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This file contains: A report regarding the comments on the Ray Price memo. Specifically, issues concerning: Patronage, campaign materials, messages, statements, and preparation for the '72 campaign. 2 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Other Document], no date From Ray Price to Haldeman. RE: The preparation for 1972, and a discussion of campaign materials, messages, statements, staffing, etc. 4 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 11/5/1971 A report concerning the comments made on Chuck Colson's memo and how they relate to the 1972 election. 4 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Other Document], no date

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WHSF: Contested, 17-12
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WHSF: Contested, 17-12
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This file contains: A report regarding the comments on the Ray Price memo. Specifically, issues concerning: Patronage, campaign materials, messages, statements, and preparation for the '72 campaign. 2 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Other Document], no date From Ray Price to Haldeman. RE: The preparation for 1972, and a discussion of campaign materials, messages, statements, staffing, etc. 4 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Memo], 11/5/1971 A report concerning the comments made on Chuck Colson's memo and how they relate to the 1972 election. 4 pgs. [Subject: Campaign] [Other Document], no date
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Richard M. Nixon's Returned Materials Collection
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Richard Nixon Presidential Library Contested Materials Collection Folder List Box Number Folder Number Document Date No Date Subject Document Type Document Description 17 12 Campaign Other Document A report regarding the comments on the Ray Price memo. Specifically, issues concerning: Patronage, campaign materials, messages, statements, and preparation for the '72 campaign. 2 pgs. 17 12 11/5/1971 Campaign Memo From Ray Price to Haldeman. RE: The preparation for 1972, and a discussion of campaign materials, messages, statements, staffing, etc. 4 pgs. 17 12 Campaign Other Document A report concerning the comments made on Chuck Colson's memo and how they relate to the 1972 election. 4 pgs. Monday, March 21, 2011 Page 1 of 1 DOCUMENT WITHDRAWAL RECORD [NIXON PROJECT] DOCUMENT DOCUMENT NUMBER TYPE SUBJECT/TITLE OR CORRESPONDENTS DATE RESTRICTION N-1 Report Comments on Ray Price memo n.d. C Docs + attachment: Memo, Price to HRN, ne: Preparing for 1972, 11/5/71 N-2 Report Comments on chuck Colson's memo n.d. C [DOC 30] N-3 Report Comments on I red malek's Paper [DOCS 37+38] n.d. on the Import of Comparinon C the white House staff attachment: memory malch to HRH re: Re- direction of stoff Efforts, 11/5/71 w-4 memo Higher to HRIS ne:- addendem to alex Butterfield Talking 11/29/71 C [DOC 39] Paper N-5 Report Commentson atex Bullerfuld u.d. A [DOC 40] Staff organization Poper N-6 Report Comments on John Dean's memo n.d. [DOC 41] on Proposed activities Through C november 1972 FILE GROUP TITLE BOX NUMBER HRH 278 FOLDER TITLE [Commentson preparing for 1972 election campaign 3 RESTRICTION CODES A. Release would violate a Federal statute or Agency Policy. E. Release would disclose trade secrets or confidential commercial or B. National security classified information. financial information. C. Pending or approved claim that release would violate an individual's F. Release would disclose investigatory information compiled for law rights. enforcement purposes. D. Release would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of privacy G. Withdrawn and return private and personal material. or a libel of a living person. H. Withdrawn and returned non-historical material. NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION NA FORM 1421 (4-85) Presidential Materials Review Board Review on Contested Documents Collection: H. R. Haldeman Box Number: 278 Folder: [Comments on preparing for 1972 election campaign] Document Disposition 34 Return Private/Political 35 Return Private/Political 36 Return Private/Political 37 Retain Open 38 Retain Open 39 Retain Close Invasion of Privacy 40 Retain Close Invasion of Privacy 41 Retain Open CC .MENTS ON RAY PRICE MEMC General: Since Ray is constantly facing the problem of deadlines, it may be his office is understaffed or may not have the right people. In either case he should move ahead quickly to bring aboard those people you have already authorised. Ray is trying to fill both the role of chief speech writer and editor in chief. This cannot be done. Somehow he must train his people to write more in the Nixon style and work out his own priorities to get the important work done before it becomes a crash project. You have already covered the point with him of remarks and whether or not they are helpful. Specific Comments: Patronage: There obviously will be some additional staff needs for M72 and Ray should begin working