tv The Contenders CSPAN August 10, 2016 3:33pm-5:37pm EDT
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cspan.org and click on the video library search box. here you can type in the name of a speaker, sponsor of a bill, or even the event topic where you can get a list and click on the program you'd like to watch. or refine your search with the many search tools. if you're looking for the most current programs and you don't want to search. our home page has many ready for the immediate viewing. such as the washington journal or the events we covered that day. c-sp c-span.org is a public cable provider. check it out at cspan.org. now the contenders, our series on key political figures who ran for president and lost, but who nevertheless changed political history. over the next two hours. the life of former arizona senator barry goldwater. who was the republican candidate for president in 1964. this was recorded in phoenix, arizona at the goldwater
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institute. >> wherever he goes, he speaks out. clearly and forcefully on the issues answers questions, explains exactly where he stands on domestic and foreign policy. everywhere he goes, the people are responding with enthusiasm for this new and different kind of statesman. barry goldwater has been constantly on the go. it's a grueling schedule. and whenever he can, he catches a quick nap here with his daughter, peggy. and with his wife, peggy. but soon it's back to the campaign where barry goldwater who is calling for courage and integrity. hoost kaling for an end to do nothing policies for progress based on the dimic principles of the republic. he's calling for a rebirth of individual freedom. freedom upon the free enterprise system. we reject, therefore, the ideas
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that the economic planners in washington had a group of people sitting in washington can plan what the country's going to make. where it's to be made. the quality of the product, the price of the product, the wages to be paid. the profit to be made, et cetera, et cetera. we know that this system which in simpler terms is called socialism. has never worked in the history and has not working today in countries where -- >> republican presidential candidate barry goldwater campaigning in 1964. c-span's "the contender series" coming from the goldwater institute in arizona. we look at the challenge to president lyndon johnson during the second half of the century. we welcome you tonight. we welcome our audience here at the goldwater institute and our three guests who will walk us through the life and political
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career beginning with rick pearlstien. he has written for the nation magazine new republican new yorker and the london review of book. he's the author of the book "nixonland." thanks for being with us. and darcy olson, the president and ceo of the goldwater institute. she previously served as direct of the cato institute in washington d. krmt. her editorials have appeared in usa today and the national review. and grew up here in arizona served two terms in a state legislature including one term in the arizona senate. he has produced more than 90 documentaries including barry goldwater and american life. thank you for being with us. let's begin with you, in in your book and campaign he called himself a different kind of a candidate for a different kind of election year. >> i think that made him most difficult is he is a elected presidential candidate. if we think of all the people running for president in 2012. we can't say that any of him
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were reluctant. ever since 1960 in the first draft him. and said we want you to be a presidential candidate. he would always say one thing. that's the last thing on my mind. i don't want to run for president. once he even told the chicago transcribe bun, i don't think i have the brains to be president. and over and over again, they said we don't care, we're going to draft you. and that's actually what happened. he pretty much was drafted by inpassionate followers who raised money and built an organize on their own. he had to do it. >> we're going to talk more later. the assassination of john kennedy, how did that influence his decision to go ahead in 1964? >> he was inching towards possibly doing it in the fall of 1963. and one of the reasons was because president kennedy introduced a civil right's bill that was actually beginning to build a strong backlash. and there were people talking
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about president actually being vulnerable in 1964. and goldwater was close to kennedy. it's very hard to preconduct those contacts in our minds now. people blamed extremism, the ideological politics that americans didn't want to believe was part of their political system. and barry goldwater immediately lost interest. in fact, it was another month and a half before he finally answered the call of one more group of people coming to him, begging him and saying it was his duty to support the conservative cause that he had finally agreed to do. >> darcy olson, in this book that came out, we'll talk later that was the manifest of why he was running and the ideology that shaked him in that piece of film that we showed at the top of the program. he talked about freedom and free enterprise and the failed certainlyist experiment that the
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democrats were pushing in the 1960s. >> right, well, i mean barry goldwater stood for one thing. and that was freedom. and that that book today is just as relevant as when it was written 50 years ago. and barry would say, circumstances change, principles do not. and when he was getting ready to run for office, he said, you know, as i survey the landscape and i look around at all of the different questions that might occur to me, the most important concern that i will have, the most important question that i will ask myself is are we maximizing freedom? and that was the beginning and the end of his political analysis. >> bill, take us back to 1964 and walk us through barry goldwater in the u.s. senate for two terms. what led him to this point on the national stage?
