against his nuclear-engi- along with the press. He neer savvy. What explains Carter's was also hard to categorize Yet here, too, the parallel stunning take-off arc? - a businessman, a critic of is flawed. Kennedy came Shrewdness? Partly. Dumb the TVA and the New Deal, from a highly political fami- luck? Of course. More de- yet an internationalist who ly and background, with his pends on chance than we had taken a very hard stand father's money and muscle like to admit, especially in against the Ku Klux Klan to use at will. Besides, the nominating (as opposed when President Roosevelt Kennedy had made his to electing) process. was waffling. move for the vice presiden- But the political setting, cy at the 1956 Democratic the prior mood, has even But the differences be- convention, acquiring a na- greater weight. More has tween Carter and Willkie tional reputation then. Does happened to America in the are just as striking. Willkie anybody remember what last 10 years than we can was heavily bankrolled by Jimmy Carter was doing at easily digest. And more has the Republican establish- the 1972 convention in happened in the last three ment, in ways modern fi- Miami? (Gov. Wallace years than in the tumultu- nance laws make impossi- claims he was hiding, to ous three years before ble. Fortune magazine's avoid nominating Wallace Richard Nixon's 1968 elec- editor launched his candi- for president.) tion. dacy with fund-raising The Sixties gave us an letters to Ivy League gradu- McGovern came from no- earthquake. This is a time ates. He was the first limou- where last time, but with of after-tremors. sine liberal on the Republi- the help of accidents, re- Carter, for reasons we can side - back then they forms, a rigged convention must give careful scrutiny called it "the station-wagon and other candidates' mis- to, is the upheaval's bene- set" and Willkie was called calculations. If Wallace had ficiary. We are watching "the station wagoner fielded more delegate atypical goings-on. Editorial Cauw Jim Squires Clri. Trib 3/28/76 The candidate Dearo. from nowhere Pres.cort WASHINGTON-While Ronald Rea- The Tribure was told by a Humphrey gan's primary surprise in North Caroli- backer about a "racist" former support- na was occupying everyone's attention er of George Wallace now connected last week, the real good old fashioned with Carter, and a second reporter was kick-em-in-the-groin kind of politics was reminded by a Wallace aide about going on behind the scenes in the strug- "some Marxists" on Carter's payroll. gle for the other party's nomination. Because of the wide spectrum of vot- As usual, the guys doing the kicking ing interests covered by the party, the in the Democratic Party. were the Hu- Democrats-uniike the Republicans-al- bert Humphreys and the George Wallac- ways must play group politics. A candi- es. And the guy all doubled over in pain date who wants the nomination almost -or was it laughter-was Jimmy Car- invariably starts out with the solid ter, the poor, little old farm boy from backing of one or more of the consti- Georgia. tuencies. It seems that some time between Car- For example, "lumphrey always starts ter's victory in the Florida primary and out with the solid support of black Dem- his victory in th- Illinois primary it ocrats, Jewish liberals, and a good dawned on the Hubert Humphreys that chunk of organized labor. George Mc- the nomination is about to bacome a two- Govern built his successful primary campaign four years ago around the antiwar movement, which encompassed the young activist Left and women's groups. Only after Humphrey failed did McGovern pick up the blacks. Organized labor never put both feet in his camp, which is one reason for McGovern's poor showing against Nixon. This year almost all the Democratic hopefuls started out with the backing of at least one important party segment, or at least with the stated intention of be- coming the candidate of that particular faction. Morris Udall, Fred Harris, R. Sargent Shriver went for the activist Left with lesser appeals to the blacks and blue collars. Jackson and Birch Bayh started out with initial support from labor groups. Bayh also went for the blacks, Jackson concentrated on Jews. Carter: Getting his kicks. The one guy who started out with none of these-mainly because he had man race between Carter and Henry M. no particular appeal to any of them- "Scoop" Jackson-and that when faced was Carter. His only hope was to slice with that choice the old Humphrey off a little of the George Wallace consti- constituencies of blacks and liberal la- tuency in the South and try to build on bor would pick Carter. it by picking up a little labor here, a fw blacks there, and old McGovern re- WITH A Iot of delegates still to be treads somewhere else. selected, the Humphreys wanted to give In approaching his seemingly impossi- a new signal that old HHH would be ble task, Carter obviously decided he ready to go, if only blacks and labor must come up with mushy positions on would just remain uncommitted. the hard issues which traditionally have And as they were telephoning around separated the party factions and caused trying to plant the new message with all the internecine warfare of the past. the. press, Humphrey raised his own No one thought he could get by with well-traveled foot and took a swing at it. But suddenly the candidates with Carter in a vulnerable spot. At a break- group loyalties are falling by the way- fast meeting with reporters, Humphrey side. And it appears that as of now only came as close as he could to calling Jackson and Carter have a chance of Carter a racist without calling him a grabbing the deserted factions. racist. And a little talk like that from the most popular politician with black CARTER'S GREATEST weakness- failure to take hard positions on key Ciditorial-Con 20 THI REVIEW & OUTLOOK Who Is Jimmy Carter? It seems increasingly likely that delicatessen. There is no feel for the Governor Jimmy Carter will win instincts of the man, and certainly the Democratic presidential nomi- no feel for the depth of his convic- nation. Which means that one must tion on Any issue. take seriously the possibility that a It is a marvelous piece of effron- CI 50-year-old peanut farmer who tery for Mr. Carter to say, for ex- III served eight years in the Georgia ample, that his defense policy ad- ta state senate and four years as gov- visers are Paul Warnke and Paul ernor will suddenly become Presi- Nitze, two men who agree on noth- 8 dent of the United States. ing except the Democratic Party. How would a President Carter His major foreign policy address behave? In particular, what would consisted of one half attacking he do with economics and foreign Henry Kissinger for being too soft policy-the two questions that make on the Russians and one half attack- or break a President, and two ques- ing Daniel Patrick Moynihan for tions on which no track record can being too hard on the Third World be built as a governor or state legis- On economic policy, similarly lator? It is the hallmark of the Mr. Carter one time will say the Carter campaign that even as he nation can't afford to bail out New emerges as the frontrunner in the York and another time will say he'd majority party we have no good fight unemployment and take his clue to the answers. chances with inflation. Faced with A certain fuzziness has so far the endless implications of the served Mr. Carter well enough, al- Humphrey-Hawkins employment lowing him to run on the assorted bill, he is for it one day and against weaknesses of his opponents. Know- it the next depending on the detail ing what George Wallace, Henry of what unemployment target is Jackson and Mo Udall stand for, a chosen. As Winston Churchill once good many primary voters opted for remarked, this pudding has no the guy with the nice smile. This is theme. not a tactic that will wear well, and Mr. Carter has of course enunci- in an extended contest it would ated the themes of love and efficient probably result in a stumble. But if management, and certainly there is Mr. Carter can win in Pennsyl- a place for symbolic as well as sub- vania next week and the other can- stantive politics. But motherhood didates continue to wilt, it may very themes can be dangerous. Mr. Cart well work long enough to lock up er's pledge never to tell a lie invites the nomination. a contest to find the first one. His Senator Humphrey has been pledge of management efficiency playing a parallel game by staying invites frustration: one can picture away from the primary contests the conversation in which he takes and the scrutiny they invite. This the new federal organization chart has enabled him to strike an elder- and explains the boxes and lines to, statesman pose, and to avoid awk- say, Senator Russell Long. In any ward questions about donations event, more efficient management from milk funds and Howard of what policy?-substance cannot Hughes, about personal gifts and be long avoided. disallowed income tax deductions, Seeking the presidency is an act about a guilty plea by one aide and of consummate ambition, after all, a jail sentence for another. Nothing with which the pose of anti-politi- could do more to agitate such ques- cian sets uncomfortably. The usual tions than a nomination in which justification for such ambition is power brokers trample on the prì- public purpose, a sense that a politi- mary results. If the race boils down cian wants power not merely for its to Humphrey versus Carter, as own sake, but to accomplish some- many analysts say it already has, it thing for the body politic. And what- is hard for us to envision Mr. Hum- ever their shortcomings the other phrey prevailing. major contenders-Mr. Humphrey, In some senses, too, Mr. Carter Mr. Jackson, Mr. Udall, Mr. Ford, would be a stronger candidate for Mr. Reagan - manage to convey the Democrats to field. He would that they seek the power for some run well in the South, forcing the purpose, from helping the underdog P. to class through the bat- to cooling government excesses. Jerald terHorst Stop Carter movement gears up CHICAGO TRIBUNE 2/27/76 D-Res. WASHINGTON-The paramount mes- Ex-Gov. Reagan has demonstrated that son, Udall, and Bayh-with Wallace re- sage of the New Hampshire presidential Ford is vulnerable and by no means a maining as a thorn in the party's side primary is that liberal Democrats and sure winner of all the primaries. Con- right up to the July convention in Madi- the progressive wing of the Republican servatives reason, not without merit, son Square Garden. Party are in trouble. The reasons, how- that he must keep wooing the Republi- ever, are not identical. can right to stay ahead. And if Reagan THAT JIMMY CARTER should be in can't take the nomination away from it at all is perhaps the biggest surprise Jimmy Carter's clear victory over Ford, he still may wind up on the ticket of the 1976 season. four rivals illustrates the point for the as the Ford running mate. That irks His success in New Hampshire cannot Democrats. As long as the liberals con- tinue to field a bevy of candidates like progressive Republicans as much as be attributed solely to disarray on the Morris Udall, Birch Bayh, Fred Harris, anything. liberal side. Carter's personal charm, and Sargent Shriver, the party's natural Democratic liberals, however, have stamina, and superior campaign organi- zation were clearly evident in New liberal majority will continue to be di- more of a chance to improve their posi- Hampshire. After earlier strong show- vided and thus can be conquered by a tion than the Republican left-of-center ings in Iowa and Maine, Carter has am- more moderate Democrat like Georgia's voters. ply demonstrated that a southerner and former governor. In New Hampshire, Carter had center a person without any previous national FOR MODERATE to liberal Republi- field all to himself. In Massachusetts, exposure can pull votes north of the cans, the situation is almost the reverse. Florida, and other upcoming primaries Mason-Dixon Line. President Ford squeaked by in New he will face serious competition from But Carter is also vulnerable. The Hampshire, but just barely. Conserva- George Wallace and Henry Jackson who combined votes of his liberal rivals tive Ronald Reagan was the official los- also lay claim to the Democratic center would have beaten him in New Hamp- er but he and his supporters can legiti- and right. shire. That will increasingly become a mately claim "a moral victory" of sorts Thus we will have what Richard threat to Carter as the liberal field nar- and move on strongly into Florida and Scammon, the election analyst, terms a rows down. Moreover, the worried fac- Illinois, the next big Reagan-Ford battle- "sub-primary." Indeed, we