Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Friday, July 20, 1984 JOURNEY TO SAN FRANCISCO WAS TOUGH ON CANDIDATES Delegate race took its toll WASHINGTON (AP) - For Walter Mondale, the road to San Francisco began 17 months ago in St. Paul, Minn., where he announced his candidacy in the chamber of the State House of Representatives with the declaration, "I have the experience ... I am ready to be president of the United States." It proved to be an arduous journey over rugged political terrain that was rougher still for the seven Democrats who challenged Mondale for the nomination. ONLY TWO, Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado and the Rev. Jesse Jackson, stayed the course. The others fell by the wayside months ago, overcome by a surfeit of debts and a paucity of votes. The status of front-runner proved a heavy burden for Mondale, as it had in where the Granite State's 101,129 voters had left the state two days early to hob- nob with governors in Washington, likened it to "a cold shower." A jubilant Hart boasted, "Tonight we buried the label 'dark horse."' Jackson, who had waited until November to make the leap from civil rights activist to full-fledged politician, finished fourth with 5 percent of the vote after confessing on the eye of the primary at a Manchester synagogue that he had used the word "Hymie" to refer to Jews. Jackson, after nearly losing federal matching funds due to his poor showing in New England, would go on to win 18 percent of the votes nationwide and nearly 10 percent of the delegates, in- cluding triumphs in the District of 'Tonight we buried the label "dark horse."' - Sen. Gary Hart on his New Hampshire primary victory past elections for Edmund Muskie and others deemed favorites before the first lever was pulled. Mondale never trailed in the delegate count. In January, when the House Democratic caucus named 164 of its members as "super" delegates, 75 an- nounced they would vote for Mondale. Seventeen declared for Sen. John Glenn of Ohio, 11 for Sen. Alan Cranston of California, seven for Jackson and five for Hart. BUT OTHER triumphs did not come so easily for the former vice president, whose campaign afforded by his bulging warchest, his closely or- chestrated support from big labor and an organization ranked as second to none. Mondale savored what he called "perhaps a spectacular victory" in the premier event, the Iowa caucuses on Feb. 20, when 49 percent of the 85,000 Democrats who turned out moved to Mondale's side of the room at meetings held across the snowbound state in firehouses, church halls and schools. Hart, his nearest rival, had only 17 percent. George McGovern, the peace candidate who had implored Iowans not to "throw away your conscience," was third with 10 percent, while Glenn was fifth with less than 4 percent in a showing that doomed his centrist can- didacy. EIGHT DAYS later, Mondale was left reeling by Hart's 37-to-29 percent upset win in the New Hampshire primary, FULL TRAY FULL TRAY FULL TRAY n evJ~ i l ian m PIZZA a with 2 FREE items % Splus2 FREE quarts 769-2422 m - r PIZZA EXCHANGE M . & SUB EXPRESS .;1 i~n Ays1inj AvsilT1nj Columbia and Louisiana primaries in May that made him the only candidate besides Mondale and Hart to carry a state. ON LEAP Day, Cranston, who had been the first to enter the race in February 1983, became the first to drop out, saying "I know the difference bet- ween reality and dreams. I know when to dream and how to count votes." A day later, Sen. Ernest Hollings of South Carolina and former Florida Gov. Reubin Askew bowed out. Hart marched through the rest of New England, sweeping all its primaries and caucuses. With a style borrowed from John Kennedy, Hart and his "new ideas" were suddenly the talk of the nation. The bulk of the sup- port for his exploding political fortunes came from the "yuppies" - young, ur- ban professionals., But the newfound prominence also brought intense scrutiny of Hart's background, including his shortening of the family name from Hartpence and shaving a year off his age. MONDALE RIDICULED Hart's "new ideas" with a one-line delivered with the force of a sledge-hammer at a debate in Atlanta on March 11: "When I hear about your new ideas, I'm remin- ded of the ad, "Where's the beef?"' The hamburger slogan became the battle cry of Mondale's campaign, even while aides were preparing to throw in the towel if Hart swept the South on Super Tuesday, March 13, when five states - Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Massachusetts and Rhode Island - held primaries and four states in the West held caucuses. Hart won the popular vote in Florida, as well as all four caucuses and the two New England primaries, but Mondale scored crucial victories in Alabama and Georgia to revive his sputtering campaign. GLENN, HIS debts ballooning toward $3 million, threw in the towel after finishing second in Alabama. McGovern kept a promise to withdraw after he failed to finish first or second in Massachusetts. Mondale widened his delegate leads in mid-March with a string of caucus wins in Delaware, Arkansas, Mississippi and Michigan, and an un- contested primary victory in Puerto Rico. Then, in the nation's industrial hear- tland, Mondale won major primaries in Illinois on March 20, New York on April 3 and Pennsylvania on April 10, and his delegate count kept spinning upwards. In Illinois, as in Florida earlier, Hart was hamstrung by his campaign's failure to field delegate slates in every district. HART ALSO damaged his own cause with the unfounded complaints about Mondale's television ads and his inability to yank an offensive ad of his own off the ir in Chicago. And in New York, Hart tarnished his image as the candidate who was not captive to special interests when, in an overture to Jewish voters, he did an about-face and supported recognizing Jerusalem as Israel's capital. Hart's post-mortem on the rough- and-tumble New York campaign was that Mondale "got me down on his level . . He won't do that again." ON APRIL 6, Hart complained to the Federal Election Commission that Mondale was flouting campaign spen- ding limits by allowing unions to delegate committees. Mondale shrugged it off at first, but by month's end he ordered the committees to disband, promised to refund much of the money and voluntarily counted it against his own spending ceiling. Hart looked to the West to revive his candidacy, but on May 5 Mondale whipped him by nearly a 2-1 margin in Texas's complex caucuses. Mondale' also won Tennessee's primary on May Day. Hart, in his home state, trounced Mondale in caucuses on May 7, the eve of primaries in Indiana, Ohio, Maryland, and North Carolina that Mondale hoped would at last propel him to victory. BUT VICTORY was delayed, if not denied, when Hart registered narrow wins in the Indiana and Ohio primaries. Hart, who had a weakness for football metaphors, declared, "The Democrats of this nation are not prepared to have this contest and this debate end at this time. Welcome to the fourth quarter." Hart did exceedingly well in the four- th quarter, winning nine of the final 13 primaries'and caucuses from May 7 to June 5, including a lopsided delegate win in California on the final day of the primary season. But Mondale, who shut Hart out in New Jersey, kept adding delegates to his column, and on June 6, precisely at 11:59 a.m. as promised, announced in St. Paul that he had secured the necessary 1,967 votes to go over the top. "The race for the majority is over," he said. HART CONCEDED nothing and vowed to fight to the convention, but the wind fell from his sails and the media's attention shifted to Mondale's laborious search for a running mate. Over the next month, seven Democrats - three women, two black men and one Hispanic and one white male - made the pilgrimmage to Mon- dale's secluded suburban home in Nor- th Oaks, Minn., to be interviewed for the job, much in the manner of Jimmy Carter's trooping his candidates through Plains, Ga., in the summer of 1976 before tapping Mondale. A few others. Hart smnna them were under See CANDIDATES, Page 17 ... vowed to fight to the end a I I Mondale ... continued to add delegates