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>> really in a sense the simplicity of his perspective. i mean, simplicity as compared to more complicated politics. we have to go back. we've got to let barry goldwater and the context of his time. family came here in the 1850s, okay, he grew up born in 1909 and dusty little fiennes that had 8 or 9,000 people at the time. life was simple. schismer here than in the east. >> arizona wasn't even a state. when he was born. >> when he was born, it was not a state for two, three more years. but, just lifestyle was very -- this was part of the old west at that time. it wasn't new york city, you know, and whatever. so you have to look at barry, let's say from his family history which meant a lot to him. from 1909 clear up, up to world war ii. what was life like here? it was very simple.
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it was very unsophisticated. it was, it was black and white. it was right and wrong, it wasn't sophisticated east coast. i bring that up because that's what shaped where did he get these views? you know been which i call a small libertarian, but the very simple views about right and wrong and this and that. it was the context in which he brung up. he asked me a question. what led him no to 19646 and what shaked his ideology in the 1950s until he ran in '64? >> well truthfully it was what i just said. it was simple. and i don't mean that in a negative way, but i mean, it was, it was sort of simple. there was right and wrong and there was, you know, good and bad and that and that and the other. and you get into world war ii which he served in very much. remember world war ii was the major right versus wrong, good
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versus bad thing, then you hear in the cold war, us versus the soviet union. all of these things from goldwater's perspective and from the context of the times were pretty black and white. especially as compared to today's politics. where you don't know quite who's doing what and to whom and saying what. i'm saying that's what he was the personification of good versus bad, right versus wrong, whether you agree with him or not. he was a personification of that. and i think that had a lot of appeal by the time of '50s and certainly '64 came about. >> you met barry goldwater, let's focus on the 1964 race because you had other names in the race like governor scranton of pennsylvania who was in and out and then back in again. nelson rockefeller who spent a lot of money to secure the nomination. walk us through how these candidates challenged barry goldwater and how he got the
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nomination. >> the republican party was a different institution than it is now. it was controlled by moderates and met by liberals. and the whole ideology of the american party system looked different. each party had within it both conservatives and liberals. the democratic party had very conservative members from the south, it had very liberal members in the north. the republican party had a isolationist conservative wing from the midwest, but also a liberal wing in the northeast. people like jake javitz. and what the barry goldwater presidential campaign was all about was trying to take over the party from the bottom up, the bottom up being conservative ideological. often they had their meetings in country clubs and, you know, very fancy places. and it was presumed that someone like nelson rockefeller, the apparent for the republican
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nomination. the idea that a conservative could have won the nomination was absolutely seen as impossible by the pundits because the pundits then said that america was ensconced within a liberal liberal left consensus, when dwight not only embraced the new deal, but even expanded it. opening up something like the department of health, education, and welfare, instituting the interstate was a huge federal outlay. it was just presumed that the conservatism of the 1920s which was seen as something that had gotten us into the depression was no longer relevant to modern life. >> in your book, you point out two key primaries that were critical in 1964. barry goldwater won. >> yes. california was an absolutely fascinating, knock down, drag out political fight. and i talked earlier about how barry goldwater had these
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passioned supporters who would do whatever they want, even if barry goldwater told them not to do it. these are people from the john burke society, some of them were segregationists. they were full of far right, as they were called at times extremists. and they were basically willing to knock on doors until their knuckles were bloody. they were willing to sab tanl other campaigns. it was seen as a fight for civilization itself. because the other candidates, the liberal candidates nelson rockefeller were seen as these sort of haren jers of the socialism that they believed was destroying civilization itself. two years after richard nixon lost his governorship, he was still a player in the republican party in 1964 and according to your book was trying to figure out a way that the party might turn to him if they didn't want either rockefeller or goldwater.
