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Republican Governors' Association, Palm Beach, FL, December 9, 1967
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Republican Governors' Association, Palm Beach, FL, December 9, 1967
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Gerald R. Ford Congressional Papers
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Republican National Committee (U.S.)
U.S. House of Representatives. 3/4/1789-
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The original documents are located in Box D23, folder "Republican Governors' Association, Palm Beach, FL, December 9, 1967" of the Ford Congressional Papers: Press Secretary and Speech File 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. The Council donated to the United States of America his copyrights in all of his unpublished writings in National Archives collections.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 D23 of the Ford Congressional Papers: Press Secretary and Speech File at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library GRF REMARKS TO REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS' ASSOCIATION PALM BEACH, FLA,. DEC. 9, 1967 DISTINGUISHED GOVERNORS AND FRIENDS: IT'S A NEW AND PLEASANT EXPERIENCE TO MEET WITH A REPUBLICAN GROUP REPRESENTING THE MAJORITY OF CHIEF EXECUTIVES OF THE UNITED STATES. THANK YOU FOR ASKING US HERE. I WANT TO ADD MY WARM CONGRATULATIONS TO GOVERNOR- ELECT LOUIE NUNN WHO HAS BROUGHT THE NATIVE STATE OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN BACK INTO THE REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS' FOLD. I HOPE NEXT YEAR YOU ALSO RECLAIM ILLINOIS AND INDIANA FOR HONEST ABE. JUST A YEAR AGO WHEN I LAST MET WITH YOU IN & FORD COLORADO, NONE OF US COULD QUITE BELIEVE OUR GOOD FORTUNE LIBRARY -2- AT THE POLLS. BUT THE TREND IS GENUINE AND CONTINUING. MANY REPUBLICANS CAN SHARE CREDIT FOR THIS UPSURGE, BUT AT BEDROCK LIES THE PATIENT, PAINSTAKING JOB OF PARTY-BUILDING WHICH RAY BLISS HAS BEEN DOING NIGHT AND DAY. INVARIABLY, RAY THROWS HIS WEIGHT ON THE SIDE OF PARTY UNITY AND REPUBLICAN HARMONY, AND WE ARE ALL BENEFICIARIES. chart LAST YEAR WE SCORED A NET GAIN OF 47 SEATS IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. THESE GAINS WERE MADE IN (blue) (red) 33 (white) STATES, OFFSET BY LOSSES IN 3 STATES. WE HELD OUR OWN overlon IN 14 STATES. AT THE SAME TIME, REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS WERE A WINNING IN 24 STATES AND, GENERALLY, WHERE REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS WON BIG, OUR HOUSE CANDIDATES DID WELL. R.I. Nerada the mass THOUGH 1968 IS A PRESIDENTIAL YEAR, I THINK IT'S R DOUBLY URGENT THAT REPUBLICANS PURSUE THE "ALL FOR ONE AND ONE FOR ALL" PRINCIPLE CLEAR UP AND DOWN THE TICKET. IF INSURY -3- WE DO ELECT A PRESIDENT HE WILL NEED STRONG SUPPORT ON CAPITOL HILL AND IN THE STATE HOUSES. THERE WILL BE 1968 overlay CONTESTS FOR THE GOVERNORSHIP IN 20 OF THE STATES WHERE HOUSE (green) REPUBLICANS EITHER GAINED, OR HELD THEIR OWN, IN 1966, PLUS NEW MEXICO AND LOUISIANA, WHICH HAVE NO INCUMBENT REPUBLICAN CONGRESSMEN. ASSUMING WE REGAIN THE CURRENT CALIFORNIA VACANCY, WE NEED ANOTHER NET INCREASE OF 31 SEATS TO CONTROL THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. THIS GOAL IS REALISTICALLY WITHIN OUR PARTY'S GRASP. I WILL LEAVE THE DETAILS ON THIS TO OUR EXPERT, BOB WILSON OF CALIFORNIA, THE TIRELESS CHAIRMAN OF OUR NATIONAL CONGRESSIONAL CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE. EVERY MEMBER OF THE HOUSE WILL BE RUNNING NEXT GERALO FORD LIBRARY NOVEMBER ON HIS OWN RECORD AND THE RECORD OF THE 90TH CONGRESS. REPUBLICANS WILL HAVE A FAR BETTER RECORD TO -4- TAKE HOME TO THE VOTERS THAN THE DEMOCRATS WHO HAVE BEEN IN CHARGE. WE ARE STILL THE MINORITY PARTY IN THE HOUSE, 186 TO 247. THE DEMOCRATIC MAJORITY LEADERSHIP, AND THE DEMOCRATIC CHAIRMEN OF ALL HOUSE COMMITTEES, DETERMINE ABSOLUTELY WHAT MEASURES SHALL COME BEFORE THE HOUSE, IN WHAT FORM THEY COME, WHEN THEY COME, AND THE RULES UNDER WHICH THEY WILL BE CONSIDERED. THE NEWS NATURALLY IS FOCUSED ON THE FATE OF THE ADMINISTRATION'S PROGRAM RATHER THAN UPON OUR REPUBLICAN ALTERNATIVES AND INITIATIVES. NEVERTHELESS, THIS FORD AND CO. DOES HAVE SOME BETTER IDEAS! AND WE HAVE SUCCESSFULLY WRITTEN MANY OF THEM INTO LAW THIS YEAR. OFTEN WE HAVE RECOGNIZED AND SUCCESSFULLY REFLECTED THE WILL OF THE GREAT MAJORITY OF FORD & LIBRARY GERALD -5- AMERICANS WHEN THE JOHNSON ADMINISTRATION HAS NOT. WITH 47 REINFORCEMENTS ON OUR TEAM, IT HAS BEEN A DIFFERENT BALLGAME. MOST IMPORTANT, REPUBLICANS IN THE HOUSE HAVE FOUGHT ALL YEAR FOR FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY AND AGAINST AN INFLATIONARY LEVEL OF DOMESTIC SPENDING ONSTOP OF HEAVY WARTIME DEMANDS. ON 23 KEY ECONOMY VOTES, REPUBLICANS AVERAGED 85% FOR RESTRAINT AND DEMOCRATS AVERAGED ONLY 17% MOREOVER, WE WON 11 OF THESE 23 SHOWDOWNS. AS THE SESSION ENDS, PRESIDENT JOHNSON IS GRUDGINGLY COMING AROUND TO OUR POSITION AFTER UPPING HIS DEFICIT CONJECTURE TO $35 BILLION AND FEELING THE FOUNDATIONS OF THE DOLLAR SHAKING. THERE WERE 40 SPECIFIC REPUBLICAN RECOMMENDATIONS FOR DOMESTIC ACTION ADVANCED LAST JANUARY IN OUR REPUBLICAN APPRAISAL OF THE STATE OF THE UNION. BERRLO FORD LIBRARY -6- REPUBLICANS IN THIS CONGRESS HAVE SUCCEEDED IN ENACTING INTO LAW, GAINING APPROVAL EITHER BY THE HOUSE OR THE SENATE, OR ADVANCING FAVORABLE COMMITTEE CONSIDERATION OF 15 OUT OF 30 DOMESTIC PROPOSALS, AND ALL BUT ONE OF OUR 10 NATIONAL SECURITY RECOMMENDATIONS. SIXTY PERCENT ISN'T A BAD SCORE FOR THE MINORITY. REPUBLICAN PRESSURE COMPELLED THE HOUSE TO CREATE A COMMITTEE ON STANDARDS OF OFFICIAL CONDUCT, A BALANCED PACKAGE OF LAW ENFORCEMENT LEGISLATION, IMPROVEMENTS IN SOCIAL SECURITY AND VIET-NAM VETERANS BENEFITS, HONEST BOOKKEEPING ON PARTICIPATION SALES BORROWING, AND SLOW BUT STEADY PROGRESS TOWARDS A CLEAN ELECTION LAW FOR 1968. REPUBLICAN INSISTENCE ON THE PRINCIPLE OF REVENUE SHARING AND GREATER STATE CONTROL OF FEDERAL PROGRAMS RESULTED IN MARKED IMPROVEMENT OF THE COMPREHENSIVE HEALTH ACT, THE LAW -7- ENFORCEMENT ASSISTANCE AND JUVENILE DELIQUENCY ACTS, THE AIR QUALITY AND THE FEDERAL MEAT INSPECTION ACTS OF 1967. THIS IS QUITE A CHANGE FROM THE GREAT SOCIETY RUBBER STAMP THAT WAS WORN DOWN TO A NUBBIN DURING 1965 AND 1966. THE LATE UNLAMENTED 89TH CONGRESS SOWED THE WIND OF THE FISCAL WHIRLWIND THAT NOW FRIGHTENS THE WORLD. IN THIS 90TH CONGRESS WE HAVE WON SOME AND LOST SOME; WE HAVE MADE SOME MISTAKES AND WE HAVE LEARNED SOME LESSONS; BUT ALL IN ALL WE ARE WRITING A RESPONSIBLE AND CONSTRUCTIVE REPUBLICAN RECORD FOR 1968. entend Is win more - WHEN WE HAVE WON -- AND WE AREN'T FINISHED YET -- IT HAS BEEN DUE TO A DEGREE OF TEAMWORK AND SOLIDARITY AMONG HOUSE REPUBLICANS UNMATCHED IN MY 19 YEARS IN CONGRESS. OUR POLICY COMMITTEE IN 29 SPIRITED MEETINGS HAS FORD TAKEN 30 FORMAL AND PUBLIC POLICY STANDS ON PENDING MATTERS. THESE RECOMMENDED 10 AFFIRMATIVE REPUBLICAN PROGRAMS, -8- SUPPORTED 13 LEGISLATIVE SOLUTIONS OR IMPROVEMENTS IN PRESENT LAWS, PROPOSED CONSTRUCTIVE CHANGES IN 5 KEY MEASURES, AND TWICE OPPOSED A DEBT CEILING INCREASE THAT WAS EXCESSIVE AND INFLATIONARY. IN 24 INSTANCES THESE ISSUES CAME TO A ROLLCALL VOTE. OF COURSE, THE POLICY COMMITTEE'S CONCLUSIONS ARE NOT BINDING UPON ANY REPUBLICAN MEMBER. BUT THE RECORD SHOWS AN AVERAGE OF 96% OF REPUBLICANS PRESENT AND VOTING SUPPORTED THE PARTY POLICY POSITION. I THINK THAT'S TERRIFIC -- AND so, SECRETLY, DO OUR DEMOCRATIC RIVALS IN THE HOUSE. IF THEY HAD 96% UNITY THEY COULD PREVAIL EVERY TIME IN THIS CONGRESS AS THEY ALMOST DID IN THE LAST ONE. IN THEIR FRUSTRATION, THE PRESIDENT AND THE DEMOCRATIC LEADERSHIP HAVE PUBLICLY MADE A CURIOUS LIBRARY CONFESSION -- THAT THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY CANNOT GOVERN THE -9- COUNTRY UNLESS IT HAS A 2/3s MAJORITY IN THE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH! REPUBLICANS WILL SETTLE FOR A SIMPLE WORKING MAJORITY. IN THOSE 24 ROLLCALLS WHERE REPUBLICANS STOOD TOGETHER 96%, OUR POSITION PREVAILED 18 TIMES. WHERE WE STAKED OUT A RESPONSIBLE REPUBLICAN STAND ON MAJOR ISSUES IN ADVANCE, WE SCORED 75% OF THE TIME. I THINK WE'RE BOTH READY AND ABLE TO ORGANIZE THE NEXT HOUSE. A REPUBLICAN MAJORITY IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. WITH REPUBLICANS RUNNING ITS COMMITTEES AND DIRECTING ITS LABORS, WOULD BE THE BEST THING FOR THE COUNTRY EVEN IF PRESIDENT JOHNSON WERE TO WIN RE-ELECTION. BUT IT WILL BE ABSOLUTELY IMPERATIVE FOR ANY REPUBLICAN PRESIDENT TO HAVE A REPUBLICAN HOUSE IF HE IS TO HAVE A REAL OPPORTUNITY TO -10- ENACT A REPUBLICAN PROGRAM OF REDIRECTION AND REFORM. I WAS MOST IMPRESSED WITH THE RECENT WARNING OF OUR HOST, GOVERNOR KIRK, THAT EVERY REPUBLICAN CAMPAIGN HEADQUARTERS IN 1968 SHOULD DISPLAY A LARGE SIGN SAYING: "REMEMBER 1948." I REMEMBER 1948 AS ONE ALWAYS REMEMBERS HIS FIRST CAMPAIGN. I MADE IT, BUT I HAD TO WAIT FOUR YEARS FOR A REPUBLICAN PRESIDENT AND 12 LONG YEARS FOR A REPUBLICAN GOVERNOR, BY WHICH TIME WE AGAIN HAD A DEMOCRAT IN THE WHITE HOUSE. TIMES DO CHANGE. IN 1948 PRESIDENT TRUMAN HAD A BALANCED BUDGET OF $33 BILLION -- JUST ABOUT THE SIZE OF PRESIDENT JOHNSON'S CONJECTURED DEFICIT FOR 1968! AND PRESIDENT TRUMAN HAD HIS TROUBLES FROM A WALLACE ON HIS LEFT AND A McCARTHY ON HIS RIGHT. GERALD FORD LIBRARY -11- BUT THE 1968 THREATS OF A SENATOR McCARTHY ON THE LEFT AND A GEORGE WALLACE ON THE RIGHT POSE PROBLEMS FOR REPUBLICANS AS WELL AS FOR PRESIDENT JOHNSON. THE PROSPECT OF A THIRD OR FOURTH PARTY PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE WINNING THE ELECTORAL VOTES OF SOME STATES IS A SERIOUS POSSIBILITY. IN A CLOSE ELECTION, THE CHOICE OF OUR NEXT PRESIDENT COULD BE THROWN INTO THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE 1825. AFTER 142 YEARS OF DISUSE IT'S NOT SURPRISING MOST AMERICANS HAVE FORGOTTEN THAT WHEN THERE'S NO MAJORITY IN THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE, AND THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES CHOOSES THE PRESIDENT FROM THE TOP THREE CONTENDERS, WE BALLOT NOT AS INDIVIDUAL MEMBERS BUT BY STATE DELEGATIONS. THUS THE STATES REPRESENTED IN THE HOUSE BY ONE CONGRESSMAN -- AND FOUR OUT OF FIVE OF THESE ARE NOW GERALD FORD LIBRARY - -12- REPUBLICANS -- COUNT AS MUCH IN A PRESIDENTIAL RUNOFF AS THE BIG HOUSE DELEGATIONS OF NEW YORK, CALIFORNIA AND TEXAS, NOW DEMOCRATIC. AND THOSE STATES WHERE PARTY STRENGTH IS EQUAL OR TIED, AS ILLINOIS, OREGON AND MONTANA NOW ARE, WOULD HAVE NO VOICE AT ALL IN THE DECISION. IT'S QUITE CONCEIVABLE THAT WE COULD WIN A MAJORITY IN THE HOUSE NEXT NOVEMBER AND STILL FALL SHORT OF THE chart ABSOLUTE MAJORITY OF 26 STATE DELEGATIONS REQUIRED TO DECIDE A CLOSE PRESIDENTIAL CONTEST. RIGHT NOW WE HOLD ONLY 18 REPUBLICAN DELEGATIONS, WHILE THE DEMOCRATS DOMINATE (red) 29, (blue) AND THREE ARE "EVEN-STEVEN." BUT THE ODDS ON OUR PICKING UP EIGHT MORE STATE DELEGATIONS ARE NOT AS BAD AS THEY LOOK overlay FOR INSTANCES, THERE ARE SEVEN (dotted) STATES WHERE ONE REPUBLICAN REPLACING AN INCUMBENT DEMOCRAT IN THE HOUSE Montana, Origon, Nevada, Kty, Tenn, Illnois, Pa, -13- WOULD SWITCH CONTROL OF THE STATE DELEGATION FROM DEMOCRAT Illenois, Montract Orgm TO REPUBLICAN, THE THREE TIED DELEGATIONS ALREADY MENTIONED PLUS PENNSYLVANIA, NEVADA, KENTUCKY AND TENNESSEE. AND WE HAVE REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS IN 5 OF THESE 7. (brown) overlan B THERE ALSO ARE 11 STATES WHERE A SINGLE SWITCH WOULD TIE UP THE DELEGATION AND DENY IT TO THE DEMOCRATS, WHILE A NET GAIN OF TWO REPUBLICAN SEATS WOULD WIN THEM FOR THE REPUBLICAN STANDARD-BEARER. THEY ARE VIRGINIA, ARKANSAS, COLORADO, MARYLAND, OKLAHOMA, MASSACHUSETTS, NEW MEXICO, HAWAII, RHODE ISLAND, ALABAMA AND MAINE. SEVEN OF THESE 11 STATES ARE NOW BLESSED WITH REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS. TO SUM UP -- IF EVERY REPUBLICAN GOVERNOR COULD HELP US ELECT TWO ADDITIONAL REPUBLICAN CONGRESSMEN FROM HIS STATE -- OR ONE MORE IF THAT'S THE BEST HE CAN DO -- Thered onlyone inacrot left whip FORD WE WOULD GAIN 35 SEATS IN THE NEXT HOUSE -- A MAJORITY GERAL PLUS SERVICE 4. -14- -- AND WE WOULD SAFELY SEW UP 31 STATE DELEGATIONS FOR A REPUBLICAN PRESIDENT IN A PHOTO FINISH. I ABSOLVE GOVERNORS HICKEL (ALASKA), SAMUELSON (IDA), TIEMANN (NEB.), BOE (S. DAK.) AND HATHAWAY (WYO.) FROM THIS CHARGE BECAUSE THEIR HOUSE DELEGATIONS ARE 100% PURE REPUBLICAN. MY CALCULATIONS ARE BASED ON 1966 CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICTS, AND OF COURSE THERE WILL BE SOME CHANGES DUE TO REAPPORTIONMENT. ON THE SUBJECT OF SHIFTING CONGRESSIONAL optional CONSTITUENCIES, LET ME LEAVE YOU WITH A STORY FROM ONE OF MY HOUSE COLLEAGUES. THIS MEMBER OF CONGRESS RECEIVED A LONG AND ANGRY LETTER ABUSING HIM FOR EVERY IMAGINABLE SIN OF COMMISSION AND OMISSION, AND WINDING UP THIS WAY: "I VOTED FOR YOU LAST TIME BUT NEVER AGAIN. NEXT TIME I'M VOTING FOR THE DEVIL." GERALD LIBRARI -15- optional MY COLLEAGUE HAD THE PERFECT ANSWER. "DEAR FRIEND," HE WROTE BACK, "THANKS FOR YOUR NICE LETTER. SORRY TO HEAR YOU WON'T BE IN MY NEW DISTRICT." GENTLEMEN, MY VERY SINCERE THANKS AND THOSE OF ALL HOUSE REPUBLICANS FOR THE GREAT AND GROWING CONTRIBUTION is YOU ARE MAKING TO THE REVIVAL OF OUR PARTY. ONE OF THE EARLIEST VISITORS TO THIS HOSPITABLE STATE WAS PONCE DE LEON PONE - SAY DAYLY - OWN , WHO WAS LOOKING FOR THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH. SOME SAY HE FOUND IT, AND IS ALIVE AND WELL TODAY IN MIAMI BEACH. I HOPE REPUBLICANS WILL GO FORTH FROM MIAMI BEACH NEXT SUMMER REJUVENATED, REUNITED AND REDEDICATED -- ONE FOR ALL AND ALL FOR ONE -- TO A GREAT REPUBLICAN VICTORY AND A NEW ERA FOR AMERICA. FORD i LIBRARY GERALD -END- CONGRESSMAN NEWS GERALD R. FORD HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER RELEASE --FOR RELEASE UPON DELIVERY-- Remarks of Rep. Gerald R. Ford (R-Mich.), House Republican Leader, to the Republican Governors' Association, Palm Beach, Florida, Dec. 9, 1967. Distinguished Governors and Friends: It is a real pleasure to meet with a Republican group representing the majority of Chief Executives of the United States. I want to add my warm congratulations to Governor-elect Louie Nunn who has brought the native State of Abraham Lincoln back into the Republican Governors' fold. I hope next year you also reclaim Illinois and Indiana for Honest Abe. Although I am still the House Minority Leader, I am convinced that our party today is reflecting the desires, hopes and great good sense of the majority of Americans. If we stay on this course, our future will be as sunny as these Florida skies. Just a year ago when I last met with you in Colorado, none of us could quite believe our good fortune at the polls. But the trend is genuine and continuing. Many Republicans can share credit for this upsurge, but at bedrock lies the patient, painstaking job of party-building which Ray Bliss has been doing night and day. One of Ray's not-so-secret formulas is simply getting Republicans together and talking things out face to face, whether in the National Coordinating Committee or in conferences and seminars all over the country. Invariably, Ray throws his weight on the side of party unity and Republican harmony, and we are all beneficiaries. I could wish that all the Governors and all Senators and Congressmen of our Party would get together periodically between conventions for more eyeball- to-eyeball discussions. There's no limit to the help we can give one another within the Republican fraternity and, believe me, that's the only way we're ever going to get this great country out of the mess it's in. Last year we scored a net gain of 47 seats in the House of Representatives. These gains were made in 33 States, offset by losses in 3 States. We held our own in 14 States. At the same time, Republican governors were winning in 24 States and, generally, where Republican Governors won big, our House candidates did well. We picked up five more members each in my own state of Michigan and in Ohio--and three in California. (more) GERALD FORD LIBRARY -2- Though 1968 is a Presidential year, I think it's doubly urgent that Republicans pursue the "all for one and one for all" principle clear up and down the ticket. If we do elect a President, if he is to undertake the serious tasks that must be done, he will need strong support on Capitol Hill and in the State houses. There will be 1968 contests for the Governorship in 20 of the States where House Republicans either gained, or held their own, in 1966, plus New Mexico and Louisiana, which have no Republican Congressmen. Assuming we regain the current California vacancy, we need another net increase of 31 seats to control the House of Representatives. This goal is realistically within our party's grasp. Just how and just where we hope to do it I will leave to our expert, Bob Wilson of California, the tireless chairman of our national Congressional Campaign Committee. If anyone can bring in those 31 extra Republicans, Bob will. Every member of the House will be running next November on his own record and the record of the 90th Congress. Republicans will have a far better record to take home to the voters than the Democrats who have been in charge. This is only half-time, of course, with another year to go. But let me give you a brief, and perhaps prejudiced, progress report. We are still the minority party in the House, 186 to 247. The Democratic majority leadership, and the Democratic chairmen of all House Committees, determine absolutely what measures shall come before the House, in what form they come, when they come, and the rules under which they will be considered. Whatever the Founding Fathers intended, in practice the President proposes legislation and Congress disposes. The news spotlight naturally is focused on the fate of the Administration's program rather than upon our Republican alternatives and initiatives. Nevertheless, this Ford and Co. does have some better ideas! And we have successfully written many of them into law this year. Often we have recognized and successfully reflected the will of the great majority of Americans when the Johnson Administration has not. With 47 reinforcements on our team, it has been a different ballgame. And we have been in the ballgame every minute since January 10th when we defeated the Democratic leadership's effort to seat former Rep. Adam Clayton Powell (D-N.Y.). Most important, Republicans in the House have fought all year for fiscal responsibility and against an inflationary level of domestic spending on top of (more) -3- heavy wartime demands. On 23 key economy votes, Republicans averaged 85% for restraint and Democrats averaged only 17%. Moreover, we won 11 of these 23 showdowns. As the session ends, President Johnson is grudgingly coming around to our position after upping his deficit conjecture to $35 billion and feeling the foundations of the dollar shaking. Similarly, during the year the President belatedly embraced our Republican call for restoration of the investment tax credit and gave a long- overdue go-ahead to close the Anti-Ballistic-Missile defense gap, which may someday save millions of American lives. These were two of the 40 specific Republican recommendations for domestic action advanced last January in our Republican appraisal of the State of the Union. Running through these 40 points, I was agreeably surprised to find that Republicans in this Congress have succeeded in enacting into law, gaining approval either by the House or the Senate, or advancing favorable committee consideration of 15 out of 30 domestic proposals, and all but one of our 10 national security recommendations. Sixty percent isn't a bad score for the minority. Republican pressure compelled the House to create a Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, a balanced package of law enforcement legislation, improvements in Social Security and Viet-Nam veterans benefits, honest bookkeeping on participation sales borrowing, and slow but steady progress towards a Clean Election law for 1968. Republican insistence on the principle of revenue sharing and greater State control of Federal programs resulted in marked improvement of the Comprehensive Health Act, the Law Enforcement Assistance and Juvenile Deliquency Acts, the Air Quality and the Federal Meat Inspection Acts of 1967. This is quite a change from the Great Society Rubber Stamp that was worn down to a nubbin during 1965 and 1966. The late unlamented 89th Congress sowed the wind of the fiscal whirlwind that now frightens the world. In this Congress we have won some and lost some; we have made some mistakes and we have learned some lessons; but all in all we are writing a responsible and constructive Republican record for 1968. When we have won -- and we aren't finished yet -- it has been due to a degree of teamwork and solidarity among House Republicans unmatched in my 19 years in Congress. This has been achieved by the broadening of our leadership base, which now includes, besides Bob Wilson and myself, Les Arends of Illinois, (more) Economy -4- Mel Laird of Wisconsin, John Rhodes of Arizona, H. Allen Smith of California, Charlie Goodell of New York, Dick Poff of Virginia and Bill Cramer of Florida. Naturally the news emphasizes those times when so many Republicans vote with the Rublican Democrats or so many Democrats vote with the Republicans. But the cold record of this session shows that Republicans generally stuck together when the chips were down. Les Arends' whip organization has never performed more effectively. Of course we have varying viewpoints -- we are supposed to. These have been aired and threshed out in frank but friendly House Republican conferences of all our members, chaired by the able Mel Laird, and within the representative House Republican Policy Committee under the dedicated guidance of John Rhodes. Our Policy Committee in 29 spirited meetings has taken 30 formal and public policy stands on pending matters. These recommended 10 affirmative measures to implement major Republican programs supported 13 legislative solutions to major problems or improvements in present laws, proposed constructive changes in 5 key measures, and twice opposed a debt ceiling increase that was excessive and inflationary. In 24 instances these issues came to a rollcall vote. Of course, the Policy Committee's conclusions are not binding upon any Republican member. But the record shows an average of 96% of Republicans present and voting supported the party policy position. I think that's terrific -- and so, secretly, do our Democratic rivals in the House. If they had 96% unity they could prevail every time in this Congress as they did in the last one. In their frustration, the President and the Democratic leadership have publicly made a curious confession -- that the Democratic Party cannot govern the country unless it has a 2/3s majority in the legislative branch! Republicans will settle for a simple working majority. In those 24 rollcalls where Republicans stood together 96%, our position prevailed 18 times. Where we staked out a responsible Republican stand on major issues in advance, we scored 75% of the time. I think we're both ready and able to organize the next House. A Republican majority in the House of Representatives, with Republicans running its comm ttees and directing its labors, would be the best thing for the country even if President Johnson were to win re-election. But it will be absolutely imperative for any Republican President to have a Republican House (more) -5- if he is to have a real opportunity to enact a Republican program of redirection and reform. I was most impressed with the recent warning of our host, Governor Kirk, that every Republican campaign headquarters in 1968 should display a large sign saying: "Remember 1948!" I remember 1948 as one always remembers his first campaign. I made it, but I had to wait four years for a Republican President and 12 long years for a Republican Governor, by which time we again had a Democrat in the White House. I must say both President Eisenhower and Governor Romney were eminently worth waiting for, but I surely second Gov. Kirk's caution against Republican over- confidence. Times do change. In 1948 President Truman had a balanced budget of $33 billion -- just about the size of President Johnson's conjectured deficit for 1968! And President Truman had his troubles from a Wallace on his left and a McCarthy on his right. But the 1968 threats of a Senator McCarthy on the left and a George Wallace on the right pose problems for Republicans as well as for President Johnson. The prospect of a third or fourth party Presidential candidate winning the electoral votes of some States is a serious possibility. In a close election, the choice of our next President could be thrown into the House of Representatives for the first time since 1825. After 142 years of disuse it's not surprising most Americans have forgotten that when there's no majority in the Electoral College, and the House of Representatives chooses the President from the top three contenders, we ballot not as individual Members but by State delegations. Thus the States represented in the House by one Congressman -- and four out of five of these are now Republicans -- count as much in a Presidential runoff as the big House delegations of New York, California and Texas, now Democratic. And those States where party strength is equal or tied, as Illinois, Oregon and Montana now are, would have no voice at all in the decision. It's quite conceivable that we could win a majority in the House next November and still fall short of the absolute majority of 26 State delegations required to decide a close Presidential contest. Right now we hold only 18 Republican delegations, while the Democrats dominate 29, and three are "even-steven." (more) -6- But the odds on our picking up eight more State delegations are not as bad as they look. For instance, there are seven States where one Republican replacing an incumbent Democrat in the House would switch control of the State delegation from Democrat to Republican, the three tied delegations already mentioned plus Pennsylvania, Nevada, Kentucky and Tennessee. And we have Republican Governors in 5 of these 7. There also are 11 States where a switch would tie up the delegation and deny it to the Democrats, while a net gain of two Republican seats would win them for the Republican standard-bearer. They are Virginia (R4-D6), Arkansas (R1-D3), Colorado (R1-D3), Maryland (R3-D5), Oklahoma (R2-D4), Massachusetts (R5-D7), New Mexico (D2), Hawaii (D2), Rhode Island (D2), Alabama (R3-D5) and Maine (D2). Seven of these 11 States are now blessed with Republican Governors. To sum up -- if every Republican Governor could help us elect two additional Republican Congressmen from his State -- or one more if that's the best he can do -- we would gain 35 seats in the next House -- a majority plus 4 -- and we would safely sew up 31 State delegations for a Republican President in a photo finish. I absolve Governors Hickel (Alaska), Samuelson (Ida.), Tiemann (Neb.), Boe (s. Dak.) and Hathaway (Wyo.) from this charge because they can't do any better for us in the House than they have already -- their delegations are 100% pure Republican. Gentlemen, my very sincere thanks and those of all House Republicans for the great and growing contribution you are making to the revival of our party. One of the earliest visitors to this hospitable State was Ponce De Leon, who was looking for the Fountain of Youth. Some say he found it and is alive and well today in Miami Beach. I hope Republicans will go forth from Miami Beach next summer rejuvenated, reunited and rededicated -- one for all and all for one -- to a great Republican victory and a new era for America. # # # Affincapy CONGRESSMAN NEWS GERALD R. FORD HOUSE REPUBLICAN LEADER RELEASE --FOR RELEASE UPON DELIVERY-- Remarks of Rep. Gerald R. Ford (R-Mich.), House Republican Leader, to the Republican Governors' Association, Palm Beach, Florida, Dec. 9, 1967. Distinguished Governors and Friends: It is a real pleasure to meet with a Republican group representing the majority of Chief Executives of the United States. I want to add my warm congratulations to Governor-elect Louie Nunn who has brought the native State of Abraham Lincoln back into the Republican Governors' fold. I hope next year you also reclaim Illinois and Indiana for Honest Abe. Although I am still the House Minority Leader, I am convinced that our party today is reflecting the desires, hopes and great good sense of the majority of Americans. If we stay on this course, our future will be as sunny as these Florida skies. Just a year ago when I last met with you in Colorado, none of us could quite believe our good fortune at the polls. But the trend is genuine and continuing. Many Republicans can share credit for this upsurge, but at bedrock lies the patient, painstaking job of party-building which Ray Bliss has been doing night and day. One of Ray's not-so-secret formulas is simply getting Republicans together and talking things out face to face, whether in the National Coordinating Committee or in conferences and seminars all over the country. Invariably, Ray throws his weight on the side of party unity and Republican harmony, and we are all beneficiaries. I could wish that all the Governors and all Senators and Congressmen of our Party would get together periodically between conventions for more eyeball- to-eyeball discussions. There's no limit to the help we can give one another within the Republican fraternity and, believe me, that's the only way we're ever going to get this great country out of the mess it's in. Last year we scored a net gain of 47 seats in the House of Representatives. These gains were made in 33 States, offset by losses in 3 States. We held our own in 14 States. At the same time, Republican governors were winning in 24 States and, generally, where Republican Governors won big, our House candidates did well. We picked up five more members each in my own state of Michigan and in Ohio--and three in California. (more) FORD LIBRARY -2- Though 1968 is a Presidential year, I think it's doubly urgent that Republicans pursue the "all for one and one for all" principle clear up and down the ticket. If we do elect a President, if he is to undertake the serious tasks that must be done, he will need strong support on Capitol Hill and in the State houses. There will be 1968 contests for the Governorship in 20 of the States where House Republicans either gained, or held their own, in 1966, plus New Mexico and Louisiana, which have no Republican Congressmen. Assuming we regain the current California vacancy, we need another net increase of 31 seats to control the House of Representatives. This goal is realistically within our party's grasp. Just how and just where we hope to do it I will leave to our expert, Bob Wilson of California, the tireless chairman of our national Congressional Campaign Committee. If anyone can bring in those 31 extra Republicans, Bob will. Every member of the House will be running next November on his own record and the record of the 90th Congress. Republicans will have a far better record to take home to the voters than the Democrats who have been in charge. This is only half-time, of course, with another year to go. But let me give you a brief, and perhaps prejudiced, progress report. We are still the minority party in the House, 186 to 247. The Democratic majority leadership, and the Democratic chairmen of all House Committees, determine absolutely what measures shall come before the House, in what form they come, when they come, and the rules under which they will be considered. Whatever the Founding Fathers intended, in practice the President proposes legislation and Congress disposes. The news spotlight naturally is focused on the fate of the Administration's program rather than upon our Republican alternatives and initiatives. Nevertheless, this Ford and Co. does have some better ideas! And we have successfully written many of them into law this year. Often we have recognized and successfully reflected the will of the great majority of Americans when the Johnson Administration has not. With 47 reinforcements on our team, it has been a different ballgame. And we have been in the ballgame every minute since January 10th when we defeated the Democratic leadership's effort to seat former Rep. Adam Clayton Powell (D-N.Y.). Most important, Republicans in the House have fought all year for fiscal responsibility and against an inflationary level of domestic spending on top of (more) -3- heavy wartime demands. On 23 key economy votes, Republicans averaged 85% for restraint and Democrats averaged only 17%. Moreover, we won 11 of these 23 showdowns. As the session ends, President Johnson is grudgingly coming around to our position after upping his deficit conjecture to $35 billion and feeling the foundations of the dollar shaking. Similarly, during the year the President belatedly embraced our Republican call for restoration of the investment tax credit and gave a long- overdue go-ahead to close the Anti-Ballistic-Missile defense gap, which may someday save millions of American lives. These were two of the 40 specific Republican recommendations for domestic action advanced last January in our Republican appraisal of the State of the Union. Running through these 40 points, I was agreeably surprised to find that Republicans in this Congress have succeeded in enacting into law, gaining approval either by the House or the Senate, or advancing favorable committee consideration of 15 out of 30 domestic proposals, and all but one of our 10 national security recommendations. Sixty percent isn't a bad score for the minority. Republican pressure compelled the House to create a Committee on Standards of Official Conduct, a balanced package of law enforcement legislation, improvements in Social Security and Viet-Nam veterans benefits, honest bookkeeping on participation sales borrowing, and slow but steady progress towards a Clean Election law for 1968. Republican insistence on the principle of revenue sharing and greater State control of Federal programs resulted in marked improvement of the Comprehensive Health Act, the Law Enforcement Assistance and Juvenile Deliquency Acts, the Air Quality and the Federal Meat Inspection Acts of 1967. This is quite a change from the Great Society Rubber Stamp that was worn down to a nubbin during 1965 and 1966. The late unlamented 89th Congress sowed the wind of the fiscal whirlwind that now frightens the world. In this Congress we have won some and lost some; we have made some mistakes and we have learned some lessons; but all in all we are writing a responsible and constructive Republican record for 1968. When we have won -- and we aren't finished yet -- it has been due to a degree of teamwork and solidarity among House Republicans unmatched in my 19 years in Congress. This has been achieved by the broadening of our leadership base, which now includes, besides Bob Wilson and myself, Les Arends of Illinois, (more) -4- Mel Laird of Wisconsin, John Rhodes of Arizona, H. Allen Smith of California, Charlie Goodell of New York, Dick Poff of Virginia and Bill Cramer of Florida. Naturally the news emphasizes those times when so many Republicans vote with the Democrats or so many Democrats vote with the Republicans. But the cold record of this session shows that Republicans generally stuck together when the chips were down. Les Arends' whip organization has never performed more effectively. Of course we have varying viewpoints -- we are supposed to. These have been aired and threshed out in frank but friendly House Republican conferences of all our members, chaired by the able Mel Laird, and within the representative House Republican Policy Committee under the dedicated guidance of John Rhodes. Our Policy Committee in 29 spirited meetings has taken 30 formal and public policy stands on pending matters. These recommended 10 affirmative measures to implement major Republican programs supported 13 legislative solutions to major problems or improvements in present laws, proposed constructive changes in 5 key measures, and twice opposed a debt ceiling increase that was excessive and inflationary. In 24 instances these issues came to a rollcall vote. Of course, the Policy Committee's conclusions are not binding upon any Republican member. But the record shows an average of 96% of Republicans present and voting supported the party policy position. I think that's terrific and so, secretly, do our Democratic rivals in the House. If they had 96% unity they could prevail every time in this Congress as they did in the last one. In their frustration, the President and the Democratic leadership have publicly made a curious confession -- that the Democratic Party cannot govern the country unless it has a 2/3s majority in the legislative branch! Republicans will settle for a simple working majority. In those 24 rollcalls where Republicans stood together 96%, our position prevailed 18 times. Where we staked out a responsible Republican stand on major issues in advance, we scored 75% of the time. I think we're both ready and able to organize the next House. A Republican majority in the House of Representatives, with Republicans running its committees and directing its labors, would be the best thing for the country even if President Johnson were to win re-election. But it will be absolutely imperative for any Republican President to have a Republican House (more) -5- if he is to have a real opportunity to enact a Republican program of redirection and reform. I was most impressed with the recent warning of our host, Governor Kirk, that every Republican campaign headquarters in 1968 should display a large sign saying: "Remember 1948!" I remember 1948 as one always remembers his first campaign. I made it, but I had to wait four years for a Republican President and 12 long years for a Republican Governor, by which time we again had a Democrat in the White House. I must say both President Eisenhower and Governor Romney were eminently worth waiting for, but I surely second Gov. Kirk's caution against Republican over- confidence. Times do change. In 1948 President Truman had a balanced budget of $33 billion -- just about the size of President Johnson's conjectured deficit for 1968! And President Truman had his troubles from a Wallace on his left and a McCarthy on his right. But the 1968 threats of a Senator McCarthy on the left and a George Wallace on the right pose problems for Republicans as well as for President Johnson. The prospect of a third or fourth party Presidential candidate winning the electoral votes of some States is a serious possibility. In a close election, the choice of our next President could be thrown into the House of Representatives for the first time since 1825. After 142 years of disuse it's not surprising most Americans have forgotten that when there's no majority in the Electoral College, and the House of Representatives chooses the President from the top three contenders, we ballot not as individual Members but by State delegations. Thus the States represented in the House by one Congressman -- and four out of five of these are now Republicans -- count as much in a Presidential runoff as the big House delegations of New York, California and Texas, now Democratic. And those States where party strength is equal or tied, as Illinois, Oregon and Montana now are, would have no voice at all in the decision. It's quite conceivable that we could win a majority in the House next November and still fall short of the absolute majority of 26 State delegations required to decide a close Presidential contest. Right now we hold only 18 Republican delegations, while the Democrats dominate 29, and three are "even-steven." (more) -6- But the odds on our picking up eight more State delegations are not as bad as they look. For instance, there are seven States where one Republican replacing an incumbent Democrat in the House would switch control of the State delegation from Democrat to Republican, the three tied delegations already mentioned plus Pennsylvania, Nevada, Kentucky and Tennessee. And we have Republican Governors in 5 of these 7. There also are 11 States where a switch would tie up the delegation and deny it to the Democrats, while a net gain of two Republican seats would win them for the Republican standard-bearer. They are Virginia (R4-D6), Arkansas (R1-D3), Colorado (R1-D3), Maryland (R3-D5), Oklahoma (R2-D4), Massachusetts (R5-D7), New Mexico (D2), Hawaii (D2), Rhode Island (D2), Alabama (R3-D5) and Maine (D2). Seven of these 11 States are now blessed with Republican Governors. To sum up -- if every Republican Governor could help us elect two additional Republican Congressmen from his State -- or one more if that's the best he can do -- we would gain 35 seats in the next House -- a majority plus 4 -- and we would safely sew up 31 State delegations for a Republican President in a photo finish. I absolve Governors Hickel (Alaska), Samuelson (Ida.), Tiemann (Neb.), Boe (s. Dak.) and Hathaway (Wyo.) from this charge because they can't do any better for us in the House than they have already -- their delegations are 100% pure Republican. Gentlemen, my very sincere thanks and those of all House Republicans for the great and growing contribution you are making to the revival of our party. One of the earliest visitors to this hospitable State was Ponce De Leon, who was looking for the Fountain of Youth. Some say he found it and is alive and well today in Miami Beach. I hope Republicans will go forth from Miami Beach next summer rejuvenated, reunited and rededicated -- one for all and all for one -- to a great Republican victory and a new era for America. # # # CHARTS FORD-WILSON PRESENTATION To GOP GOVERNORS' CONFERENCE Neededd Thursday Dec. 7 SURE (Deliver to Paul Theis) Chart No. 1-- Map of United States blue In Hill: 33 states where GOP gained House seats in 1966 No color: 14 states with no net Michigan-plus 5 change. Ohio-plus 5 lowa-plus 4 Kansas *** California-plus 3 Massachusetts Wisconsin-plus 2 Missouri HHY Kentucky-plus 2 Montana Texas-plus 2 New Mexico New Jarsey-plus 2 Hawaii Virginia-plus 2 Louisiana Alaska-plus I Nevada Arizene-plus I Rhode Island Arkansas-plus I South Carolina Colorado-plus I South Bakota Connecticut-plus I Vermont Delaware-plus I Washington Florida-plus I West Virginia Georgia-pus I Idellse-plus I Illinois-plus I Indiana-plus I Maryland-plus I Minnesota-plus I Nebraska-plus I New Hampshire-plus I New York-plus I North Carolina-plus I North Dakota-plus I Oklahoma-plus I Oregon-plus I Pennsylvania-plus I Tennessee-plus I Utah-plus I Wyoming-plus I In red: Three states where GOP lost House seats in 1966. Alabama-minus 2 Maine-minus I Mississippi-minus I FORD & LIBRARY 074870 First transparent overlay for chart No. I 24 states where GOP governors won in 1966 or 1967 Michigan Florida Wyoming Ohio Ideho Massachusetts California Maryland New Mexico Wisconsin Minnesota Nevada Kentucky (1967) Nebraska Rhode Island Alaska New York South Dakota Arizona Oklahoma Arkansas Oregon Colorado Pennsylvania The second transporent overlay for chart No. I 22 w states which will elect a governer in 1968 lowa Kensas Texas Missouri Arizona Montana Arkansas New Mexico Delaware Louisiana Illinois Rbode Island Indiana South Dakota New Hompshire Verment North Carolina Washington North Dakota West Virginia Utah Wisconsin FORD is LIBRARY 07V830 Chart No. 2-Map of United States In blue: 18 states with GOP majority in House delegations, 90th Congress Michigan R-12 D-7 Nebraska R-3 Ohio R19 D-5 New Hampshire R-2 lowe R-5 D-2 North Dakota R-2 Wisonsin R-7 D-3 Utah R-2 Alaska R-1 Wyoming R-1 Arizena R-2 D-1 Kansas R-5 Delewere R-1 South Daketa R-2 Idohe R-2 Vermont R-1 Indiana R-6 D-5 Minnesota R-5 D-3 In red: 29 states with Democratic majority in House delegations, 90th Congress California 11-66 R-17 D-21 (1 vac.) Tennessee R-4 D-5 Kentucky R-3 D-4 Massachusetts R-5 D-7 Texas R-2 D21 Missouri R-2 D-8 New Jersey R-6 D-9 New Mexico D2 Virginia R-4 D-6 Hawali D-2 Arkanses R-1 D-3 Louisiana D-8 Colorade R-1 D-3 Nevada D-1 Connecticut R-1 D-5 Rhode Island D-2 Florida R-3 D-9 South Carolina R-1 D-5 Georgia R-2 D-8 Washington R-2 D-5 Maryland R-3 D-5 West Virigine R-1 D-4 New York R-15 D-24 (1 vac.) Alabama R-3 D-5 North Carolina R-3 D-8 Maine D-2 Oklahoma R-2 D-4 Mississippi D-5 Pennsylvania R-13 D-14 No color: Three states with equal party strength In House delegations, 90th Congress Illinois R-12 D-12 Oregon R-2 D-2 Mentana R-1 D-1 GERALD FORD LIBRARY First transparent overlay for chart No. 2 Seven states where one seat needed for GOP majority in House delegation Illinois Oregon Montana Pennsylvania Negada Kentucky Tennessee Second transparent overlay for chart No. 2 II states where two seats needed for GOP majority In H ouse delegation Virginia Arkensas Colorado Maryland Okhahoma Massachusetts New Mexico Hawaii Rhode Island Alabama Maine GERALD FORD LIBRARY (NOT PRINTED AT GOVERNMENT EXPENSE) 10 Congressional Record United States of America PROCEEDINGS AND DEBATES OF THE 90ᵗʰ CONGRESS, FIRST SESSION Vol. 113 WASHINGTON, MONDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1967 No. 197 House of Representatives HOUSE REPUBLICAN ACCOMPLISH- len budgetary deficit. ing Washington bureaucracy, solutions MENTS-FIRST SESSION, 90TH The budget for fiscal 1958 totaled $73.3 have not been found to the many prob- CONGRESS billion. Today the Federal Government lems that face urban America. It is in- is spending at an annual rate in excess of teresting to note that even liberal Demo- Mr. RHODES of Arizona. Mr. Speaker, $140 billion. In the 5-year period of the crats such as Daniel P. Moynihan, in the first session of the 90th Congress, Johnson administration, the Federal former Assistant Secretary of Labor and the Republican Members of the House Government has spent $60.487 billion now director of the Harvard-MIT Joint of Representatives have compiled a re- more than it has taken in. The non- Center for Urban Affairs, has stated markable record of achievement and defense spending by the Federal Govern- that: progress. In committee and on the House ment in 1960 was $48.6 billion. The esti- We must abandon the notion that the na- floor, many legislative measures that up- mated nondefense spending for fiscal tion, especially the cities of the nation, can date existing programs or establish a year 1968 is $95.6 billion. And now, the be run from agencies in Washington. new and sound approach to problem administration's January 1967 forecast The Great Society program that is solving at the Federal level have been of an $8.7 billion deficit for fiscal 1968 built around the concept of the categori- developed or substantially improved has been shot upward by President John- cal grants administered by huge Federal through Republican efforts. son to a staggering $30 to $35 billion. bureaucracies has not delivered the On January 19, 1967, the minority The second and third installments on goods. Waste, inefficiency, and few real leader, GERALD R. FORD, presented the the grandiose Great Society programs results have been the rule rather than domestic portion of the Republican ap- that were hastily enacted by President the exception. In an effort to counter this praisal of the state of the Union. In Johnson and his rubberstamp Demo- trend, the Republican Members of Con- this appraisal, there was presented a 40- cratic majority in the 89th Congress are gress have advocated a system of block point program of constructive Republi- now due. The combination of Great So- grants that encourages maximum State can proposals for consideration by the ciety spending and increased defense ex- coordination and permits the States and 90th Congress. Thirty of these proposals penditures has resulted in an inflationary localities to establish priorities and run were in the area of Republican alterna- spiral that has reached an annual rate of tives to the tired and outdated ap- 4.4 percent and the cost of living has their own programs with a minimum of Federal interference. proaches of the Johnson administration risen 12.6 percent since January 1961. and the Democratic congressional ma- Key interest rates are soaring out of con- The recently enacted Comprehensive jority. This was admittedly an ambitious trol and may zoom to heights not reached Health Act provides one of the best ex- program, but it was a program that re- since the 19th century. amples of what can be done under the sponded to the needs of the 1960's and Despite the seriousness of the present block grant approach. This Republican- the challenges of the 1970's. situation, the Johnson administration re- sponsored and supported act consolid- Since the first of the year, the House fused to cut back on nonessential spend- ated 16 separately administered public Republican policy committee has held ing and establish spending priorities. It health programs and permitted the 29 meetings and adopted 30 policy state- waited until August 3, 1967, to request a States to develop plans, establish priori- ments. The discussion at these meetings tax increase and then offered dubious ties, and coordinate local activities. Un- and the action taken by the committee promises of future frugality. Only re- der this approach, the priority health have played an important part in for- cently has President Johnson finally problems in each State and community mulating sound legislation and fostering faced up to the fact that "the cruelest whether they stem from communicable the broadest possible public understand- tax of all is the inflation tax." It was not disease, narcotics, or rat infestation can ing of the Republican proposals. In the until November 29, 1967, 11 days after be identified and programs designed to 30 policy statements, the policy commit- the fateful devaluation of the British combat the problems established and tee: First, recommended 10 affirmative pound, that a specific plan for expendi- properly funded. The bill will provide measures to implement Republican pro- ture reduction was submitted to Congress more than $900 million for comprehen- grams; second, supported 13 legislative by the Johnson administration. sive health grants to the various States proposals that provide solutions to