will have tions within the Democratic Party-lib- grounds. two of them in the coming weeks. One eral labor organizations and the party's To progressive Republicans, the mean- will test Carter against Jackson, Wallace intelligentsia-will now join together in ing is obvious. Reagan remains a threat. and, in some instances. Pennsylvania a major stop-Carter movement. His rec- So long as he does. they have no choice Gov. Milton Shapp. The second sub-pri- ord in Georgia and campaign state- but to stick with Ford. And as long as mary will be the sinke-out among the ments will be combed for flaws and the President continues to top Reagan, liberals-Udall, Bayh, Shriver, and Har- inconsistencies. Carter smiled through however narrowly, he is not likely to ris. his first bout with such chicken-scratch- alter his strategy of courting the con- My guess is that these sub-primaries ing in New Hampshire, but it will get servatives and ignoring the moderate-to- on the Democratic side will kcep four more savage now. liberal wing of the GOP. candidates in the running-Carter, Jack- Washington Star The Atlanta Constitu on Jan 31, 76 Hal Gulliver Carter and Wallace: 1970 and 1976 A Georgia critic of Jimmy Carter to find out about in Georgia's first blocking the speech; the Wallace back- that he ever said anything which recently sent this message to Ala- presidential primary this spring). Wal- ers called off their rally and somehow even implied segregationist sentim nt. bama Gov. George Wallace: "You lace had actually carried Georgia just it never got rescheduled. elected Carter two years before, in the 1968 presi- Carter used that against Sanders New, in a curious turn. Carte. is governor, and dential year, running well ahead of with a vengeance in the 1970 cam- viewed by many as the anti-Wal :ce now it locks like both Richard Nixon and Hubert Hum- paign, saying mildly over and over candidate: the one who just may you might get phrey. Wallace got 10 million votes that it just wasn't right for a governor have a chance to defeat the Alaba ma him elected over the country that year, the strong- of Georgia to be SO rude to the gover- governor in the important Florida ri- President." est showing that a third party candi- nor of the neighboring state of Ala- mary. Wallace is right in one thin, a The critic did- date had made in more than 50 years. bama. Why, Carter said, if he were good many influential Democrats are n't really believe So in this context, Carter used Wal- governor he would go out of his way more than willing to help Carter in that Carter will lace as a political weapon against his to invite George Wallace to Georgia states where he would be the main end up in the main opponent. former Gov. Carl to speak. Wallace opponent. Yet it is far from House. But Sanders. Sanders and Wallace had a Racist? No. it is not. though Carter clear that these same Democr ts there is at least a history of being political enemics. not critics felt bitterly at the time that would support Carter against ill certain partial just a question of differing on issues Carter was indirectly appealing to other potential Democratic nominee truth is the comment; the careers of but specific and fairly personal politi- segregationist sentiment. Politically But it is interesting. Carter hims If George Corley Wallace and James cal scars. Wallace openly supported expedient? Sure, a lot of Wallace says the Florida primary is the ma e Earl Carter have intertwined in curi- Sanders' main opponent in 1962, when admirers took due note of the Carter or break one for him. And that mea. 5, ous fashion. the Augusta lawyer won the governor- comment and really thought it prob- really. that his national political i :- In 1970. when Carter was elected ship, and Sanders responded while ably indicated that Carter and Wal- ture depends on how well he TL is governor of Georgia, Wallace was per- governor by blocking Wallace boosters lace were soul mates. Yet. it should against George Wallace, the sar. e haps at a peak of popularity in this from using a National Guard building be added that Carter campaigned ac- man whose rights of free spee- 1 state (he may or may not be still that for a Wallace speech. tively in both white and black com- Carter talked about SO sympathet- popular, that's something we're going The Sanders action had the effect of munities, and there is no evidence cally in the 1970 governor's race, The Washington Post, 31, 16 David S. Broder USABLE Questions About Carter Buring MILWAUKEE-An incident at the And that irresistible surge of hope Vel Phillips YWCA here one afternoon and belief is what made it all the gave blacks an increased voice in the last week may shed some light on harder to accept what happened in the school system and which assured that the paradox of the Jimmy Carter cam- next few moments, because if Carter: "no child is bused against the wishes paign. It also shows why some who did not "betray" that confidence" he of the child." have been watching him have trouble had built in his audience, he did little "So in effect," he said at Marquette, deciding whether they are covering to merit it. "you've got voluntary busing with the most promising political figure to He had been asked, he said, his views black participation in the management emerge in the 1970s or the most skill- on "school integration and I'll of the school system. Now that's what ful demagogue. give you the same answer I gave in I' personally favor," adding that as As is often the case when he has a Jackson, Miss., and Biloxi, Miss., and President he would enforce court black audience, Carter spoke with an Montgomery, Ala., and Asheville, N.C., orders, whether or not he agreed with eloquence, a simplicity, a directness and in New Hampshire." them, and would not support an anti- that moved listeners of both races. But the truth is he did not give the busing constitutional amendment, be- He spoke of the fundamentals that same answer he had given in those cause it is "divisive. unite this country-of restoring "those cities. He did not even give the same That is a perfectly defensible posi- precious things we've lost," like love answer he had given three hours ear- tion. but if any of the blacks at the YWCA understood that to be Carter's of country and trust and pride in its 'lier to a predominantly white audience government-"the things that made us at Marquette University or would give view, they did it through a process of all proud in the past and have kind of an hour later, to another white aud:- divination, and not because of what he had said. slipped out of our hands.". ence at a fund-raiser at the Red Car- Was it accidental or opportunistic-- He reminded us that peasants in pet Inn. the omission of the entire section of Latin America and villagers in Africa his standard answer dealing with "felt when John Kennedy was in the Ile gave the blacks at the YWCA school integration in a big city like White House that our country, big about one-third of his standard re- Atlanta, when speaking to a black and powerful as it is, cared about sponse, then turned to another topic audience in another city now strug- them." He suggested that "those small And when a reporter, who had been gling with that very issue? countries, new and struggling and caught up in the emotion of the gath. Was it a deliberate deception-or poor, want a friend. They could respect ering and had begun to believe that just a fortuitous circumstance - that us if we respected them. They would this man was all that his admirers say Carter left his black listeners thinking trust us if we were trustworthy." he is, realized what had happened, the. that the serene picture of his daugh- And then, having intimated his ein- sense of betrayal was as sharp and ter's second grade is what he sees as pathy for the nations on the other painful as if someone had punched the ideal? side of the great North-South division him in, his stomach and knocked the Was it misleading or not for a candi- in the globe, this son of the American air out of his lungs. date who has pledged "never deliber- South reached out across the great Carter began by saying, as he al- ately to mislead you" to say to a black barrier between the races in this land, ways does, that the passage of the audience, "School integration, I'm for- and said: givil rights acts had been "the best it." and to a white audience, "Forced "If I've got one solid base of sup- thing that has happened in the South busing, I don't like it"? port in this election, it's been among in my lifetime." He told how his daugh- No one can judge another's motives, the black people of this nation ter goes to ""a typical south Georgia but these are the questions that arise and I cherish it as much as anything school" and how "last year in the in covering Carter. I've had in my life-that confidence- second grade, she had 13 white class- and I would never do. anything to be- mates, 16 black classmates, a black tray that confidence. I would rather teacher. She's getting a good educa- die first.' tion. She goes there because she wants He said. as he has done before to to, because her momma and daddy white audiences and black. that Martin want her to. And that's typical and Luther King Jr., had liberated the_ it's good and I'm proud of it. So school whites in the South as much as he integration, I'm for it. It hasn't hurt Educ. had the blacks, by frecing them from us: it's helped us. the burden of guilt and segregation. Ile stopped his answer there at the And he said that his candidacy for the YWCA, turning to a discussion of (wel- presidency would be quite literally im- fare reform. and leaving unsaid some possible had Dr. King not "removed important things that, for one reason from the South the stigma of being or another, he thought the audiences preoceupied with the race issue." at Marquette and the Red Carpet Inn One would have to be made of stone should thear. to be unmoved by the surge of emotion At both those other occasions, after the communion - between those citing his daughter's experience, Carter black listeners and that white speaker immediately said: "We tried mandatory who hopes to be their President. And busing in Atlanta and it didn't work." Busina one would have to be blind not to see He asserted that only the children of what a boon it would be for this coun- the poor were bused and that Atlan- try to have a President who inspired tans of both races preferred a plan that trust in blacks as in whites. which, made busing voluntary, which Edwardats The Los Angeles Times, April 14, 76 Carter: a Look at the Big Picture BY DAVID S. BRODER benefited from the advice of black Ameri- South would give its votes either to the Ala- WASHINGTON-The cartoon in this cans. But in every case, it seems fair to say. bama governor or to the politician who could these Democratic Presidents and presidential most effectively echo parts of Wallace's ap- week's New Yorker shows a quizzical gen- candidates enlisted the aid and assistance of peal-whether it was Barry Goldwater or tleman with a campaign button reading, "Jim- black leaders only after they had secured Richard Nixon, Spiro Agnew or Ronald Rea- my Carter-I think." That is a pretty good. their basic support in the white community. gan. summary of the equivocal status at the Carter's candidacy has been of a different That was always a distortion and an over- moment of the Democrats' front-runner. character. The first and, for months, only simplification of reality. In the same period The "ethnic purity" controversy has prominent Georgia politician to support him that Wallace was claiming to speak for the brought the first major crisis to the former was Rep. Andrew Young (D-Ga.), a black. South, the Confederate states elected other Georgia governor's pursuit of the presidential Young and State Rep. Ben Brown head a governors and members of Congress from nomination, and has caused the first serious touring group of black politicians who have both parties who were moderate in their ra- waverings among many who were beginning perhaps been Carter's most indefatigable cial views and progressive in their economic to believe in either the desirability or the campaigners. By all odds, Carter's most im- and social philosophies. inevitability of a Carter victory. portant endorsement is the one he has re- Southern politicians were the heroes of the As is often the case in politics, it has also ceived from the Rev. Martin Luther King Sr. long impeachment ordeal-from Sam Ervin caused some to forget how much Carter has Unlike the last four Democratic nominees, to Barbara Jordan. already accomplished. who used their strength among whites to ca- But it remained for Carter and his defeats He has changed the nature of the 1976 elec- jole backing from blacks, Carter has used his of Wallace in the Florida and North Carolina tion, and even if his own campaign were to support from black voters and black leaders primaries to demonstrate conclusively that stop dead in its tracks-which it will not- in an effort to establish his credibility in the the moderate voices are dominant in the fundamental aspects of the Democratic Party eyes of whites-particularly the activist South. And, by doing that, he has not only in- and the presidential campaign would have liberals and trade-union leaders. The alterna- creased the chances of Southerners being on been altered. tion in the relationship-the out-front role both tickets in 1976, but has changed the The first change for which Carter can claim for blacks in his campaign-is likely to be re- kind of appeal that all presidential candidates credit is in the relationship of black leaders to membered and felt by others in the Demo- will make to the South-and thus to the na- others in the Democratic Party hierarchy. cratic Party, no matter what happens to Car- tion. Blacks have earned an increasing role in that ter himself. None of this is offered to mitigate or justify party ever since John Kennedy's campaign of The second thing he has done is to redefine the disturbing, distasteful language Carter 1960. Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson and Hubert the South for other politicians of both parties. used in discussing housing policy-for which Humphrey all enjoyed the confidence and In oversimplified terms, for the past decade he later apologized. But it is part of his rec- the South has been seen by most politicians ord, as much as the words for which he is as George Wallace country. properly being called to account, and it Conrad and Inferlandi are on vacation. The belief has been inculcated that the should not be forgotten. Rowland Er ns and Robert Norak 3/4/76 Carter's Campaign: The McGovern Factor CHICAGO As Jimmy Carter hur- Louis Manilow, past contributor in Me- ried it hugh Chicago in a 15-hour cam- Govern and other liberal candidates paign dy prior to today's Illinois and now Carter's chief Illinois fund- Democratic primary. constantly at h raiser. side was a left-wing politician and reformer named James Wall - a fact But Carter's base goes well beyond central to Carter's intricately wrought McGovern's. Co-host with Manilow at a plt to become President. S250-a-ticket cocktail party for Carter at the posh Metropolitan Club last Wall, a Me Jodist clergyman and week was ex-Atlanta Braves owner Bill editor of the super-liberal Christian Bartholomay, a rich Chicago business- Century, was Ill'nois state chairman roan with vague Republican anteee- for Sen. George McGovern in 1972 and dents. Thus, the party mixed Me- plays the same role for Carter in 1976 Governite veterans and Republican neo- He is not alone. Erstwhile NeG- phytes. One Depublican lawyer. who overnites dominate Carter's organiza. never before had supported a Demo- tion in Illinois and elsewhere crat for President or contributed to (especially Florida, scene of his most any political undidate, told us he ex. impressive victory). peeted a President Carter to "cut hell Yet, Carter still straddles issues with one of the bureaucracy" in Washing- devout ideological agnosticism. He is, ton. therefore, attempting a tour de force Nor does Carter pursue the old lib. in keeping a McGovernite cadre while eral baiting of Mayor Richard J. Da- avoiding the pure left positions fatal to ley's organization. Although Carter is McGovern with the electorate four widely supported by anti-Daley reform- years ago. ers. he has pledged to Daley that any This feat could well nominate the Carter delegates elected in Illinois will smiling peanut farmer from Georgia. vote for the mayor to head the state's While nationally prominent liberals convention delegation: distrust Carter and demand more clearly enunciated positions, former Hearing erroneous reports that Da- state-level McGovernite activists are ley was supporting ex-Chicagoan Sar- on the ground floor of his campaign gent Shriver in the four-man presiden- and, therefore, willing to shed an ideo- tial primary here (in fact, the mayor is logical scruple to enter the halls of neutral), a Carter campaign underling power. That means significant Carter placed a complaining telephone call to sentiment on the party left not only Daley's office. Wishing no trouble at against Sen. Henry M. Jackson but city hall, Wall quickly placed a second even Sen. Hubert Humphrey as a bro- call reassuring the Daley camp the kered candidate. complaint was totally unauthorized. That satisfied the Daley aide. who Accordingly, when Carter arrived never realized this was the same Jim here after his Florida triumph. he Wall who had long been Daley's hair- made no slight change in his ideologi- shirt in suburban Dupage County. cally nondescript posture. Carefully re- citing his memorized formulations. bal- Among sophisticated liberals who ancing himself Oi: all issues, Carter have not succumbed to Carter's South- told us he would not tailor his rhetoric ern charm, there is apprehension over to W00 the left. He was willing to en- his non-positions on abortion. busing, dure a little booing at college cam- defense, health and energy. When Car- puses in Chicago and Champaign last ter straddled the amnesty issue last week when he favored "blanket par- week, some McGovernites here said don" and opposed "blanket amnesty" they wanted out. Nor were reformers for Vietnam draft do 'gors: better an- overjoyed by newspaper pictures of gry students than an angry Middle Carter's breakfasting with Lt. Gov. America. Neil Hartigan, a young lion of the While avoiding McGovern's follies, Daley organization detested by Car- Carter vas seeking McGovern's bless- ter's liberal supporters. ing. McGovern has privately confided But fund-raiser Lou Manilow typifies he SO distrusts Carter that he might new flexibility on the left which per- prefer even hawk Scoop Jackson in a mits Carter to seek "moderate middle Hobson choice. So. Carter recently tel- courses to unite the country." Manilow ephoned McGovern with this plea: accepts "blanket pardon" instead of me on the campaign trail If you "blanket amnesty." which would be un- have acceptable to most voters. Carter has char- NEW.YORK By Richard Reeves " The barefoot boy with cheek is mixing politics and religion and he may be capable of doing it with devastating effect " What makes us great? "Love of God. term as a governor, he had no constit- ing Carter in New Hampshire, reported: love of land, love of our children." said uency, no identification with the politi- "My impression is that audiences yearn Jimmy Carter as he moved through cal movement, and not much money- to believe Jimmy Carter. They're look- Florida on an incredible pilgrimage he peanuts, in fact. ing for something. It is his manner and believes will take him from Plains, On deeper levels, Carter. it seems to tone. Also, it is his words. Without Georgia, to the White House. "There me, has figured out a couple of very embarrassment (10 himself or his audi- is no reason I should feel different important things: that what national ence) Carter is able softly to preach about you," he told 200 black students leaders and other candidates perceive love. invoke the name of the Lord, at Florida Memorial College, "than I as a political crisis is actually a spiritual say that he has found Jesus, that he is feel about my little eight-year-old daugh- crisis, and that more symbolic commu- washed in the blood of the Lamb. that ter when I walk in the door at home. nication is the best way to reach Ameri- "I am twice born." Also, the yearning God bless you all." cans drifting in an atmosphere saturated crowds seem to go away believing. in- Newsweek had a lovely line about with instant communications. The bare- cluding a surprisingly high proportion Jimmy Carter: "It is said around Plains foot boy with cheek is mixing polities of the working press. We want to be- that you love him in fifteen minutes. and religion, and, like Jerry Brown in lieve, 100. hate him in six months and understand California, William Jennings Bryan, or, It is clear that Carter perceives and him in ten years. I've known him more more significantly, Gandhi, he may be understands the yearning. Loss of faith than fifteen minutes and less than six capable of doing it with devastating in government is one thing, but, to months. The word love does not come effect. many people, loss of faith in anything to me as easily as to him, but I am Carter's autobiography, a fascinating is everything. The breakdown of reli- very impressed. My first impression is book, was published by Broadman Press gion, the loss of a comprehensible mor- that he is head and shoulders above of Nashville, a religious publisher al framework-of rules-may be the most of the politicians I've seen in re- whose other titles include Politics and United States' overriding crisis. What cent years-a brilliant politician who Religion Can Mix! These lines are is right and wrong today in America? may have a feel for a kind of post- from Carter's book: Are our great political issues actually ideological leadership of a media "I have come to realize that in moral: Race? Vietnam? Watergate? nation. every person there is something fine The CIA? Corporate bribes? On one level, campaigning, Carter's and pure and noble, along with a Was it the old religious framework political brilliance seems beyond de- desire for self-fulfillment. Political that held families together? No doubt bate. A man does not come from where and religious leaders must attempt those rules, graven in stone, were part he did to within reaching distance of the to provide a society within which of it. No doubt Jimmy Carter knows presidency without establishing. prima these human attributes can be nur- what he is doing when he refers con- facie, that he is one sharp* country tured and enhanced would stantly and reverently to "my daddy" politician. There is a qualitalive differ- hasten to point out that nowhere and "my mamma." ence between Carter's rise and the East- in the Constitution of the United Carter is onto something. and he ern Establishment's projection of Wen- States, or the Declaration of In- comes by it honestly. He is a real down- dell Willkie. the nation's hero worship dependence. or the Bill of Rights. or home Baptist whose life has revolved of Dwight Eisenhower. or the antiwar the Emancipation Proclamation, around the church, including years of movement's adoption of George Me- or the Old Testament or the New missionary trips and teaching Sunday Govern. Carter started in the suburbs Testament do you find the words school before. while, and after he was of nowhere: he was from the wrong 'economy' or 'efliciency.' Not that governor of Georgia. His sister, Ruth part of the country and was fairly (II)- these two words are unimportant. Stapleton, is an evangelist and faith popular there. After one controversial But you discover other words like healer of some reputation, described by % first met Carter, actually, more than " honesty, integrity, fairness, liberty, her brother as a woman "expressing year ago when, in the process of courting justice, courage, patriotism, com- in the most refreshing way her deep the press, he invited me to breakfast. But passion, love words which faith and personal relationship with I don't count that. because / didn't pay describe what a government of Christ." (Mrs. Stapleton, whose home any attention. / thought he was wasting his human beings ought to be." base is Fayetteville, North Carolina, is time (and mine) and I can't remember a also an effective political organizer. ac- word he said. In The New Republic, "TRB," follow- cording to Carter's staff, which has used 28 NEW YORK/MARCH 22, 1976 paign workers il' caucus delegates in places like rural In 1902. when Carter was considering his first political race, for the Georgia Senate, he talked with an evangelist friend. "If you want to be of service to other people," the preacher said, "whv don't you go into the ministry or into some honorable social service work?" Carter remembers answering, "How would your like to be pastor of a church with 30,000 members?" Now, instead of a State Senate con- stituency of 80,000. Carter is being looked over by a membership of 215- million. How do you reach that many people, media-bombarded people with their senses dulled by instant, constant information? Perhaps the answer is that you reach them the same way you reach millions of people without any information network--Gandhi solved that 50 years ago in India by communi- cating through the most basic symbol- ism. Perhaps the