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>> you mention the oregon primary. he actually established a secret foiler room in a basement. richard nixon in which people were hired to make phone calls saying hey, wouldn't it be a neat idea if nixon was drafted to be president of a and this is richard nixon and someone found out about it. and a camera crew showed up and that came across. but richard nixon was scheming and scamming and always hoping that goldwater and rockefeller were not knocking themselves out. there was this great cartoon in which it showed rockefeller and goldwater having a shootout, you know, in the middle of an old western town. and nixon was rubbing his hands and richard nixon's political undertaker parlor. >> we to want hear from you, our phone lines are open
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202-177-0033. if you live in the mountain or pacific time zone, also getting questions from those here in the audience at the goldwater institute in just a moment, we'll show you some of the political ads in 1964, but you remember this campaign, how did lyndon johnson run against barry goldwater. what was his tactic? >> rottenness. no, johnson ran a very smart campaign. because he made goldwater the issue as opposed to the issues being the issue. and barry was painted as a, you know, crazy person. you know, i mean, there were things put out by the johnson kban that some group of psychiatrists in america came out with some statement that barry was mentally ill, some of you probably remember that. you know, and that he was crazy. and then, of course, the famous 10, 9, 8, 7, the nuclear bomb
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commercial. which only aired one time, but it got a lot of attention that was designed by bill moyers actually. you know, it was, it was a totally, do the guy in, kind of a, you know, of a campaign. >> it's important to realize the nuclear stuff didn't just come out of nowhere. i mean in contents of a conservative, he made a very strong argument that a craven fear of depth had crept into the american psyche, and by that he meant, people were so afraid of nuclear war that they didn't want to confront the soviet union. well, there was a good reason that people were afraid to confront the soviet union because all out war with the soviet union would have meant the end of civilization itself. barry goldwater never flinched and it freaked people out, the ideaed that if we're afraid of going to war with the soviet union, even if it means nuclear war. we are on a path to surrender. and that was a genuinely
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frightening notion, especially lil after the cuban missile crisis when people actually came within hours so they thought of armageddon itself. he had unconventional ideas about the necessity of confronting the soviet union head on. >> we're going to talk about that iconic daisy ad. we have put together other 1964 ads to give you a sense of the issues and the personality in that campaign. [ buzzing ] >> this particular phone only rings in a serious crisis. in the hands of a man whose proven himself responsible. vote for president johnson on november 3rd. >> the people asked barry goldwater -- >> i have a question for mr. goldwater, i'm cynthia ford we hear about hot wars, cold wars,
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and bush water wars. i have brother brothers in the armed services. i'd like to know what he'll do out of war. >> let me assure you here and now, throughout this campaign and i'll continue to say it, that a goldwater/miller administration will mean once more the proven policy of peace through strength that was the hallmark of the eisenhower years. the eisenhower approach to foreign affairs is our approach. it served the cause of freedom and avoided war during the last republican administration. it will do so again. we are the party of preparedness and the party of peace. >> in your heart, you know he's right. vote for barry goldwater. >> on october 24th, 1963, barry goldwater said of the nuclear bomb, merely another weapon. merely another weapon?
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vote for president johnson. the stakes are too high for you to stay home. >> graft. swindles. juvenile delinquency. crime. riots. hear what barry goldwater has to say about our lack of moral leadership. >> the leadership of this nation has a clear and immediate challenge to go to work effectively and go to work immediately to restore proper respect for law and order in this land, and not just prior to election day either. america's greatness is the greatness of our people. and let this generation then make a new mark for that greatness. let this generation of americans set a standard of responsibility that will inspire the world. >> in your heart, you know he's right. vote for barry goldwater.