with Malek right now to get these solved. One need will be for a writer to supply materials to all our key speakers and the truth squad. This maybe something for a writer at the Citizen's Committee but either way this consideration should be taken care of, so when Ray's staff is asked to supply material for a Dole or someone else it can be done. You have mentioned to Ray the need for a gag writer and this is another area he should work with Malek in. The same would be true for a woman writer. The woman could spend a substantial part of her time writing for Julie, Tricia, and Mrs. Nixon. We should move ahead with this idea now. In addition, there are times when Safire and Buchanan have time on their hands. They are not properly being utilized, partly because of Ray's reluctance to assign anything to Buchanan or Safire. This is something that should be overcome on Ray's part, either by him suggesting to you that things be assigned to them or by Ray stepping up and moving in this direction himself. Campaign Materials: We need someone to quality control the campaign materials and make sure our line is being hit hard. This probably will require someone to be plugged into the Price question. We should use the writer over at 1701 in this area also. --Messages: I agree that we don't want to do too many of them. On the other hand, we should be able to do all of those that are appropriate and you should make sure that the staff is sufficient in this area. Besides the messages, there is the mail situation. The President wants to use mail more. Hopefully you will con- tinue to pull good letters he can use in his remarks, etc. ; something we have done a medioces job on in the past. You should start encouraging your writers to spend some time with the mail and find materials in the mail that could be worked in to the remarks, etc. --Statements: This proposal raises a good point. This is something that Buchanan should be able to work on also and we should perhaps program him more in this direction; particularly for the reaction material. With regard to initiating our own statements this is something we should probably be getting some guidance on from the Domestic Council. There is a need for better coordination here. -Preparation for the '72 Campaign: There is the question of what we are doing in the construction of an issue book for '72. Has this been figured out yet? It is my understanding that the Domestic Council is working to some extent in this area but I am not sure where we stand. Your thought to having materials ready that can be put together quickly is extremely good, It is something that should be done now while there is a lull, rather than waiting until June of next year. Will you please get together with Cole and Ehrlichman and see what we are going to do here. --By-liness: The idea of thoughtful by-liners by Cabinet Members and your office is great but they should be done as second priority to those things that we need to get solved now. Let's make sure we're properly staffed to strike a balance. MEMORAN THE WHITE HOUSE WASHINGTON November 5, 1971 MEMORANDUM FOR: BOB HALDEMAN FROM: RAY PRICE RaPy SUBJECT: Preparing for 1972 A few rough thoughts on gearing up for 1972: Remarks. An enormous amount of the writers' time and energy goes into the "suggested remarks" for Presidential appearances, and most of it would appear to be wasted -- judging by the proportion of what we give him that actually gets used. I'd like to sit down with him sometime and get an updated reading on how useful this stuff is: whether it's still true, as we used to be told, that even though he doesn't use much of it it's helpful in stimulating his own thoughts, or whether some differ- ent approaches to it would be more useful. We've tried a few minor variations on the format lately; I'm reluctant to go too heavily into major variations if in fact what he's getting serves him well, but it would seem that we could either a) cut back substantially on it, thus freeing up a lot of writers' time; or b) invest the same time in providing stuff that would be more useful. Wommuriton Staffing. I don't have a solid feel for what additional staff needs will be, in part because this will depend to a great extent writer. on the nature of the campaign -- and also, of course, on the extent to which we're going to be called on to provide materials to others than the President. I do feel a need for one more senior writer, who would be primarily and specifically a speech the idle writer -- well trained in that particular branch of the art -- and I'd hope he would also be someone who could fill in for me so Budun time that I could cut loose for several days at a time to do writing myself, and who could be a stand-by replacement for me if necessary. I also think I'll probably be needing another junior Bob Haldeinan - 2 November 5, 1971 writer; and, depending on how heavy the demands of the campaign become (and on what roles Safire and Buchanan end up playing) perhaps more. Campaign materials. I think we should provide "packages" of speech materials that could be used by Administration