Waiting for Arnold to deliver a message
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JOSEPH N. BELL
The recall circus has stumbled into its final month, and the fringe
players have mostly disappeared into the wings. One major player,
Peter Ueberroth -- despite leading the candidates in campaign
contributions from Newport-Mesa -- joined them yesterday. Meanwhile,
as the remaining supporting cast in Arnold Schwarzenegger’s new movie
struggle to beef up their roles, parallels continue to be drawn
between the long ago candidacy of Ronald Reagan for the governor’s
job in California and that of Schwarzenegger today.
The correlations are superficial, at best. Both men are
professional actors. Neither had ever run for political office or had
political experience before seeking the governorship. Both ran as
Republicans and offered instant name recognition to a great majority
of voters who also went to the movies. But the differences in both
the men and the way they went about this mission are profound, and
should be considered carefully by those voters who kid themselves
that they will be getting another Reagan.
Although my experience with Reagan was brief and limited, I caught
him at both ends of his long political cycle. I reported his first
campaign for governor for a national newspaper, and I was in the
audience for one of his first speeches after he completed his
presidency. The contrasts in his performance were enormous. But so
were the similarities -- and therein lies a strength Schwarzenegger
has yet to show: the commitment to and carry-over of specific basic
views.
When ex-President Reagan spoke to the Orange County Business
Council, I read an advance copy of his speech. It was full of cliches
and banalities that lacked any of the special insights a retiring
president -- Dwight Eisenhower comes to mind -- might usefully leave
behind. Yet, when Reagan delivered this turkey word-for-written-word,
I was totally engaged and understood for the first time the grip he
had on this nation. He made banalities seem fresh and evocative by
the earnest way he delivered them, his grasp of the material and his
conviction in it.
He had only mastered some of these tools when he approached his
first campaign for governor, almost 20 years earlier. Reagan had the
conviction, then, but not the grasp. That came slowly, but it came
steadily because Reagan went to school for many months to learn his
political trade. His mentor was Bill Roberts, who with his partner,
Stu Spencer, were pioneers in the field of political management. I
interviewed both of them -- along with their candidate -- while they
were assembling and directing the team that created the political
Ronald Reagan.
It went like this. When Barry Goldwater was smashed by Lyndon
Johnson in the 1964 presidential election, the only visible Goldwater
supporter who came through with image intact was Reagan, who made a
speech supporting Goldwater that was widely reproduced and effusively
admired. So when the sugar daddies of conservative Republicanism in
California began looking around for a candidate to put up against
Gov. Pat Brown, Reagan was the only image in focus. That’s when they
hired Spencer-Roberts -- by then well known and respected -- to make
a study of Reagan’s chances.
The political managers talked with Reagan and were impressed with
his general philosophical views, but not his knowledge of state
affairs. So they brought in several dozen experts on water problems,
education, public finance and other basic state problems to brief
him, then shopped Reagan to grass-roots audiences. The questions that
came up repeatedly in those pre-campaign sessions became the issues
on the cards Reagan spoke from in all of his later campaign speeches.
When Roberts gave Reagan high marks as a candidate, his firm was
hired to manage Reagan’s campaign for governor. And for the next
several months, under Roberts’ direction, the candidate explored in
considerable detail the same subjects on which he had earlier been
given a crash course. Roberts knew that Reagan had to be prepared to
deal with such issues in depth under questioning that might well be
unfriendly.
As a result, when Reagan came down from the mountain, he was armed
for the political wars. He was accessible to the toughest reporters
and didn’t dodge public debate. He articulated firm positions that
could certainly be challenged, but were mostly clear and unambiguous.
Bill Roberts told me at that time: “You can build an image for a
candidate, but if the basic material isn’t sound, it will come out.
In the end, the candidate is out front all alone.”
Well, not all of the candidates this time. With the Davis recall
election only four weeks away, we’re still waiting for Schwarzenegger
to show up out front all alone. It is a considerable irony that the
dismal debate performance by Ueberroth, who did show up, was a factor
in his withdrawal. But while Ueberroth put himself on the line,
Schwarzenegger has avoided political reporters, stressed breadth
rather than depth in campaign rhetoric, and appeared mostly before
hand-picked groups. His absence at the candidate debates has shown
contempt for the voters. Yet, the contrast between his movie
Terminator image and his avoidance of the rough-and-tumble of
partisan politics, which speaks volumes about his handlers’ lack of
confidence in his ability to perform well out front, all alone,
hasn’t seemed to deter his fans.
But we’re not casting a movie here. What we’re doing is, first,
finding out whether money can buy a desired result as well as a new
election in our democratic society. And, second -- if it can and does
-- whether we are going to treat it as a movie and cast the most
experienced actor or as a serious effort to replace Davis with
someone who has some inkling of how to run a state more complex than
most nations in the world.
Reagan came to this job short on experience but long on an expert
and pragmatic political education, and deeply rooted in his own
convictions. If Arnold Schwarzenegger can demonstrate these same
qualities in the public arena of political debate and discourse, we
sure as hell haven’t heard it yet. Nor will we if the only debate he
enters provides him with the questions in advance, a luxury he won’t
enjoy in the real world of governing.
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
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