most complex and most primitive societies are both receptive to religious-political communication simply rooted in their own traditions. Fasting as a means of protest. March- ing to the sea 10 raise a fistful of free salt to condemn a British colonial salt tax. Mahatma Gandhi slept on a mat; ex-seminarian Jerry Brown sleeps on a mattress on the floor. Their constituen- cies perceive them in the same way, as somehow at a level above polities. Carter draws on the symbolism of Christianity and the land--"I'm a fah- muh. my daddy's people been fah-min' the same piece of land for 210 years" -and that symbolism touches deep roots in many Americans, no matter how irreligious or urban their lives may be now. A man who understands that also understands that politics and lead- ership can be a little more creative than just constructing an inollensive record. Calculated inoffensiveness-rhetorie that no longer has meaning-is one of the high goals and hallmarks of the United States Congress and Washing- ton itself. Congress and Washington, of course, consider the presidency their prerogative and property. Who is this Fimmy Carter Wee Jimmy," as James Reston disdainfully calls him--a former governor without the dignity to call himself by his rightful name, James Earl Carter Ir.? Washington is in a small panic over "Wee Jimmy." The titans of old Wash- ington, led by Reston, Averell Harri- man, and Hubert Humphrey, seem ready to take to the streets of George- town. Whv? Mark Shields, the Dr. Johnson of Duke Zeibert's, summed it up: "The problem is that no one in Washington owns a piece of Jimmy Carter." Guests at Harriman's house, which 20 Washington is III a small panic over 'Wee Jimmy.' The titans, led by Resson and Harriman, seem ready to take the streets " is down the street from Henry Kissin- And he is an absolute master at using a cotton-mouthing accent can be con- ger's, which is near Rowland Evans's, the same facts to give different impres- nected to a first-rate mind. not far from Katharine Graham's, re- sions to different audiences. When he And work? Behind that Huckleberry port that "Get Carter" is no longer just appeared before the Young Lawyers Finn grin there is a perfectionist cam. the title of an old Michael Caine movie. Section of the Dade County Bar Asso. paigning machine that shuts down only In a column arranged for strings, Res- ciation in Miami, he was asked about 0 hours of every 24. Mter losing a ton concluded that poor Carter-and his repeated assertions that he is not race for governor in 1966. Carter and poor Ronald Reagan and poor George a lawyer and the attached implication his wife, Rosalynn, began four years Wallace-are sadly misguided in their that lawyers are part of the American of traveling Georgia alone, shaking anti-Washington campaigns: problem. "I had to turn what seemed hands and recruiting volunteers-they to be a disadvantage into an advan- estimate that together they shook 600,- "Washington is agitated and irri- tage," he answered. "Had I been a 000 hands in four years. Then Carter tated by all these campaign ma- lawyer, I'd be bragging about it." decided to try the same thing nationally. neuvers Washington is hold- In almost every speech, he recites a His right hand was bleeding from ing the country together during the political turmoil the leaders of little litany of American heroes-- scratches the other day as he worked a "George Washington, Thomas letter- crowd for a half hour near Tampa. both parties here are cooperating son "-and you can always gange What made him think he was the in the national interest, and con- his calculation of a crowd by whether one among many? I liked his answer: centrating on the things that unite or not he includes Martin Luther King them and have to be done in 1976, "1 have always looked on the presi- fr. Usually in Florida he did not; usual- dency of the United States with rever- rather than on the divisive debates ly in New Hampshire he did. cnce and awe, and I still do Dur- of the candidates. who are vililying is he a liar-this candidate who savs, ing 1971 and 1972 met Richard Nix- the city they want to take over." "I don't intend ever to tell you a lie"? (1) George McGovern Hubert One of those leaders holding the He certainly is not lying now. There are Humphrey Nelson Rockefeller, and country together. Senator Humphrey, 50 reporters trailing him. each waiting other presidential hopefuls. and I lost has made a deal with Senator Henry to catch a lib. A New York Times re- my feeling of awe about presidents." Jackson. if you believe Time magazine porter tried to check out whether Car- If they could do it, so could be. But -and I do, this time. Hubert will do ter was telling the truth when he said he had to figure out how it worked. a little for Scoop-in Florida, he let he didn't know whether or not his an- He volunteered for an honorary job- Jackson use a tape of a laudatory old cestors owned slaves. Sometimes after chairman of the 1974 Democratic Na- Humphrey speech in radio commercials a question-and-answer session, reporters tional Campaign Committee-and used -if Scoop will support Hubert if cluster to give his answers a purity it to explore and chart political Amer- his candidacy collapses. That arrange- test. His words pass, sometimes just ica. Under the guidance of Robert ment made for some interesting doings because he uses language well. Keefe of the Democratic National in Florida, where Carter was going to Was he a liar? Selby McCash. the Committee. the helpful Georgia gov- clobber Wallace. perhaps finishing him statehouse reporter for the Macon, ernor methodically organized panels of off for good. until Jackson suddenly Georgia, newspapers, says, "I doubt if experts to prepare issue papers for decided to go all out to try to cut Car- he ever lied directly in his life. but he congressional candidates and traveled ter's vote. So, given a choice, old liber- is willing by omission of information the country to observe campaigns and als Humphrey and Jackson preferred to let certain impressions get picked make friends. What he did-as Keefe, the survival of Wallace, who threatens up. We all do that to some extent. of who now manages Scoop Jackson's the country more than he threatens course. but il may be that Carter is campaign, later realized-was use the them. to the survival of Carter. who just a little more clever at it" DNC to initiate and finance his own threatens them more than he threatens Jimmy Carter is clever at a lot of national education and begin setting the country. things, bringing both intelligence and up a Carter-for-President organization. Younger liberals, not SO protective cunning to his work. He stood fifty- "When I am president," he says now. of the perfection of the nation's capital, ninth in his class of 820 at the U.S. where even the most egocentric candi- have another gripe with Carter: he's a Naval Academy before working as a dates have always said "if." Ilis sense "phony liberal." or. some think. just nuclear engineer (he exaggerates that, of destiny is scary. In New Hampshire, a plain phony. I'll leave the first argu- calling himself a "nuclear physicist") when a group of editors pressed him ment for the New York primary- my under Admiral Hyman Rickover, then about his sketchy views on foreign own estimate is that every time a New going back to Plains, a town with one policy, be answered, "T'll deal with York politician says that Carter is not street, to make a half-million dollars or that in nv inaugural." a "reat liberal." the Georgian will gain so growing and warehousing peanuts. Maybe he knows something the rest 50,000 votes somewhere west of the He also speaks workable Spanish and of US don't. His relationship with Hudson River. says he has read four books a week Christ is obviously a topic of some Is he a phony? Of course he is. He's during his noncampaigning life. I was discussion among the reporters cover- a politician, an actor, a salesman. What struck by how many national reporters ing him-uninformed, uncomprehend- I like is that the product he's peddling believed he was the smartest politician ing musings by many Northerners who is one of the most interesting I've seen they had ever covered. That perception have trouble dealing with the idea of in a long time. He's a Southern popu- was enormously helped, I think, by the a highly sophisticated 51-year-old man list free of the race anchor, something performance of Southerners like Sena- sounding like the thinking man's Billy of a 1976 Huey Long outgrowing bis lors Ervin and Baker during the Senate Sunday. Perhaps we shall understand origins and repackaging the salable Watergate hearings, which made a when we've known Jimmy Carter for points of his life and public record. lot of Northern provincials realize that ten years. 30 NEW YORK/MARCH 22. 1976 CARTER: GENERAL STRATEGY 100 пазшикии ras Thursday, Seprember 2, 1710 The Inner Circle Hasn't Changed The Core of Carter's Campaign By Jack W. Germond Washington Star Staff Writer Continued From A-1 ATLANTA - In a windowless room on the 24th floor of an office AND THIS FLIES in the face of the building here the walls are covered conventional political wisdom, which with maps and charts that describe has been that, once nominated, Car- the Democratic plot to overthrow the ter would broaden his organizantion government. to take advantage of the highly skilled This is the "situation room" of party professionals who usually Jimmy Carter's national headquar- function in every presendital cam- ters, and the maps and charts quan- paign. tify the strategy he will follow in the Instead, the roster of more than eight weeks of the general election 310 paid employes of the Carter cam- campaign. paign shows not a single addition of One chart lists the states, their anyone from outside in any position electoral votes and the "weight"- of real influence in the organization. meaning essentially priority - each The inner circle is, as it has been, has been assigned by the Carter Charles Kirbo, the politically savvy managers. Thus, for example, New Atlanta lawyer, campaign director York has 41 electoral votes but has Hamilton Jordan, press secretary been given 48 "points" by the cam- Jody Powell, advertising director paign because it is large, Democrat- Gerald Rafshoon, opinion pollster ic and winnable against Gerald Ford., Patrick Caddell, issues director Stu STU EIZENSTAT Another is a calendar of the weeks Eizenstat, campaign treasurer Rob- The issues man until Nov. 2, and, so far as they are ert Lipshutz, field operations director known now, the itineraries that will Tim Kraft and perhaps one or two be followed by Carter, vice-presiden- others. Caddell, who worked for tial nominee Walter Mondale and George McGovern four years ago, is their wives and children. the only one with experience in a AND HUGE MAPS show those general election campaign. same travel schedules for the two Campaign director Jordan's staff weeks ahead, a different colored line shows the same pattern. His deputies assigned to each of the campaigning include Ben Brown, a black state "units." The Carter line is green, legislator here; Barbara Blum, who which is the dominant color of the was a lobbyist for environmentalist campaign advertising. causes in Georgia; Hugh Carter, a Each of the campaigners has been cousin of the candidate, and Pat De- assigned a "weight, too, for rian, a Mississippian of broad ex- scheduling purposes. A "hit" by Car- perience in liberal and women's ter is worth seven points, one by movements. Landon Butler, the po- Mondale five, one- by either wife litical director who often functions in three, or by the children two. Thus, a Jordan's place, is an Atlanta execu- state entitled to, let us say, 27 points tive. might get two visits by Carter, two by Mondale and one by Rosalynn POWELL HAS ADDED some CHARLES KIRBO Carter or Joan Mondale professionals to the press operation The 'politically savvy' lawyer There is nothing very remarkable recently - Walt Wurfel, who worked about any of this: All candidates for for Hubert Humphrey four years president plan to use their time in the ly respected young professional who ago; Jerry Doolittle, a onetime gov- places and to the extentithey think it. worked earlier this year for Sen. ernment information officer in Laos; may yield. the greatest reward in Henry M. Jackson. Mary Fifield, who has been press And the addition of Mondale has electoral votes. But it is unusual, at secretary to Massachusetts Gov. brought with it several leading the least, for any campaign plan to Michael J. Dukakis. But his chief as- professionals - Richard Moe, Mich- be so precisely designed, perhaps be- sistant, Betty Rainwater, is another ael Berman and James Johnson cause so few engineers ever are Georgian who has been on board the among them. nominated. whole way. What is most intriguing about the Issues director Eizenstat worked BUT THE CORE OF the campaign Carter plan, however, is that it is for Humphrey in the 1968 campaign, clearly a direct descendant of the one organization is what it has been all but he is also an Atlanta lawyer. the Georgian used in winning the along. Carter has decided that what There are, of course, many people nomination. And it is so because it was good enough for the political with wide experience among the 300- miracle of his nomination is good has the same paternity, the same plus- on the payroll now, and there group of advisers who have been be- enough- for defeating an incumbent will be others as the payroll grows to hind Carter all the way from obscuri- president. 