Before the Storm (100 page)

Read Before the Storm Online

Authors: Rick Perlstein

And so history did record. George H. Mayer concluded in a chapter added to the second edition of his
The Republican Party,
called “The Amateur Hour and After,” that without besting the Democrats in meeting “the burgeoning problems of the city, the GOP seems certain to occupy its current role as a minority party for the foreseeable future.” (As for Vietnam, “unless it spreads elsewhere it is no more likely to produce a lasting realignment than the Korean War.”) The nation's leading students of American political behavior, Nelson Polsby and Aaron Wildavsky, speculated that if the Republicans nominated a conservative again he would lose so badly “we can expect an end to a competitive two-party system.” Arthur Schlesinger put it most succinctly of all in volume 4 of his magisterial
History of American Presidential Elections
,
1789-1968
: “The election results of 1964,” he reflected, “seemed to demonstrate Thomas Dewey's prediction about what would happen if the parties were realigned on an ideological basis: ‘The Democrats would win every election and the Republicans would lose every election.' ”
At that there seemed nothing more to say. It was time to close the book.
NOTES
ABBREVIATIONS
AC: Author's Collection
AHF: Barry Goldwater Papers, Arizona Historical Foundation, Tucson
AHFAV : Barry Goldwater Audiovisual Collection, Arizona Historical Foundation
AHFCP : 1964 Campaign Photo Album and accompanying text, Arizona Historical Foundation
A R :
Arizona Republic
BMG: Barry Morris Goldwater
C M : Clarence Manion Papers, Chicago Historical Society
C T :
Chicago Tribune
DDE : Dwight David Eisenhower
D K : Denison Kitchel Papers, Hoover Institution, Stanford University
FCW : F. Clifton White Papers, Cornell University Special Collections
FL: Hillsdale College Freedom Library
FSA : Free Society Association Papers, in Denison Kitchel Papers, Hoover Institution
GP : George Gallup,
The Gallup Poll: Public Opinion, 1935-1971
(New York: Random House, 1972)
GRR:
Group Research Report
newsletter
HE :
Human Events
HI : Hoover Institution, Stanford University
HR : Henry Regnery Papers, Hoover Institution
JCJ : Jameson Campaigne Jr. Private Papers (unsorted)
JFK : John F. Kennedy
LBJL : Lyndon Johnson Papers, Lyndon Johnson Library, University of Texas at Austin
LBJT: Recorded LBJ phone conversations, LBJ Library
LBJWH: Johnson Papers, White House Central Files
LBJWHA: White House Central Files, Aides' Files
LBJWHAM : Aides' Files, Bill Moyers
LBJWHAM53: Aides' Files, Bill Moyers, Box 53, “Campaign, 1 of 2” and “Campaign, 2 of 2” folders
LBJWH6 - 3: White House Central Files, EX: PL 6-3 file
LBJWHN: White House Central Files, Name Files
LBJWHNG: Name Files: Goldwater, Barry
L N : Leonard Nadasdy Private Papers (unsorted)
MCSL: Margaret Chase Smith Library, Skowhegan, Maine
M L : Marvin Liebman Papers, Hoover Institution
MTR: Museum of Television and Radio, New York, New York
NAR: Nelson A. Rockefeller
N R :
National Review
NYHT:
New York Herald Tribune
NYHTEN:
New York Herald Tribune,
Rowland Evans and Robert Novak, “Inside Report” column
NYP:
New York Post
NYRB:
New York Review of Books
NYT:
New York Times
NYTM:
New York Times Magazine
O H : Oral History
PPP:
Public Papers of the President
(Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office)
RAC: Rockefeller Archive Center, New York Office, Series III 15 22, subseries 2, Sleepy Hollow, New York
S E P:
Saturday Evening Post
SFC:
San Francisco Chronicle
SHBGS: Barry Goldwater Scrapbook, Sharlot Hall Historical Museum, Prescott, Arizona
SLPD:
St. Louis Post Dispatch
TNR:
The New Republic
USN:
U.S. News and World Report
WAR: William A. Rusher Papers, Library of Congress
WFBJ: William F. Buckley Jr. Papers, Yale University Special Collections
WGN: WGN-TV news footage, Chicago Historical Society
W P:
Washington Post
W S :
Washington Star
WSJ :
Wall Street Journal
 