ma- In an effort to stem the inflationary during the next 3 years. See September jor problems or basic improvements in tide, House Republicans led the fight to 19, 1967, policy committee statement. present laws; third, proposed construc- cut nondefense spending. An increase in The House-passed Law Enforcement tive changes and substantive improve- the public debt ceiling that sanctioned and Criminal Justice Assistance Act as it ments to five key measures; and, fourth, the Johnson administration's dangerous was improved and perfected by Republi- twice opposed debt ceiling increases that and irrespondsible approach to Federal can amendments, employs the block failed to deal with nonessential spending spending and budget deficits was opposed grant approach. It provides maximum and greater budget deficits. on three different occasions. On March State and local control over law enforce- In the 24 cases where a rollcall vote 22, 1967, the policy committee urged the ment and minimum Federal interference. was taken on the amendment or position adoption of a Republican resolution that The Republican initiated and supported supported by the policy committee, 96.1 would return the 1968 budget to the Air Quality Act encourages the solution percent of the Republican Members vot- President and request that he indicate of air pollution problems on a regional ing, voted in agreement with the policy the places and amounts where he believes basis in accordance with air quality. committee. And in 18 cases, the bill or that reductions can be made. This re- standards and enforcement plans devel- amendment supported by the policy solution was pigeonholed by the Demo- oped by States. And the House-adopted committee was adopted by the House of cratic majority. However, a Republican Meat Inspection Act establishes a viable Representatives. proposal that imposed a $131.5 billion Federal-State cooperative meat inspec- The policy committee statements, and limitation on Government spending ex- tion program. the positions that they contain, have cept for added expenditures that might The principle of block grants also pre- been addressed to the vital issues and be necessary for Vietnam, and could lead vailed in the final House version of the problems that presently challenge this to a spending reduction of at least $5 Elementary and Secondary Education country. They reflect hours of study and billion, was adopted by the House of Rep- Act. In this legislation, a portion of the provide specific and workable sugges- resentatives on October 18, 1967. And, massive educational program has been tions for improving old programs or as a result of Republican efforts, ap- returned to State control and planning. initiating needed new legislation. They proximately $4 billion has been pared See April 19 and August 2, 1967, policy express a determination that the basic from the administration's request for committee statements. changes and improvements demanded by new spending authority. PUBLIC SAFETY-ASSISTING STATE AND LOCAL LAW the American people in the 1966 election Repblicans have made it abundantly ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES shall be given at least a fair hearing and, clear that if the President is sincere This year alone urban rioting has if at all possible, enacted into law by about wanting a tax increase, he must caused more than $100,000,000 in prop- this Congress. take the first step toward reestablishing erty dåmage. Cities, countles, and States FIGHTING INFLATION AND WILD GOVERNMENT his fiscal credibility. He must cooperate have spent millions in overtime for police SPENDING in making a significant cut in the ex- and fire departments and calling up of The first session of the 90th Congress penditure level of this Government- National Guard units. More than 16,000 nas witnessed a continuing battle by see February 8, March 22, June 7 and persons have been arrested during out- House Republicans against the spending 21, and October 18, 1967, policy commit- breaks of violence in 67 cities, more than policies of the Johnson administration- tee statements. 3,200 injured and 85 killed. spending policies that fed the inflation- THE CRISIS IN THE CITIES The current "Uniform Crime Reports" ary fires, skyrocketed interest rates and Although billions and billions of dol- reveal that serious crime in the United dramatically increased an already swol- lars have been spent by an ever-increas- States increased 11 percent in 1966 when compared with 1965. All crime index of- turbing that in a period of continued nouncing that it, too, will recommend fenses showed substantial increases in American decline the other maritime na- the establishment of a Hoover-type com- volume. Crimes of violence were up 11 tions of the world are building up their mission to help weed out obsolete Gov- percent with a 9-percent increase in mur- merchant fleets. In 1963, the Russians ernment programs-see February 23, der, 10 percent in aggravated assault, 10 constructed 115 ships while America 1967, policy committee statement. percent in forcible-rape, and 14 percent launched 31. Between 1959 and 1963, the RESPONDING TO PUBLIC DEMANDS FOR CLEAN in robbery. American fleet increased by 20 fewer ELECTIONS These statistics starkly dramatize the ships than the Russians produced in the For some time, there has been general crisis in law enforcement in this country. single year 1963. agreement that the laws dealing with The very ability of government to main- In response to the Republican call to election campaigns should be revised and tain law and order and to provide per- sonal safety has been challenged as never action, legislation establishing an inde- updated. The Federal Corrupt Practices before. Local law enforcement, criminal pendent Federal Maritime Administra- Act was enacted in 1925. The Hatch Act justice, techniques of correction and re- tion was enacted by the House of Repre- was passed 27 years ago. Recent studies habilitation must be updated and im- sentatives. This legislation can facilitate such as the 1962 Report of President proved. the development of a forward-looking Kennedy's Commission on Campaign maritime program and help to bring an Costs reveal that present laws invite eva- In response to this challenge, Repub- lican-sponsored legislation that would end to the present period of neglect, con- sion and are filled with loopholes. Unless fusion, and inactivity. Unless our ship- there is basic reform, public confidence impose criminal penalties upon persons traveling in or using the facilities of building effort is increased, our defense in the election process will be impaired. interstate commerce with the intent to commitments throughout the world will At the start of the 90th Congress, the incite a riot was enacted by the House be in jeopardy. Our national survival may policy committee urged the House leader- depend upon the shipping that should be ship to schedule the Election Reform Act of Representatives. This legislation under construction but which the John- as one of the first pieces of legislation to represents the legitimate exercise of son administration has scuttled-see receive floor consideration. Thereafter, Federal power under authority based on the commerce clause of the Constitution. May 3 and October 11, 1967, policy com- with unanimous Republican support, an Historically, certain types of conduct mittee statement. election reform bill, H.R. 11233, was re- have been prohibited by Federal statute CONGRESSIONAL REFORM AND REORGANIZATION ported by the subcommittee of the House when the facilities of interstate com- Unless Congress is strengthened and Administration Committee on June 27, merce are used. The Republican-spon- new procedures and techniques devel- 1967. This is sound legislation. Through oped, the historic roll of Congress as an the incorporation of the following major sored antiriot legislation follows this pattern of asserting Federal authority. essential check on the massive power of Republican provisions, honest reporting The provisions of the bill supplement not the executive branch may be dangerously of campaign contributions and expendi- diluted. The enactment of a mass of tures and streamlined enforcement pro- supersede local law enforcement. By as- cedures would be insured: suring Federal jurisdiction over out-of- open-ended legislation has created an state inciters, State and local authori- escalating bureaucracy that is in no way First. A five-member bipartisan Fed- responsible to the voters of the country. eral Elections Commission is established ties are assisted in keeping the peace Congress, limited as to staff and access to to receive reports and statements re- and protecting the public safety. See pertinent information, cannot adequate- garding campaign contributions and ex- July 12, 1967, policy committee state- ment. ly audit the mass of Federal activities and penditures. Second. The Commission has been Republicans also supported the Law programs. A spittoon approach to the Enforcement and Criminal Justice As- problems of a computerized society is no granted full and complete authority to sistance Act of 1967. This legislation es- longer adequate. Early in the session, the enforce the provisions of the act. It is tablishes a Federal program to provide policy committee advocated legislation also authorized to make reports and that would update and modernize Con- statements available for public inspec- assistance to local law enforcement agencies. Key Republican amendments gress. This legislation would: tion and to prepare and publish sum- offered and adopted on the floor of the First. Establish a Joint Committee on maries and reports. House materially strengthened this bill. Congressional Operations with continu- Third. Candidates for Federal office, These amendments, which were sup- ing authority to study the structure and and political committees supporting ported by the National Governor's Con- procedures of Congress and to recom- such candidates, that accept contribu- ference, curb the unlimited power of the mend additional reforms and changes. tions or make expenditures exceeding Attorney General and provide essential Second. Protect the rights of the mi- $1,000 in any calendar year, are required State coordination and control. Each ,nority through the provision of addi- to report contributions and expendi- tures. State is authorized to develop a state- tional committee staff and the right to wide comprehensive law enforcement present minority views and reports. Fourth. Donations by an individual of plan and establish a State agency to Third. Authorize measures designed to more than $5,000 to any candidate or administer the plan. Once this plan is assist Members of Congress in the per- any committee supporting such candi- accepted, all Federal assistance goes to formance of their congressional duties. dates in any calendar year are pro- hibited the State agency which in turn distrib- Fourth. Implement fiscal controls and utes the aid to local law enforcement Fifth. Campaign contributions by po- budgetary reforms that would include a agencies. See August 2, 1967, policy litical action committees financially sup- greater utilization of the General Ac- committee statement. ported by a corporation, trade associa- counting Office. tion or labor organization are regulated, ANTIBALLISTIC MISSILE SYSTEM Fifth. Establish a bill of rights for Sixth. Conventions, primaries, and On August 9, 1967, the Republican congressional committees. party caucuses have been placed under policy committee urged the Johnson ad- The policy committee also urged the the reporting and disclosure provisions ministration to provide the American immediate establishment of a Select of the bill. people with an effective antiballistic mis- Committee on Congressional Standards Seventh. The disclosure of gifts or sile system. In calling for immediate and Conduct which would be provided honorariums of more than $100 is re- action, the committee noted: First, the with the authority to establish a code of quired of candidates for the House and Soviets have been building and deploying ethics, investigate alleged breaches of Senate as well as incumbents. their ABM system for some time. Second, conduct, recommend appropriate action, At a series of committee meetings, Re- the Joint Chiefs of Staff unanimously and report violations of law to the proper publican Members consistently urged support the position that this country local and State authorities. Legislation that this important legislation be report- should now proceed to deploy. Third, has been enacted and a code of ethics is ed so that it could receive early floor con- Congress has appropriated sufficient now being drafted. This is an important sideration. However, their efforts were funds for this purpose. Fourth, the Joint first step in recapturing the public con- met by delaying tactics and late in the Committee on Atomic Energy has fidence and respect that has been lost session, the election reform bill did not warned: through the highly publicized allegations even appear on the administration's list A low order of magnitude attack could of misconduct against a few Members of of must legislation. Certainly, congres- possibly be launched by the Chinese Com- Congress-see February 8 and May 10, sional action cannot be delayed much munists against the United States by the 1967, policy committee statements. longer if this legislation is to be in effect early 1970's. At present we do not have an EXECUTIVE REORGANIZATION and operative during the 1968 campaigns. effective anti-ballistic missile system which could repel such a suicidal (for the Chinese) As a result of hastily enacted and It must receive early consideration in the but nevertheless possible strike. oftentimes competing programs that second session of Congress. The American have been stacked one upon another, it public demands and deserves an election On September 19, 1967, the Johnson is impossible for State and local officials process that commands respect and con- administration finally heeded these to know what Federal programs are fidence. warnings and announced that the United available for what purpose or even where SKILL DEVELOPMENT AND TRAINING FOR THE States this year would start building a to go for specific information. Moreover, UNEMPLOYED $5 billion missile defense system. The old departments and agencies created The Republican Members of Congress importance of this decision to go forward and organized to meet the problems of have long been interested in establishing with the establishment of a defense the first half of the 20th century are now a sound program that would solve this against missiles has been underlined by woefully antiquated. In order to provide Nation's manpower problems by upgrad- the recent announcement that the Soviet a careful and thoughtful study well ing and developing the skills of our labor has developed a fractional orbital bom- above partisan politics and interagency force. The Republican effort in this area bardment system that would cut the power fights, the policy committee rec- began with Operation Employment in warning time of targets in America from ommended the establishment of a Com- 1961-62. In this study by the Republican 15 to 3 minutes. See August 9, 1967, policy mission on the Organization of the Ex- policy committee, leading authorities in committee statement. ecutive Branch similar to the first and the fields of education and on-the-job S S-S S-THE AMERICAN MERCHANT second Hoover Commissions. training were contacted for their com- MARINE This Commission would be empowered ments and recommendations. The results Deeply concerned that the Johnson ad- to conduct an in-depth study of the Fed- of this study were incorporated into the ministration has permitted the American eral Government's bureaucratic sprawl. Republican-proposed Manpower and De- maritime industry to drift into a major It could probe a war on poverty that now velopment Training Act of 1962 which crisis, the policy committee issued a call includes more than 260 Federal pro- was adopted in great part and enacted for immediate action and endorsed legis- grams. An answer might even be found to into law by the 87th Congress. This act lation sponsored by the Republican a mushrooming Federal bureaucracy that has proven to be an important step in a members of the Merchant Marine and defies a Presidential order to cut back greatly expanded war on unemployment Fisheries Committee that would estab- by adding 192,000 employees to the rolls. and underemployment. For example, lish an independent Maritime Admin- Recently, the Johnson administration from August 1962 to April 1967 there istration. It is both ironic and deeply dis- has taken an important first step by an- were 635,000 trainees enrolled in MDTA institutional training and 163,000 train- ance benefits. statement urging the immediate consid- ees enrolled in MDTA on-the-job train- Under the provisions of this bill, the eration and enactment of the Election ing. amount that a person may earn and still Reform Act of 1967 which has been HUMAN INVESTMENT ACT get his benefits would be increased from sponsored and introduced by Republican Despite the efforts that have been made $1,500 to $1,680 and the amount to which Members. This act would establish a under the MDTA and other costly Fed- the $1 for $2 reduction would apply, five-member bipartisan Federal Elec- eral training programs, there remain to- would range from $1,680 to $2,880 a year. tions Commission which would receive, day an estimated 2.7 million Americans The amount a person may earn in 1 investigate, and audit campaign contri- who are chronically unemployed and month would be increased from $125 to butions and expenditure reports and hundreds of thousands of others who are $140. Also, the number of days of hos- statements. underemployed. In order to meet this pitalization would be increased from 90 Second. February 8, 1967: Adopted a need, the Republicans in the House of to 120 days. A patient would be per- statement urging the immediate estab- Representatives have urged the immedi- mitted to submit his itemized bill directly lishment of a Select Committee on ate consideration of the Human Invest- to the insurance carrier for payment. Standards and Conduct. This 12-member ment Act of 1967. This act is designed to And a physician no longer would be re- committee would be empowered to rec- encourage on-the-job training by private quired to certify that a patient requires ommend rules and regulations to insure industry and skill development by indi- hospitalization at the time he enters or proper standards of conduct by Mem- viduals. It would offer a tax credit to- that a patient requires hospital outpa- bers and officers and employees of the ward certain specified expenses of pro- tient services. See August 16, 1967, pol- House. Also, it would have the authority grams designed to train prospective em- icy committee statements. to investigate alleged breaches of con- ployees and to retrain current employees IMPROVING FEDERAL AND STATE MEAT duct, recommend appropriate action and INSPECTION for more demanding jobs. It is a proven report violations of law to the proper fact that the most effective employee The Republican-supported Meat In- Federal and State authorities. trainer in the Nation is private enter- spection Act, establishes a cooperative H. Res. 418 (Apr. 13, 1967), final passage: prise. The Human Investment Act would Federal-State inspection system under Yea 175 encourage employers throughout this which the Federal Government assists Nay 0 country to develop and implement addi- the States in meeting their responsibi- Not voting 12 tional training programs that will equip lities to provide high quality meat in- Percentage 100 thousands and thousands of individuals spection. Federal cooperation and assist- Third. February 8, 1967: Opposed H.R. to cash in on the job opportunities that ance to the States includes program 4573 which would raise the debt ceiling will be provided by the many technolog- planning and technical and laboratory to $336 billion without making certain ical changes and advances that are being assistance as well as financial aid up to basic budgetary reforms. Urged the adop- developed and implemented by Ameri- 50 percent of the total cost of the State tion of an amendment which would in- can industry. program. clude as a part of the public debt par- HELPING THOSE ON WELFARE The prohibition against counterfeiting, ticipation certificates sold as full faith forgery, and other unauthorized use of One of the most perplexing problems and credit obligations. Also, urged the official certificates, labels, and marking facing this country today is the welfare adoption of an amendment which would devices is clarified. The authority of the problem. We have second and third gen- permit the Secretary of the Treasury to Department of Agriculture to regulate eration welfare families. Their business save as much as $50 million in annual the marking, labeling and packaging of is welfare and the payments are so good interest payments by issuing up to $6 carcasses, meats, and meat food products that they cannot afford to go to work. A is clearly defined. The same standards, billion long-term Treasury obligations way must be found to get these indi- that apply to meat and meat products on the same interest basis as short-term viduals trained, into private employment produced and processed within the Unit- obligations. and off the welfare rolls. ed States is extended to imported meat. Motion to recommit: An important first step in the solution This legislation does not preempt the Yea 153 of this terribly complicated problem has jurisdiction of the States over intrastate" Nay 23 been taken by the House of Representa- Not voting 11 commerce. An amendmemnt that would tives during this session of Congress. The Percentage 86.9 have virtually eliminated State inspec- House-adopted Social Security Act tion programs and assigned the responsi- Final passage: amendments make a number of impor- Yea 2 bility of State and local health protection, Nay 173 tant changes in the program that pro- at an additional annual cost of $31.2 mil- Not voting 12 vides aid to families with dependent lion, to the Federal Government was re- Percentage 98.8 children-AFDC. In the last 10 years, this jected. program has grown from 646,000 fami- Under the provisions of this act, a Fourth. February 23, 1967: Adopted a lies that included 2.4 million recipients viable Federal-State cooperative meat- statement urging the immediate consid- to 1.2 million families and nearly 5 mil- inspection program is established. New eration and enactment of legislation lion recipients. It is estimated that the protection is afforded to the consumer. sponsored and introduced by Republican amount of Federal funds allocated to this This legislation strengthens and improves Members that would establish a Com- program will increase from $1.46 billion a meat packing and processing industry mission on the Reorganization of the to $1.84 billion over the next 5 years that has $16 billion in annual gross sales Executive Branch of the Government- unless constructive and concerted action and that provides $13 billion in yearly new Hoover Commission. is taken. In order to reduce the AFDC sales of livestock to the American farm- Fifth. March 8, 1967: Adopted a state- rolls by restoring more families to em- ment urging the immediate considera- er-see October 31, 1967, policy commit- ployment and self-reliance, the States tee statement. tion of legislation introduced by Repub- would be required to: lican Members that would eliminate LEGISLATION TO IMPROVE THE QUALITY OF OUR First. Establish a program for each political favoritism and insure the rec- AIR HAS A HIGH PRIORITY AFDC adult or older child not attend- I ognition and promotion of able and ex- The Republican-supported Air Quality ing school which would equip them for perienced career postal employees. Act of 1967 encourages the solution of air work and place them in a job. Sixth. March 15, 1967: Adopted a pollution problems on a regional basis in Second. Establish community work statement urging the immediate consid- accordance with air quality standards and training programs throughout the eration of the Human Investment Act and enforcement plans developed by the State by July 1, 1969. of 1967. This Republican-sponsored leg- Third. Provide that protective pay- States. It provides $428 million over a islation would encourage American busi- ments and vendor payments be made 3-year period for air control research, ness to invest in our No. 1 resource-the studies, planning and grants to States where appropriate to protect the welfare American working man and woman. It of children. and air pollution agencies. would stimulate the initiation and ex- Air pollution is no longer just a threat, Fourth. Furnish day-care services and pansion of job training and retraining other services to make it possible for It is a present menace to the health and programs by providing a tax credit for adult members of the family to take well-being of the American people. Ap- certain expensese of such programs. proximately 130 million tons of pollutants training and employment. Seventh. March 22, 1967: Commended are discharged annually into the Nation's Fifth. Have an earnings exemption to the Republican members of the Joint atmosphere, an average of 1,400 pounds provide incentives for work by AFDC Economic Committee for their excellent for each American. This pollution is a recipients. analysis and review of the 1967 Eco- byproduct of our highly developed econ- nomic Report of the President. Urged See August 16, 1967, policy committee omy. It stems from the rising number of the enactment of a Republican resolu- statement. motor vehicles, and from the trend tion that would return the 1968 budget UPDATING SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFITS toward urbanization which concentrates to the President and request that he in- During the 89th Congress and again the highest levels of pollution in the most dicate the places and amounts where he in the January Republican state of the populated areas. Economic and mechani- believes substantial reductions may be Union message, the Republican leader- cal progress has meant the deterioration made. ship in the House of Representatives of our precious air supply. Smog, dam- Eighth. April 5, 1967: Urged the up- called for an immediate increase in so- age to health and property, and even dating and revision of the copyright cial security benefits. Due to the Great death have resulted from the pollution law, H.R. 2512. This law would insure Society inflation, many of our elderly of our air. that authors receive the encourage- citizens have been faced with a serious For some time, the Republican Party ment they need to create and the re- situation. Last year alone, the cost of has recognized that steps must be taken muneration they deserve for their crea- living rose 3.3 percent. Cash benefits fell to improve this Nation's knowledge and tions. 