McCarthy
was a Truth-Teller
December
13, 2005
Like most of those who knew him, I was saddened late last week to learn
of the death of former Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCarthy.
McCarthy's moment in the sun came in 1968 because he had the nerve to
do what no other Democrat would do: challenge President Lyndon Johnson,
a fellow Democrat with a reputation for vindictiveness.
McCarthy disliked Johnson's Vietnam policies and a good bit more, always
said what he thought and was adopted by the anti-Johnson left as a sort
of challenger of last resort while more "realistic" Johnson
critics such as Robert Kennedy prepared to jump in if he could inflict
a mortal wound on the man in the Oval Office.
And McCarthy did just that in New Hampshire, where he came within seven
points of actually beating Johnson, fielded a ground army the likes
of which had not been seen in decades and built up a head of steam that
but for the ambitions of others and his own ambivalence might have made
him president. That didn't happen, of course, because the Minnesotan's
penchant for truth-telling turned out to be a weakness as well as a
strength.
McCarthy was, of course, riding the growing public dissatisfaction with
the Vietnam War. Some opposed it by 1968 because they thought it was
the wrong war in the wrong place at the wrong time, and others believed
it was being badly managed from Washington and therefore wouldn't be
won for that reason alone, and still others opposed it because, well,
they were on the other side.
The hard left, which argued that the United States couldn't and, more
important, shouldn't win the war, would eventually dominate the anti-war
movement and was a big player in 1968. These were the folks who began
by burning their draft cards and ended up burning their nation's flag.
They adopted McCarthy, never realizing that his opposition to Johnson's
Vietnam policies lacked the anti-Americanism that motivated so many
of them.
As it happened, our paths crossed that year just prior to the Wisconsin
primary, where the prospect of a McCarthy victory persuaded Johnson
to bail out. As I listened to McCarthy and began studying his background,
I became convinced that he was far more complex and far more honest
than those of his supporters who were praying for a communist victory
over U.S. forces in Vietnam. I decided to bet on that honesty.
Madison that spring was the site of the left's first attempt to get
the voters of a city to demand an immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces
from Vietnam, and anti-war leaders had managed to get a referendum question
on the ballot demanding just that. I was recruited by local veterans
groups to manage the campaign against the referendum.
None of us thought we had much chance. Madison is more like Tacoma Park
than Tacoma Park and is the home of one of the most liberal universities
in the country, anti-war fever was peaking as anti-war activists from
around the country poured in as part of the McCarthy crusade, and moderate
and conservative students and non-students seemed lost.
The senator himself was to speak just before the primary at what would
eventually be described as the largest political rally in Wisconsin
history. I asked a friendly part-time reporter for a Madison radio station
to do whatever it might take to get to McCarthy with his tape recorder,
hand him the referendum question demanding our immediate withdrawal
from Vietnam, ask him to read it and tell him how he would vote on it
if he were a Madison voter.
My friend did as he was asked, and McCarthy responded as I suspected
he would. He read it, paused and said simply that if he were a Madison
voter, he'd vote no. We had that tape on the air within hours and won
on primary day, even as McCarthy was trouncing Johnson.
I didn't actually meet McCarthy until some years later, but we eventually
became good friends and I told him what I'd done back in 1968. He looked
at me for a minute and said simply that I had no idea how much grief
had come his way as a result of that answer.
Gene caught a lot of grief over the years for saying what he thought
but those who listened realized whether they agreed with him or not
that they were in the presence of that rarest of all political figures
a truly honest and thoughtful man.
He will be missed.
Keene,
chairman of the American Conservative Union, is a managing associate
with Carmen Group, a D.C.-based governmental-affairs firm (www.carmengrouplobbying.com).