 
 
AUTHOR INTERVIEWS
Noel Black
Alan
Brinkley
William F. Buckley Jr.
Jameson Campaigne Jr.
W.
Glen
Campbell
Elsie Carper
Mel Cottone
Jack Craddock
Ron Crawford
Carol Dawson
Don Devine
Richard Dudman
M. Stanton Evans
Rep. Barney Frank
Milton Friedman
Robert Gaston
Henry Geier
Patricia Geier
Ryan Hayes
Margot Henriksen
Doug Henwood
John Higham
David Keene
Richard Kleindienst
Charles Lichenstein
Robert Love
Wes McCune
John McManus
Graham T. T. Molitor
Judge Daniel Manion
Steve Max
Leonard Nadasdy
Gus Owen
Tom Pauken
Howard Phillips
Lou Proyect
Alfred Regnery
Jonathan Rosenblum
William A. Rusher
Allan Ryskind
John Savage
Sara Jane Sayer
Phyllis Schlafly
William Schulz
Scott Stanley
Angie Stockwell
Richard Viguerie
Pamela Walton
Eric Wunderman
Wirt Yerger
Herbert York
 
 
ABOUT THE NOTES
Paragraphing of the source citations follows the paragraphing in the text. Page numbers indicate the page on which each paragraph begins.
Phrases in italics are passages taken from the text.
LBJ conversations reviewed and transcribed by the author are indicated by the abbreviation LBJT and a citation number; ones transcribed by Michael Beschloss are cited from his book
Taking Charge: The Johnson White House Tapes, 1963-1964
(Simon and Schuster, 1997).
 
PREFACE
ix
“He has wrecked his party”: New York Times,
November 5, 1964.
“The election has finished the Goldwater school”:
Lee Edwards,
Goldwater: The Man Who Made a Revolution
(Washington, D.C.: Regnery, 1995), 344.
“By every test we have”:
NYTM, June 28, 1964.
ix
“The Democrats would win every election”
: Arthur Schlesinger Jr., ed.,
History of American Presidential Elections, 1798-1968
, vol. 4 (New York: Chelsea House, 1971), 3021.
“A recrudescence on American soil”
: Philip Rahv, “Some Comments on Senator Goldwater,”
Partisan Review
(Fall 1964): 603.
ix For 1966 off-year elections, see Andrew E. Busch,
Horses in Midstream: U.S. Midterm Elections and Their Consequences, 1894-1998
(Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1999), 100-106; and M. Stanton Evans,
The Future of Conservatism
(New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1968).
x For DDE's preservation and extension of New Deal programs, see Samuel G. Freedman,
The Inheritance: How Three Families and the American Political Majority Moved from Left to Right
(New York: Touchstone, 1996), 162. Lippmann quote: transcript of May 1, 1963, interview on
CBS
Reports, RAC, Box 10/755. My interpretation of the sense of inevitability of progress in consensus thinking is indebted to Christopher Lasch,
The True and Only Heaven: Progress and Its Critics
(New York: Norton, 1991), especially the chapter “The Politics of the Civilized Minority,” 412-75.
xi
“To meet the needs of the people”
: “Atlantic Report on the World Today,”
Atlantic Monthly,
September 1964.
xi
“Not really a coherent, rational alternative”
: Stewart Alsop, SEP, September 29, 1964.
“A kind of vocational therapy”:
Young Americans for Freedom,
Newsletter,
May 1962, quoting speech in Los Angeles, cited in Matthew Dallek, “Young Americans for Freedom, 1960-1964” (master's thesis, Columbia University, 1993).
xiii
“We must assume that the conservative”: The Progressive,
May 1961.
xiii
“The year 2000 has all
”: Daniel Bell and Stephen R. Graubard, eds.,
Toward the Year 2000: Works in Progress
(Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1997 [original ed. 1967, reporting on conference held in 1965]), 3.
“Think of how wonderful the year
2000”: Jack Sheppherd and Christopher S. Wren, eds.,
Quotations from Chairman LBJ
(New York: Simon and Schuster, 1968), 37, 106.
xiv
“I first learned that the government”:
Taylor Branch,
Pillar of Fire: America in the King Years, 1963-1965
(New York: Simon and Schuster, 1998), 521-22.
Three decades later, half:
David Boaz,
Libertarianism: A Primer
(New York: Free Press, 1997), 1.
 
