Vow, F- .----- - w - t, Hubert Humphrey-Contender for The Presidency Lyndon Johnson: Mr. Demo The Senate Majority Leader Acts as Focal Point of Policy C By KARL LAMB W HEN Minnesota Senator Hu- bert Humphrey first entered the Senate in 1949, one writer de- scribed his initial impact on the Senate as follows: "Here, intense, brilliant and "Staccato. was a new voice, the voice of an ideological liberal, child of the depression and the dust bowl, apostle of the New Deal and millenium, scourge to. reaction. "Here. said the veterans, right here in the hallowed Senate chamber, was what Roosevelt had raised up for them." People familiar with Humphrey s e e m unanimously agreed that Humphrey is not as bad as he sounded then-or now. This is fortunate, because Hum- phrey sometimes sounds like a spoiled brat throwing a tantrum. The Wisconsin primary provides a good example of this. Senator William Proxmire and Gov. Gay- lord Nelson, Wisconsin's two lead- ing Democrats remained neutral in the primary fight between Humphrey and Sen. John Ken- nedy of Massachusetts. A week or so before the election Proxmire and Nelson cautioned Humphrey that his attacks on Kennedy were so fierce that they might cause an irreparable split in the party. One presumably could expect a calm, reasonable answer from a man aspiring to the Presidency. But by no stretch of the imagina- tion could Humphrey's answer be considered calm or reasonable: "I don't believe in razzle-dazzle, friz- zle-frazzle synthetic phoney pol- itics. We're not in American poli- tics trying to select a lead star for Hollywood drama, but a presi-' dential candidate." The Senator from Mm By JAMES SEDER THIS is just one example of' many instances when Humphrey seems like a petulant, frustrated child. One can't help wondering if this man is seriously contending for the Presidency. This fall Humphrey gave another example of his rather flamboyant speaking' style at the Young Democrats national convention in Toledo. It was a fighting liberal speech and strongly affected the very liberal Young Dems, but the speech left most of the reporters -who were following the written text of the speech--cold. He was dismissed by one of the calmest and most experienced reporters there as a demagogue. But there is another side to the story. The same reporter also said that Washington reporters say he's doing a very good job in the Senate. And, strangely, reading over his speech a few months later it seems intelligent and witty: "I n c i d e n t l y, you may have heard a lot of talk about the anti- intellectual atmosphere in Wash- ington. But you shouldn't believe everything you hear. It's no long- er considered subversive to have an idea in Washington-so long as it doesn't cost any money. "I am ashamed when I think of the millions of people through- out the world, barely staving off starvation. while America com- plains of the burden and cost of storing huge surplusses of wheat and corn and cotton.- H UMPHREY'S aggressive liber- alism--which sometimes seems childishly quarrelsome - is un- doubtedly a product of his back- ground. He first left his home town of Doland, South Dakota to enter the University of Minnesota in September, 1929. At the end of the school year Humphrey had to quit school to aid the family's shaky pharmacy operations. Itf was 1937 before Humphrey could return to Minnesota. He gradu- ated in 1939 magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa. He was married and had a child. His babysitter was Orville Freeman, now Governor of Minnesota and an active Humphrey supporter. After his graduation Humphrey went to Louisiana where he re- ceived a master's degree. His thesis subject was "The Philos- ophy of the New Deal." Following this he held a variety of jobs: he was a teaching fellow at Minnesota; he worked at var- ious government jobs; and in 1943I he became a professor at Macal- Eleanor Roosevelt that he has "a * spark of greatness." eso/" ta!Y ires There is. of course, oine major difference between Humphrey and FDR: Roosevelt came from the upper-class and Humphrey from . the lower-middle class. In fact io s hidHumphrey is mlaking a campa-ign issue out of his lack of wealth. James Reston. W a s h i ng t o n Bureau chief of the New York Times has labeled Humphrey's ester College in St. Paul. There he cry of poverty as the "log-cabin" taught political science to stu- approach to the White House. dents in an Air Corps training de- Specifically, Hump h rey has tachment. been arguing the "rich" candi- He was not drafted for medical dates have an enormous built-in reasons. He had a double hernia advantage in the fight for the and some minor lung calcifica- nomination. There is some merit tion. Today, however, he is appar- to his argument, but he seems to ently in perfect health, be considerably exaggerating. It is true that having the re- HE entered politics in 1943, run- sources to continually run around ning for mayor of Minne- the country lining up delegates is apolis. The primary was wide- a great convience, but Humphrey open and he finished second, but has managed to get around-even lost the run-off. In 1944 he help- if, as he claims, he has sometimes ed merge the Democratic and the had to use the "coach flights" of Farm-Labor parties. commercial airlines. He is supposed to have done an excellent Job in his two terms as HE has been hitting particularly mayor. His particular accomplish- hard at Kennedy, claiming he ments were cleaning up vice and tried to "buy" the Wisconsin pri- driving the Communists out of mary. But Kennedy claims both Minneapolis politics, camps have spent approximately Humphrey first gained national the same amount on the primary attention in the 1948 Democratic and there has been no evidence convention, where he was one of to the contrary, the leaders of the successful fight Humphrey has specialized in for