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>> darcy olsen is the president and ceo of this institute. you look back at those campaigns from 1964, your reaction. >> well, you know, somebody -- a lot of different thoughts come to mind when i see that array, including how many of these commercials inspired modern day political commercials. but what i take away from that is the slogan in your heart, you know he's right. i think that the american people proved that 15 years later when they elected ronald reagan. who campaigned on virtually an identical platform, but with a little bit different packaging, and a little bit more gloss. and this messaging, i mean, rick, you were talking about with the soviet union and how, you know, goldwater had too much bravado and it was scaring people, that is exactly what reagan ran on, won with and we have history to tell the tale that that was actually the right public policy to pursue. and i think that that speaks a lot about the timing and the -- what is happening socially when
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you were campaigning and how important that is and how much that influence is ultimately whether or not you get through with your ideas. >> two very different approaches. tony schulz was behind a lot of the lyndon johnson ads as you write about in your book. a different tactic by the goldwater campaign. >> when i look at goldwater ads, i think how embarrassingly atrocious they were. the goldwater team was not professional for all kinds of interesting reasons. one of them being barry goldwater being the reluctant candidate wanted people around him he felt comfortable with. he hired all of his arizona friends who were not necessarily national political professionals. the johnson commercials were made by ddb, the most sophisticated advertising agency. they had done the volkswagen ads. and i interviewed one of the guys who produced one of the big goldwater ads, which was goldwater talking about eisenhower. and it was just a total bust and they got all kinds of telegrams saying i'm never going to give to this campaign again that was such a bad commercial. chuck lichtenstein, now passed away.
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he told me, well, you know, i don't have a lot of experience with tv. i said, well, you mean, you never produced a tv commercial. he said, no, i didn't watch tv. so that was the goldwater campaign. >> we'll get to your calls in a moment. but bill mccune, we'll be showing during the course of this evening some of the documentary that you put together, some of the original work. and you worked with barry goldwater for how long to get this put together? >> probably -- specifically on the project, probably six months. >> was there one thing that you didn't know about barry goldwater and his politics that you learned in putting this together? >> his language. >> elaborate. >> barry had a very colorful language. i was going to tell a story, but i really have to clean it up. i will tell the story. i will clean it up. one of the last times i was with him, one of the very last times, but one of the last times, i walked into his living room and
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he was sitting in a barcalounger watching tv. i said, how you are you doing? he looks up to me and says -- this is the cleanup part. he said the f'ing raccoons are s'ing in my fireplace. i said, what? well, people don't know, but we have raccoons in the desert in arizona. i didn't even know it until that day, actually. a mother raccoon climbed up on barry's roof and come down on the chimney, what do you call the thing in the fireplace. >> the grate. >> the grate and gave birth to a litter of baby raccoons. this isn't in his house. this is in the ham shack, where he had his ham radio, it was next door, and the raccoons were doing his business, so to speak, in his fireplace. that was his phrase. >> on that note, let's go to martin from fair oaks ranch,
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texas, as we look at the life and career of barry goldwater, and his 1964 presidential bid. good evening, martin. >> good evening. the reason i'm calling in, veterans day, i happen to be a retired navy captain, civil engineer corps, from illinois, and i would like to tell my friends not so much the history of how many times i met goldwater accidentally, but the fact that i first was influenced, being a democratic, young man from illinois, where my cousin became the supreme court justice, head of the state of illinois, attorney general, i won't go on. but it was world war ii, texas a&m colonel in the air force -- excuse me, army, later air force, that influenced me to vote for goldwater. and interestingly enough i like to say to my texas friends, i'm
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one of the few guys left that remember on mondays hearing fdr when i was 7 years old give the day of infamy speech. but i ran into goldwater a couple of times in a little restaurant he loved, the titles on connecticut avenue. one time i was there, my boss who happened to be a civilian world war ii pilot named stafford, i introduced goldwater to my boss. and my boss says, why did you introduce me to the senator? i said, well, he knows another robert t. stafford and he got such a kick out of this, and he said, how long did you know goldwater? i said, oh, i've only met him here a couple of times in the restaurant. but, anyway, the man was fantastic individual. the only time i ever went to the senate when i was a young naval officer was who was presiding, it was barry goldwater. and this guy was truly an interesting and a beautiful man.