750 or so with the addition of paid This does not mean, however, that ty 10 his present lead over President workers on the state staffs. the Carter operation has not bor- Ford. Mary Hoyt, Mrs. Carter's press rowed from the past or adapted tech- See CAMPAIGN, A-6 secretary. did the same for the wives niques from other campaigns to its of both Edmund Muskie and McGov- own. ern four years ago. Scheduling direc- Eizenstat's issues operation, for tor Eliot Cutler worked for Muskie, example, is similar to that in many and one of the advance and schedul- campaigns. He has 15 assistants, ing coordinators, Tresa Smith, did most of them assigned to specific the same for McGovern. topics or groups of topics, and they The campaign trip director, Jim draw on about 15 "task forces" of King, is a political veteran who outside experts for raw material that worked for Sen. Edward M. Kenne- eventually can be converted into a dy. The state campaign manager in speech, a statement or a position California is Terry O'Connell, a high- paper. They are in the process now of producing a briefing book on all issues that will be a basic resource for Carter in preparing for the de- bates. Eizenstat says the typical briefing paper product of his group includes several pages of raw facts, a critique of the Ford position on the question plus recommended options for Car- ter. In preparing a speech, he said, Carter "insists on a wide range of opinions" and the raw data as well. And he frequently consults others in the field not involved in the task force or staff process. The principal speechwriter is Patrick Anderson, a tabliehedl frele-lancere whe lives outside Washington THE FIELD OPERATION direct- ed by Kraft, the young professional from New Mexico who ran Carter's Iowa and Pennsylvania campaigns earlier this year, seems to borrow both from the 1960 Kennedy cam- paign and the State Department. Kraft has used the -Kennedy tech- nique of assigning out-of-staters as state campaign managers on the theory that using local people brings you their enemies as well as their friends. Thus, Patty Knox, a political veteran from Michigan, is running the Massachusetts operation while a Massachusetts state legislator, Joe Timilty, is in charge in Pennsylva- nia. JODY POWELL There are 10 regional coordinators, Press secretary including some of the most success- ful state operatives from the pri- maries such as Phil Wise for the South and Chris Brown for the Pacif- ic states. But the state managers report directly to regional "desks" in the Atlanta headquarters under a system similar to that in the State Department. The desks act as a service agency for the state leaders but also collect political intelligence, each of them producing a page or so of notes from the field each day which are synthesized by Scott Bur- nett, an assistant to Kraft, into a two-page report to Jordan. THE CAMPAIGN IS also like others in that it has special desks - supervised by deputy director Blum - for such special groups as the ROBERT LIPSHUTZ aged, Catholics, Jews, women and Campaign treasurer minorities. The pay is also like that of other campaigns. Salaries run from $500 to $2,000 a month maximum, and Jor- dan recently orderd a 10 percent cut for everyone over $600 a month. The total payroll cost is likely to run under $2 million, or less than 10 per- cent of the $22 million in públic funds that is available to finance the cam- paign. The biggest single slice of the bud- get, some $8.5 million at this stage, goes for Rafshoon's advertising operation, and that is likely to be in- creased before it is all over. Raf- shoon has prepared some new five- minute spots, the first of which will be shown on CBS tonight, and new 60-second commercials as well. July 16 i FORD GERALD Carter's Signals LIBRARY Jimmy Carter did not arouse much passion in his ties. To the contrary, the senator has been in the long and determined pursuit of the Democratic forefront of those pressing for legislative action to nomination. Even among his own adherents outside help the poor and the elderly. the South, there was little emotional commitment Nor can Mondale be identified with the Demo- to the Georgian. He won because of amazing orga- cratic old guard. Carter's bete noire in the primary nizational skills; because he was willing to work jungles. Yet, at the same time. the Minnesotan has longer and harder than his more prominent rivals; strong appeal to the traditionalist wing of the party because Plains. Ga., is a better place to be from as the protege of Hubert H. Humphrey. than Washington, D.C., in such cynical times, and The platform is just as compatible with Carter's because he was seen as a decent man. understanding of what the majority will accept. It Carter took the Democratic nomination by relent- promises neither too much nor too little. less siege, not by daring assault. Yet, Carter's ac- A mandatory national health care plan and wel- ceptance speech Thursday night, his choice of Sen. fare and tax reform are among its major commit- Walter F. Mondale as his running mate, and his ments, but it avoids the extravagant cost specifics dominant role in drafting the blandest of platforms that Republicans could attack, as they did with -all are clear signals that he intends to advance such devastating effect four years ago when on the Presidency with the same careful pragma- George McGovern fell into the error of specificity. tism that won him the nomination. But the platform also draws the battle lines His acceptance speech, designed to reach beyond against the Republicans. It proposes to do what the the convention delegates and the smoky confines of Democratic majorities in Congress have been una- Madison Square Garden to the vastly larger televi- ble to do: to override, by a change in administra- sion audience. was written to strike those rhetorical tions, President Ford's many vetoes of Democratic notes he believes are responsive to the current proposals to concentrate on reducing unemploy- mood of the country: distaste for the inadequacies ment rather than on anti-inflation controls. of government. unhappiness with drift, a longing The platform also speaks to political reform. to for stability and confidence and plain talk. bureaucratic profligacy, and to greater openness In tone the speech was tinged with populism, but and accountability in government-all consitent in substance it was moderate and consensus-seeking. with Carter's long-argued positions. Carter's selection of Mondale is consistent with a A pragmatic and cautious campaign may or may theme that disdains the flamboyant in favor of a not carry the day against the Republicans, and Car- calmer appeal to the voters. Reserve, deliberateness ter may yet decide that a bolder effort, revealing and persistence also run strongly in the young sen- other aspects of his character, is in order. ator's character. As a Southerner, he must contend with the re- But Mondale brings more than compatibility to verse provincialism of Northern liberals. As a pri- the ticket. vate and introspective man, he still remains an Although he strengthens its liberal credentials, enigma to vast numbers of Americans-and even he is not offensive to moderates. Although he to the party that nominated him-despite his sud- brings experience in the federal government to the den and extraordinary rise to prominence. team, Mondale cannot be identified with the Demo- The one certainty is that the country will to cratic faction in Washington that is, by Carter's know him-and understand him-better than 11 own definition. unresponsive to unmet social priori- does now. 7/1/anta Constitution june17 New Face' and "Integrity' Atl. Con June Carter's Foremost Draws BY LOUIS HARRIS What the American people find most appealing about former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter is that "he is not part of the HARRIS POLL Washington, D.C. establishment," and that he is a "man of integrity." However, the public has some doubts help them if he becomes President." Among about Carter. The most serious is expressed blacks, a 51-15 per cent majority agrees by the 58-23 per cent majority who "worry with this assessment, which reflects the con- some about a politician who says, 'I will tinuing Carter appeal to the largest racial never lie to you." minority in the country. With the primary season now over, and -By 40-22 per cent, a plurality be- Carter driving toward a first ballot nomina- lieves that "as President, he would inspire tion in next month's Democratic convention, confidence personally in the White House it is instructive to see how the voters look A 50-19 per cent majority of Democra's at the man who may well carry his party's share this view. banner. These figures indicate that Carter is : On the positive side: beginning to come through to substantial -A 46-24 per cent plurality admire numbers of the American people as a diffet him for "having the courage not to make ent type of national figure who can generate promises to get votes." At a time when the much positive support. electorate has become highly skeptical of However, as he becomes a more fami'- the old politics and easy promises, Carter iar face, some of the early negatives that stands out as a candidate who has been very were raised about him linger: cautious about promising programs that -A 48-26 per cent plurality believe might involve sizable federal spending. The the charge by his primary opponents that number who praise Carter for his restraint "he has ducked taking stands on issues to has risen from the 40-25 per cent nation- avoid offending anybody-and that is wide who felt that way in April. wrong." This represents an increase from -Better than a two-to-one plurality be- the 42-27 per cent who felt that way in lieves that "if he gets the Denocratic nomi- April. nation, he will have done it without being -By 41-24 per cent, a plurality also obligated to anyone except the voters, and feels that "underneath that smile, he is a that is good." The sense that Carter is inde- tough and cold-blooded politician." In April, pendent of the usual obligations built up by a smaller 36-22 per cent plurality felt tha' aspiring candidates could serve him in good way. stead in the fall campaign. Although it is much discussed. Carter: -By 42-35 per cent, a plurality feels. strongly held religious faith does not appea that Jimmy Carter is "the kind of new, to be a decisive factor in people's judgments fresh face that is needed in the White about him. By 32-31 per cent-with 37 per House." In April, this view was held by a cent unable to express an opinion-most narrow 38-35 per cent. people do not agree with the statement that -By 42-18 per cent, the public also "he is a deeply religious man, which is very thinks that Carter "feels keeply about less important to me this year in choosing a privileged people and getuinely wants to President." Washington stor 906.4 Charles Bartlett Carter is moving left for the fall campaign NEW YORK - Jimmy cans will warn that the na- demonstrations of personal Carter has not taken most tion will wind up like New rapport to fill out his image. of the jumps in his eager- York unless Congress Some of this can be accom- ness to capture the presi- mends its fiscal ways, Car- plished on television - dential nomination of a ter is ready to stick with cozy, five-minute inter- united Democratic party. New York. views from his den at home. Carter campaigned in the Private interviews and He did balk at the women primaries as a figure some- press conferences in a se- who pressured him here to what to the right of the rene Georgia setting will back a rule requiring that party's mainstream. But he give him other opportuni- half the delegates at the is now hurrying to enlist as ties to show grace under next convention be female. a consensus Democrat. This pressure. This was not a major balk means all-out for Israel, a The