7 percentage points behind the Consumer technical capability to meet the air pol- Final passage: Price Index. It is unfortunate that the lution problem. In his 1955 state of the Yea 182 administration delayed action on this Union address, President Eisenhower Nay 1 legislation for so long. There are nearly urged the enactment of air pollution Not voting 4 40 million retired Americans who do not legislation. With the support of Repub- Percentage 99. 4 enjoy the benefit of rising wages and in- licans of both Houses of Congress, the Ninth. April 5, 1967: Urged the crea- come to cope with rising prices. first legislation in this field was enacted tion of a bipartisan Congressional Com- The Republican-supported social secu- by the 84th Congress. The Air Quality Act mittee on Captive Nations. There is an rity bill that has been adopted by the materially strengthens and improves this obligation to promote the enjoyment of House, provides an across-the-board in- basic legislation. See October 25, 1967, human rights and fundamental free- crease by 12½ percent, increases the policy committee statement. doms wherever they may be denied or amount an individual may earn and still REPUBLICAN POLICY COMMITTEE STATEMENTS threatened. If we are to consider build- get full benefits, strengthens the benefit AND FLOOR VOTES ing bridges to the East, such an effort formula and improves the health insur- First. February 8, 1967: Adopted a should start with the people in the captive nations. record vote. Twenty-fourth. September 13, 1967: Tenth. April 19, 1967: Urged basic re- Eighteenth. June 21, 1967: Opposed Adopted a statement with respect to the forms in the Elementary and Secondary H.R. 10867 which would increase the bor- Appalachian Regional Development Act Education Act. Under the present law, rowing authority of the Treasury to a Amendment of 1967 and Amendments to Federal support intended to improve maximum of $365 billion. Urged the con- the Public Works and Economic Develop- elementary and secondary education has tinuation of the present $336 billion debt ment Act of 1965, S. 602, which urged been used to undermine State and local limit. This would be adequate to finance that the Appalachian region be retained initiative and responsibility. Urged an the Government expenditures through in its present size, that the authorization amendment to provide block grants to September 30, 1967, and would afford the be restricted to its current amount and the States for educational purposes. Such Johnson-Humphrey administration an- that the amendments to the Public grants would replace the multiplicity of other opportunity to review and reassess Works and Economic Development Act categorical grant-in-aid programs now its fiscal policies and forward to Congress be deleted. in operation. up-to-date and credible information re- Amendment to reduce authorization by Block grant amendment: garding anticipated expenditures and $50 million: Yea 154 revenues. Yea 146 Nay 26 Nay 14 Not voting 7 Motion to recommit: Percentage 85.5 Yea 169 Not voting 26 Nay 10 Percentage 91.2 Eleventh. April 26, 1967: Adopted a Not voting 7 Motion to recommit: statement regarding congressional redis- Percentage 94. Yea 143 tricting which noted that the establish- Final passage: Nay 17 ment of precise criteria for congressional Yea 0 Not voting 26 redistricting is a matter for Congress. If Nay 176 Percentage 89.3 Congress does not establish guidelines Not voting 10 for the State to follow, the districts in 22 Percentage 100 Twenty-fifth. September 19, 1967: States or 297 congressional districts may Nineteenth. July 12, 1967: Urged the Supported the Partnership for Health be ruled invalid. H.R. 2508 would provide prompt enactment of antiriot legislation, Amendments of 1967-H.R. 6418. This congressional standards for the State to H.R. 421. This Republican-sponsored leg- Republican sponsored and supported follow in the establishment of districts islation would impose criminal penalties proposal provides $892 million in com- for the election of representatives to Con- upon persons traveling in or using the prehensive health grants to the States gress. facilities of interstate commerce with the during the next 3 years. With these funds Motion to recommit: intent to incite a riot. each State and locality will be able to Yea 158 Final passage: zero in on its most serious public health Nay 3 Yea 180 Not voting 26 problem whether it is due to rat infesta- Nay 4 Percentage 98.1 Not voting 2 tion or some other cause. Final passage: Percentage 97.8 Final Passage: Yea 141 Yea 172 Nay 15 Twentieth. July 19, 1967: Urged the Nay 4 Not voting 31 House-Senate conference on the National Not voting 10 Percentage 90.3 Aeronautics and Space Administration Percentage 97.7 Twelfth. May 3, 1967: Urged the authorization bill to accept the key Re- Twenty-sixth. October 11, 1967: Sup- prompt enactment of legislation to pro- publican amendments which were hibit the deliberate and defiant desecra- adopted on the floor of the House. These ported H.R. 159 which would create an tion of the American flag. amendments reduce the funds requested independent Federal Maritime Adminis- by NASA by $201.4 million, establish an tration. H.R. 10480 final passage: independent safety panel in NASA and Final Passage: Yea 175 require the Space Administration on its Yea 162 Nay 0 Not voting 12 own initiative to keep Congress fully and Nay 5 Not voting 19 Percentage 100 currently informed of problem areas 111 the space effort. Percentage 97 Thirteenth. May 3, 1967: Adopted a Motion to recommit: Twenty-seventh. October 18, 1967: statement that warns of a national crisis Yea 157 Adopted a statement supporting a reduc- in the American maritime industry that Nay 20 tion of at least $5 billion in governmental has been triggered by the neglect, con- Not voting 9 expenditures. Urged that a spending ceil- fusion, and general inability of the John- Percentage 88.7 ing be imposed so that the anticipated son-Humphrey administration to meet Twenty-first. August 2, 1967: Adopted Budget expenditures for fiscal year 1968 the mounting maritime problem. Urged a statement with respect to the Law En- would be reduced from $136.5 to $131.5 the revitalization and modernization of forcement and Criminal Justice Assist- billion. our shipbuilding industry so that the de- ance Act of 1967, H.R. 5037 which urged H.J. Res. 888-Spending ceiling amend- mands of the future can be met. Called the adoption of three key amendments. ment: for the development of a meaningful Yea 171 The States must be given the authority maritime policy that will incorporate a Nay 9 to coordinate applications for assistance Not voting 6 forward-looking ship replacement pro- and distribute aid to local law enforce- Percentage 95 gram. Fourteenth. May 10, 1967: Adopted a ment activities. An appropriate alloca- Twenty-eighth. October 25, 1967: Sup- statement which urged prompt action on tion formula should be adopted that ported the Air Quality Act of 1967, S. the congressional reorganization legisla- would limit the Attornev General's un- 780. This legislation encourages the solu- tion, S. 355. The awesome problems of checked discretion to distribute funds. tion of air pollution problems on a re- today and the challenges of the 1970's A National Institute of Law Enforcement gional basis in accordance with air qual- demand an efficient and effective Con- and Criminal Justice which would be au- ity standards and enforcement plans de- gress. Unless Congress is strengthened, thorized to establish regional training veloped by the States. It provides $362.3 there is grave danger that the historic institutes should be established. million over a 3-year period for air con- role of Congress as an essential check on Amendment that would grant author- trol research, studies, planning, and the massive power of the Executive may ity to States: grants to States and air pollution Yea 172 be dangerously diluted. Nay 4 agencies. Fifteenth. May 24, 1967: Adopted a Not voting 10 Final passage: statement supporting the Military Selec- Percentage 98.8 Yea 161 tive Service Act of 1967, S. 1432. This Nay 0 Final passage: Not voting 25 legislation updates and improves the Yea 173 Percentage 100.0 present Selective Service System in a Nay 1 number of important respects. It estab- Not voting 12 Twenty-ninth. October 31, 1967: Sup- lishes uniform criteria for future under- Percentage 99. 4 ported the Federal Meat Inspection Act, graduate college student deferments. Twenty-second. August 9, 1967: Urged H.R. 12144. This legislation updates and Final passage: revises the act of March 4, 1907, the the Johnson-Humphrey administration Yea 164 Horsemeat Act and the Imported Meat to provide the American people with an Nay 0 22 effective antiballistic missile system. The Act into a single new statute. It broadens Not voting Percentage 100 Joint Chiefs of Staff unanimously sup- the present meat inspection service by port the position that this country should establishing a Federal-State cooperative Sixteenth. June 7. 1967: Adopted a deploy an antiballistic missile system. meat inspection program. The Depart- statement in opposition to H.R. 10328 The Joint Committee on Atomic Energy ment of Agriculture is provided with au- which would increase the public debt has warned: thority to eliminate practices that could ceiling by $29 billion. Urged a cutback in defraud consumers and endanger the A low order of magnitude attack could nonessential spending and honest report- possibly be launched by the Chinese Com- public health. ing of anticipated Government expendi- munist against the United States by the Final passage: tures. This must be done if we are to early 1970's. Yea 179 avoid a runaway economy that may lead Nay 1 Twenty-third. August 16, 1967: Sup- Not voting 6 to Government control of wages, prices, ported H.R. 12080, the Social Security Percentage 99.4 and credit as well as further increases in Amendments of 1967. This bill provides taxes. an across-the-board increase of 12½ per- Thirtieth. November 8, 1967: Urged the Final passage: cent, increases the amount an individual prompt consideration of clean elections Yea 0 Nay 176 may earn and still get full benefits, legislation. On June 27, 1967, a bipartisan Not voting 11 strengthens the benefit formula, im- election reform bill, H.R. 11233, was re- Percentage 100 proves the health insurance benefits, and ported by a subcommittee of the House Seventeenth. June 14, 1967: Adopted a requires the development of programs Administration Committee. This legisla- statement on the railroad labor dispute under Aid to Families with Dependent tion contains the basic reforms advo- legislation, House Joint Resolution 559, Children-AFDC-that would insure cated and supported by President John- that individuals receiving aid would be son and the Republican congressional pointing out that due to the vacillating trained to enter the labor force as soon leadership. With the next presidential performance of the Johnson-Humphrey administration, the country is faced with as possible. and congressional elections less than 1 year away, congressional action cannot a tragic situation. Legislation must be en- Final passage: acted, for in this period of international Yea 182 be delayed if this legislation is to be in Nay 1 effect and operative during the 1968 cam- tensions and war, a chaotic nationwide Not voting 8 paigns. Percent railway strike cannot be permitted. No Percentage 99. Total average 90.1 13 31 states 20 18+ 18+2=20 14 also From the desk of 94 add to add to Rep Pres ROBERT T. HARTMANN +1 35 He GOP +2 Repo RI. Ky okla ming nx. mich Ohio washin pore Pa. Colo mass, Calif md. n n mex. Visconser Ha +1 Reps mont, nev And any Cant do better alska Idaho mbrasha W yo FORD is LIBRARY GERALD S Dakota GERALD R. FORD MICHIGAN OFFICE: FIFTH DISTRICT, MICHIGAN 425 CHERRY STREET SE. GRAND RAPIDS ZIP 49502 Congress of the United States Office of the Minority Leader house of Representatives Washington, D.C. 20515 December 1, 1967 (COPIES SENT TO ALL REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS) The Honorable Name Governor of State City and State Dear Governor Name: We deeply appreciate the invitation of the Republican Governors Association to take part in your Palm Beach meeting next week and look forward to seeing you there. On Saturday morning at 9, we plan to bring you a brief report on the current session of Congress and outline our hopes for electing a Republican House of Representatives next year. We want and need your counsel and your help, and we pledge you our close cooperation, throughout the 1968 campaign which is so crucial for our party and our country. With warm regards, Gerald R. Ford, M.C. Bob Wilson, M.C. Minority Leader Chairman, National Republican Congressional Committee bKR CHARTS FORD-WILSON PRESENTATION To GOP GOVERNORS' CONFERENCE Neededd Thursday Dec. 7 SURE (Deliver to Paul Theis) Chart No. 1- Map of United States blue In Hill: 33 states where GOP gained House seats in 1966 No color: 14 states with no not Michigan-plus 5 change. Ohio-plus 5 lowa-plus 4 Kansas *** California-plus 3 Massachusetts Wisconsin-plus 2 Missouri NH Kentucky-plus 2 Montana Texas-plus 2 New Mexico New Jersey-plus 2 Hawaii Virginia-plus 2 Louisiana Alaske-plus I Nevada Arizona-plus I Rhode Island Arkansas-plus I South Carolina Colorado-plus I South Bakota Connecticut-plus I Vermont Deloware-plus I Washington Florida-plus I West Virginia Georgia-pus I Idalio-plus I Illinois-plus I Indiana-plus I Maryland-plus I Minnesota-plus I Nebraska-plus I New Hompshire-plus I New York-plus I North Carolina-plus I North Dakota-plus I Oklahoma-plus I Oregon-plus I Pennsylvania-plus I Tennessee-plus I Utah-plus I Wyoming-plus I In red: Three states where GOP lost House seats in 1966. Alabama-minus 2 Maine-minus I FORD a LIBRARY 07V839 Mississippi-minus I First transporent overlay for chart No. I H 18 states where GOP governors won in 1966 or 1967 Michigan Florida Wyoming Ohio klaho Massachusetts California Maryland New Mexico Wisconsin Minnesota Nevada Kentucky (1967) Nebraska Rhode Island Alaska New York South Dakota Arizona Oklahoma Arkansas Oregon Colorado Pennsylvania The second transporent overlay for chart No. I 22 27 states which will elect 0 governor in 1968 lowe Kansas Texas Missouri Arizona Montana Arkansas New Mexico Deloware Louisiana Illinois Rhode Island Indiana South Dakota New Hampshire Vermont North Carolina Washington North Dakota West Virginia Utah Wisconsin EALA FORD LIBRARY Chart No. 2-Mep of United States In blue: 18 states with GOP majority In House delegations, 90th Congress Michigan R-12 D-7 Nebraska R-3 Ohio R19 D-5 New Hempshire R-2 lowe R-5 D-2 North Daketa R-2 Widensin R-7 D-3 Utah R-2 Alaska R-1 Wyoming R-1 Arizena R-2 D-1 Kansas R-5 Delaware R-1 South Dakota R-2 Idahe R-2 Vermont R-1 Indiana R-6 D=5 Minnesota R-5 D-3 in red: 29 states with Democratic majority in House delegations, 90th Congress California R-17 16 D-21 (Ivar) Tennessee R-4 D-5 Kentucky R-3 D-4 Massachusetts R-5 D-7 Texas R-2 D21 Missouri R-2 D-8 New Jersey R-6 D-9 New Mexico D2 Virginia R-4 D-6 Hawell D-2 Arkansas R-1 D-3 Louislana D-8 Colorado R-1 D-3 Navada D-1 Consecticut R-1 D-5 Rhade Island D-2 Florida R-3 D-9 South Carolina R-I D=5 Georgia R-2 D-8 Washington R-2 D-5 Maryland R-3 D-5 West Virigina R-1 D-4 New York R-15 D-202 (1 voc.) Alabama R-3 D-5 North Carelina R-3 D-8 Maine D-2 Oklahema R-2 D-4 Mississippi D-5 Pennsylvenia R-13 D-14 No color: Three states with equal party strength In House delegations, 90th Congress Illinois R-12 D-12 Oregen R-2 D=2 Mentana R-1 D-1 GREATO FORD LIBRARY First transparent overlay for chart No. 2 Seven states where one seat needed for GOP majority In House delegation Illiamis Oregan Mentana Pennsylvanta Negada Kentucky Tennessee Second transparent overlay for chart No. 2 II states where two seats needed for GOP majority In H ouse delegation Virginia Arkansas Celorade Maryland Okhahema Massachusetts New Mexico Howell Rhode Island Alabama Maine FORD LIBRARY STATE OF FLORIDA GOVERNOR'S OFFICE TO: News Media DATE: December 6, 1967 FROM: Jim Wolf, Press Secretary GOVERNORS, AIDES AND SPECIAL GUESTS Agnew, Spiro T. & Mrs. Governor of the State of Maryland Mr. & Mrs. Charles Bresler - 507 Mr. & Mrs. B. Melvin Cole - 560 Mr. & Mrs. John Surrick - 555 Mr. Joseph Dukert, State Chairman 545 Mr. Arthur Sohmer, Executive Assistant - 523 Bartlett, Dewey F. Governor of the State of Oklahoma Wayne Rowley, Administrative Assistant - 452 Babcock, Tim & Mrs. Governor of the State of Montana James B. Patten, Executive Assistant - 127 Boe, Nils Governor of the State of South Dakota Charles Howard, State Chairman - 225 Cargo, David F. & Mrs. Governor of the State of New Mexico Merrill Johns, Administrative Assistant - 570 Chafee, John H. Governor of the State of Rhode Island Arthur D. Levin, Press Secretary - 227 Howard E. Russell & Mrs. Russell, State Chairman - 446 Joseph Sinclair - 219 Evans, Daniel Governor of the State of Washington Captain William Lathrop - 444 James M. Dolliver, Executive Assistant - 410 Neil McReynolds, Press Secretary - 411 c. Montgomery Johnson, State Chairman - 409 Charles Finncoune - 414 GOVERNORS, AIDES AND SPECIAL GUESTS - 2 Hathaway, Stanley K. & Mrs. Governor of the State of Wyoming Hickel, Walter J. Governor of the State of Alaska Joel Holberg - 238 Kirk, Claude & Mrs. Governor of the State of Florida J. W. Conner - 102 Scott Linder - 474 Mr. & Mrs. Michael O'Neill - 512 Knowles, Warren - not coming Governor of the State of Wisconsin Laxalt, Paul Governor of the State of Nevada Bob Robertson - 222 Mr. and Mrs. Phil Lucier - 200 Edward Allison - 714 Le Vander, Harold Governor of the State of Minnesota Robert Hinkley - 422 Love, John A. & son, Andy Governor of the State of Colorado Patrick Murphy, Appointments and Press Secretary - 527 Robert Waggoner, Executive Secretary - 543 McCall, Tom & Mrs. Governor of the State of Oregon Ronald C. Schmidt, Administrative Assistant - 320 Nunn, Louis B. Governor Elect, the Commonwealth of Kentucky Tommy Lansdowne - 353 Reagan, Ronald Governor of the State of California Arthur Van Court, Travel Secretary - 430-432 Lyn Nofziger, Communications Director - 442 Tom Reed, Republican - 428 Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Gillenwaters - 580 GOVERNORS, AIDES AND SPECIAL GUESTS - 3 Rhodes, James A. Governor of the State of Ohio Paul Quick, Assistant to the Governor - 120 Richard Krabach, Director of Finance - 160 Rockefeller, Nelson & Mrs. Governor of the State of New York George L. Hinman, National Committeeman - 116 Dr. William Ronan - 515 Leslie Slote, Press Secretary - 525 Stan Tupper - 402 Dr. Kenneth Ryland - 423 Charles Schoeneck, Chairman, New York Republican State Committee - 165 Alton Marshall - 511 Ann C. Whitman (Mrs.) - 565 Mary McAniff - 559 Major Edward Galvin - 427 Romney, George - not coming Governor of the State of Michigan Dr. Walter D. DeVries, Special Assistant - 405 Dick Van Dusen, Aide to the Governor - 564 Samuelson, Don & Mrs. Governor of the State of Idaho Mr. & Mrs. Grant (Mary) Kilbourne - 547 Shafer, Raymond P. Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Hugh Flaherty, Legislative Assistant - 128 William Sennett, Attorney General - 156 Arthur Sampson - 156 John Conmy, Press Secretary - 110 Manley Stampler, Security - 134 Fred Speaker, Counsel - 134 Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jordan, State Chairman - 118 Tiemann, Norbert T. Governor of the State of Nebraska Sgt. Hanus, Security - 122 Dr. & Mrs. Clayton Yeutter, Administrative Assistant - 146 GOVERNORS, AIDES AND SPECIAL GUESTS - 4 Volpe, John A. & Mrs. Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Tauro, Appintments Secretary - 310 Mr. & Mrs. Barry Locke, Press Secretary - 316 Sgt. Larry Carter - Security - 328 Anthony P. De Falco - 318 Les Ainley - 318 Richard S. Robie, Sr. - 356 Williams, Jack & Mrs. Governor of the State of Arizona Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Shadegg - 340 Chairman & Mrs. Ray C. Bliss - 334 - 6 Jim Baker - 411 Ab Herman - 421 Jim Welden - 415 SENATOR Everett M. Dirksen - 248 - 50 SENATOR George Murphy - 249 - 251 Lee Nunn - 247 CONGRESSMAN Gerald R. Ford - 149 - 151 Bob Hartman - 378 CONGRESSMAN Bob Wilson - 230 - 232 Paul Theiss - 220 Lee Potter - 228 RGA Staff: Fleming, Richard T. : 302 Hughes, Maggie - 403 Kiley, Patricia - 357 Marshall, Jim - 478 GOP GOP NET GAIN IN HOUSE DELEGATIONS GOP SHARE OF MAJOR ELECTS A GOV-> INCUMBENT delegation n 90 thC HOUSE SEATS 1966 IN 9 OTH CONGRESS PARTY VOTE FOR GOV- ERNOR IN 1968 GOP GOVS6 ERNORSHIP IN 1966 Michigan 5 R12 D7 61% Romney Ohio +5 R19 D5 62% Rhodes Iowa +4 R5 D2 44% (Lost) Yes California +3 RIV D21 (D) (I race) 58% Reagan Wisconsin +2 R7 D3 54% Knowles Kentucky +2 R3 D4 (D) 52% (1967) Num (:68 Texas +2 R2 D21 (D) 26% (Lost) Yes New Jersey +2 R6 D9 (D) Virginia +2 R4 D6 (D) x < Alaska +1 R1 51% Hickel Arizona +1 R2 D1 54% Yes Williams Arkansas +1 R1 D3 (D) X 54% Yes W. Rockef ler Colorado +1 R1 D3 (D) x 55% Love Connecticut +1 R1 D5 (D) 44% (Lost) Delaware +1 > R1 Yes Florida +1 R3 D9 (D) 55% Kirk Georgia +1 R2 D8 (D) 50.2% (Lost in legislature) Idaho +1 X R2 53% Samuelsor Illinois +1 R12 D12 (Tied) Yes Indiana #7 w R6 D5 Yes Maryland *1 R3 D5 (D) X 55% Agnew Minnesota +1 X R5 D3 53% LeVander \ Nebraska +1 R3 62% Tiemann New Hampshire +1 X R2 46% (Lost) Yes New York +1 R15 D26 (D) 54% N. Rockei c lei GERALD FORD LEBARY North Carolina +1 R3 D8 (D) Yes North Dakota +1 x R2 Yes Oklahoma +1 R2 D4 (D) X 56% Bartlett Oregon +1 R2 D2 (Tied) 55% McCall Pennsylvania +1 R13 D14 (D) 53% Shafer Tennessee +1 R4 D5 (D) (No GOP Candidate) Utah +1 x R2 Yes Wyoming +1 R1 54% Hathaway 5 SUMMARY In November 1966 Republicans made a net gain of 47 seats in the House. At the same time Republicans made a net gain of 8 Governorships and won 1 more (Kentucky) in November 1967. The GOP now holds 26 of the 50 Governorships. +51 Republican gains in the House were made in 33 States. 4 Republican losses in the House occured in 3 States. (Maine -1; Miss. -4; Ala.-2) +47 There was no change in House delegations from 14 States. Of the 33 States where the GOP picked up House seats, GOP Governors won in 18. In the same 33 States, GOP candidates lost the Governorship in 5 States. There were no Gubernatorial races or no GOP candidate in the other 10 States. There will be Gubernatorial races in 1968 in 12 of these 33 States. Of the 14 States in which the 1966 elections brought no change in the ratio of House delegations, 19 will elect Governors in 1968: Kansas, Missouri, Mon- tana, New Mexico, Louisiana, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, Washington and West Virginia. Thus there will be Gubernatorial races in 1968 in 22 States where House Republicans either gained or held their own in 1066 At the same time Republicans made a net gain of 8 Governorships and won 1 more (Kentucky) in November 1967. The GOP now holds 26 of the 50 Governorships. +51 Republican gains in the House were made in 33 States. -4 Republican losses in the House occured in 3 States. (Maine -2; Miss. -2; Ala.