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one last memory is that i went to wright patterson air force base, happened to be going there on business as a civil engineer, and my wife and young son were there, and i said, why don't you go down to the museum? well, that was the day that barry goldwater and jimmy stewart dedicated the first wing of the museum. and they both came by and shook hands with my wife and son. i wished that i had had that experience to meet the other brigadier general jimmy stewart. i just wanted to share that on veterans day. what a wonderful man he was. >> martin, thank you for the call. he was a pilot, he was a ham radio operator, he had a lot of hobbies, took a lot of pictures. >> it is important for us to recognize on veterans day that actually a lot of powerful rich people, which is what barry goldwater was from one of the richest families in the city, used their influence to get out of military service. he pulled strings to get in the military when world war ii
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started, he was born in 1909, he was a pretty old guy. and he took up duty in a very dangerous air route and the china burma theater called the aluminum trail because so many planes went down. and he had this fascination with flying the latest military hardware and one time in 1964 he had this very sensitive meeting with lyndon johnson about how they were going to handle the issue of race riots and lyndon johnson spent hours and hours preparing and there was this whole memo that was going to guide his incredibly delicate negotiations. the meeting ended up lasting 15 seconds, but then barry goldwater was like, when do i get to try this new a-11 coming out? >> let's go back to the 1964 campaign. he received 38% of the vote. it was a landslide for lyndon johnson. why such a disparity and was barry goldwater misunderstood in the '64 campaign? >> well, a lot of reasons.
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first of all, people were terrified of the prospect of nuclear war, that he never really backed down from. lyndon johnson was dishonest on issues like vietnam. he said i'm not going to send american boys 7,000 miles away to do what asian boys should do. there was a bumper sticker that showed up the next year, if i voted for barry goldwater, there would be a war in vietnam. i did vote for barry goldwater and there was. by the same token, barry goldwater's ideas about the role of the federal government were not popular. when he said we should sell this -- the tva, that was seen as crazy. and, you know, his ideological time had not come. and also i mentioned the absolutely atrocious campaign he ran. i found a memo, they fired the research staff from the rnc and i found a form letter they sent out to political science professors in every state, said, dear professor, please send us any books or pamphlets about the political situation in and it
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said, insert state here. so this was not a very professional operation. >> in addition to your calls, we're welcoming questions from the audience here at the goldwater institute. we'll get one up front. >> i'm a retired cpa, i lived in phoenix for 53 years. as a person who knew barry and worked with him in the community, i knew him to be a man of impeccable integrity and who was dedicated to the proposition of personal responsibility. and when he ran for president, it seemed to me, from my perspective that the pundits that you mentioned earlier went out of their way to print and broadcast atrocious, dishonest statements about him. there is a national magazine to this day that i don't take because of the things they said about barry goldwater that were outright untrue. my question is why did the national press, so many people, prominent at the national level,
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go out of their way to be so vindictive against a man who based upon what has already been said was going to lose. >> yeah, i would say a couple of things. first of all, a lot of his followers were very, very frightening. which, you know, you can charge that to barry goldwater or say it wasn't his fault. but he didn't like to distance himself from people who were devoted to him. another thing was you have to understand the context of the times. fascism, naziism was a living memory for just about every adult. and the idea of people getting together with such rage against liberals, and when barry goldwater gave a very famous speech at the 1960 convention in which he said, conservatives, let's grow up, we can take this party back, he said we need to defeat the democrats who are working for the destruction of this nation.