I. THE MANIONITES
3 Background for Manion cadre drawn from the correspondence in CM, Boxes 69 and 70; A. G. Heinsohn,
Anthology of Conservative Writing in the United States, 1932-1960
(Chicago: Regnery, 1962), and
One Man's Fight for Freedom
(Caldwell, Idaho: Caxton Printers, 1957); Clarence Manion,
The Conservative American: His Fight for National Independence and Constitutional Government
(New York: Devon-Adair, 1964), and
The Key to Peace: A Formula for the Perpetuation of Real Americanism
(Chicago: Heritage Foundation, 1951); Frank E. Holman,
The Life and Career of a Western Lawyer, 1886-1961
(n.p., 1963), 717-31; Thomas E. Vadney,
The Wayward Liberal: A Political Biography of Donald Richberg
(Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 1970); Fred C. Koch, “A Business Man Looks at Communism, by an American Business Man” (self-published, 1960); and David M. Oshinsky,
A Conspiracy So Immense: The World of Joe McCarthy
(New York: Free Press, 1983). For foreign policy matters, see Robert A. Taft,
A Foreign Policy for Americans
(Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1951); James T. Patterson,
Mr. Republican: A Biography of Robert Taft
(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1972); Justus D. Doenecke,
Not to the Swift: The Old Isolationists in the Cold War Era
(Cranbury, N.J.: Associated University Press, 1979); and Michael W. Miles,
The Odyssey of the American Right
(New York: Oxford, 1980), 57-221.
3
“Up till then a river”
: Clarence Budington Kelland,
Mark Tidd
,
Manufacturer
(New York: Grosset and Dunlap, 1918).
“The man who builds a factory”: Publishers Weekly,
April 24, 1995, 67.
4 For the divergence in the Depression era and wartime economic interests between small and large manufacturers, see David A. Horowitz,
Beyond Left and Right: Insurgency and the Establishment
(Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1997); Alan Brinkley, “The New Deal Experiments” and “The Late New Deal and the Idea of the State,” in Brinkley,
Liberalism and Its Discontents
(Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1998); and Nelson Lichtenstein,
Walter Reuther: The Most Dangerous Man in Detroit
(Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1995), 154-74.
5 On the postwar strikes, see James T. Patterson,
Grand Expectations: The United States, 1945-1974
(New York: Oxford University Press, 1996), 39-60.
5 On the GOP Eastern internationalist wing, see Wendell Willkie,
One World
(New York: Simon and Schuster, 1943); and Donald Bruce Johnson,
The Republican Party and Wendell Willkie
(Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1960).
5 For humiliation over the Korean War truce, see General Edwin Walker's letter of resignation in “Thunder on the Far Right: Fear and Frustration,”
Newsweek
, December 4, 1961.
6
On the first day of June 1959
: Manion to various, “
CONFIDENTIAL
, ” May 27, 1959, CM, Box 69/4.
6 Manion biography: Manion,
Lessons in Liberty
(South Bend, Ind.: Notre Dame University Press, 1939),
Conservative American
(the Wilson chant is on page 25), and
Key to Peace;
William F. Buckley, “My Secret Right-Wing Conspiracy,”
The New Yorker,
January 22, 1996; and author interview with Judge Daniel Manion.
7 For America First, General Robert Wood, and Colonel Robert McCormick, see Horowitz,
Beyond Left and Right,
175-86 (“despotic” quote is on page 175).
8 For
Wickard
v.
Filburn
, see Manion,
Conservative American,
96.
Manion assured high school students:
Manion,
Lessons in Liberty,
189.
“Government cannot make man good”:
Manion, Key to Peace, 61.
8 Harry Dexter White theory in Fred J. Cook, “The Ultras: Aims, Affiliations, and Finances of the Radical Right,” special issue,
The Nation,
June 30, 1962.
9 For Manion in DDE's Administration, see Robert J. Donovan,
Eisenhower: The Inside Story
(New York: Harper and Brothers, 1956), 105, 239; Manion,
Conservative American,
93-125; and Doenecke,
Not to the Swift,
236-38. For the Bricker Amendment, see Doenecke, 235-39; and Donovan,
Eisenhower
, 231-42.

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