a strong civil rights stand-- three areas: the farm problem, which, incidently, led to the Dixie- disarmament and foreign affairs. crat bolt. In 1948 he also ran for His domestic farm ideas are the Senate. He beat the incumb- basically those of most Democrats ant Republican Joseph H. Ball by -he is for high, rigid price-sup- 234.000 votes., ports and he is bitterly against His record in the Senate seems Secretary of Agriculture Ezra to the outsider to be unspectacu- Taft Benson. lar. He appears to be simply a He has a. program called "Food fiery-speaking, Northern big-city for Peace," which sounds original liberal. and simple--but is neither. Es- Yet people familiar with his sentially the program would send performance say that he has been our food surpluses abroad to fight a very effective Senator. He has starvation. This idea has been worked hard and intellegently to brought up before, but has been get his ideas into law and has had dropped because it would have a some considerable success. He has disastrous effect on the world's concentrated primarily on farm grain prices and perhaps destroy aid-he has consistantly and nois- the economies of France and Can- ily opposed the Administration's ada. Humphrey has not solved flexible price-support program this problem. and its foreign policy. Humphrey has been one of the leading American advc'eate's of JN addition to serving on the disarmament. He has consistently Senate Foreign Relations Com- advocated in advance positions mittee he has been a delegate to which the Admini t ration event- the United Nations General As- ually adopted. 'HE LATE Senator Robert A. Taft of Ohio enjoyed the title+ of "Mr. Republican," an accolade unofficially granted him as the recognized spokesman of the Re- publican party. are compounded by the identifi- cation of Johnson as a Southerner in the public eye. Just as the public may have feared for the safety of the eco- nomic changes wrought by the Taft personified the attitudes of New Deal if Senator Taft were Republicans in Congress, but he elected, so do the Northern Demo- was unable to win his party's nom- crats feel that the current noble ination for the Presidency. The cause of the liberals, raising the party maniagers felt the voting American Negro to the standards public could never be persuaded of first-class citizenship, cannot be that those qualities required for entrusted to a Southern President. legislative leadership were also Lyndon Johnson in fact is not needed in the White House. laced in the straitjacket of racial Lyndon Johnson, leader of the attitudes worn - often with pride Democratic majority in the pres- -by politicians of the Old South., ent Senate, has claims for the His ancestors were not plantation leadership of the entire Demo- owners who sipped their juleps and cratic party that are more valid allowed their Negroes to be than were those of Taft for the whipped. Republican leadership. If anyone The Johnsons were pioneers on deserves the title of "Mr. Demo- the Texas frontier who depended crat," it is Lyndon Baines John- on the strength of their own mus- son. Iles to wrest a living from the dry, Whereas Senator Taft was re- unproductive soil. Johnson's en- garded as the favorite of the more vironment was closer to that of conservative wing of the Republi- the rancher of New Mexico or Ari- can party, Johnson is the focal zona than to the planter of Geor- point of the conflicts over policy gia or Mississippi. and rivalries among sections that Oppression of the Negro is not divide the Democrats. At least in the basis of white society in west the Senate, he is the leader recog- Texas; Houston is neither Atlanta, nized by all factions in the party. Georgia, nor Birmingham. Ala- It is Lyndon Johnson who at- bama. tempts to build a bridge of under-I standing between Democrats of 1YNDON JOHNSON'S arrival on the North and Democrats of the the public scene was presided South. It is Lyndon Johnson who over by the most famous liberal has borne the responsibility of midwife of the time -Franklin D. erecting a Democratic record in Roosevelt. Johnson had served as Congress which will give the party the Texas head of the National a valid claim to the White House Youth Administration, a New Deal in 1960. agency, and he was elected to the If he continues to build that House ofnRepresentatives at the record successfully, his supporters age of twenty-nine on a platform feel that Johnson himself will be supporting Roosevelt's 1937 plan the most logical person to receive to "pack" the Supreme Court. ButI the Presidential nomination of the Johnson has been credited with a Democratic party. Numbered major hand in defeating the at- among such supporters are the tempts of Southerners and con-" State Legislature of Texas and servatives to curb today's morej Sam Rayburn, Speaker of the liberal Court. House of Representatives. There is every reason to believe that Johnson's New Deal convic- UT TEXANS wield much less tions continue at full strength and power in the national Demo- that his desire to aid the Southern cratic party than they do in Con- Negro through piecemeal additions gress. Unless there is a deadlock in to civil rights legislation is both the National Convention, and the sincere and realistic. He may prove contending forces can agree on to have been a greater friend of nobody else, Lyndon Johnson will the Negro than any halfaidozen not be nominated. The influences Northern legislators whose dra- working against Johnson's nomi- matic plans for a massive assault nation are the same as those which on racial barriers win headlines defeated Senator Taft; but they but would, if adopted, bring a Joh deni part the polit, the gres as 1 resid eleC Unit natt Of ti cial the anc j immr base that as a appe doub y At Mas, x f in t nom whey x prim the - path reco x - men 4 - Lynd generation of bloodshed