fuzziness complaint because the women knew readiness to risk inflation to will fade as it becomes their cause was unrealistic. create jobs, and down-the- apparent that he means to Only S per cent of all city, line support for national campaign as a liberal state and federal elective health insurance and wel- Democrat. He will be for- offices are now held by fare reform. He has been given for his refusal to take women, so they have no im- describing himself as liber- clear stands on right to mediate claim on half the al on human rights and a work or abortion after he political stage. fiscal conservative. The begins to mouth the ortho- But Carter has taken a pre-convention processing dox Democrat positions. huge jump in espousing the has left him a liberal Demo- $18 billion federal package crat. Like the delegates, Car- with which the nation's ter is slightly lost in this mayors aspire to relieve the Carter's aides talk now of huge city. He is certainly fiscal plight of their cities. "the problem," which is stirring nothing like the ex- The diminished lustre of their pollster's perception citement that burst upon urban causes kept the cities that many Democrats are Queen Elizabeth here last out of most of the political wary of him. The problem is week. Small crowds stand dialogue of 1972 and Cart- not, in their judgment, a behind the barricades and er's willingness to take up matter of being disliked by cheer when he leaves his the mayors' campaign is Catholics, Jews or other hotel. But they are not jam- bringing them into his cor- specific groups because he ming the streets or tearing ner with enthusiasm. is a Southern Baptist. In- down the barricades. A poli- stead they ascribe the wari- tician has to look really A fervent enthusiast is ness to the fact that many Presidential before New New York's Mayor Abe became aware of the candi- Yorkers get excited. Beame, whose misery date in the climatic phase of Democrats react to famil- under the restraints of his the primaries when he was iar issues mouthed by a federal creditors is undis- moving too fast to display candidate who embraces guised. A more generous his personal qualities. their consensus positions. deal with a Democratic Like many nominces before President would case the If this assessment is him, Carter went to the pressure and Beame is right, the solution does not right to get nominated. Now wholly persuaded that Car- lie in the choice of a vice- he needs to go to the left to ter will make that deal. In a presidential candidate. get elected and that is how campaign in which Republi- What Carter needs are he is positioning himself. Washington tost July good. Joseph Kraft Fred. Reph is Winning the Election: Themes Vs. Issues Though the cheers and huzzahs of ing goes-with "milk on his hands." the New York convention are still ring- But that stain can be washed almost ing in his ears, Jimmy Carter faces a clean by the statements made on behalf crucial question of political strategy. of Gov. Connally by Congresswoman The question is whether to make the Barbara Jordan, not to mention the presidential race a campaign of themes Democratic national chairman, Robert or a campaign of issues. Strauss. The temptation is to stick with the If character is Mr. Ford's strong thematic emphasis which won the nom- point, however, his weakness is job per- ination for Mr. Carter. But President formance. A large number of Ameri- Ford, whom he will almost certainly cans think he simply dcesn't have the face in the general election, is a far brains to run the country. The latest more formidable foe than seems gener- Gallup Poll shows that he gets 45 per ally imagined, and much less vulnera- cent approval. That compares with 59 ble to a campalgn on themes than to a per cent for President Nixon at a simi- campaign on the issues. lar stage in 1972; with 74 per cent for The thematic campaign, which Mr. President Johnson in 1984 and with 69 Carter and his aides acknowledge they per cent for President Eisenhower in used to win the nomination, empha- 1958. sizes personal qualities rather than To be sure, Mr. Ford has the economy public causes. Thus, in his speeches and going for him. Unemployment is going advertisements, Mr. Carter tried to down, and 50 is inflation. Though the show that he was a good man, an hon- administration's chief contribution was to do nothing. The President will un- doubtedly claim credit. "As President, he has Moreover, it seems certain that once he has beaten Gov. Reagan, Mr. Ford no recognition problem. will go back into action on the foreign policy front. An arms control deal with More important, for all the Russians seems not at all unlikely. For all these reasons the Democrats need to challenge the administration his bumbling, he sharply on domestic issues. Unemploy- ment is the obvious example, since it af- commands high fects worst most of the biggest states- California, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, personal repute. New York and Massachusetts. Economic inequality is a second good target. For it unites Mr. Carter's follow- est man and a strong man. He ad-' ers in both North and South. dressed issues only when questioned by Welfare reform, aid to cities, health reporters or the public. insurance and tax reform are also ob- That approach worked brilliantly in vious issues. The Republicans have the primary campaign-in part be- done almost nothing to beat these prob- cause Mr. Carter's opponents were not lems, nor will they do much as long as all that well known, and in part be- Mr. Ford remains in office. cause their emphasis on the issues Finally there is the matter of making turned out to be boring, but President the federal government work. It is not Ford is something else again. easy when there is a Democratic Con- As President he has no name recogni- gress and a Republican President. The tion problem. More important, for all less SO when the Republican President, his bumbling, he commands high per- instead of trying to cooperate, paints sonal repute. All the polis show that the himself up as Harry Truman and makes American people believe Mr. Ford to be a point of picking fights with the Con- a man of honesty and integrity. Not gress. even the pardon of President Nixon, In emphasizing these issues, to be which Sen. Mondale cited in his speech sure, Messrs. Carter and Mondale accepting nomination as Carter's run- would offend some voters. But the in- ning-mate and which we will no doubt jured parties would be mainly Republi- be hearing more of in the campaign, is cans anyhow. Democratic votes would apt to tarnish the impression of the tend to be solidified. To me that President as a basically decent man. tradcoff makes sense. It seems better, Nor is an assault on John Connaily, in other words, to go for 51 per cent the former Texas governor and Secre- plus of the votes that an issues cam- tary of the Treasury, whom Mr. Ford is paign can virtually assure than for the likely to choose as his running-mate: To nearly 100 per cent that would be the be sure, the indictment of Mr. Connally goal of an inoffensive thematic cam- in connection with bribes taken from paign. dairy producers leaves him-as the say- c 1976, Field Enterprises, Inc. Challenge to Carter: Washwayter Star Step Lightly, Look Carefully FORD This has been successful GERALD for two reasons. THE TRICK for the LIBRARY By Jack W. Germond First, there have been no Democratic candidate will Washington Star Staff Writer issues of overriding concern be to keep the faith without ATLANTA - When someone sug- to the primary electorate, giving the Republicans an gested to Jimmy Carter the other either practically or emo- opening, particularly to the be might bring heavier day that the key to the November tionally. There has been no blue-collar Democrats who pressure on Carter on the election might be simply whether he genuine preoccupation with deserted to the Republican amotional issuer such as makes a serious mistake during the anything as volatile as the line in such numbers four busing, crime and welfare campaign, he nodded soberly and war in Vietnam or race or years ago. At this point fev Democrats replied: "I know that." Then he crime in the streets. Carter will seek to avoid see how this could make grinned broadly and repeated with Secondly, it is now appar- such a situation by trying to enough difference in make more emphasis: know. ent - at least in retrospect set an agenda for the cam- Reagan a threat in Ohio or The response seemed to reflect - that to the extent issues paign before the Republi- Pennsylvania 01 Illinois or with mirror accuracy the mood of the were involved, there were cans settle on a nominee. New York - unless, of Carter camp as it looks ahead to the few basic differences be- He plans a series of course, Carter made that general election campaign, a mood tween Carter and the other speeches that, taken togeth- serious mistake in reacting that perhaps can be best described as Democrats who competed er, will claim to be the to Reagan. cautious and aware confidence. along the way. It is true issues on which the cam- The best defense is Cart- That confidence is based in large that Carter has been unwill- paign should be based. How cr's well demonstrated measure on the almost unanimous ing to go as far as, for successful that approach natural shrewdness and finding of opinion surveys, both put example, Morris K. Udall will be depends, of course, caution. But the Democrat- lic and private, that Carter hold on such issues as health on who wins the Republican 10 leader is maki plans, comfortable leads over both Presi insurance, public employ- nomination. too, to broader his cam- ment policy and the fate of Carter and most of his dent Ford and Ronald Reagan and paign to put more lines into thus would be favored to defeat ei the oil companies. But the advisers seem to consider more of the elements of the ther one. differences have been Ford the more formidable Democratic party. largely those of degree, opponent. This is based to Carter and his dvisers AND, USING THEIR OWN poll: rather than direction. Car- some extent on the advan- held a series of planning made by Patrick Caddell, the Carter ter does favor a national tages any incumbent presi- meetings last week that health insurance system; dent enjoys. But it is based managers have begun translating dealt largely with campaign the raw figures into potential elec he is just not willing to sup- even more on Caddell's mechanics They talked port one now that would be finding that Reagan is ex- toral votes. The bottom line in every about things as diverse as computation seems to be that there i: totally operated by the traordinarily weak in big the method for selecting a no way Carter can lose to either For federal government. industrial states - meaning vice presidential naminee that his strength in terms of or Reagan - unless he makes tha and whether the campaign serious mistake somewhere along CARTER'S TECHNIQUE electoral votes is even less airplane should be config- was demonstrated here than that reflected in na- the way. used with first class tour- again Saturday when he an- tional opinion polls. ist class seating. Carter is ideally position- swered questions from a If Carter can be sure of ed to see that this does not A- panel of leaders of the Na- capturing almost all of the BUT THEY AL 0 ap- happen. The collapse of his tional Education Associa- South, and few quarrel with preached at least some opposition after the Ohio tion for a television film that, neither Republican tentative decision on primary has given him a that will be shown at their can win without taking strengthening their organ- month before his own con- convention. Carter took several of the major indus- ization before the fail The vention and two months be- note of NEA's demand for trial states of the Midwest inner circle will remain un- fore the Republicans will greater federal funding of and Northeast. changed - meaning Hamil- settle on a candidate to get his ducks in a row. More- education and pointed out it EVEN IF REAGAN were ton Jordon. Jody Powell, Charles Kirbo, Rebe Lif- over, he can look ahead to would require $18 billion to conceded the entire Far $20 billion a year to West, including California, shutz, Gerald Ratshoon, opposition that almost sure- ly will be divided and achieve. and were able to add to that Morris Dees. Peter Hourne, and Caddell and few embittered. "I think that is a good Texas, Florida, Indiana, others. goal but I can't say when it Kansas, Nebraska, Oklaho- Indeed, no presidential But another laver of ought to be done," he told ma and Virginia, he would candidate representing a professionals is like., to be the NEA officials. end up with only 175 elector- party