-2) 447 There was no change in House delegations from 14 States. Of the 33 States where the GOP picked up House seats, GOP Governors won in 18. In the same 33 States, GOP candidates lost the Governorship in 5 States. There were no Gubernatorial races or no GOP candidate in the other 10 States. There will be Gubernatorial races in 1968 in 12 of these 33 States. Of the 14 States in which the 1966 elections brought no change in the ratio of House delegations, 19 will elect Governors in 1968: Kansas, Missouri, Mon- tana, New Mexico, Louisiana, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Vermont, Washington and West Virginia. Thus there will be Gubernatorial races in 1968 in 22 States where House Republicans either gained, or held their own, in 1966. Republicans need 31 more seats (plus 1 Calif. vacancy) to win House control in 196 States in which GOP neither gained nor lost House seats in 1966 were: Kansas R 5 45% (Lost) Yes Massachusetts R5 D7 (D) x 63% Volpe Missouri R2 D8 (D) Yes Montana R1 D1 (Tied) Yes Babcock New Mexico D2 (D) x 52% Yes Cargo Hawaii D2 (D) X 49% (Lost) Louisiana D8 (D) Yes Nevada D1 (D) 52% Laxalt Rhode Island D2 (D) x 63% Yes Chafee South Carolina R1 D5 (D) 42% (Lost) South Dakota X R2 58% Yes Boe Vermont R1 42% (Lost) Yes Washington R2 D5 (D) Yes Evans West Virginia R1 D4 (D) Yes States in which GOP lost House seats in 1966 were: Alabama -2 R3 D5 (D) X 33% (Lost) Maine -1 D2 (D) X 47% (Lost) Missisippi -1 D5 (D) 3 R P X = Switch of I seat would the delegation 11 6 = " " " win majority 7 9 There are 18 States with Republican House delgations (15 hare GOP Gons.) " " 3 " Tied Equal (2 have GOP Good.) " " 29 " " House delegations19 COP Good) the votes of 26 State delegations a are required To elect a President in The House of Representatives Tied delegations, any lacking a majority choice (if split 3 ways) cast a "dwided pr. vallot Repubicans must either pick up majority House seats in 8 States (holding all 18 now held) On, deny Demorats 4 or more delegations now held and win 3rd party or Conservative support elsewhere, Otherwise, House would elect Democrat on st ballot Note: there are 3 tred delegations Illinois Oregon, montane and 5 one- member desptions alaska, Delivare, /y delegations Wyoming, Vermont, where1 death or absence could change nevada party control magoring evin after November 1968 elections ERALD R.FORD LIBRARY REPUBLICAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE 1625 EYE STREET NORTHWEST WASHINGTON, D. C. 20006 NAtional 8-6800 RAY C. BLISS CHAIRMAN December 22, 1967 That fun The Honorable Gerald R. Ford Minority Leader House of Representatives Washington, D. C. Dear Jerry: As we move to the close of the year, I just want to thank you for all you have done to be helpful to me in my difficult role as National Chairman. I want to reiterate my deep appreciation to you for the very generous remarks you made concerning my leadership on the occasion of the Republican Governors' Association at Palm Beach. You have been a real team player and without the help of men like you the progress our Party has made in the past three years would not have been possible. For all you are doing and have done not only for our Party but our Nation as well, I am deeply grateful to you. Thanking you for all your cooperation, I am Sincerely yours, Ray Ray C. Bliss RCB:jmd FORD : LIBRARY GERALD From the desk of ROBERT T. HARTMANN 9:18 Duerebeck 111-3591 52-32-30 56 56-35-24 60-55- 24 FORD & LIBRARY 07V330 Bro Gresham n9195 Leane. From the - desk of chas Thomas Boyd ROBERT T. HARTMANN Wash. Hilton 483-3005 656 -7877 r 95 48 95, 48 Henry $1435 op 8p241- 241- FORD & LIBRARY GERALD 213 363-1558 Palm Beach December 8, 1967 Dear Governor Love: The Policy Committee, in accordance with your request, has given much thought to the contribution the Republican Governors' Association should make to the development of the Republican Platform for 1968. In the opinion of the Policy Committee, the Republican Platform should not deal solely with the federal level of government but rather with the total federal system -- the federal, state and local levels of government. The Platform should address itself to the ability of the federal system to solve particular problems. The solutions to national problems will require the utilization of all levels of government. Governors, because of their experience in working with all three levels of government, are in a unique position to determine how the activities and energies of the three levels of government can most effectively be stimulated and coordinated. It is the view of the Policy Committee that the Republican Platform of 1968 must offer solutions to the problems confronting this nation today. As chief executives, Governors must continually develop and implement specific solutions to problems. The knowledge and experience of Governors in problem-solving should be incorporated into the development of the 1968 Platform. As its initial step, the Policy Committee, through its staff, has attempted to present factually the dimensions of certain problems as they currently face the nation. To this end, a statistical workbook has been developed and is transmitted herewith. This working document prepared by staff presents factual information on degree and kinds of domestic problems in certain areas of national concern. The document is designed only to give factual information regarding major domestic problems. It does not deal with solutions to these problems. The Policy Committee of the Republican Governors' Association viewed its first task as making available comprehensive material which accurately and factually presented aspects of the problems. Because of the tremendous volume of information available, this document is by no means exhaustive. It does not, for example, include material regarding all domestic areas of concern. However, the Policy Committee intends to continue to prepare for consideration similar statistical material for remaining areas of national concern, such as natural resources and efficiency in government. Furthermore, even in those areas covered, additional data are available and may be needed in developing comprehensive proposals. For example, housing statistics are based on 1960 Census Bureau data which must be updated as soon as more recent figures are made available. This material attempts to set forth the pertinent facts in major areas of concern such as education, poverty, housing, health and mental health, agriculture, water and air pollution and others. The material also highlights the elements of certain specific problems in these areas. In addition, it clarifies the interrelationship between various problems, and points to the need to recognize the complex nature of each problem rather than just individual aspects of it. The Republican Governors Association Policy Committee having prepared factual material relating to certain background on domestic problems now intends, as its next step, to develop alternative solutions in these areas for consideration by the members of the Republican Governors Association. This material will present the arguments for and against such alternative solutions. Republican Governors as elected public officials are also deeply concerned about defense, space and foreign affairs. The Policy Committee, therefore, intends to develop materials similar to those submitted or planned regarding domestic concerns. Sincerely, Nelson A. Rockefeller, Chairman John A. Volpe George Romney Jack Williams Tom McCall David F. Cargo Warren P. Knowles Nils A. Boe Raymond P. Shafer Daniel J. Evans Some items in this folder were not digitized because it contains copyrighted materials. Please contact the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library for access to these materials. DEC 1 0 1967 E-337,733 8-399,319 G.O.P. GOVERNORS BALK Chief Executives Admit They Are Not Prepared to Select be Back a Republican Candidate for President at This Time AN EDGE FADES Island chairmen, seld he will call a meeting of chairmen from the Northeastern states to dis- cuss the situation. New Less Likely of Nom- Should Act Now ince From Their Russell said Republican chair- Renks men and governors should look at the opinion polls, take their own soundings, then try to agree Palm Beach, Fla. (AP)- to back the man who looks like Sublican governor# ac- the party's most potent challen- ger to President Johnson. THE NEW CHAIRMAN of the National Republican Governors associa knowledged yesterday they Twenty-six strong but unable is John H. Chafee (right), governor of Rhode Island. He received the g have no consensus - and noñè in prospect - on a to align their power behind any of office yesterday in Palm Beach, Fla., from Gov. John A. Love of Color presidential candidate for potential 1988 contender, the (Wirephoto).: had to content them- Page Poge ATLANTA, GEORGIA JOURNALOG 1987 E-247,912 5-511,319 the GOP would control 31 state Ford Says House face when It happens, but I Rockefelle delegations. don't think it's a reality. I a draft come Rep. Bob Wilson of California, haven't faced it. I don't think chairman of the Republican Con- of the part It's going to happen. haven't felt gressional Campaign Commit- May Pick President tee, told the governors his committee had picked 37 prime target districts in its drive to gain control of the House. He PALM BEACH, Fla. (UPI)-House Republican Lender Gerald said there were a number of Ford annealed to GOP governors Saturday for help in electing other districts in which stronger party could win enough elector- al votes to throw a close Press Intelligence, Inc. presidential election into the WASHINGTON, D.C. 20001 House. I Edit Other Ford said the GOP could gain Page Page ? the 31 seats it needs to control the House and still fail to LANSING, MICH. control the 26 state delegations STATE JOURNAL needed to elect a president. He said the Republicans now 9 - 75,444 hold the majority in 18 states and the Democrats in 29, while SDEU59284967 three delegations are evenly divided. If every Republican governor helped elect one or two more Ford Asks members to the House, he said, Help of Governors PALM BEACH, Fla, (UPI)- House Republican Leader Ger- aid Ford appealed to GOP governors today for help in electing more Republicans to Congress because, he said, FORD is LIBRARY 077839 there was "m serious possibili- ty" that the next presidential election may be thrown into the House. Press Intelligence, Inc. WASHINGTON, D.C. 20001 Front Edit Other Page Page Page PHILADELPHIA 9/A PA. INQUIRER M-517,229 GEOMLD FORD LIBRARY S-943,731 DEC 4 1967 GOP Governors Shaping Issues Stand WASHINGTON, Dee, 3 (AP) fighting, with a prentise to back Senatorial ⑉ Campaign Committee, Ford and Rep. Bob Wilson of epublican governors are pre- them to the NO. are scheduled to tell the gover- define their position on California, head of the Congres- The Republican Policy Coordi- nors at a "salute to General firmal issues as part of a drive nating Committee, of which eight Eisenhower" lunchess Friday sional Campaign Committee, will forge for themselves a maior governors are members has how they can help about more make a witch Saturday for aid to Massachusetts, New Mexico, *sqnep OWNER Colorado, Maryland, Oklahoma, securez and These are Virginia, Arkansas, зкои our uo ajon should IBA CHICAGO TRIBUNE POLITICAL EDITOR By George Tagge POLITICAL (PEI or STATE OF FLORIDA GOVERNOR'S OFFICE TO: All Media DATE: December 6, 1967 FROM: Jim Wolf MASTER LIST - AND ADDENDUM NAME ROOM NUMBER Abrahms, Al 147 New Jersey Republican Party Agnew, Bruce 608 Business Week Allen, Hal Perry Publications Altmeyer, Paul 186 ABC Barrett, Lawrence 461 Time - Life Beard; Ditta 355 Gov. Reagan Behrens, Earl C. 114 San Francisco Chronicle Behringer, J. C. M/M 217 Fort Lauderdale Bell, Jack M/M 561 Associated Press Bell, Paul 517 National Airlines Bellmon, Gov. H. 166 Nixon for President Committee (former Gov. of Okla.) Biosset, Bruce 509 Newspaper Enterprise Blackburn, Dan 557 Metromedia Radio News Bourdier, James 701 Associated Press Miami Bourne, Mary 715 Congressional Finance Advisory Committee Boyd, Robert 223 Knight Newspapers Brattigam, A. R. 367 Hotel & Restaurant Commission Brennan, Phil Success Magazine Brock, Norris 504 Time - Life Brack, Dennis Metromedia Broder, David M/M 407 Washington Post LIBRARY Brown, Joe 502 State of Florida Brown, Omar III 441 Chairman, Virgin Islands Republican Party STATE OF FLORIDA GOVERNOR'S OFFICE TO: All Media DATE: December 6, 1967 FROM: Jim Wolf -2- NAME ROOM NUMBER Bruce, B ob 611 CAP News Bureau Bryan, Jacob M/M 347 Jacksonville, Florida Bulloch, Nolland M/M 300-301 Tulsa Tribune Campbell, L. S. M/M 401 De Funiak Springs, Florida Cannon, James M/M 482 Newsweek Carter, Bob 705 Bob Carter Association Carter, Roger M/M 138 40 WIOP Chalmers, Judd M/M 466 Jacksonville, Florida Clancy, Martin 204 Public Broadcasting N. Y.C. Clarity, Jim M/M 366 New York Times Clayton, Peter 125 Gov. Babcock Clayton, Ralph M/M 516 State Senator, Deland, Florida Cole; Betty 604 Meet-The-Press Coleman, Carl 259 Time - Life Collins, George M/M 417 WTVT - TV, Tampa Conklin, Hartwell 605 WDBO - TV Conway, Monica Perry Publications Courtney, Phoebe 721 Independent American Newspaper Cronkite, Walter M/M 266 Columbia Broadcasting System Davis, Charles M/M 372 Florida House of Representatives Davis, J. 145 Florida House of Representatives -3- NAME ROOM NUMBER Day, James 154 With F. Clifton White De Bartolo, E. 553 Youngstown, Ohio De Filippo, Frank 252 News American Dent, Harry M/M 412 State Chairman, Republican Party of South Carolina Desmond, Jim 164 New York Daily News Donovan, Robert 576 Los Angeles Times Drummond, Geoffrey 500-503 Publishers Newspaper Syndicate Drummond, Roscoe M/M 500-503 Publishers Newspaper Syndicate Duke, Paul 615 WNBC - 4 - NAME ROOM NO. Duncan, Richard 103 Time Eddy, Jas. R. Florida State Committee Ellsworth, Robert 211 Nixon for President Committee Embrey, George 344 Columbus Dispatch Endicott, Robert 311 Dayton Daily News Evans, Tom 178 Nixon for President Committee Farmer, John 263 Newark News Fern, Jack 115 National Broadcasting Co, Fisher, Jos. 144 Gannett Newspapers Flor, Mrs. B.A. 136 Friedman, Saul M. /M 306 Knight Newspapers Fritchey, Clayton 182 Newsday Gavin, Tom 616 Denver Post Germond, Jack 304 Gannett Newspapers Gibbons, Clarence 707 Columbia Broadcasting System Goldstein, Larry 364 American Broadcasting Co. Gould, Stanhope 719 Columbia Broadcasting System Gregory, F.L. 322 Newark Starr Greco, Charles 607 WBDO TV & WJAR TV Gustafson, Joel /M Florida House of Representatives Guerra, David 264 WV SF Tampa Haddan, Edmond 711 Capitol Cities Broadcasting KPOL Halley, Jim 208 Chairman, California Republican Party Hamill, Pete 376 Newsday Hamilton, Tony 218 WFLA TV Tampa Harrison, Clayton /M 419 Chairman, Delaware Republican Party Harrison, C. Creshull 124 Florida Development Commission Healy, Robert 170 Boston Globe Heath, Ralph M64 Xerox LIBRARY - 5 - NAME ROOM NO. Henry, William 218 WFLA - TV Tampa Hillings, Pat 256 Hope, Paul 305 Washington Star Hopkins, John /M 578 Fort Lauderdale News Hubbell, Williams 253 Guidance Associates Hudson, Bill 702 Associated Press Jackson, Don 174 Nixon for President Committee Jacobs, Bradford 453 Baltimore Sun Johnson, Beth (and Peter) 606 Florida State Senator Johnston, T. W. 374 Florida Industrial Commission Jones, G. Paul 460 State Chairman, Georgia Kampmann, Mrs. Ike 267 Texas Finance Committee Kappes, Charles R. 188 WGBS Miami Kelly, Paul 158 Providence Journal Khromak, Leo 612 NBC Knapp, Ted 244 Scripps Howard Knowles, Howard 359 Worcester Telegram Kraft; Joseph 358 Chicago Daily News Krauser, Bob WIXY, WFLM News Kulsea, William C. 380 Booth Newspapers Lahr, Raymond 361 United Press International Lamont, Lansing 574 Time - Life Lawrence, Bill 505 American Broadcasting Co. Lawrence, David 111 Orlando Sentinel Leach, Tom 101 Chicago American Lee, Robert /M & son 167 Leonard, Bill 314 Columbia Broadcasting system Lewis, Irwin 603 NBC Lindsay, David 323 Florida State Legislature - 6 - NAME ROOM NO. Livingston, Lyons 582 Baltimore Sun Marko, Paul Florida Industrial Commission Manitzas, Frank 209 Columbia Broadcasting System Marans, J. Eugene 362 Ripon Society Mathews, Frank 325 Pittsburgh Post Gazette Maytag, L.B. 567 National Airlines McCready, Albert 556 The Oregonian McDermott, John 260 Miami Herald McIntile, James Jr. 162 Means, Marianna 476 Hearst Newspapers Mears, Walter 215 Associated Press Meisel, Lawrence 240 Missouri State Committee Miller, Norman C. 152 Wall Street Journal Moed, Helen 704 Columbia Broadcasting System Morone, Emile 338 UPI Morrell, Ken 142 Nashville Banner Morris, John L. 360 Florida Development Commission Mounger, W. D. 416 Mississippi Republican Party Murfin, William 467 State Chairman, Florida Naughton, James 472 Cleveland Plain Dealer Nellius, Dick St. Petersburg Times Nicholson, E. D. 307 Fort Lauderdale Nicodemus, Charles 343 Chicago Daily News Nolan, Martin 370 The Reporter Novak, Robert 372 Inside Report Ottenad, Tom 619 St. Louis Post Dispatch Palazzi, John 235 State Chairman, New Hampshire Pell, Ernest 454 Westinghouse Broadcasting - 7 - NAME ROOM NO. Phillips, William Ridder Newspapers Persons, Gen. Wilton B. Pieper, Donald 261 Omaha World Herald Pierce, Lawrence 717 Columbia. Broadcasting System Piglia, Lynne 721 Independent American Plamtz, Don 441 Virgin Islands Pourade, Richard 562 San Diego Union Powers, Dick 406 Sun Sentinel Pride, Donald 258 St. Petersburg Times Prisendorf, Anthony 315 New York Post Pullen, Dale 363 Perry Publications Ray, Robert 720 Chairman, Rep. Party of Iowa Reed, Clarke 418 Chairman, Rep. Party of Mississipp Reed, Maureen 161 WSMB, New Orleans Renick, Ralph 184 WTVJ - Miami Reuter, Cliff 506 Florida State Senate Richter, Robert 157 Columbia Broadcasting System Ridel, J. J. 367 Hotel & Restaurant Commission Ridder, Bernard New York Journal of Commerce Robertson, Claude 341 Chairman Republican Party of South Carolina Roach, Jack Rollins, Levey 709 Columbia Broadcasting System - 8 - NAME ROOM NUMBER Roth, Robert 257 Philadelphia Bulletin Russell, Frank 207 Orlando Sentinel Salisbury, John 445 KXL, Portland Schindler, Max 618 Meet-The-Press Schultz, David 361 United Press International Sears, John 172 Nixon for President Committee Sellers, Gene 123 Shaffer, Jessee M/M & C 339 Cincinnati Enquirer Sharkey, Dorine 163 Florida Times Union Sherman, E. H. M/M 309 Shipley, Carl M/M 319 District of Columbia Committee, Chairman Short, Hal 327 Smith, Les 221 WVCG News Spencer, A. Conover 420 New Jersey Republican Party Sperling, Godfrey 610 Christian Science Monitor Spagnoli, Gino 242 New York Daily News Spivak, Lawrence M/M 614 Meet-The-Press Stafford, Charles 203 Tampa Tribune Stayman, H. W., M/M 621 Florida Turnpike Authority Stockman, W. T. M/M 447 Florida State Senate Stone, Ross M& C 106 - - 108 WINZ Miami 1 9 - NAME ROOMNUMBER Sweissgood, Bill 245 Florida Times Union Taft, Dale 617 Kiplinger Magazine Taggee, George M/M 456 Chicago Tribune Taylor, C. 121 National Broadcasting Company Taylor, Ken 243 WLBW TV Theiss, George 216 Chairman Republican Party of Minnesota Thimmesch, Nick 276 Newsday Timmons, William 180 Nixon for President Committee Thompson, Robert Think 400 Hearst Newspapers Thurston, George 192 WTVT Tallahassee, Florida Todd, Webster M/M 408 Chairman Republican Party of New Jersey Topping, John 239 Ripon Society Turner, Bob 159 Tampa Times Valentine, Harold 265 Associated Press Vanocur, Sander M/M 554 National Broadcasting Company Wallace, M. M/M 706 Columbia Broadcasting System Walsh, Travis 205 Tulsa World Weaver, Richard 609 WDBO-TV & WJAR-TV Weaver, Warren 202 New York Times Weber, Charles Florida State Wells, Cy 508 Colorado Republican Party Wells, John M/M 568 Wessels, Hugo 338 United Press International White, Arthur 620 Meet-the-Press - 10 - White, Condon E. 404 Desert News - Salt Lake White, F. Clifton 176 F. Clifton White & Associates Whiteford, Charles 582 Baltimore Sun Whitfield, C. R. 308 Wicklein, John 345 Public Broadcast Laboratory Wieghart, Jas M/M 712 Milwaukee Sentinel Williams, Jack M/M 480 Journal Herald, Waycross, Georgia Wilson, Larry 342 Omaha World Herald Winter, Rolf 2 78 Witcover, Jules M/M 262 Newhouse National News Wussler, Robert 365 Columbia Broadcasting System Young, C. W. "Bill" 104 Florida Senate Minority Leader Zimmer, Richard 558 Daytona Journal Herald ADDENDUM NAME ROOM NO. Brower, Millicent Women's News Service Syndicate Dawson, Ed /M Society Pictorial DiBona, Darrell WVSF TV & Radio Tampa Guerra; Barbara WVSF TV & Radio Tampa Hall, Clif WLIZ Humphries, Bill WVSF TV & Radio Tampa Kay, Mort Photographer McElroy, Gayle Beachcomber McKean, Douglass Oregon Journal Minter, Jim Miami Herald Napier, Bill WVSF TV & Radio Tampa Purks, Jim AP Tallahassee Potter, James 139 Price, John R. Ripon Society Roach, Jack Smith, Vee World Wide Features Taylor, Sip WPTV Palm Beach Ward, Ray WSBR Boca Raton PRESS LIST - ADDENDUM NAME MEDIA Ash, Agnes Women's Wear Daily Anderson, Tom Scripps-Howard Arsenault, George Palm Beach News & Life Burt, Al Miami Herald Bate, Dick WEAT - Palm Beach Bailey, Lowell WEAT, Palm Beach Cason, Thad WEAT, Palm Beach Charnley, Bill Miami Herald Carroll, John John Waldron Associates Colee, Don Colee and Co. Connor, Jim WEAT Didio, Dave Miami Herald Dosdourian, Jack Scripps-Howard Douthat, Strat AP - Miami Davidoff, Bob Miami News & Life Eden, Jerry Lion Country Safari, Inc. Eden, Jerome Mr. & Mrs. Lion Country Safari, Inc. East, Bob Miami Herald Eberling, Ray WEAT Fisher, Ray Miami Herald Freese, Jack Scripps-Howard Gordon, Bill Scripps-Howard Humphrey, Jim Scripps-Howard Hubbell, William Guidance Assoc. 2 NAME MEDIA Jones, Clarence Miami Herald Koppel, Mr. & Mrs. Monte Lion Country Safari Kerlin, Jim AP - Miami Kane, Dean WIRK - Palm Beach Lapham, Georgie Gold Coasting Massey, Toby AP - Miami McKee, Alice Ft. Lauderdale News Morgan, Carrol Palm Beach News & Life Morgan, Bert Palm Beach News & Life Morris, Dwight Scripps-Howard Morris, Mona Miami Herald Mansfield, Bill Miami Herald Nauton, Ena Miami Herald Norton, Charles Scripps-Howard Owens, Jack WTVJ Broward Bureau Pike, C. E., Jr. Scripps-Howard Parrish, Martha Palm Beach News & Life Ralls, Charles Palm Beach News & Life Reed, Tedd WEAT - Palm Beach Rosenberg, Ira. Miami Herald Sutton, Bill WEAT Smith, Tom Miami Herald Simmons, Dave Miami Herald 3 NAME MEDIA Smith, Helen Ban Hoy Miami Herald Silay, Beverly Jack Walrad Assoc. Smollor, Jim WTVJ Stewart, Bob Palm Beach News & Life Thompson, Robert WIRK Radio - P. Beach Vaughan, Battle Miami Herald Veverka, Toni Palm Beach News & Life Woodward, John WTVJ Wilson, Bob WEAT Walrad, Jack M. Jr. Jack Walrad Associates Walrad, Jack M. 3rd Jack Walrad Associates Walrad, Charlene Jack Walrad Assoc. Walrad, Marian Jack Walrad Assoc. Zimmerman, Bill Scripps-Howard MASTER MARRESS LIST - ADDENDUM 2 NAME MEDIA Ash, Agnes Women's Wear Daily Anderson, Tom Scripps-Howard Arsenault, George Palm Beach News & Life Burt, Al Miami Herald Bate, Dick WEAT = Palm Beach Bailey, Lowell WEAT, Palm Beach Cason, Thad WEAT, Palm. Beach Charnley, Bill Miami Herald Carroll, John John Waldron Associates Colee, Don Colee and Co. Connor, Jim WEAT Didio, Dave Miami Herald Dosdourian, Jack Scripps-Howard Douthat, Strat AP - Miami Davidoff, Bob Miami News & Life Eden, Jerry Lion Country Safari, Inc. Eden, Jerome Mr. & Mrs. Lion Country Safari, Inc. East, Bob Miami Herald Eberling, Ray WEAT Fisher, Ray Miami Herald Freese, Jack Scripps-Howard Gordon, Bill Scripps-Howard Humphrey, Jim Scripps-Howard Hubbell, William Guidance Assoc. 2 NAME MEDIA Jones, Clarence Miami Herald Koppel, Mr. & Mrs. Monte Lion Country Safari Kerlin, Jim AP - Miami Kane, Dean WIRK - Palm Beach Lapham, Georgie Gold Coasting Massey, Toby AP - Miami McKee, Alice Ft. Lauderdale News Morgan, Carrol Palm Beach News & Life Morgan, Bert Palm Beach News & Life Morris, Dwight Scripps-Howard Morris, Mona Miami Herald Mansfield, Bill Miami Herald Nauton, Ena Miami Herald Norton, Charles Scripps-Howard Owens, Jack WTVJ Broward Bureau Pike, C. E., Jr. Scripps-Howard Parrish, Martha Palm Beach News & Life Ralls, Charles Palm Beach News & Life Reed, Tedd WEAT - Palm Beach Rosenberg, Ira Miami Herald Sutton, Bill WEAT Smith, Tom Miami Herald Simmons, Dave Miami Herald 3 NAME MEDIA Smith, Helen Ban Hoy Miami Herald Silay, Beverly Jack Walrad Assoc. Smollor, Jim WTVJ Stewart, Bob Palm Beach News & Life Thompson, Robert WIRK Radio - P. Beach Vaughan, Battle Miami Herald Veverka, Toni Palm Beach News & Life Woodward, John WTVJ Wilson, Bob WEAT Walrad, Jack M. Jr. Jack Walrad Associates Walrad, Jack M. 3rd Jack Walrad Associates Walrad, Charlene Jack Walrad Assoc. Walrad, Marian Jack Walrad Assoc. Zimmerman, Bill Scripps-Howard GOP To Gain New Governorships In '68 The Republican Governors Association will expand the seat of the incumbent Republican Senator in their its membership next year. state that will be up in the fall rather than seek re-election. Gubernatorial races are set in 21 states next Novem- There has been serious speculation that the Democratic ber-13 of these states now have Democratic Governors Governors in Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, New Hampshire, and eight have Republicans.