Sometimes people famous
for other things turn out to be very good poets indeed. Not always—various celebrities have taken
advantage of their notoriety and foisted on the public verse that would have
best been left out of one of those vanity
press anthologies for suckers. Eugene McCarthy, best remembered as the
1968 Democratic peace candidate who
caused Lyndon B. Johnson to fold his
tents, tuned out to be very good indeed.
With characteristic wry and self depreciating humor he wrote, “If any of
you are secret poets, the best way to break into print is to run for the
presidency.”
McCarthy was born March
29, 1916 in Watkins, Minnesota. His father was an Irish cattle buyer and local Postmaster—a
political appointment—known for his humor and storytelling. His mother was from German stock and intensely religious. He was raised in a devoutly Catholic home and educated in the local
parochial school before going to St.
John’s College Prep in Collegeville,
Minnesota.
The school was operated
by the Benedictine Monks of St. Johns Abby, who deeply influenced
the young man. They encouraged his
natural scholarly bent. He entered the
Abby as a novice following
graduation in 1931. After nine months he
reluctantly concluded that he did not have the vocation and left. But he so impressed his fellow novices that
one observed sadly that his departure was “like losing a twenty game winner.”
McCarthy didn’t go
far. He enrolled in St. John’s University in Collegeville under the same leadership.
After graduating with
distinction in 1935, he became a public school teacher serving rural schools in
South Dakota and Minnesota. He also pursued advanced education at the University of Minnesota where he earned
a master’s degree in 1939. He took his new degree back to his beloved
St. John’s where he was professor of economics and education from 1940 to ’43.
McCarthy left academia
to participate in the war effort as a civilian technical assistant in the Military Intelligence Division of the War Department.
In June 1945 he married
Abigail Quigley, another
academic. Together they briefly returned
to Watkins were they lived on a farming commune for Catholic couples before
each resumed their careers. Together they
would have four children.
McCarthy resumed
teaching as a professor of sociology at the College of St. Thomas in St.
Paul. He also became active in the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party. In 1948 the Party tapped him for its
nomination to Congress from the 4th District. That was the same year fellow Minnesotan Minneapolis Mayor Hubert Humphrey rose to national prominence with a speech at the Democratic National Convention
demanding a Platform Plank
condemning segregation—the speech
which caused the Dixiecrat Party split
that year. The two leading liberals
careers would be intertwined ever after.
McCarthy entered the House of Representatives in 1949 just
in time for the McCarthy Era
hysterics. He was a hard working and
respected Congressman noted for his liberalism, his professorial demeanor, and
his interest in foreign policy. Popular
at home, he easily won re-election five times but was little known outside of
his home state.
In 1958 he moved up to
the Senate where he earned a seat on
the Foreign Relations Committee. McCarthy attracted national attention at
the Democratic National Convention of 1960 when at the urging of Eleanor Roosevelt he gave an
impassioned speech in defense of Adlai Stevenson and rallied liberals to
his standard. Both he and Mrs.
Roosevelt, however, understood the powerful symbolism of a leading Catholic
politician standing against the nomination of John F. Kennedy.
By 1960 McCarthy began
to be noticed for a series of serious political and policy books including Frontiers in American Democracy, Dictionary
of American Politics, and A Liberal Answer to the Conservative
Challenge. He was an acknowledged
liberal leader of the Democratic Party.
In 1964 Lyndon B. Johnson,
in need of a northern liberal running mate not tied to the Kennedys considered him for the nod, but opted for his fellow
Minnesota senator Hubert Humphrey whose eubulant personality was considered
better for the campaign than the sometimes dour McCarthy.
It was probably just as well for Johnson, because McCarthy was becoming
increasingly disenchanted not only with the escalating War in Vietnam, but with the foreign policy assumptions that made
such military interventions possible.
He laid those objections out in speeches on the Senate floor, in appearances
on the Sunday morning news panel shows, and in a widely read book published in
1967 The Limits of Power: America's
Role in the World. Suddenly
McCarthy was the leading and most coherent anti-war
voice in Congress.
He was recruited by supporters of Oregon
Senator Wayne Morse, one of only two Senators who voted against the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, to enter the
1968 Presidential Primaries against
Johnson. McCarthy somewhat reluctantly
agreed expecting only to be able to bring the issue of the war to the fore and
perhaps influence Johnson to change course.
McCarthy was as surprised as anyone when an army of college students
and young people descended on the first primary state, New Hampshire to canvas the state door to door on his behalf. Many “Came clean for Gene,” cutting long
hair, shaving beards and adopting sport coats and ties and prim dresses. McCarthy shocked the nation—and the White House—by placing second in the
contest with 42% of the vote against Johnson 49%. Perhaps more importantly, because the
President had not bothered to slate delegates to the state convention which
would in turn select delegates to the Democratic National Convention, McCarthy
supporters won 20 of 24 spots and thus controlled the delegation.
The win spurred other actors to action.
Four days after the primary Senator
Robert Kennedy, who despite despising Johnson had not believed he was
vulnerable, announced his entry into the race, perhaps hoping that McCarthy
would drop out in his favor. On March 31
Johnson announced that he “would not seek and will not serve” a second term.