out of power has been When pressed, he refused al votes, or 95 short of the added to give the campaign able to enter a general elec- contricts where it has lack- to give them a figure but required 270. And that tion campaign in such a ed them SO far. One exam- promised "I'll be commit- scenario requires a lot of dominant position since "even if." ple The Carter managers Thomas E. Dewey ran ted along with you to a sub- Ford's problem is some- an now negotiating with against Harry S. Truman in stantial increase." Robert Keefe, Henry Jack- It was not everything the what different. He would be 1948. teachers' group wanted but given a better chance to win SOD : campaign manager There are, however, and a former executive questions about the Carter it did position Carter on the in some of the major North- director of the Democratic side of the angels from their ern states - Michigan, campaign that must be an- National Committee who viewpoint. Ohio and Pennsylvania, for swered over the next 120 has a wide range of associa- In the general election example - but he would be days, and those answers rated far less capable of de- tion with both party regu- are likely to determine who campaign, however, there lare and the leaders of will be real differences be- feating Carter in Texas and wins the presidency Nov. 2. organized labor. Florida or of sweeping the tween the presidential Far West. Other Democratic profes- THE MOST BASIC is candidates, whether the simply whether Carter can Republican nominee is Ford Reagan, however, repre- signals will be sought out for advice on strategy with- sents a different kind of a defeat a Republican with or Reagan. It is no secret out being brought into for- threat to the Democrat the same campaign ap- that either Republican will from Georgia. Ford is a mal roles in the campaign. proach he used in defeating try to force Carter to the OHE possibility in this cate- level quantity in national a dozen other Democrats left on such questions as gory is Fred Dutton. an old busing and welfare and politics - known, meas- along the way to the no'mi- Kennedy hand with an ured, lacking the potential nation. crime in an attempt to por- untenny visceral feel for to either excite great zeal In his remarkable march tray him as a latter-day campaigns. or to outrage the electorate. through the primaries Car- George McGovern. And Reagan is a different TO the end, however, ter relied on what became there will be obvious pres- Carter's fate against the dynamic, a provocative known as a "thematic ap- sure on Carter not to aban- Regublicans will depend on campaigner not yet so well proach" - meaning that don his basic Democratic his own ability to pick his perceived by voters every- rather than rely on specific constituency by making a where and possessed of the way through the tricky cur- programs or proposals, he me-too reponse. rent: of the general election potential for political peaks presented himself as a dif- and valleys. as is he did through ferent kind of politician the of the primaries. offering at least the hope of a genuinely fresh concept of THIS COULD MEAN national leadership if he be- disaster for Reagan if, for came president. instance. he frightened the electorate with saber-rat- tling on foreign policy. But it could mean, as well, that background CARTER CAMPAIGN hat Kind of Governor W as Jimmy Carter? Jimmy Carter was Governor of Georgia from 1971 to 1975. His record in office is likely to be T more notable issue in the general election than it was in the primaries. now that he is no longer an unknown quantity. Two members of the Georgia House of Representatives give their views of that record. Mr. Beckham is an Augusta Republican. Mr. Horton is an Atlanta Democrat. By Bob Beckham The ironies of Jimmy Carter Carter's reorganization show- The big-spending promises of are endless. For 3 Georgian. prece was the Department of the Democratic platform. now perhaps the biggest irony is that Human Resources. a conglamer- warmly embraced by Carter. Carter could not have won re- atten :: health. social service. contrast sharply with his anti- election as Governor. if state and miscellaneous programs. A Washington tone during the pri- law had allowed him to try for a few months after Carter left oit- maries. second term in 1974. ice. Department of Human Re- Make-work jobs provided by As Governor. Carter's sup- sources officials acknowledged the government. Welfare reform port for other candidates made to reporters for the Atlanta that amounts to a retread of them almost certain losers. Constitution that 45 per cent of McGovern's old guaranteed in- In 1972 and 1974. his clear fa- all Georgia welfare cases con- come plan. vorites for a U.S. Senate seat tained some error or fraud. Right-to-strike for public em- and the Governor's office were Just this June, Governor ployees. Ban of right-to-work soundly beaten despite well- George Busbee told 3 group of laws. which Carter protected as heeled campaign war chests. Georgia mayors that when he Governor but now promises to Had Georgia's presidential pri- took over from Carter. the De- help repeal. mary come earlier this year. be. Federal economic controis, partment of Human Resources fore Carter ran well in other massive new aid for cities, na- was "an organizational night- states. he likely would have been tional health insurance. mare." Twice. the Georgia legis- embarrassed on his home turf. lature has authorized Busbee to In short. it's the same old Carter's people call his rise a revamp Carter's bureaucratic Great Society formula that brought our economy w the "miracle." If the triumph of im- monster. age over issues is a miracle, During the summer of 1975. brink of depression-spend. while Carter was writing the au- spend. spend. The very formula Carter qualifies. "Miracle" is one of the many buzz words tobiography that claims he left a Carter criticized through the primaries. Carter has used to make this $200 million state surplus. the When Carter can for gover- election 3 battle of symbols legislature was in special ses- nor in 1970. he called himself 3 rather than substance. His forte sion to make $125 million in is glittering generalities. like budget cuts to avoid a deficit. conservative and claimed polici- cal kinship with George Wal- trust. love. decency. Carter had been gone only six lace. Now he picks as his run- Consistently, Carter dances months. The last budget before Carter ning mate Walter Mondale. the away from firm positions. Polls taken by the Washington Post took office as Governor was Senate's leading defender of bus- ing and a staunch advocate of and the Reagan campaign show roughly $1 03 billion. Four years the big-spending, big-govern- the same peculiar result Carter later. his final budget was about ment tradition. Incredibly. Cart- backers who have conflicting $1.69 billion. an increase of di er and Mondale are telling us views on issues like busing and perform. they agree on everything. abortion believe he agrees with State Merit System reports What does Jimmy Carter them. not the other size. That is show state employment rising really stand for? No one knows. the real miracle of Jimmy Cart- .34 per cent under Carter. Ear- maybe not even Carter. We've er. lier this year. State Auditor Er- got to take a huge risk to find His record as Georgia's Gov- nest Davis said he had never out Like the Pied Piper, Carter ernor IS less than miraculous. been able to identity any savings must persuade the voters to its- It deserves close scrutiny achieved by Carter's reorganiza- ten to his sweet song, and 200 since he promises a federal re- sion. despite boasts coming from care where it leads us. organization patterned on what the Carter campaign. he did in Georgia. Baltimore Sun, 8/14/76 (Cont.) Background (Cont.) CARTER CAMPAIGN WHAT KIND OF GOVERNOR WAS JIMMY CARTER? By Gerald Horton The governorship of Jimmy Because of those good times, i inadoxically. he paid little Carter in Georgia was much it is hard to judge whether OF not on to regional planning. more successful and positive Carter's often touted Ti had been chairman of than his critics would have you based budgeting system has 3 nonal planning agency in believe. And substantially less much to do WHO Jeorgia and founder of the than Carter likes to remember patterns. Experience = pro- Georgia Planning Association. and talk about. An example is gram cutting in Georgia during he did not lend his support to the reorganization of Georgia's the last :wo years suggests zero- strengthening Georgia's 23 area executive branch. based budgeting is 3 useful tool. and planning development com- Some of Carter's home state but not infallible. Department missions. In fact. be did not des- legislators have it that the re- heads (and a governor) still can ignate them to conduct federal- organization of state govern- justify programs they wish to ly-required regional water re- ment in Georgia has been a dis- maintain and cut loose without a source planning. which he alone aster. They cite the problems of comforting word those they had had authority to do. one department-Human Re- just as soon let die. In the area of consumer pro- sources-with rundway Medi- Cn environmental issues. a tection. Carter proposed sweep- caid costs and an unwieldy ad- special interest of mine. Carter ing legislation and then failed to ministrative structure as char- points with justifiable pride to push it or to divide his compre- acteristic of the reorganization. his moratorium on sewer hansive bill into pieces that This is simply not true. Overall connections in the north Georgia would pass the legislature. management of the consolidated mountains, which slowed poten- He did not give up his princi- departments. such as Natural tially destructive second home ple. but Georgia citizens had to Resources and Administrative development. He also did battle wait until the next administra- Services. is better. Costs are with the U.S. Corps of Engineers tion for specific relief from much more under control and over the Sprewrell Bluif dam. some abuses. budgetary adjustments neces- saving one of our free-running Carter was a good governor sary to meet state revenue rivers. for Georgia in good times Some shortfalls of the last two years But systematic. institutional of his accomplishments for were possible because of the bes- environmental protection which he gives the legislature ter management As to the prob- through land use planning and little credit. though a passed lems of Medicaid in the Depart- regulations and the designation them into law. such as judicial ment of Human Resources. they of environmentally sensitive reform and reorganization will have plagued all the states. areas 35 had been done in Flort- be long lasting and. perhaps. It was a good time to be Gov- da. Minnesota and Oregon did even historic Others. such as ernor of Georgia. Prosperity ran not capture Carter's Interest or zero-based budgering. may be high with concurrent revenue sotain his support. more sound than light Finally. surpluses. The hard decisions 00 Though his administration some of his individual environ- where to cut expenditures and to wen some individual battles for mental battles. both wen and curtail programs were in the fu- environmental protection. Cart- lost. are gone and largely longos- ture for his successor. Carter's er did not institute or support a ten. pleasant task was :0 propose system of regulation that was :0 new programs and budget in- continue after his governorship. creased expenditures. and be did Carter often describes him- that well In a flush economy. self as a clanner On the blus teacher pay raises. the purchase side. has administration institut- of historical and sensitive areas. ed and organizationally strue- the construction of community- tured planning as part or the based mental health centers budgetary process in an Office were sound proposals. with of Planning and Budget, respon- which the legislature agreed. sible directly to the Governor Saltimore Sun, 8/14/76 Demo Campaign: News N-8 Carter on Foreign Policy In the third of a series of conversations with Jimmy Carter in Plains, Ga., Harry Reasoner (ABC) spoke with Carter about foreign policy. Reasoner: Turning to foreign affairs. You had your briefing from George Bush, not Henry Kissinger. And some people thought that when you referred to a Lone Ranger kind of foreign policy, you might possibly have meant Henry Kissinger. Do you disapprove of him in some manner, sir? Carter: Yes. I think Secretary Kissinger is a brilliant man and a good negotiator, and has a good sense of humor. I like him personally. The thing I don't like about Henry Kissinger is that I don't believe he trusts the American people -- our judgment, our