* North Dakota, Utah and Vermont will forgo State House Republicans will win at least five of the State Houses re-election races to try to achieve membership in the now controlled by Democrats and very likely several oth- Senate Club. Any such move by the Democratic incum- ers while retaining the eight Republican governorships. bent will make the task of the Republican gubernatorial The number of Republican Governors presently stands nominee in that state much easier. at 26 as a result of the upset victory of Louie B. Nunn Another three Democratic Governors-in Indiana, over Democrat Henry Ward in Kentucky's gubernatorial North Carolina, and West Virginia are ineligible to run election last month. It marks the first time since 1955- for another term next year and will bow out. when there were 30 Republican Governors in the 48 The decision of John B. Connally of Texas to by-pass states-that the Republican Governors outnumber their a fourth term bid has spurred the Republican forces into Democratic counterparts. an all-out effort to capture this Governorship for the Seven of the incumbent Republicans-Governors Jack GOP for the first time since Reconstruction. Williams of Arizona, Winthrop Rockefeller of Arkansas, Next year promises to be a banner year for Republicans Tim Babcock of Montana, David F. Cargo of New Mex- throughout the country-particularly in the governorships. ico, John H. Chafee of Rhode Island, Daniel J. Evans of Washington and Warren P. Knowles of Wisconsin- * In Louisiana's statewide election in February Democratic are expected to seek re-election and are heavy favorites Governor John J. McKeithen is unopposed. to win. Although Governor Nils Boe of South Dakota is prevented from seeking another term by state law the GOP nominee will easily win the governorship in this A state-by-state analysis of the 21 gubernatorial strong Republican area. elections next November starts on page four. Seven of the Democratic Governors may challenge for Governors News Log Published by the Republican Governors Association 1625 Eye Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006 WASHINGTON MONTANA R NORTH DAKOTA R D D WISCONSIN SOUTH DAKOTA R MICHIGAN R R IOWA ILLINOIS UTAH D INDIANA COLORADO D VIRGINIA MISSOURI D D D D KANSAS D D KENTUCKY NORTH CAROLINA FORD & LIBRARY 018470 ARIZONA NEW MEXICO OKLAWOMA ARKANSAS TEXAS 1 1 R R R Governorship Race in Nov. R-Republican Incumbent -D-Democratic Incumbent ALASKA D Republican Governor Democratic Governor HAWAII State Urban Action Center Discussion Scheduled Result of RGA Initiative On Role of Governors The initiative shown by the Republican Governors Association has resulted in the In '68 Convention establishment of the States Urban Action Center-a privately financed, non-partisan agency of experts in state government-to advise the 50 Governors. Consideration of the role that the The Action Center is a result of the plan recommended by the Policy Committee Republican Governors will take in the of the RGA to deal with the national crisis of lawlessness and social injustice. The National Convention and a statistical plans call for creative state leadership to meet all phases of urban problems in the presentation of the problems of concern Gov.-Elect Nunn light of the summer riots. The proposal was conceived by Governor Nelson A. Rocke- to the states, will be part of the agenda feller, chairman of the Policy Committee, and hammered out at a conference of eight for the two-day RGA conference that Republican Governors in New York City in August. Republicans Hold The Action Center was established last month and former Mayor Robert F. Wag- open in Palm Beach today. ner of New York was named chairman with former Governor Elmer L. Andersen The Republican Governors are also expected to spend considerable time dis- 26 Governorships of Minnesota as co-chairman and Stanley R. Tupper, former Maine Congressman as cussing steps that the Association can executive director. take to win the 21 gubernatoriol battles After Kentucky Win The sentiment that greeted the RGA's 60-point "action program" was summed up that are set for the November election. in the New York Times editorial that stated the "Republican Governors have offered The nation's Republican Governors the nation a constructive and enlightened response" to the summer of our national are also scheduled to get a first-hand look The upset victory of Louie B. Nunn discontent. at the preparations for the United States over Democrat Henry Ward in Ken- "The action plan set forth by the Governors," the editorial continued, "contains moon rocket program when they tour tucky's gubernatorial election last month many useful, specific suggestions for transforming the physical environment of the the Cape Kennedy Space Center on Sat- continues the Republican surge at the slums, increasing job opportunities, creating community schools, and tailoring edu- urday. State House level that saw Republicans cational programs to the distinctive needs of the impoverished and disoriented." Top officials of the National Aeronau- capture 10 states which were held by "The Republican Governors," the editorial concluded, "have provided the leadership tics and Space Administration (NASA) Democratic Governors in the 1966 elec- that the GOP members of Congress, the Democratic majority and the Johnson Ad- ministration could all heed." Governor John A. Love with Troops in Vietnam will give the Governors a run down on tions. activities at the space center that are "The elections last month disclosed The Center will send experts into various states to recommend steps than can be Republicans have retained their 1966 taken to solve the specific problems found in each state. Mr. Wagner said that the Gets Association Rolling now concentrated on tests for the first time of the three-stage, 362-foot Saturn momentum and will win additional gov- new organization will use research experts but that "action not research" is the main rocket and the Apollo spacecraft that ernorships in next year's election," it was objective. "We studied problems to death in some instances," Mr. Wagner asserted. The ac- Chairman John Love Stresses will carry American astronauts to the predicted by Colorado Governor John A. moon-hopefully by the end of 1970. Love, RGA chairman. tion plan has been given the approval of the National Governors' Conference. The Governors will view the 530-foot Governor-elect Nunn's victory broke 20 years of Democratic reign in Ken- only Republican ever elected to a county- achieved by his vigorous campaign the Need for Republican Unity high Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) tucky and was particularly sweet since -as tall as the Washington Monument wide office in that Democratic strong- against the entrenched Democratic ad- Mr. Nunn came within 13,000 votes in ministration in that state. This marks the It has been a busy and productive year World War II piloting a PBY with the -where four Saturn rockets can be as- hold. He has successfully managed state- 1963 of defeating now-Governor Edward for Governor John A. Love of Colorado wide Republican campaigns since 1956 famed Navy "Black Cat Squadron," to sembled and housed, the launch pad area first time in 20 years that Kentucky can T. Breathitt. boast of a Republican Governor. since he took over the Chairmanship of make an eight-day fact-finding tour of and the intricate control systems opera- in Kentucky. He managed the successful One of the highlights of the Kentucky the Republican Governors Association. battle-torn Southeast Asia. tion. Republican Presidential campaigns in "The issue-oriented campaign waged His first task after the two-day confer- Colorado Governor John A. Love, campaign was the appearance of Califor- Kentucky in 1956 and 1960 and was ac- by Rubel Phillips in Mississippi and the His two-week tour included briefings nia Governor Ronald Reagan at a $10 ence at Colorado Springs last December number of votes cast on his behalf shows by military officials, helicopter tours of RGA chairman, said the Association "is tive for the GOP presidential nominee 9th and 10th was to gain some financial delighted that the December conference a person fund-raising affair that drew in 1964. He was also campaign man- the continued growth of the Republican the battle zones, a visit to the carrier an enthusiastic audience of nearly 12,000. support for the Association. He had ager for Senators Thruston B. Morton party in the South. It indicates a bright USS Kitty Hawk, and a PT boat ride is to be hosted by Claude Kirk-Florida's Governor Claude R. Kirk of Florida also been instructed by the Republican Gov- along the Viet Cong-infested shoreline. first Republican Governor in 94 years." and John Sherman Cooper. future for the Republican Party in a re- made an appearance for Mr. Nunn. ernors to meet with Chairman Ray Bliss A "Salute to General Dwight D. Eisen- In Mississippi, Republican Rubel Phil- gion-which until this decade has been The Republican victory was interpreted and seek funds in order to rejuvenate the Governor Love has spent countless hower" luncheon is set for Friday noon as a slap at President Johnson and the lips ran a hard campaign for the gover- considered hopeless territory for Repub- Association and set up a Washington of- hours selling "Republicanism" throughout when Senators Everett M. Dirksen, Re- lican candidates." the country. He has been particularly national administration and on election norship against Congressman John Bell fice. publican Leader, and George Murphy, night, Governor-elect Nunn remarked: Williams, a conservative segregationist, Governor Love found himself in a active in the "Opportunities Unlimited" Chairman of the National Republican "Tonight I am sure that 1600 Pennsyl- who bolted the Democratic party in 1964 wonderful bargaining position. Repub- campaign aimed at college students and Senatorial Committee, will talk about vania Avenue is aware of this victory. to support Barry Goldwater. RGA NEWSLOG licans had captured 10 State Houses in new voters and in addressing GOP fund- the "Governors Role in Electing More Our party now has a majority of Gover- Mr. Phillips proved to be the only se- the fall election formerly controlled by raising affairs. Republican Senators." It is hoped that nors in these United States and next year rious Republican gubernatorial candidate Official Publication the Democrats and the number of GOP Whenever he talks before Republican former President Eisenhower will be groups, he stresses the need for Repub- able to attend. we are going to have a President." in Mississippi since Reconstruction days REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS ASSOCIATION Governors had increased to 25. Although there is a nominal three to and got 30 percent of the vote-down 1625 Eye Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006 The session with Chairman Bliss was lican unity as he did when he told the Republican National Chairman Ray C. one Democratic registration figure in from his total vote when he ran for the productive. Governor Love came away annual convention of the Federation of Bliss will attend as an official guest of Kentucky the CBS News survey indicated governorship in 1963. with the promise of $90,000 for the first Republican Women: Chairman: GOVERNOR JOHN A. LOVE, Colorado the Association. Congressmen Gerald R. there was a surge to the Nunn camp in Governor Love asserted that although year of operation. Shortly after Gov- "With the great opportunity and with Ford, Republican Leader and Bob Wil- Vice Chairman: GOVERNOR JOHN H. CHAFEE, R.I. the last two weeks when it was estimated both gubernatorial elections "were de- ernor Love completed arrangements for the sound reason for optimism, we must son, Chairman of the National Republi- Executive Director: RICHARD T. FLEMING that he picked up about a third of his cided on state issues there was widespread a staff and the Washington office was bring to the task of the elections of 1968 can Congressional Committee will discuss votes to win by more than 26,000 votes. evidence of disenchantment and dissatis- Public Relations Director: JAMES J. MARSHALL opened without fanfare in April at 1625 healthy and sound debate. But we must the ways that the Governors can help to The newest Republican Governor is a faction with the Democratic party at the Eye Street, in Suite 705. follow it with another course of action elect Republican Congressmen in the next Glasgow attorney and was a former coun- state and national levels." In May, the 50-year-old Governor -we must follow the debate with a solid election at one of the business sessions. ty judge in Barren County, the first and Volume 1 DECEMBER 8TH, 1967 Number 1 jetted across the same Pacific waters "Governor-elect Nunn's victory was and unbreakable unity at the time of the Governor John H. Chafee of R.I. as- where he had spent two years during election." sumes the chairmanship tomorrow. GOP to Win at Least Five Democratic Governorships in November Arizona According to state polls, most Arkan- Governor. If Governor Kerner bows out of the tion can occur. The present governor, There appears to be a surplus of Re- Governor Jack sans-Democrats and Republicans alike The leading contenders are Richard gubernatorial race to tackle Senator Roger D. Branigin, cannot serve another publican talent available to run for the Williams, the fifth -are ready and willing to give the Gov- B. Ogilvie, President of the Board of Dirksen next fall it is expected that the immediate successive term and the In- office. Reportedly leading the list of Republican Gover- ernor another term. They have been Cook County Commissioners and John Democrats will turn to State Treasurer diana Democratic party is currently so potential candidates are Lieutenant nor in the state's embarrassed by the backward image of Henry Altorfer, a Peoria industrialist Adlai E. Stevenson III. The son of the factionalized that GOP chances look very Governor John Crutcher of Hutchinson history, is more their state and appreciate his efforts to and Republican candidate for Lieutenant twice defeated Democratic presidential promising. and State Senator Glee Smith of Larned popular today than get the state into the national main- Governor in 1964. Mr. Ogilvie has nominee was lassoed by Mayor Richard According to the Christian Science who is president pro tem of the State he was in 1966 stream. licked the Democrats' Chicago machine Daley to run for the post of State Trea- Monitor, "An atmosphere of general Senate. when he ousted in- The Christian Science Monitor (11/8/ twice-first as sheriff and in 1966 as surer in 1965 and was the only Demo- Republican optimism and Democratic Others often mentioned as possibilities cumbent Democrat 67) reported: President of the county board. crat to survive on the state slate. The pessimism is found here. Front runners to make the race are: Attorney General Samuel Goddard. "The very fact he decided to move Others on the growing list of Republi- glamor of his father's name was an im- for the gubernatorial nominations now Robert C. Londerholm; Congressman Governor Williams pushed through here in 1963-a man with millions who can potentials are House Speaker Ralph portant factor in Stevenson's narrow would appear to be GOP Secretary of Robert Dole; State Representative John the legislature a reorganization bill to could reside anywhere in the world-has T. Smith of Alton; former Governor 11,000-vote-victory. Another possible State Edgar D. Whitcomb and Demo- Conard; former Governor John Ander- prevent the recurrence of the scandals done much to overcome what has been William G. Stratton; Benjamin S. Ada- Democratic candidate for either Gover- cratic Lt. Governor Robert L. Rock. son; former president of the Kansas that rocked the State Liquor Department described as a statewide inferiority com- mowski, former Cook County State's nor or Senator is Sargent Shriver, broth- "Hoosiers may be looking for a change Livestock Association Bill House; John- during the previous Democratic admin- plex. Attorney and the GOP's 1963 candidate er-in-law of the Kennedys and head of after two straight Democratic adminis- son County Republican Chairman and istration. "Governor Rockefeller is, by name for Chicago Mayor; and State Senator the Office of Economic Opportunity in trations. Vietnam, and the presidential former Kansas State University athlete These new laws establish a code of and fortune, able to open doors of hard- Arthur R. Gottschalk of Flossmor. Washington. There is also some men- race most certainly will have a major Rick Harman; and former Congressman ethics for public employees and tougher nosed industrialists in an era when new It is considered highly unlikely that tion of Mayor Daley as the Democratic effect on the governor's race. The Presi- Robert Ellsworth who is now Executive penalties for bribery and corruption and jobs are needed to keep the state's best Governor Otto Kerner will depart from party's choice for Governor. dent's popularity is down." Director of the National Nixon for have earned Governor Williams a "well young people at home." the political scene voluntarily. He is expected to either seek re-election to a Indiana A second candidate for the GOP nom- President Committee in Washington. done" from the public. Delaware The registration figures that give the third term or challenge the venerable Most political observers list Indiana as ination is Dr. Earl L. Butz, Dean of Missouri Democrats a big edge are meaningless While Democratic Governor Charles Senate Republican Leader Everett M. one of the states where a change from a Agriculture at Purdue University, who in this state, the only one outside of the L. Terry, Jr., ponders the question of Dirksen. Democratic to a Republican Administra- announced his candidacy in early Novem- Though no candidates have yet an- ber. House Speaker Otis Bowen is also nounced, Missouri Republicans are very deep South which cast its 1964 electoral whether to seek a second four-year term, votes for its own Senator-Barry Gold- Delaware Republicans are becoming in- known to be interested in making the optimistic about their chances in next year's gubernatorial race. water. The expected return of former creasingly optimistic about their chances Gubernatorial Elections November-1968 race. Though Democratic Governor Warren Senator Goldwater to the state's political of taking over the governorship. lowa arena to battle for and win the Senate Many think that Governor Terry's de- Hearnes has said he will probably run clining popularity and his age he is REPUBLICANS (8) Republican hopes are high in Iowa as for re-election, both he and Lieutenant seat of 90-year-old Democrat Carl Hay- Democratic Governor Harold Hughes Governor Thomas Eagleton are reported den should aid the Republican cause. the nation's oldest governor at 68-may % of The Democrats got a drubbing at the convince him not to run again. Total Vote runs into political trouble over the state's to be interested in running against Sena- Term Last controversial new tax law. polls in 1966 when Governor Williams The five Republicans most often men- tor Edward Long in the Democratic Election headed a GOP sweep that carried Re- tioned as candidates for Governor in Most political insiders in Iowa believe primary. Arizona Williams 2 years 53.8 publicans into control of the legislature 1968 are: Governor Hughes will not run for an- The October 11th Christian Science Arkansas Rockefeller, W. 2 years 54.3 for the first time in the State's history. Attorney General David P. Buckson other term anyway, but may challenge Monitor states: "If the President loses in Montana Babcock 4 years 51.3 Next year's gubernatorial race is shaping (who is also a former Lieutenant Gov- Iowa's veteran Senator Bourke B. Hick- Missouri by 200,000 votes, Governor New Mexico up as a rerun of the 1966 affair. The ernor) who narrowly lost for Governor Cargo 2 years 51.7 enlooper for his Senate seat. Hearnes will go under regardless of who Rhode Island Chafee 2 years 63.3 lackluster Sam Goddard is very much in 1964. Republicans reportedly interested in the GOP candidate is. That is the opinion South Dakota Boe* interested in a comeback try. Another Dr. Russell W. Peterson, a duPont 2 years 57.7 the gubernatorial race are: Robert Beck, of top Democratic professionals in this executive who has led successful state- Washington Evans 4 years 55.8 serious contender appears to be State Centerville newspaper publisher who ran state, and they believe there is a good Knowles 53.5 wide reform drives for the state correc- Wisconsin 2 years Senator Bob Stump of Maricopa County, in the 1964 gubernatorial primary; Don possibility that President Johnson may the minority whip. tional system and the reapportionment Johnson, a West Branch businessman lose by 200,000 votes." of delegates to state party conventions. Arkansas DEMOCRATS (13) who is a former National Commander The leading possibility for the Repub- Robert A. Short, the State Insurance % of of the American Legion; Max Milo Mills, lican nomination for Governor of Mis- Winthrop Rocke- Commissioner who came into office in Term Total Vote a Marshalltown lawyer, former state leg- souri at this time appears to be Kansas feller, the first Re- 1963 and who led the Republican ticket Last islator and candidate for Lieutenant publican Governor in 1966, receiving more votes than any- Election Governor in 1966; and GOP State Chair- City manufacturer Dutton Brookfield, of Arkansas in 94 one in Delaware history. Delaware Terry 4 years 51.4 man Robert Ray of Des Moines. who is chairman of the Kansas City years, has made Harry G. Haskell, Jr., of Wilmington, Illinois Kerner 4 years 51.9 sports complex and a former candidate a resounding im- the Republican National Committeeman Indiana Branigan* 4 years 56.2 Kansas for mayor (he lost by less than 1200 pact on the State. for Delaware and a former Congress- Iowa Hughes 2 years 55.3 Kansas Republicans hope to recover votes in heavily Democratic Kansas City). He has quickly put man. Kansas Docking 2 years 54.8 their only wayward high state office by Mr. Brookfield gained a great deal of into force his elec- George W. Cripps, a Dover business- Missouri Hearnes 4 years 62.1 defeating one-term Governor Robert support early this year when he was the tion promises of re- man and retired Lieutenant Colonel who New Hampshire King 2 years 54.0 Docking next year. Governor Docking form in the areas of insurance regulation, was elected State Auditor in 1966. North Carolina Moore* 4 years 56.6 chief force behind the passage of a was one of only two Democrats in the law enforcement, government reorganiza- North Dakota Guy 4 years 55.7 major County bond issue. nation to take a Governor's chair from tion and prison reform. The continuing Illinois Texas Connally 2 years 72.8 an incumbent Republican in the 1966 Other possibilities are: State Senate disclosures of scandal in previous Orval Optimistic reports that the eight-year Utah Rampton 4 years 57.0 elections and the only one up for re- Minority Leader Thomas Woolsey, Re- Faubus administrations should make an Democratic reign in Illinois can be end- Vermont Hoff 2 years 57.7 election in 1968. There have been rumors publican State Chairman and House easy re-election for Rockefeller who will ed next fall have caused a number of West Virginia Smith* 4 years 54.9 that Governor Docking will run for the Minority Leader Dorman Steelman, and probably be opposed by the former Republican hopefuls to cast a covetous *Ineligible for another term. Senator seat of Republican Frank Carl- Chairman of the St. Louis County Coun- Governor. eye on the Republican nomination for son, who is expected to retire. cil, Hugh Scott. Election Analysis Continued Plenty of Muscle choice of the party's gubernatorial nomi- nee next year. Lt. Gov. Preston Smith has already Montana New Mexico nomination and was regarded by the The political muscle of the Republican Governors is evident in a few interesting announced. Many expect Senator Ralph statistics. W. Yarborough to represent the liberal The Republicans As the youngest Democrats as a major threat. However, at that time, Mr. Stickley The 26 states that will have Republican governors next year have a total of 302 wing of the Democratic party. have retained firm chief executive control of the gov- since statehood in with backing from many of the State's electoral votes-32 votes more than the magic 270 figure that is needed to elect the Republicans have a number of popular ernorship in this 1912 - Governor most influential party regulars began to presidential ticket. figures ready. Senator Tower has not state since 1953 and run. Among his backers are Congress- These states will send 760 delegates out of the 1,333 delegates to the Republican ruled himself out and Congressman David F. Cargo, 38 Governor Tim Bab- man Charles R. Jonas who clashed with National Convention that opens in Miami Beach on August 5th. This gives them 93 George W. Bush is mentioned often. years old, has had cock aims to make Mr. Gardner in 1963 over a congressional votes more than the 667 votes that is needed to select the Presidential and Vice Other Republican possibilities are Con- to spend much of gressman Robert