spokes- men -- not complete speeches-to-order, but the sort of thing we used to distribute to the Cabinet: ideas, themes, lines, speech 1701 sections, etc., that highlight some of the themes we're trying writer to get across, and from which they can draw in putting together their own speeches. Messages, etc. The volume of special messages to groups and individuals has increased substantially, and we'll probably want to increase it somewhat more. But there's going to be heavy pressure to increase it much more than I think would be wise -- and in particular to send a lot that could get us in trouble. As it is, we frequently get high-pressure requests, and sometimes demands, for messages to groups or for occasions that on investi- gation turn out to be badly tainted. There's also the perennial problem that if we accede to one request for a message to an event that falls outside the rules, and there are (as there usually are) a hundred or so others that are similar in all respects except for their advocacy at the White House, we lose more than the 99 we don't send them to than we gain with the one that we do. It's easy to give the flip answer that we should send them to the other 99; but not only is this not manageable, but we quickly reach a point at which it not only dilutes the impact of all messages but, more to the point, makes the President look almost obscenely over-eager. As we get into the election year we'll need a hard look at the basic rules to see how they should be modified -- but I don't think we should yield too readily to the easy temptation to scrap them altogether. They serve the President well -- and their existence gives us an understandable excuse for the many turn-downs that have to be made. Statements. We're probably going to want to do more of these, and in a more programmed way -- finding opportunities for our own initiatives, rather than simply reacting to the Congressional votes, etc. Bob Hald - 3 - November 5, 1971 Workof Prepa ion. Somewhere along the way we should probably (though I hann some doubts about its utility) begin building a bank of campaign peech-type materials for our own use, that could then be qui patched together when the appropriate occasion talifor arose. T egative side of this is that a) it risks a certain done stale qual: the final product, as it comes out; and b) it probably 'sents a substantial amount of wasted time, since most of it would probably not in fact be used. But I'm inclined to think at this point that the pluses of having it on hand, and of the exercise it represents (as well as possible use by surrogates) outweigh the minuses. However, I don't think it should be done too far in advance - if it is, the staleness factor is greatly increased Thoug Jul by-liners by staff and Cabinet: if the President continues feel he shouldn't deliver speeches with substantial or sophi wated thought content, it's doubly important that the rest of us do more of this to demonstrate that thought does occur in the Administration, and also to legitimatize his own reductions of these more sophisticated arguments to simpler terms compre- hensible to the TV audience. As long as there's a basic consistency, they'll complement each other rather than compete with each other. As it is, we're taking it in the neck because of the constant repetition of the old cheer-lines and the old themes, without ? breaking substantial new ground or advancing substantial new thoughts -- or arguing the case in sophisticated terms. But if his aides and advisers are doing this, it makes much more readily acceptable the argument that as the one who has to talk to all the people he's constrained from showing in public the sophistication he displays in private. This is something my staff should probably help on from time to time - -- not only doing occasional pieces themselves, but also writing them for others' signature - for two reasons: a) since it's important to the President's interests that it be done, and he feels he can't do it himself, it becomes an important part of the Presidential mix; and 2) it would be good for the writers - giving them a chance to flex their intellectual muscles a bit from time to time, and thus to keep the juices of thought and of thoughtful analysis -- running. Bob Ha man - 4 - November 5, 1971 It' portant that this be seen not as a substitute for the usual he sell campaigns for matters of current concern, answer the critics, etc., but as a supplement to it, addressed to a dif nt audience and meeting a different need -- indeed, filling cuum. If we're going to sell the administration to leaders thought, we've got to demonstrate that we're capable of thou, and that we're thinking seriously, in philosophical terms, out the concerns of a latter-20th-century America. COMMENTS ON CHUCK COLSON'S MEMO General: Chuck has tried to broaden the scope of his responsibilities too fast to build the sound organisation beneath him that is necessary for '72. He should take the next month or two and step back and concentrate on really tightening his organization for the Campaign. While he has done a good