common sense -- I don't think he has a deep commitment to the high moral character of the people to be mirrored in what our country is. He's much too inclined to act secretly, excluding us from participation in the decision- making process, and that includes the Congress as well. Secretary Kissinger has been inclined to establish his own reputation with highly-publicized and sometimes non-productive trips -- to Peking, seven or eight times, to Moscow, five or six times -- he's made decisions that affect our natural allies and trends, those in Europe, this hemisphere, Japan, without adequate prior consultation. Only recently has he shown any interest in the developing nations of the world. Those are some of the criticisms that I have of him. He's responded to some of my foreign policy speeches by saying that he can't see any substantial difference between my attitude and that of himself, which is kind of a compliment to me. But there are some differences, primarily in getting the American people and the Congress to form a much better informed and a much more bipartisan nature of support for what our country is and what we do in relationships with other nations. Reasoner: What would be some differences between a Carter foreign policy and a Kissinger foreign policy apart from the form. Carter: I would strengthen the relationship among European countries in the NATO area. I think Secretary Kissinger has been inclined to treat those nations as individuals and to discourage their closer coralation. I think a strong Europe -- militarily, economically, and politically -- would be to our own advantage. I would have a much greater emphasis on torn relation- ships that exist between our country and Canada, our country and Mexico, our country and other nations of Central and South America. I think we need to have a much more comprehensive approach to the problems of mutual defense. We've not reassessed now our relative contributions to NATO since I believe 1967. And there's been a Demo Campaign: News N-9 tremendous technological improvement in weapon systems since that time. I think we need a reassurance given the Japanese before we make any major immediate decision that relates to the Peoples Republic of China or shipment of crucial element or commodities to Japan like soybeans or coal, that we ought to consult with them. So, those are some of the things that would be changed. I would be inclined towards friendship with the Soviet Union, with the people of the Republic of China. I think that friendship ought to be based on strength. I would never yield, in any way, the full responsibility that would fall on my shoulder, which is the most important of all to have a nation strong enough in its defense capability to guarantee the security of our country. Reasoner: Secretary Kissinger wrote recently began a new quite different American policy in Africa. Would you approve of that policy of a stronger alliance with Black Africa? Carter: I believe SO. I think this was brought about, belatedly, by the abject failure of the Kissinger-Ford-Nixon policy for inst in Angola. We were faced with a realization there to the Portuguese left Angola that we had no policy that related directly with the people of that nation. We suffered because of it in that the Soviet Union and Cuba had replaced us completely as a friend to the Angolan people and I think in the aftermath of that which is brought about primarily by secrecy and the lack of planning, and the lack of consideration of the needs of the natives of Angola. We suffered. And in the analysis of that suffering, or that mistake, I think Mr. Kissinger has moved in that direction. Demo Campaign: News N-10 Carter Repeats Warnings of GOP Attacks Jimmy Carter told the National Democratic Campaign Steering Committee Wednesday in Washington that he expects the Republicans to launch personal attacks on himself and Sen. Mondale. Reporters asked Carter what made him sure of these expected attacks. Carter said (on ABC film): "They've begun to send out, the Republican National Committe, has all the ad- verse comments that has been made, that's unconfirmed or been published in the news to country newspapers and radio stations and I've noticed the delegates for President Ford in the Congress and otherwise have been making speeches lately about me personally." Carter drew a distinction between the anticipated personal attacks and his own blasts at President Ford. Carter said (on CBS film): "I reserve the right at any time to point out the failures of a person in public office, an absence in leadership, a disharmony between the White House and the Congress, a lack of purpose. Those are analyses of the political and leadership inadequacies of the administration, they are not a personal at- tack on President Ford. I've never said anything in my life that was to be construed as a personal attack on President Ford." Carter said he did not know of any skeletons in the Carter closet that could be unearthed by Republican researchers. Asked if he really thought the Republians would "get dirty" about it, as one reporter put it, Carter said (on ABC/CBS film) "I hope not. That's my concern but I think we can withstand it OK." Sam Donaldson said the Republican National Committee has been sending the material. The packet comes with a cover letter saying, "We feel that these will add to your understanding of Jimmy Carter." "In large part, the material does consist of un- verified news stories. Some of them bearing lurid headlines that may or may not reflect the full truth of the matter." "Forestalling complacency among his supporters may be obviously one of the reasons for Carter's predictions that Carter and Mondale privately told Democrats not to lash back at the Republican assaults, Ed Rabel (CBS) reported. Republicans will fight dirty. But there's also one other reason. The Carter camp has successfully employed the same technique before, of issuing dire warnings about expected oppo- sition tactics, then when the opposition does mount an attack, even if that attack doesn't quite live up to the horror of the warnings, Carter is in a position to blunt it by saying, 'I told you so." AP,UPI,ABC,CBS -- (8/4/76) Demo Campaign: News N-11 Carter Calls His Criticism of Ford Factual Jimmy Carter said Tuesday night that his criticism of President Ford was factual and did not constitute the type of personal attack the Republicans are planning against him. Arriving in Washington after a campaign trip to New Hampshire, Carter said (on CBS film): "The Republicans have already begun send out collections of critical newspaper clippings. They've had Sen. Dole and others begin to make very strong statements about my stands on the issues. And I think my prediction is accurate, but, as I pointed out, the thrust of it, in my opinion won't come until after the convention's over. Carter attended two fundraisers in Washington Tuesday night. Despite his campaign, which has continually called for open meetings, the first fundraiser for doners of $1,000 or more was closed to the press, Bruce Hall (CBS) reported. Following media complaints, a later reception for members of the enter- tainment industry was open to the press. CBS Morn. News -- (8/4/76) Carter to Campaign by Train Robert Strauss, Chairman of the Democratic Party, said Wednesday that Jimmy Carter has suggested the idea of a cross- country campaign trip by train. Strauss added, "We're going to give him a train ride or bust ourselves trying. We don't know where we're going or when we're going, but we're going." NBC -- (8/4/76) Election: News League of Women Voters Calls for Presidential Debates The League of Women Voters is trying to collect a list of four million signatures in favor of presidential debates this fall, CBS reported Wednesday. Carter has said he generally favors that idea, but has not promised to debate. CBS Morn. News -- (8/4/76) Carter Campaign rter Would Be Better President Don't know 7% By MARK ANDREWS To the question; "What kind of Metropolitan-area residents interviewed by, The Daily News Opinion Poll think President do you think Ronald at Jimmy Carter would make a better President than either Gerald Ford or Ronald Reagan would make The re- agan. sponse was: Carter's margin over Ford was 14, was a random telephone sam- Fair 23% Very good 5% pling: of 539 adults in the city, Poor 10% Good 17% ght, partly because more than northern New Jersey, and Don't know 36% = third of those polled said Fair 24% y didn't know what kind of Westchester, Rockland, Nassau Respondents also were dsked: Poor 37% esident the Democratic nomi- and Suffolk counties. Richard F. What kind of President do you Don't know 17% e would make. Link of Artronic Information think Gerald Ford woulk make if Carter received support across Reagan Unpopular Systems Inc. was consultant. Reagan was clearly the loser Those interviewed were asked: elected to a full term The the political spectrum, being call- the three-way popularity con- "What kind of President do you replies were: ed either a "very good" or a think Jimmy Carter would Very good 4% "good" choice by 34% of the con- st. More than one third of ose polled said they thought he make The answers were: Good 25% servatives, 32% of the moderates buid make & "poor" President. Very good 7% Fair 37% and 33% of the liberals inter- The poH, taken July 12, 13 and Good 24% Poor 27% viewed. Ford got "very good" or "good" ratings from 39% of the. conservatives, 25% of the moder- ates and 13 of the liberals poll- ed. Reagan was called a "very good" or "good" choice by 31% of the conservatives, 18% of the moderates and 9% of the liberal questioned. Jimmy Carter on Justice G OV. JIMMY CARTER'S speech to the American former may be an idea that could be used as success- Bar Association last week raised more questions fully in Washington as Gov. Carter used it in Atlanta, than it answered. He talked to the nation's lawyers but the latter is a fundamental change in the struc-- about the need "to achieve a higher standard of free- ture of government that deserves long and careful dom, equality and justice" and threw out a long list of consideration. changes in the law he would like to see made. But the details of few of those changes were in his speech, It is true that Mr. Carter dealt with some specifics. and he must, sooner or later, begin to flesh out the He does not think a permanent special prosecutor's office should be created. He believes the Law En- goals of which he speaks. The quality of law turns more on such details than it does on broad statements forcement Assistance Administration has spent much too little of its-money aiding the judicial system. He of principle. For example, the Democratic candidate said that wants public financing of political campaigns ex- "all federal judges, diplomats and other major offi- tended to congressional elections. He opposes as far cials should be selected on a strict basis of merit." too weak the Ford administration's bill requiring That is a goal with which few will disagree, at least in only reports to the Commerce Department of ques- public. But who decides what is "merit" and how tionable payments made abroad by American corpo- does a President overcome the role of senatorial rations. But he needs to tell us more about how the courtesy in the appointment of judges? Again, Gov. activities of lobbyists can be controlled, how he Carter said that the Attorney General should be re- would provide "minimum secrecy within govern- moved from politics "as much as is humanly possible" ment matched with maximum privacy for private and enjoy the same "independence and authority citizens," what kind of government-in-the-sunshine: and deserve as much confidence as did the special law he favors, and how he will end "the sweetheart prosecutor" in the Watergate investigation. But how arrangement between regulatory agencies and indus- is this to be achieved? tries being regulated." Some of the governor's advisers have suggested Running through this speech are themes that have that what he has in mind is the creation of citizen marked Mr. Carter's early campaigning-a desire to commissions to recommend judicial candidates and reduce substantially the role of special interest the transformation of the Department of Justice into groups in forming government policy and to increase a quasi-independent agency with the Attorney Gen- substantially the ethical standards under which gov- eral appointed to a fixed four-year term from which ernment operates. The themes are appealing; they he could not be removed without cause. If this is might become more so with more substance attached what the governor has in mind, he should say so. The to them. New York Daily News washington Post 8/16/76