D. (Bob) Price; former it at least 20 years redistricting plan; and the former state Presidential nominees and approve the Party platform. his time watchdog- Democratic Attorney General Will Wil- of Republican lead- ging the Democrat- GOP chairman, William E. Cobb, who Republicans will control a majority of the 50 States Houses in the country for the son; James M. Collins, a Dallas business- ership. controlled legisla- came out of retirement to help build a first time since 1955 when there were 30 Republican Governors in the 48 states. Elected as Lieutenant Governor in campaign organization for Mr. Stickley. man; Peter O'Donnell, Jr., Republican ture and bringing some much needed Republicans hold the governorships in seven of the 10 largest states-New York, 1960, Governor Babcock took over the reform to state government. An important factor to be considered State Chairman; and Albert B. Fay, GOP California, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Massachusetts and Florida. National Committeeman. office in 1962 when a tragic plane crash He has deactivated close to 50 of the is that most of the state's 350,000 reg- 214 cumbersome and archaic boards and istered Republicans live in the Western Republicans govern in states with some 58 percent of the nation's population. killed his predecessor and friend, Gover- Utah nor Donald G. Nutter. commissions in his State and has com- and Piedmont portions of the state (the bined the duties of five agencies into one home area of Mr. Stickley, Congressman Jonas and Mr. Cobb) while many of Elections South Dakota Democratic Governor Calvin Ramp- Despite the landslide victory of Presi- dent Johnson in Montana three years ago Republicans ton's waning popularity and the Repub- Department of Transportation. Governor Babcock became one of only Congressman Gardner's supporters (from should have no dif- lican upsurge in 1966 in Utah have The people like the results. It showed the Eastern part of the state) are reg- his second term as Governor expired in sparked unprecedented interest in the three Republican incumbent Governors ficulty in holding in a recent popularity poll taken at the returned for a full term in November of istered Democrats who could vote for 1961. the governorship of 1968 gubernatorial race. Eastern New Mexico State Fair when 1964 when he defeated Dr. Ronald R. him in a general election but who will Governor Cargo defeated his nearest Rhode Island South Dakota even In 1966, Utah citizens returned both Renne, the former president of Montana be unable to do so in a primary. though Governor congressional seats (one had been Demo- Democratic rival among possible guber- State College. Other names sometimes mentioned in In this tiny, tradi- Nils A. Boe is un- cratic for one term) to the Republican natorial candidates by three to one. connection with the Governorship are: tionally Democrat- The public agrees with his concern able to succeed column with 60 percent of the total state- As the underdog candidate in 1966 Congressman James Broyhill, Congress- ic state Governor about the problems of education in the himself. wide vote. Democratic Governor Ramp- Governor Cargo tripped up the pundits man Jonas and Guilford lawyer William John H. Chafee, Governor Boe ton and Senator Frank Moss were saved state and approves of his decision to by winning the Republican primary and Osteen. the new chairman has said that he is "very interested" in from the Republican landslide only be- make available additional state funds for overtaking the top-heavy Democratic of the Republican this purpose. running for the Republican nomination cause they were not up for re-election favorite in a gubernatorial campaign in North Dakota Governors Associa- Further, people are fed up with the to face Democratic Senator George Mc- that year. which Governor Cargo spent only Republican hopes are high in North tion, has performed Democratic Party's attempt to play "poli- Govern. However, he said he won't an- At an early meeting called to consider $14,000. He'll win again in November tics" with the sales tax issue and applaud Dakota to unseat Democratic Governor political miracles. nounce for a while. candidates for the GOP gubernatorial Governor Babcock's view that the finan- -and improve on his 1966 plurality of William Guy who will probably try for He will repeat for a Prominent in the speculation to win nomination, over 30 people expressed in- 9,038. an unprecedented fourth term. No Gov- fourth term next November. cial problems that "confront Montana the Republican nomination are Attorney terest in running for the post. The list Democrats have bid adieu to Governor in the near future go beyond the sphere ernor of North Dakota before Guy had In 1964-in this state in which you General Frank Farrar and State Senator has now narrowed to 10 active candidates of political parties." Cargo's opponent the last time around— ever remained in office for over six years. can still use the master lever on the vot- Robert Bartron. who are currently co-sponsoring a public Speculation about the Democratic T. E. (Gene) Lusk and are casting around Because of this precedent, some speculate ing machine-President Johnson won an The state's political situation was re- opinion survey throughout the state to nominee centers around several unexcit- for a candidate. Likely choices are for- that Governor Guy may choose to chal- astonishing 82% of the vote. The vote cently appraised in an article in the determine the relative popularity and ing prospects. They include: Attorney mer Lieutenant Governor Mack Easley lenge Republican Senator Milton Young should have buried Governor Chafee. It Sioux-Falls (S. Dak.) Argus Leader which strength of each against Governor Ramp- General Forrest Anderson, Billings of Hobbs or Bruce King, Speaker of the for his Senate seat in 1968. didn't. He captured a record breaking reported that in the Democratic party ton in next year's race. House. Mayor Willard Fraser, John W. Mahan, North Dakota Republicans already 61% of the vote. "so far no one has indicated interest in Vermont member of the do-nothing U.S. Subver- North Carolina talked about for the race are: State Rep- In 1966 he was again the winningest running for anything. In view of last sive Activities Board, State Senator Le- resentative Gordon Aamoth of Fargo, Republican Governor in the country fall's election results, it might be sug- Vermont Republicans who had held Roy Anderson of Conrad and Merrill K. North Carolina Republicans have an 1967 Speaker of the House; Arley Bjella, with 63.3% of the vote and carried into gested that this is not so much a sign of the Governorship for more than 100 Riddick of Philipsburg. excellent chance to gain the state's chief Williston attorney and a former GOP office with him a Republican Lieutenant disinterest as of good sense." years before Democrat Philip H. Hoff executive office and may for the first time state chairman; former Governor John E. Governor and Attorney General. It was took office in 1963 have high hopes to New Hampshire have a primary struggle for the guber- Texas Davis of Bismarck, who has just com- the first time in 28 years that Republi- reclaim that chair in 1968. Republicans here are very optimistic natorial nomination. By state law, pleted a year as national commander of cans had won a statewide office other The decision of Governor John B. At the moment, the leading GOP can- about next year's gubernatorial race. Democratic Governor Dan Moore can- the American Legion; Ed Doherty, New than the governorship. Connally to forego a try for a fourth- not serve an immediate successive term. didate for the nomination appears to Governor John W. King has indicated Rockford newspaper publisher; Richard term has given the Republicans their best Jack L. Stickley of Charlotte, a 64- As one columnist wrote about Gov- be Attorney General James Oakes who that he has "no plans" regarding a Elkin of Taylor, member of the state chance in nearly 100 years to win the possible fourth term. year-old businessman and a former presi- Public Service Commission; State Senator ernor Chafee-"his personal leadership governorship. was the only Republican to win a Con- Many New Hampshire political ob- dent of the International Association of Evan Lips of Bismarck, 1967 Senate Ma- and popular acceptance as 'the man you His departure from the political scene stitutional state-wide office in 1966. servers, however, find it hard to believe Lions Clubs, has announced his intention jority leader; Robert P. McCarney, Bis- can trust' have revitalized his state's promises to embroil the two warring Other candidates being mentioned are: that Governor King will not run for of seeking the 1968 Republican guber- marck auto dealer; State Representative political spirit." Democratic factions in the state-the Frederick Smith, a Burlington banker; re-election-or for the Senate seat now natorial nomination. He may be op- Robert Reimers, Melville seed farmer Democrats are scouting about for pos- liberal and the conservative forces-in a Thomas Hayes, an attorney in Middle- held by the firmly entrenched Repub- posed for the nomination by Congress- who was assistant House Majority leader; sible candidates to oppose Governor bitter struggle for the Democratic nomi- bury and former administrative assistant lican Senator Norris Cotton. man James C. Gardner, a drive-in res- State Senator Grant Trenbeath, Neche Chafee but the pickings are slim. It nation for Governor. to Senator Winston Prouty; Deane Davis, Over a year ago, Republican House taurant tycoon from Rocky Mount who farmer, in the Senate since 1957; and Such a split in the Democratic ranks appears that former State Senator Thomas Chairman of the Board of Directors of Speaker Walter Peterson of Peterborough unseated 32-year veteran Congressman State Representative Bryce Streibel, Fes- was a big factor in Senator John G. Tow- indicated an interest in being a candidate Harold Cooley in 1966. senden farmer who was the House Ma- R. DiLuglio of Johnston unsuccessful er's victory in 1961. President Kennedy's the National Life Insurance Company in in next year's gubernatorial race. Sev- Until late last summer, Congressman jority leader in the last session. aspirant for the Democratic nomination ill-fated trip to Texas in November 1963 Montpelier; and Robert Gibson, a Brat- eral other Republicans are interested in Gardner, who has a large following of Probably the most well-known candi- for Lieutenant Governor in 1966-will was made to mediate the Democratic tleboro attorney who is the son of for- the race, but no one has yet made a dissident North Carolina Democrats, date is former Governor John E. Davis be given the blessing of his party but party's tong warfare which is sure to mer Governor and now District Judge formal announcement. seemed to be a front-runner for the who has been on the party sidelines since little help. escalate into a full-scale battle over the Ernest Gibson. Elections mer Governor Albert D. Rosellini-de- His political standing in the state is feated by Governor Evans four years attested to by the statement of Demo- ago. cratic Senator Gaylord A. Nelson that Washington Governor Evans-whose upset victory Governor Knowles is the "only Republi- After the 1964 in 1964 came despite the Democratic can who can give me a fight." Gover- election of Gover- sweep throughout the Country-will roll nor Knowles has kept his options opened nor Daniel J. Evans, merrily over his opposition. and has yet to announce if he will seek TIME magazine re-election to a third-term or seek the predicted that "he West Virginia seat of Senator Nelson in November. is a Republican to West Virginia Democratic Governor Governor Knowles is proud that he keep an eye on." has been able to hold the tax line on the Hulett C. Smith cannot serve an immedi- TIME couldn't have ate successive term and two highly for- 1967-69 biennial budget. This coupled been more accu- midable Republican candidates have al- with the sound legislative program that rate. He came into ready announced for the Republican he has guided through the Democratic- office with a 35-point "Blueprint for Pro- nomination to succeed him in office. controlled legislature during the past three gress" program that outlined his pro- Former Governor Cecil H. Underwood years has boosted his political fortune posals in the fields of mental health, (1957-1961) and six-term Congressman and won him widespread popular sup- tourism and modernization of state gov- Arch A. Moore, Jr. of Glen Dale, who port. ernment. He has spent the past three Democrat Bronson La Follette has announced their candidacies within days years carrying through on these plans. of one another last month, are candi- spent little time at his job lately as At- Unfortunately, the Democratic legis- dates of considerable experience and torney General as he spends much of his lators have thrown many roadblocks in ballot box appeal. time politicking and angling for the Dem- Governor Evans' way. Nevertheless, he ocratic nomination for Governor. He They are both deadly serious about has managed to push through much of unseating the Democratic administration hopes that his family name will help his program. Washingtonians are de- in Charleston and "getting the state mov- him but he will be swamped by Governor lighted about the state's explosive eco- ing again." Knowles if he seeks the governorship. nomic growth and the growth of their urban areas which has come about un- Wisconsin der the leadership of Governor Evans. A recent article Volpe Takes Charge The measure of his success is the in the Chicago Trib- Republi- grudging admission that is made even by une described Re- cans took over the the staunchest Democrats that "he's done publican Governor chairmanship of a good job." His success has captured Warren P. Knowles the National Gov- widespread national attention. as "the galvanic ernors' Confer- The choice of his opponent in the fall governor of Amer- ence in October doesn't matter to Governor Evans. "The ica's Dairyland" with the election more the merrier," said the Governor who has "been win- to that post of recently. It may take a Democratic pri- ning elections for Governor John A. mary to decide the question. The specu- 30 years." So true. Volpe of Massa- lation centers around three Democrats: He first won the governorship in 1964 chusetts. Attorney General John J. O'Connell, a by an 18,000 vote margin although LBJ As Chairman, Governor Volpe is "me-too-man" of administration policy; was carrying the state by 400,000 votes. also a member of the executive com- State Senator Martin Durkan-who has The next time around, in 1966, he wid- mittee which includes three other Re- used his position as chairman of the ened his lead to 78,000 votes and made publican Governors-Walter J. Hickel Senate Ways and Means Committee to some significant inroads in the Demo- of Alaska, Spiro T. Agnew of Mary- torpedo worthwhile legislation; and for- cratic fortress of Milwaukee. land and Nils A. Boe of South Dakota. RGA NEWSLOG Bulk Rate Published by the Republican Governors Association U.S. Postage Paid 1625 Eye Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006 Washington, D.C. Permit No. 6149 SUPER KEY DISTRICTS IN CASE PRESIDENTIAL RACE IS THROWN INTO THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES Considering the possibility that the Presidential race may end up being decided by the House of Representatives, it might be well for us to consider which are the key House seats in such a contingency. Super concentration on 19 specific Democrat House seats all of which are now on our target list, plus concentration on holding 14 presently Republican seats, seven of which are currently on our vulnerable GOP seat list, could make the difference on whether we win or lose the Presidency, should this election be decided by the House. Our Present Situation House Delegations in which there is a Republican majority: (18 atates) Alaska Nebraska Arizona New Hampshire Delaware North Dakota Idaho Ohio Indiana South Dakota Iowa Utah Kansas Vermont Michigan Wisconsin Minnesota Wyoming Where We Must Gain Where do we go to pick up majority of delegations in eight other states? 1. Illinois -- now split 12-12 -- really zero in on what appears to be the best district after redistricting is completed. if redistricted 2. Pennsylvania -- now split 14D-13R -- hold 19th (Goodling) and concentrate on 24th (Vigorito - D). 3. Montana -- now split 1-1 -- take close marginal 1st (01sen - D). The above are reasonable prospects. The following are not as good: 4. New Jersey -- now split 9-6 -- redistricting mess with Democrats Republecans in control of it. Present districts give us a good shot at two districts. We will need two districts here, whenever redistricting mess is resolved. 5. New Mexico -- We have an excellent chance at one of the two seats. It will be much more unlikely to take two, but not impossible. -2- 6. Maine -- two Democratic seats -- we have a good chance at one, the other is a harder problem, but in this basically Republican state, it should not be an impossibility. 7. Oklahoma -- now split 5-2 against us. With two sure Republican districts after redistricting -- all out efforts to hold incumbent Smith (R) and to go after Edmondson again in the 2nd -- gives us a long shot chance for a 4-3 split. 8. California -- now split 21-17 against us. Proposed "sweetheart" redistricting bill would hurt our chances of gaining the necessary three seats. Still under any circumstances we should concentrate on three seats -- even if one of them looks like a real long shot. 9. Washington -- now split 5-2 against us. While prospects of gain- ing two seats look poor, we have held three of the present Democrat seats up to two years ago. 10. Virginia -- now split 6-4 -- concentrate on gaining the 5th where Tuck is retiring, on possibility that with a 5-5 split, and a long drawn out House election for President, one of the Democrats might weaken when the chips are down (Satterfield or Marsh?????). 11. Colorado -- now split 3-1 against us. A reasonable prospect of picking up one seat -- very difficult in regard to another, but we might work on the long shot 1st. 12. Oregon -- now split 2-2 -- all out effort against Ullman (D). Wallace Delegations? Mississippi: House vote likely to be for Wallace. Alabama: House vote likely to be for Wallace. Louisiana: House vote possible for Wallace. South Carolina: House vote possible for Wallace or split. FROM POINT OF VIEW OF POSSIBLE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES VOTE FOR PRESIDENT DISTRICTS ON WHICH WE SHOULD CONCENTRATE 14 Seats We Must Hold (on our present vulnerable seat list) (in addition to those on vulnerable list) 18th Cal. Mathias 55.9% 19th Pa. Goodling 51.7% 25th Cal. Wiggins 52.5 8th Va. Scott 57.2 33rd Cal. Pettis 53.5 9th Va. Wampler 53.7 6th Minn. Zwach 51.4 Alaska Pollock 51.6 4th Okla. Smith 41.6 Del. Roth 55.8 (new) 8th Ind. Zion 51.1 1st Iowa. Schwengel 51.3 Wyoming Harrison 52.7 4th Iowa Ky1 51.7 -3- 19 Seats We Must Gain 11th I11. Pucinski 49.1% probably will remain best I11. target after redist. 24th Pa. Vigorito 44.7 probably better target than others with slightly higher percentage 1st Mont. 01son 49.2 N.M.-A.L. Walker 49.5 N.M.-A.L. Morris 44.1 1st Maine Kyros 45.2 2nd Maine Hathaway 43.2 2nd Okla. Edmondson 47.1 2nd Ore. Ullman 36.7 5th Va. Tuck (retiring) 43.8 3rd Colo. Evans 48.3 1st Colo. Rogers 44.0 2 seats in New Jersey redistricting makes this a problem, but general area of present 3rd --- now 46.6% and present 9th -- now 49.1% would seem best gamble. 2 seats in Washington -- among 2nd -43.5% 5th and 6th (new figures not yet available). 3 seats in California, the best we can find after redistricting, which are likely to include: 29th Brown now 48.9% 34th Hanna now 44.2% 38th Tunney now 45.5% MEMORANDUM Subject: The Election of the President by the House of Representatives Brief Summary of Findings: The 12th Amendment provides that if no Presidential candidate has a majority of the electoral votes when they are counted in front of a joint session of Congress, the "the House of Representatives shall choose immediately, by ballot, the President. But in choosing the President, the votes shall be taken by states, the representation from each state having one vote; a quorum for this purpose shall consist of a member or members from two-thirds of the states, and a majority of all the states shall be necessary to a choice." By law the electoral count occurs in the Hall of the House at 1 p.m. on the sixth day of January succeeding every meeting of the electors. (3 U.S.C.15) The 20th Amendment provides that the terms of the Representatives shall begin on the 3rd day of January. This combination of law and Constitutional provisions makes it clear that any election of a President by the House of Representatives would take place after the newly elected Congress had begun their term. This would remain true unless the law as to the date of counting the electoral votes were changed to a date prior to January 3. More Extensive Summary: The third paragraph of the first section of the second article of the Constitution provides: "The Congress may determine the time of choosing the Electors, and the Day on which they shall give their Votes; which Day shall be the same throughout the United States." The election of the President - Page #2 In 1801 the electoral count failed to give a majority of votes to any of the candidates. At that time the 12th Amendment had yet to be enacted but the Constitution had a provision on the subject which was similar to the language of that Amendment. (See Footnote 1; III Hinds 1981). The primary distinction was that before the 12th Amendment there was no distinction between votes for President and votes for Vice-President. This led to the election by the House in 1801, and the 12th Amendment cured this defect. The term of Congress at that time began on March 4 of the off-numbered years and extended through two years. On February 11, 1801, the election of a President was thrown into the House of Representatives, (III Hinds 1983). This election included as par- ticipants, Aaron Burr and Thomas Jefferson. It is interesting to note that Alexander Hamilton's support of Thomas Jefferson in this election was one of the factors that led to the duel between Burr and Hamilton, which resulted in Hamilton's death. For a story of the rivalry between these men, see The Rivals by Clemens, P23 (5898, R being its call number in the Library of Congress). They proceeded to elect a President under rules adopted for this matter just a few days before. (III Hinds 1982). On the thirty-sixth ballot, Thomas Jefferson was elected President with his term to begin on March 4, 1801. Therefore, Jefferson was elected by the outgoing Congress less than a month before their term was to expire. In 1804 the 12th Amendment was enacted. The pertinent part of it provides: "The person having the greatest number of votes (referring to Electoral College votes) for President, shall be the President, The election of the President - Page #3 if such number be a majority of the whole number of Electors appointed; and if no person have such majority, then from the persons having the highest numbers not exceeding three on the list of those voted for a President, the House of Representatives shall choose immediately, by ballot, the President. But in choosing the President, the votes shall be taken by States, the representation from each State having one vote; a quorum for this purpose shall consist of a member or members from two-thirds of the States, and a majority of all the States shall be necessary to a choice." In 1825, the electoral college again gave no candidate a majority and on February 9, 1825, the election in the House of Representatives of John Quincy Adams took place; the other candidates being Andrew Jackson and William Crawford. (Rules governing this election found at III Hinds 1984). It should be noted that again in 1825 the election was conducted by the outgoing House of Representatives as their term was to end on March 4, 1825. In 1825 the election by the House involved three men. From this fact it appears to be precedent that the language not exceeding three in the 12th Amendment, means "three" when at least three have received votes from the electoral college. The 20th Amendment became operative in 1933 and its most significant provision for present purposes provides: "Section 1. The terms of the President and Vice President shall end at noon on the 20th day of January, and the terms of the Senators and Representatives at noon on the 3rd day of January of the years in which such terms would have ended if this article had not been ratified; and the terms of their successors shall The election of the President - Page #4 then begin." This Amendment makes it clear that it is only the newly elected Congress that can act after January 3 of the odd-numbered years. The 12th Amendment provides that the election goes into the House of Representatives only after the Electoral count has failed to give any candidate a majority. Therefore, it becomes vital as to when this count is