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so the passions were very high, and political passions of that intensity, of that magnitude, were greatly feared in an exaggerated way. and he was kind of caught up in that, i would say in an unfair way, but it had to do with the context of the belief that if people's darker angels were about to give reign within the american political system, we would not be able to control the consequences, and this is a time, of course, don't forget, when there's civil rights terrorism in places like mississippi. people were burning down churches, people were assassinating civil rights workers, and people were saying why is it a place like mississippi where all this stuff is going on was voting 87% for barry goldwater. >> of course, the 1964 civil rights debate and bill, a key process of that. we'll go to george joining us from manassas, virginia, welcome to our program and our look at barry goldwater.
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>> thank you very much. thank you for doing this show. first of all, my parents lived in texas and volunteered for barry goldwater because they firmly believed in the ideals and what the man said, but my question to y'all, was he more of a libertarian or more of a conservative, and there is a difference if you look at it. >> darcy olsen. >> boy, right in it there with that question. you know, i -- i think that barry goldwater -- i mean, his book was called "the conscience of a conservative." he felt he was a conservative. he was a true conservative who understood that this nation was founded on the concept of constitutionally limited government, and that was true in all spheres of life, that you couldn't pick and choose where you would have government involvement.
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if it wasn't in the constitution, then it wasn't constitutional and, therefore, the government shouldn't be involved. today, there are a lot of modern conservatives that share those beliefs as well and see that coming up with folks in the tea party movement. and different candidates for president. i'm not going to define him as a libertarian or conservative. he used the term conservative, and i think that what he stood for was as close to what the founding fathers stood for, as any prominent person in our history. >> in this book "before the storm," what personality came through from barry goldwater? what did you learn about who he was as a person? >> i think what people have been saying. he was a guy who shot from the hip and didn't care what people thought of him and much to his detriment often. but again, people talk about him
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as an honorable man, and i think he was an honorable man. by the same token, i think ideologically, he could be very naive. i mentioned the civil rights terrorism that was going on in mississippi, the fact that people were being shot in cold blood for doing things like helping people register to vote. he never denounced that. he said his appeal to the south, i'm not going to as an arizonian tell people in mississippi what they should do. when civil rights are being violated, i think there is a kind of which side are you on question. so i think his heart was in the right place and he believed he was doing the right thing, but i think he had a certain myopia when it came to a real morale ordeal that he kind of avoided at that time. >> we have put together -- go ahead. >> i want to talk about the libertarian, capital "l," small
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"l," conservative, different things. you have to look at goldwater and that subject in the concept of his time. i wouldn't be surprised if, during his life and certainly while he was in the senate, he probably never heard the word libertarian. that wasn't even a word that was even heard of at the time. he was, i call him a small "l" libertarian, because he basically believed in, you know, freedom of choice as he came later in his career after politics, he was outspoken in favor of gay rights, of women's right to choose of all sorts of things like that. and some of my friends would say, oh, barry got senile and changed and became a big liberal in the end, he changed. he didn't change. his philosophy was always it's up to you as an individual to have the right to decide. whether it was about gay rights,
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abortion rights, labor unions, that's the whole thing from the '50s where he was totally misunderstood, i might note. he was a small "l" libertarian. today we have all sorts of politicians and presidential hopefuls talking about libertarian this, libertarian that. you have to keep it in the concept of the time. >> let me jump in. you've done a great job of setting up this next piece. to give you a sense of the personality and the style of barry goldwater. >> he talked so fast, you know. i said, you know, hubert sitting there trying to listen to you reminds me of trying to read "playboy" magazine with my wife turning the pages. [ laughter ] i happen to think i'm in a very tough race. i'm spending the money i legally can. that's the answer. that's a stupid question, if you don't mind me saying so.
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>> and you say -- you say redirect it. >> i never said that airplane wouldn't fly. >> you said you wouldn't fly it yourself. >> i flew it. >> you said you wouldn't. >> i flew it. ♪ dream [ laughter ] >> people all over the country keep talking about legalizing gambling, and i thought we already had it. it's called election day. [ cheers and applause ] i now realize what it takes to become the president. apparently, it helps to have a brother that sits at a gas station drinking beer all day. [ laughter ] when i was competing in that razor-thin election in 1964, i should have told everyone that dean was my brother.