In the following primaries some of McCarthy’s early supporter did jump
ship to Kennedy, who quickly put together a well oiled campaign. But McCarthy and many of his loyal,
idealistic followers steadfastly remained in the race. Vice
President Humphrey, with impeccable liberal credentials but tied to Johnson’s
war policy, entered the race too late to enter the primaries but with the
support of almost the entire party establishment. He began reaping delegates in the many states
which still relied exclusively on state conventions and on elected officials at
all levels who were automatic delegates.
Kennedy and McCarthy slugged it out an increasingly bitter race. Kennedy won the crucial, delegate rich California primary but was assassinated following his acceptance speech. Most of Kennedy’s supporters, instead of
throwing their grieving support to McCarthy, backed South Dakota Senator George McGovern instead.
McCarthy arrived at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago with more delegates from
primary elections than any candidate, but that was only 20 % of the total. The fight for the nomination on the
convention floor was overshadowed by the demonstrations and massive police
violence on the streets. Many McCarthy
supporters and delegates were swept up in the melees and in the early morning
hours after the famous Battle of
Michigan Avenue, police actually stormed McCarthy Conrad Hilton headquarters and beat staffers and demonstrators who
were being sheltered there.
McCarthy reluctantly threw his support to Humphrey, but McGovern won
the nomination. Many of his idealistic supporters
were radicalized by the experience.
McCarthy was embittered.
The senator declined to run for re-election in 1970 and even seemed to
retreat from a high profile role in the chamber in his remaining two years.
But the presidential bug, once caught, is not easy to shake. McCarthy tried once more to win the
Democratic Party nomination in 1972. He fell far short and had to drop out well
before the convention.
While remaining a committed social liberal, he had also become increasingly
distressed by the growing power of the Federal government over individual lives
and had assumed libertarian positions
on many issues.
Despite this apparent turn to the right, his anti-imperialist foreign policy still had support from many on the
left. He abandoned the Democrats to run
as an independent or under various state party titles in 1976. He gained ballot access in 30 states and was
a recognized write-in in two more. In
the end he garnered 740,460 popular votes—just under 1% of
the total—finishing third in the election.
In his remaining years
McCarthy was an increasingly isolated figure given to quixotic crusades that sometimes baffled former supporters. He
considered Jimmie Carter the worst
President in history. After flirting
with the Libertarian Party, he
endorsed Ronald Reagan in
November 1980. He was also a party to a
Federal law suit with William F. Buckley,
the Libertarians, and the American
Civil Liberties Union, that struck down most existing limits on Federal
campaign contributions as an abridgement of free speech.
McCarthy’s personal
life was also disrupted in the ‘70’s. He
separated from his wife in 1970 but because of their strong mutual Catholic
faith neither sought a divorce. Now
living in the Virginia countryside,
he was rumored to be having a long term secret affair with a high level woman
journalist. Many suspected that it was columnist
Shana Alexander. But a recent biography revealed that his
lover was CBS News correspondent Marya McLaughlin. The affair continued until her death in
1998.
In 1992 McCarthy
returned to the Democratic Party and campaigned once again in New
Hampshire. But NBC News anchor Tom Brokaw acting
as moderator of a televised debate refused to allow him to participate because “he
wasn’t a serious candidate,” conferring him to the margins with such figures at
Billy
Jack star Tom Laughlin. It was a humiliating rejection and
McCarthy subsequently withdrew from the race.
McCarthy died at the
age of 89 of Parkinson’s disease in
a Georgetown retirement home on
December 10, 2005.
In one final, ironic
insult, he was supposed to be memorialized with other prominent Democrats at
the 1996 Democratic Convention. But his
photo in the montage displayed to delegates and TV viewers was identified as “Senator
Joseph McCarthy.”—the name of the infamous Republican
anti-communist. In the end the
Democrats could hardly remember who he was.
Today’s poem was
included in McCarthy’s first book of poetry, Cool Reflections: Poetry For The Who, What, When, Where and Especially
Why of It All, published
during the 1968 campaign.
Mai
Li Conversation
How old are you, small
Vietnamese boy?
Six fingers. Six years.
Why did you carry water to the wounded soldier, now dead?
Your father.
Your father was enemy of free world.
You also now are enemy of free world.
Who told you to carry water to your father?
Your mother!
Your mother is also enemy of free world.
You go into ditch with your mother.
American politician has said,
"It is better to kill you as a boy in the elephant grass of Vietnam
Than to have to kill you as a man in the rye grass in the USA."
You understand.
It is easier to die
Where you know the names of the birds, the trees, and the grass
Than in a stranger country.
You will be number 128 in the body count for today.
High body count will make the Commander-in-Chief of free world much encouraged.
Good-bye, small six-year-old Vietnamese boy, enemy of free world.
Six fingers. Six years.
Why did you carry water to the wounded soldier, now dead?
Your father.
Your father was enemy of free world.
You also now are enemy of free world.
Who told you to carry water to your father?
Your mother!
Your mother is also enemy of free world.
You go into ditch with your mother.
American politician has said,
"It is better to kill you as a boy in the elephant grass of Vietnam
Than to have to kill you as a man in the rye grass in the USA."
You understand.
It is easier to die
Where you know the names of the birds, the trees, and the grass
Than in a stranger country.
You will be number 128 in the body count for today.
High body count will make the Commander-in-Chief of free world much encouraged.
Good-bye, small six-year-old Vietnamese boy, enemy of free world.
—Eugene
McCarthy
No comments:
Post a Comment