taken. The electoral count occurs in the Hall of the House at 1 p.m. on the sixth day of January succeeding every meeting of electors (3 U.S.C. 15), but in the 1957 count the date was changed to Monday, January 7. (P.L. 436, 84th Cong.). So if the Congress operates within existing law any election of a President by the House of Representatives would necessarily occur after the newly elected Representatives' terms had begun. The electors actually meet in their respective states to vote on the first Monday after the second Wednesday in December next following their appointment, (3 U.S.C.7) which occurs on the day the public "votes" for President. (Tuesday next after the first Monday in November, 3 U.S.C. 1). The possibility therefore apparently exists that Congress could by law change the date of the counting of all the electoral votes to a time in say late December. If this were done and no Presidential candidate received a majority of the electoral votes, the election of the President would fall upon the outgoing House of Representatives. Since Congress is not usually in session in late December, such a meeting of Congress could be called by the President as provided by Article II, Section 3 of the Constitution. In one instance, the President called Congress into session when it had already provided by law for a later time to meet. (1 Hinds 12). congres? The election of the President - Page #5 adapted On January 3, 1961, the Senate by concurrent resolution approved-a resolution providing as follows: "Resolved by the Senate (the House of Representatives concurring) that the two Houses of Congress shall meet in the Hall of the House of Representatives on Friday the 6th day of January 1961, at 1 'clock post meridian, pursuant to the requirements of the Constitution and laws relating to the election of President and Vice President of the United States, and the President of the Senate shall be their Presiding Officer; that two tellers shall be previously appointed by the President of the Senate on the part of the Senate and two by the Speaker on the part of the House of Representatives, to whom shall be handed, as they are opened by the President of the Senate, all the certificates and papers purporting to be certificates of the electoral votes, which certificates shall be opened, presented, and acted upon in the alphabetical order of the States, beginning with the letter "A", and said tellers, having then read the same in the presence and hearing of the two Houses, shall make a list of the votes as they shall appear from the said certificates; and those votes having been ascertained and counted in the manner and according to the rules by law provided, the result of the same shall be delivered to the President of the Senate, who shall thereupon announce the state of the vote, which announcement shall be deemed sufficient delcaration of the persons, if any, elected President and Vice President of the United States, and, together with a list of the votes, be entered on the journals of the two Houses." The election of the President - Page #6 On January 4, 1965, a resolution was adopted that was identical to the above except that the date was changed to January 6, 1965, and "President of the Senate" was changed to "President Pro Tempore of the Senate." These resolutions make it clear that Congress has in practice strictly followed the requirements of 3 U.S.C. 15 as to the date of counting the electoral votes; namely on January 6. As long as this law is followed it is clear that it would have to be the newly elected House that would elect the President should an election be thrown to them. As to the questions of procedure once the election is thrown into the House of Representatives, the election of 1825 becomes the primary precedent. Hinds The entire procedure is set out at A1984. The highlights beyond direct 12th amendment requirements are: 1) The House is to continue to ballot without interruption by other business until one of the candidates, not exceeding three, shall have a majority of all the States. 2) The doors of the Hall shall be closed during the balloting, except against the Members of the Senate, stenographers, and the officers of the House. 3) The Representatives of each State shall first ballot among themselves in order to ascertain the vote of their State. 4) If the votes within a State don't give either candidate a majority then the word "divided" shall be written on their vote. 5) When either receive a majority of the votes of the States, the is elected President. for all practical purposes, It therefore appears that a "divided" vote may well be a vote against the potential winner. REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS ASSOCIATION 1625 Eye St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006 Suite 705 Phone 202-628-3240 628-6800 NEWS RELEASE Jim Marshall Release: MONDAY Public Relations Director A.M. - November 13th The nation's Republican Governors are scheduled to get a first-hand look at the preparations for the United States moon rocket program when they tour the Cape Kennedy Space Center during their two-day conference in Florida next month. The Governors will be briefed by top officials of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) before theif inspection of the facilities at the space center on December 9th (Saturday), it was announced by Colorado Governor John A. Love, Chairman of the Republican Governors Association. The tour will wind up the Association sessions that open at The Breakers in Palm Beach at 9:00 a.m. on December 8th (Friday) with business sessions on both days. A rundown will be given the Governors on the activities at the space center that are now concentrated on tests for the first time of the three-stage, 362-foot-tall Saturn rocket and the Apollo spacecraft that will carry American astronauts to the moon - hopefully by the end of 1970. The Governors will view the 530-foot high Vertical Assembly Building (VAB)- as tall as the Washington Monument and the largest building in the United States outside of the Pentagon . where four Saturn rockets can be assembled and housed, the launch pad area and the intricate control systems operation. The Governors will welcome into their ranks Governor-elect Louie B. Nunn whose upset victory in the Kentucky election gives the Republicans 26 out of the 50 governorships. It marks the first time since 1955, when there were 30 Republican Governors in the 48 states, that the Republicans have outnumbered their Democratic counterparts. -more- LIBRARY - 2 - The agenda will include a discussion of some of the domestic problems that confront the country and the States along with consideration of the role that the Republican Governors will play in the National Convention in Miami Beach in August. A "Salute to General Dwight D. Eisenhower" luncheon is set for Friday noon when Senators Everett M. Dirksen, Republican Leader, and George Murphy, Chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee, will talk about the "Governors Role in Electing More Republican Senators." It is hoped that former President Eisenhower will be able to attend. The social functions will be highlighted by a special show by Perry Como at the Royal Poinciana Playhouse on Friday night (December 8th) for the conferees. Florida's Governor Claude R. Kirk, Jr. the state's first Republican Governor in 94 years - is host for the conference that will be held only about a mile from his Palm Beach home - "Ducks Nest". Republican National Chairman Ray C. Bliss will attend as an official guest of the Association. Congressman Gerald R. Ford, Republican Leader and Bob Wilson, Chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee will discuss the ways that the Governors can help to elect Republican Congressmen in the next election at one of the business sessions. Governor John H. Chafee of Rhode Island assumes the Chairmanship of the Association from Governor Love for a year at the end of the Palm Beach conference. The eight Republican Governors on the Republican Coordinating Committee are expected to fly directly from Palm Beach to Washington, D. C. for the Monday (December 11th) meeting of that group which will be held at the Statler Hilton Hotel. Republican Governors on the Coordinating Committee are Governors Love, Chafee, Nils A. Boe of South Dakota, Daniel J. Evans of Washington, Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York, George Romney of Michigan, Raymond P. Shafer of FORD Pennsylvania and John A. Volpe of Massachusetts. GERALD LIBRARY ## 6-9-67 U.S. News & World Report Maybe Reason Bob, for $1 Billion Add-on to molitary construction? Paul The President now thinks he has a winning formula for 1968 in spite of everything. Keynote of the campaign will be "Johnson prosperity." Main appeal will be to cities, suburbs, Negroes, labor unions. LBJ believes he even has a ---Washington Reporters Photo campaign answer to the biggest "Personal campaigning" is prescribed for President Johnson in '68 by political issue-the war in Vietnam. advisers-meeting people "the way Harry Truman did," leaving TV to others. LBJ'S PLAN FOR on previous positions-such as advocacy of "open housing" legislation and inte- grated juries. Those close to LBJ say he plans to stand on the record of civil-rights laws WINNING IN '68 and regulations adopted during his Ad- ministration. And, he thinks, the Repub- lican platform on this issue is bound to be quite like the Democratic plank. If it comes to a choice between the Strategy Being Shaped declining farm vote and urban con- sumers-then the Johnson strategy will be aimed at wooing the big cities and their suburbs. Pocketbook appeal. Above all, the President hopes to win in 1968 by an overriding appeal to the pocketbook in- The White House, at this time, is Also, the Administration believes that terests of broad classes of voters-from starting to plot the basic strategy to be suburbanites will not be sufficiently young to old, from rich to poor-cutting used in Lyndon Johnson's campaign for aroused by racial conflicts to vote for across State or regional boundaries. re-election as President. former Governor George Wallace of Ala- "Prosperity" will be the keynote of Here is how-according to polítical bama-who seems almost certain to run the Democratic campaign. Over and advisers-LBJ plans to run, and win for President on a third-party ticket. over again, Mr. Johnson will call atten- again, in 1968: Where the "Wallace effect" in the tion to the "good times" he claims the The President foresees victory as a re- next election is concerned, the President public is enjoying under his leadership. sult of putting together a winning com- has expressed satisfaction to White A Government official observed: bination of votes from the cities, sub- House visitors with a recent Gallup Poll "Whatever it takes, the President will urbs, Negroes, and labor unions. indicating that most of Mr. Wallace's have the economy soaring by Election The next election-in Mr. Johnson's vote would be taken away from the Re- Dav. Then people will ask, as they go estimation-will be won or lost in rapid- publican nominee. to the polls, whether they would be bet- ly growing suburban areas of the nation. There even is reason to believe that ter off under a Republican President. Thus nearly a third of the current the regular Democratic organization may That is when they will decide not To presidential messages to Congress are see some merit in helping to finance the vote against prosperity. aimed at suburban problems-education, Wallace campaign in a roundabout way. This official continued: crime, pollution, consumer legislation, A stand on record. Racial contro- "Deficit? Sure, there will be a budget mass transit and auto safety. versy would be handled this way: Mr. deficit-a big one. Republicans will talk The key: "good times." In the Johnson has given signs. that he does not about Government spending, taxes, and RD White House view, suburban families propose to stir up the suburbs by mak- deficits. But so did Goldwater in 1964." are so prosperous that they will not ing strong civil-rights speeches in the Recently, the Administration has been take a chance on changing "good times" 1968 campaign. At the same time, the releasing billions of dollars in previously LIBRARY by voting Republican next year. President does not intend to back down impounded federal funds for construc- 46 U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT, June 12, 1967 SPEECH BEFORE REPUBLICAN GOVERN ORS ASSOCIATION CONFERENCE COLO. SPRINGS. COLO. - FRIDAY. DECEMBER 9. 1966 DE THE MHIC2' 2 TVLE 12 THE ЕИД OE MY GOOD FRIENDS AND FELLOW REPUBLICANS--AND I THINK MEBE THAT S REDUNDANT. ЬСГІДІСАГ БЛИДТ12 MHO 1MO AEAB2 I M HAPPY AND HONORED TO HAVE THE CHANCE TO SPEND A FEW HOURS WITH YOU. FIRST OF ALL TO CONGRATULATE YOU-CONK2E THOSE WHO WERE ELECTED OR RE-ELECTED LAST NOVEMBER 8--AND TO THANK ALL OF YOU. WHETHER YOU WERE CANDIDATES OR NOT. FOR THE KEY ROLES YOU PLAYED IN THE GREAT RESURGENCE OF REPUBLICANISM WHICH WE HAVE WITNESSED AND WHICH IS STILL IN MOTION. КОИДЕВЕЛГ CHOICE tok 10 CVIHEK HEBE IF I CAN CLEAR MY DESK OF THE POLITICAL PROBLEMS THAT HAVE PILED UP IN ANTICIPATION OF THE NEW CONGRESS. I AM THE ROCKIES COMING BACK TO COLORADO WITH MY WHOLE FAMILY LATER THIS -6- MONTH FOR THE RELATIVELY SAFE SPORT OF SKIING. WE ALL AREA LOVE THIS STATE. THERE IS SOMETHING ABOUT THESE MAJESTIC MOUNTAINS THAT REDUCES MAN TO HIS PROPER SIZE. AND I THINK IT WAS A WONDERFUL CHOICE FOR REPUBLICANS TO GATHER HERE IN THE FLUSH OF LAST MONTH S SWEEPING SUCCESSES. WE STILL HAVE A WAY TO GO И THE CKEVL ВЕЗПКСЕИСЕ OE YOUNG LT. ZEBULON PIKE. WHEN HE FIRST LOOKED AT THE PEAK THAT BEARS HIS NAME. SUPPOSEDLY SAID IT WOULD "NEVER BE SCALED BY MORTAL MAN ONLY A FEW YEARS LATER. OF COURSE. IT WAS. WI THINK WE MIGHT CONSIDER SETTING UP A ZEBULON A PIKE AWARD FOR ALL THE POLITICAL PUNDITS WHO TWO YEARS AGO WERE DOLEFOLLY PREDICTING THAT THE REPUBLICAN PARTY WOULD GO THE WAY OF THE WHIGS. AND AS LATE AS THE END OF OCTOBER CONCLUDED THAT THE REPUBLICANS HAD FAILED TO FIND ANY SIGNIFICANT CAMPAIGN ISSUES IN 1966 AND THAT THE ELECTION SPEECH BEFORE REPUBLICAN GOVERN ORS ASSOCIATION CONFERENCE COLO. SPRINGS. COLO. - FRIDAY. DECEMBER 9. 1966 MY GOOD FRIENDS AND FELLOW REPUBLICANS--AND I THINK THAT S REDUNDANT. I M HAPPY AND HONORED TO HAVE THE CHANCE TO SPEND A FEW HOURS WITH YOU. FIRST OF ALL TO CONGRATULATE YOU-- THOSE WHO WERE ELECTED OR RE-ELECTED LAST NOVEMBER 8--AND TO THANK ALL OF YOU. WHETHER YOU WERE CANDIDATES OR NOT. FOR THE KEY ROLES YOU PLAYED IN THE GREAT RESURGENCE OF REPUBLICANISM WHICH WE HAVE WITNESSED AND WHICH IS STILL IN MOTION. IF I CAN CLEAR MY DESK OF THE POLITICAL PROBLEMS THAT HAVE PILED UP IN ANTICIPATION OF THE NEW CONGRESS. I AM THE ROCKIES COMING BACK TO COLORADO WITH MY WHOLE FAMILY LATER THIS MONTH FOR THE RELATIVELY SAFE SPORT OF SKIING. WE ALL AREA LOVE THIS THERE IS SOMETHING ABOUT THESE MAJESTIC MOUNTAINS THAT REDUCES MAN TO HIS PROPER SIZE. AND I THINK IT WAS A WONDERFUL CHOICE FOR REPUBLICANS TO GATHER HERE IN THE FLUSH OF LAST MONTH S SWEEPING SUCCESSES. WE STILL HAVE A WAY TO GO. YOUNG LT. ZEBULON PIKE. WHEN HE FIRST LOOKED AT THE PEAK THAT BEARS HIS NAME. SUPPOSEDLY SAID IT WOULD "NEVER BE SCALED BY MORTAL MAN. ONLY A FEW YEARS LATER. OF COURSE. IT WAS. I THINK WE MIGHT CONSIDER SETTING UP A ZEBULON PIKE AWARD FOR ALL THE POLITICAL PUNDITS WHO TWO YEARS AGO WERE DOLEFULLY PREDICTING THAT THE REPUBLICAN PARTY WOULD GO THE WAY OF THE WHIGS. AND AS LATE AS THE END OF OCTOBER CONCLUDED THAT THE REPUBLICANS HAD FAILED TO FIND ANY SIGNIFICANT CAMPAIGN ISSUES IN 1866 AND THAT THE ELECTION -3- WOULD PRODUCE NO APPRECIABLE CHANGE IN THE POLITICAL COMPLEXION OF THE COUNTRY OR THE CONGRESS. NOW THESE SAME PROGNOSTICATORS ARE SAYING WE REPUBLICANS WILL GET SO EMBROILED AND ENMESHED IN OUR OWN IDEOLOGICAL AND PERSONAL ARGUMENTS THAT WE WILL DEFEAT OURSELVES BEFORE 1968 WITHOUT ANY HELP FROM THE OUTSIDE. I THINK WE OUGHT TO SEND THIS WARMED-OVER DISH RIGHT BACK TO THE KITCHEN. I THINK THEY ARE TALKING ABOUT THE WRONG PARTY. DURING THE PAST TWO YEARS. I HAVE MADE ONE OR MORE VISITS TO SOME 44 STATES. AND ALL I CAN REPORT IS THATI NEVER HEARD ANY REPUBLICAN TALKING ABOUT ANY OF YOU THE WAY SENATOR FULBRIGH AND PRESIDENT JOHNSON ARE ALLEGED TO TALK ABOUT EACH OTHER. AND I NEVER CAUGHT ANYBODY EYEING ME THE WAY HUBERT LOOKS AT BOBBY. AND VICE VERSA. ЯАЗУ-770 -4- THE MAIN REASON I M HERE IS TO REPORT TO YOU BRIEFLY AS MINORITY LEADER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. AND IT SHOULDN T SURPRISE YOU THAT WITH A NET REINFORCEMENT OF 47 MORE REPUBLICANS IN THE HOUSE. I DO FEEL A LOT MORE LIKE A LEADER AND A LOT LESS LIKE A MINORITY. IN THE UPCOMING 90TH CONGRESS. WE WILL HAVE 187 SEATS-- OUR HIGHEST FIGURE SINCE 1958. THIS IS STILL 31 VOTES SHORT OF THE MAJORITY WE D LIKE. BUT IT S A WHOLE LOT DIFFERENT FROM BEING OUTNUMBERED BY TWO TO ONE WITH 15 VOTES TO SPARE. УИА ОЯАЗН 21 PRELIMINARY FIGURES INDICATE THAT REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES FOR THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES WON CLOSE TO 49 PERCENT OF THE TOTAL CONGRESSIONAL VOTE NATIONWIDE. THIS WOULD BE OUR BEST OFF-YEAR SHOWING SINCE 1950. -5- THE TOTAL VOTE FOR REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES IN HOUSE TUB CONTESTS WAS MORE THAN 25 MILLION. WHICH WOULD APPEAR TO 3HT BE A RECORD FOR A NON-PRESIDENTIAL YEAR. YOU GENTLEMEN RIGHTFULLY SHARE IN THE CREDIT FOR THIS TURNOUT AND FOR THE ENCOURAGING FACT THAT REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES OUTPOLLED DEMOCRATS IN HOUSE RACES IN 26 STATES -- ALASKA. ARIZONA. CALIFORNIA. DELAWARE. IDAHO. ILLINOIS. INDIANA. IOWA. ЯОТАИЗЕ KANSAS. KENTUCKY. MICHIGAN. MINNESOTA. MONTANA. NEBRASKA. OT ar 70 NEW HAMPSHIRE. NEW JERSEY. NORTH DAKOTA. OHIO. OREGON. PENNSYLVANIA. SOUTH DAKOTA. TENNESSEE. UTAH. VERMONT. SUIHT WISCONSIN AND WYOMING. ЭИАН 3W ЗЯЛИЗУ TU8 NOT TO PAINT TOO ROSY A PICTURE. WE DID LOSE HOUSE SEATS IN MAINE. MISSISSIPPI AND ALABAMA. AND WE FAILED TO GAIN BACK HOUSE SEATS LOST IN 1964 IN NEW YORK AND WASHINGTON. МАНАЯВА BUT JUST AS THE SCOPE OF OUR SUCCESS WAS NATIONWIDE. SO THE FEW DARK CLOUDS WERE NOT CONFINED TO ANY PARTICULAR REGION. THERE WAS ENOUGH HAPPINESS FOR ALL TO SHARE. PERSONALLY. I STARTED THE GUESSING SEASON SAYING WE COULD PICK UP 30 TO 40 HOUSE SEATS. BUT AS THE PRESSURE FROM THE PRESS INCREASED. PARTICULARLY AFTER MY GOOD FRIEND SENATOR DIRKSEN LAID $100 ON THE TABLE TO BACK HIS FORECAST OF 75 SEATS. I TOOK TO SAYING "40 OR MORE." TOWARDS THE END. I KEPT LAYING A LITTLE LOUDER STRESS ON THE "OR MORE" AND THUS I DISQUALIFIED MYSELF FOR THE ZEBULON PIKE AWARD. BUT I WILL VENTURE ONE MORE PROPHESY. IF WE ALL HANG TOGETHER IN SUCCESS AS WELL AS WE DID IN ADVERSITY. WE ARE NOT GOING THE WAY OF THE WHIGS. WE ARE GOING THE WAY OF ABRAHAM LINCOLN AND DWIGHT D. EISENHOWER. FOR WHOSE SPEEDY -7- RECOVERY FROM SURGERY WE SHOULD ALL PRAY TODAY. YOU GENTLEMEN ALL WANT TO KNOW IN A NUTSHELL HOW THE 90TH CONGRESS WILL DIFFER FROM THE UNLAMENTED 89TH. 3W ЭИТНОТАК 38 AS I SEE IT. THE DIFFERENCE WILL BE SIMPLY THIS. REPUBLICANS IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES WILL BE BACK ЭНТ TUS IN THE BALLGAME. ЯАЗҮ ТХЗИ .TI OT HOUM OUT THE MINORITY PARTY WILL AGAIN BE IN A POSITION TO SIGNIFICANTLY INFLUENCE THE LEGISLATIVE PROCESS. AND THAT IS THE WAY THE AMERICAN GOVERNMENT IS SUPPOSED TO WORK. IT HASN T FOR THE PAST TWO YEARS. THE NEXT CONGRESS WON T SIMPLY GO THROUGH THE MOTIONS OF RECEIVING. APPROVING AND TRATE RETURNING PRESIDENTIAL PROPOSALS FOR SIGNATURE. WITHOUT HEARING OPPOSING OPINIONS OR ADEQUATE FLOOR DEBATE. WE WILL REALLY BE LEGISLATING AGAIN. IN COMMITTEES AND ON THE FLOOR--AND THE COUNTRY WILL BENEFIT. AS THE VOTERS KNEW. BUT WITH INCREASED INFLUENCE. WE REPUBLICANS IN THE HOUSE WILL HAVE TO BEAR INCREASED RESPONSIBILITY. AND THE VOTERS WILL BE WATCHING THIS. TOO. WE WERE RESPONSIBLE. I BELIEVE. AND WE TRIED TO BE CONSTRUCTIVE IN THE 89TH CONGRESS: BUT WITH THE LOPSIDED LINEUP. WE DIDN T WIND UP WITH TOO MUCH TO SHOW FOR IT. NEXT YEAR I THINK YOU WILL FIND MANY DEMOCRATS. MAYBE INCLUDING THE PRESIDENT. PUSHING FOR THE VERY THINGS WE KEP URGING BE DONE IN 1965 OR 66. ЭНТ IT WOULD BE EASY FOR US JUST TO SIT BACK AND SAY "WE TOLD YOU SO" OR "WE SAID IT FIRST" -- BUT THAT WON T DO. INSTEAD WE PROPOSE TO START RIGHT OFF WITH A POSITIVE REPUBLICAN PROGRAM IN THE SECOND "STATE OF THE UNION" APPRAISAL WHICH SENATOR DIRKSEN AND I PLAN TO MAKE WHEN CONGRESS CONVENES. -9- WHILE IT S TOO EARLY TO REVEAL ALL THE PROPOSALS WE ARE CONSIDERING FOR THIS PRESENTATION. WHICH WILL AGAIN BE NATIONALLY TELEVISED ACCORDING TO CURRENT PLANS. IT CERTAINLY WILL INCLUDE A FORM OF FEDERAL-STATE TAX SHARING AND INCREASED SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFITS TIED PERMANENTLY TO COST OF LIVING AND INFLATIONARY INCREASES. 90 IT S NOT TOO EARLY. EITHER. TO MAKE IT CLEAR THAT WEMA IN THE HOUSE ARE NOT MAKING ANY AUTOMATIC ALLIANCES OR COALITIONS SIMPLY FOR POWER OR OBSTRUCTION. WE WILL WELCOME THE SUPPORT OF LIKE-MINDED DEMOCRATS IN ADVANCING MEASURES THAT ARE GOOD FOR THE COUNTRY OR RESISTING THOSE THAT ARE UNWISE OR UNTIMELY--BUT WE ARE GOING TO CALL OUR OWN PLAYS AND WILL BE GLAD TO HAVE THE HELP OF ANY DISCERNING ME СОЙСКЕГЕ DEMOCRATE. 1 I EARNESTLY HOPE. AND I SPEAK NOW FOR ALL MY REPUBLICAN COLLEAGUES IN THE HOUSE. THAT YOU REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS AND INDEED REPUBLICAN OFFICIALS AT ALL ECHELONS OF GOVERNMENT WILL FIND THE TIME AND TAKE THE TROUBLE TO FORWARD YOUR SUGGESTIONS AND IDEAS TO US. WE WOULD LIKE THESE OURING THE DRAFTING OF OUR FORTHCOMING STATE OF THE UNION APPRAISAL. AND WE WANT TO SUSTAIN A CLOSE EXCHANGE OF INFORMATION WITH REPUBLICAN STATE CAPITOLS THROUGHOUT THE NEXT TWO YEARS. WE ALL SUBSCRIBE AS REPUBLICANS TO THE THEORY THAT ALL WISDOM DOES NOT REPOSE IN WASHINGTON. THIS THEORY SHOULD FIND CONCRETE EXPRESSION IN CONTINUING COMMUNICATION ON MATTERS AFFECTING YOUR STATES OR THE FEDERAL-STATE RELATION- SHIP IN GENERAL. WE HOPE DURING THE 90TH CONGRESS TO HAVE EACH OF YOU -11- AS OUR GUEST TO ADDRESS OUR HOUSE REPUBLICAN CONFERENCE OF ALL 187 REPUBLICAN MEMBERS IN WASHINGTON. WE WOULD LIKE TO SEE INCREASED PARTICIPATION AND REPRESENTATION OF REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS ON THE REPUBLICAN COORDINATING COMMITTEE. AND. ALTHOUGH THE DEMOCRATS ARE STILL IN CONTROL. WE FEEL YOU COULD CONTRIBUTE MUCH-NEEDED INFORMA- TION AND VIEWS AS EXPERT WITNESSES BEFORE THE VARIOUS ФИТОАЗЯ 90 EXCELL COMMITTEES OF THE CONGRESS. COLLISTON гоитя JJA ОТИ! 770 YJR SUSWEIN IN TURN. ARE VITALLY INTERESTED IN THE COMPOSITION OF THE CONGRESS. AND I AM REMINDED THAT BETWEEN NOW AND 1968 SEVEN STATES WITH A TOTAL OF 110 HOUSE SEATS MUST BE REDISTRICTED--INCLUDING CALIFORNIA. WHICH I AM DELIGHTED TO SEE REPRESENTED AGAIN AT A REPUBLICAN GOVERNORS MEETING. AS THE DEMOCRATS GROW A LITTLE LESS POSITIVE ABOUT BEING -12- A PERMANENT MAJORITY PARTY IN THE NATION. THERE IS A DANGER THAT THEY MAY TRY TO SHORTCHANGE US IN SOME STATE LEGISLA- TURES. ОЗГАЗЯОИ! CT I HAVE TAKEN TOO MUCH OF YOUR TIME ALREADY. BUT MAY I SPEAK VERY BLUNTLY AND EARNESTLY BEFORE I CLOSE. I AM SICK OF HEARING THAT WE REPUBLICANS CAN SURVIVE ANYTHING EXCEPT SUCCESS. I AM TIRED OF READING HOW WE ARE GOING TO FLY OFF INTO ALL KINDS OF COLLISION COURSES. THE GOVERNORS VERSUS THE CONGRESSIONAL LEADERS. THE EASTERNERS VERSUS THE WESTERNERS. THE LIBERALS VERSUS THE CONSERVATIVES. 70 THE URBANITES VERSUS THE SUBURBANITES. AND THE SUBURBANITES VERSUS THE FARMERS. AND SO FORTH AD NAUSEUM. THAT ISN'T THE MESSAGE I READ IN THE 1966 RETURNS. I THINK OUR REPUBLICAN COORDINATING COMMITTEE. WHICH -13- IS MEETING AGAIN NEXT MONDAY UNDER THE ABLE CHAIRMANSHIP OF RAY BLISS. HAS DONE A MARVELOUS AND ALMOST MIRACULOUS JOB OF UNIFYING OUR PARTY AND HAMMERING OUT RESPONSIBLE 23:11 REPUBLICAN POSITIONS ON CURRENT ISSUES. THIS BODY WAS AN EXPERIMENT HARDLY ANYONE THOUGHT WOULD WORK. BUT IT HAS WORKED. AND IT HAS WORKED BECAUSE WE ALL WANTED THIS RESULT. CONCURRENTLY. IT HAS BEEN THE DEMOCRATS WHO HAVE BEEN ON ALL SIDES OF EVERY ISSUE. CUTTING EACH OTHER UP FOR PERSONAL SPITE OR POLITICAL ADVANTAGE. CAUSING THE AMERICAN PEOPLE TO WONDER IF THEY REALLY DESERVE TO DIRECT THEIR DESTINIES. I SAY LET S LET THE DEMOCRATS CONTINUE TO ENJOY THESE CANNIBALISTIC EXERCISES. IF WE ARE RESPONSIBLE REPUBLICANS. IF WE ARE A MEANINGFUL MINORITY. AND ABOVE ALL IF WE CONTINUE TO SHOW THE COUNTRY A PICTURE OF CLEAR UNITY AND -14- COMMON ЯНИЗИАМЯТАНО PURPOSE ON ELICA THE GREAT 3HT ЯЗОИЦ, ISSUES OF THESE DIFFICULT T33M 211 TIMES. 1966 WILL BE JUST A PRELUDE TO VICTORY: .221.18 YAR 30 700 ЭИТЯЗММАН ОИА YTRA9 ЯИО ЭИТУЗIИИ 30 800 THANK YOU-CHHT .230221 ТИЗЯЯИО ИО ИАОТ ЈЕЛЯЯ 2AH TI TUS . XROW OJUOW THOUGHT ЗИОҮИА YJORAH ТИЗМ1ЯЗЯХЗ ИА TJU239 21HT ОЗТИАШ JJA BW 38UA038 2AH TI ОИА ИО ИЗЗ8 3VAH OHW STAROOMED 3HT ИЗЗ8 2AH TI ЈАИОГЯЗЯ ЯОЗ 9U ЯЗНТО HOAD-ENDITOO .30221 3 30 23012 JJA 319039 ИАСТЯЗМА ЭНТ CANSTING JACITIJ09 Я0 10 МОИДЕК IL THEA BETΓΓA DIKEC1 THEIR DESLINIES 323HT YOUNE oT СОИТЕЛИЗ STAROOM30 3HT T3J 2 TELL YAS I EXECT IL ME VBE ВЕГЬОИГІВГЕ ВЕБАВГІСУИГ 3W 71 JJA 3VO8A ОИА JURONINA3M A ЗЯА 3W 31 ОИА YTIMU ЯАЗ УЯТИОВО SHT WOH2 DE