job, there is much work left to be done, particularly in terms of getting some coordination with the Domestic Council on deciding major initiatives and themes and setting up some program to ride them through. This is something we started after the State of the Union, but the whole idea has broken down. Right now the Demestic Council is getting away with murder in terms of lack of follow-up and Colson should move to tap this resource. Colson has real doubts about his personal relationship with you. While there are obtiously problems here, he should feel that he is not running into a stone wall everytime he deals with you, but that you are at least interested in his ideas. Colson does need to be put down and put down hard on a number of occasions, but occasionally he should be told he is doing a good job. Specific Comments: News Planning Coordination and Execution: This does seem to be moving along fairly well, except in the area of counter-attack. Here there is obviously a need for the addition of another individual to handle Congressional follow-up and Colson should work with MacGregor and Malek in finding the Congressional man. He probably should be publicly identified as part of the Congressional relations team, but work with Colson similar to the way that Gifford works with Shults. Domestic Coordination: Barker is simply not strong enough to handle the execution needed on the Domestic side. We need to get a stronger individual here who can handle this job who can be dealing directly with Cabinet Secretaries, etc. Perhaps Barker can remain as the number two man. 2 -- Shumway replacement: With Shumway's departure, there needs to be someone else brought in to handle the type of assignment that he has been handling. Colson should work with Klein and Malek to finding another Shumway. Major Administration Political Issues: This area needs to be followed up on and coordinated heavily with the Domestic Council. There needs to be five or six key task forces. Perhaps one on drugs, aging, the economy, etc., that are continually meeting and figuring out ways to promote our initiatives in their respective areas. This is an effort Barker could handle and should have had underway by now. We are not drawing heavily enough on the outside people in Departments and Agencies to make sure this is done. -- Political cultivation of interest groups and individuals: While we have done a good job here of opening contacts and maintaining lists, we haven't very effectively utilized these groups. It might be good to bring another man in to figure out some political applications for these groups or reorient Bell more in this direction. The Youth effort is almost non-existent with McLane obviously not producing very much. Perhaps we should look for someone wise here and do it quickly. Chuck's concern over the areas of Labor and Aging are probably justified. Malek is currently doing a study to determine areas where we need to bring people in for the Campaign and these special interests would certainly be high on the list. Once again, the task force concept needs to be put in being here. Ask Chuck to provide Malek with a list of the areas where he thinks we need to consider bringing on additional White House staff during the election year. Have Malek staff these Colson suggestions with the rest of the people here to see if we could use more people. 3 -- Counter-Attack: In the counter-attack area, in addition to getting a man on the Congressional side, we need to have a better mechanism set up for Buchanan and Khachigian to reaction material. This is something that is not coming on a smooth or automatic enough fashion. Buchanan and Khachigian need to be brought in more with the new man and get a specific working arrangement established here. Maximising media coverage for the political promotion for the President: One of the areas where we have really fallen down here is getting Meore or Safire involved in all of the events and making sure they push our story. This is something Colson should constantly be pushing with the scheduling people. Also, it might be helpful for Chuck to hold a small meeting with the three people who are putting the line out to make sure there is a coordinated effort to pump our line. This would be Moore, Safire and Scall plus Shumway or his replacement. He should constantly keep Ziegler informed of what he is doing here. -- Maximising Administration resources: This needs to be handled probably on a higher level basis. Is Pat O'Donnell really heavy enough to handle this job and have we made all the efforts we should make to position him correctly. These are two questions that need to be answered. -- Mailings: Chuck should be getting together with the Citizen's Committee to figure out how we are going to mesh the two mailing operations. Some mailings can obviously be more effective coming from the White House, others from the Citizen's Committee. 4 -- Allen Hall: I agree with Colson that he should get rid of Allen Hall. Hall would probably be a very good advance man for Mrs. Nixon and the girls and should be put to work in this area. LH:kb