to the Laws cannot eliminate racial urbs deep South. prejudice; laws can only influ- son' In ten years in the House and ence the actions of men so that Bu almost twelve in the Senate, John- their relations will gradually make wha son has bent his energies to the racial tolerance a possibility. neit perfection of his political skills, Pressure must be placed upon has which have won the admiration of the South to which it can yield in V professional politicians regardless with something akin to dignity. of their political convictions. Com- Lesser pressure will be ineffective; bY promise and the moulding of a greater pressure will arouse an : consensus through persuasion are embittered resistance that could ever the techniques which bring re- set back the cause for a genera- of sults in a legislature. Contrary to tion. wou public mythology, the exercise of The Democratic party has long ing these talents does not necessarily claimed to be the only truly na- tend include the abandonment of prin- tional party and, therefore, the the cipe o th grwt ofhypcriy, only vehicle through which theI nece: Two hard facts of Texas political conflicts dividing the nation can peal life mar the picture of Johnson as be healed. Most Southerners have mar the enemy of what F. D. R. called ceased acting as though they still bury: the "economic royalists." He had want to use the party as a means aspir no choice but to support the so- of compromise, and Northerners o called "giveaway" of rights to off- are all too eager to read the South- the shore oil and the depletion tax ern segregationists out of the batt allowance that favors Texas oil party. son's millionaires. Just as a Colorado If Lyndon Johnson can bind to- a il Senator must represent the dub- gether the warring factions of the M ous claims to special economic party in Congress, he will render ture favor of silver mining and sugar his party and his nation an in- son beet growing, a Senator from Kan- valuable service. t f sembly, the World Health Organi- zation. UNESCO, and has been an IN line with this, Humphrey lias official observer at the Geneva been one of the foremost advo- disarmament talks. He has also cates of looking for areas of con- gone abroad to talk with United ciliation with Russia. Arab Republic President Gamil, As long as "the spirit of Camp Nasser and Israeli Prime Minister David" persists, Humphrey will David Ben-Gurion. remain one of the leading Demo- He also had a rather well-pub- cratic spokesmen in the areas of lized talk with Nikita Khrushchev. disarmament and foreign policy, In fact, he talked with Khrushch- If the international s i t u a t i o n ev for eight hours. This gave changes, however. Humphrey's Humphrey a tremendous amount reputation in this area will be of publicity and he exploited this seriously hurt. attention successfully. However, Inspite of Humphrey's clear lib- he also irritated many people by eral stand and the testimonials to this incident: some' believed he his ability, there is a great temp- was causing an enormous stir tation to dismiss Humphrey as a over something essentially irrel- bright, precocious child of the evant. Depression-who never grew up. .Sinsp. his visit with Khrushchev ~ ~-~~~~ he has been actively running for the Presidency. It would be a considerable understatement to JOHNSON say that Humphrey is projecting Continued from Pa himself as a liberal. He is veryo nearly running on FDR's coat- atorial primary whether tails. wins a place on the natio "If victory is to come to the He is practically assureC Democratic party, the plain returned to the Senate b3 people of this country must find ers of Texas. Since the in the Democratic standard-bear- cans cannot win a major: er a man they sense to be their Senate, even if they si true friend, their spokesman," he every Northern seat at has said. 1960, Lyndon Johnson wi the majority leader of th HE points out that 19 per cent He will retain this positio of the population are still in er a Republican or a Del the "low-income group," which elected President. he defines as less than $2,500 for Johnson is therefore1 a family of four. He is concerned cellent position to watch with helping these people. viewing from the Senate In addition, his most frequently tlements the clash of the used testimonial is a statement by rey and Kennedy armie plain below as well as thi a Seder is a jniori vers of the Symington b James dIf the moment comes the literary college and a can assure the outcome, former member of The Daily will commit his forces.c staff. he risks nothing. "Mr. r probably prefers it this w THE MICHIGAN DAILY MA( sas must represent wheat, or one from Iowa represent corn, Lyndon Johnson must spend part of his time furthering the interests of oil. BUT THE divisive issue in the Democratic partyand in the nation is not oil. It is civil rights. Lyndon Johnson must guide civil rights legislation past the barriers erected by the Southerners who dominate Congress if he is to win any support from the North for the nomination. At the same time, he risks losing his base of South- ern support if the emerging legis- lation has real teeth in it. Lyndon Johnson's chance at the Presi- dential nomination depends on the skill with which he performs this balancing act, Not only is Johnson's political future at stake. A considerable measure of the national welfare also depends on his abilities. Leg- islation imposed upon one segment of society by another will be self- defeating, for the effectiveness of any law depends upon its accept- ance by most of those whose ac- tions it affects. The career of the Prohibition amendment demon- strated this fact. No further ex- periment is necessary. Karl Lamb is a University instructor in the political sci. ence department. Riding FDR'S Coattails way. The Johnson Family ,GAZINE SUNDAY, APRIL 17, 1960 Johnson in New