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>> rick perlstein, when you look back and you wanted to jump in earlier to bill mccune's point. >> he in that 1964 election pioneered what would later become social conservatism. he ended up going in a different direction personally. he gave a very sharp speech about sort of the moral decay of the nation. it was actually at the mormon tabernacle in salt lake city, but he also towards the end of his life, used some of that salty language that we need to censor when he referred to the christian right. jerry falwell said in 1981 that all good christians should be very concerned about sandra day o'connor, and if i may, he said all good christians should kick jerry falwell in the ass. >> we'll go to paul in illinois. thanks for waiting.
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>> thank you. >> go ahead, paul. >> hi, i was just curious to know what your panel thinks. had goldwater got elected in '64, how would he have handled vietnam differently than lyndon johnson did? would he have escalated the war as lbj did, or would he have seen that conflict more as a civil war between the north and south vietnamese? >> thanks for the question. >> well, whether he would have been successful or not, i don't know, but you know, i was of that generation. vietnam war under lyndon johnson was gradualism, oh, we're going to tighten the screw and eventually they are going to give up. yeah, right. i think if barry had been president, and again, i'm not saying it would have been a good move or bad move, i'm not sure, but i think he would have come
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in with what later became the colin powell doctrine. in my documentary, he even says -- he says if you're going to go to war, you have to go to war with the attitude you're going to win it in the next hour. that's his attitude. then he said, we lost the war in vietnam for one reason, the politicians tried to run the war and politicians don't know their ass from a hot rock about running a war. that was his quote. and i think he would have taken a far more aggressive approach to it, as compared to johnson's gradualism, which dragged out almost as long as our current wars. >> let me take his point and ask it one step further. what sort of a president would he have been, darcy olsen? >> barry would have been something we don't see too often today. i think he would have been a very honest president. i think he would have been very
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candid, as he was his whole life. that was the way he campaigned. it was the way that he sat in office. it was how he was after office, and i think just -- i think that candor is something that people loved about barry goldwater and it's, you know, it's one of the reasons that so many people sought out barry goldwater even after he was in office and he was so well respected and liked by so many people because, you know, you knew with barry goldwater where you stood. he always put his principles first. he kind of, as rick was saying, had a tin ear sometimes to messaging and what people might think, and he put his principles before partisanship, party, politics. it's hard to say whether he would have been able to work with congress that way, but it's an exercise that i for one would have liked to have seen.
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>> we are in week ten of cspan3's "the contender" series. we're coming to you from the goldwater institute in phoenix, arizona. we have another audience here. we'll get another question right up front. >> thank you. kevin lane, prescott, arizona. i recall barry was interviewed in the '80s when russia had just gone into afghanistan and i think this underscores the wisdom and how pressing it was in many issues. his quote was, he had been in those hills and a right minded goat wouldn't wander into those hills. he had forecasted that russia would lose, and, obviously, you know, we're quite bogged down in afghanistan, so my question to the panel is maybe some other examples of his wisdom and prescience in his life as far as being ahead of his time. >> you're shaking your head. >> that's a great question and goes back to what kind of a president he would have been. one of the things we know he would have done differently, he would not have vastly expanded the welfare state in america.
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he was fighting against that. he said there were programs that were unconstitutional and needed to be repealed. he was unabashed about that. he did not agree with the levels of taxation we had then, let alone the levels of taxation we have now. he was against the progressive taxation put into place and has been more and more predominant. he said it should be minimal and fair per person. so if you give 10% i give 10%, rick gives 10%. not rick is the wealthy, so he's going to pay 90% and you're not going to pay anything. so those are some major differences. also, since that time, and certainly lyndon johnson worked on this as well, but this vast expansion of government into all these social arenas, including education, for which there is no constitutional authority. all of those things are things that barry goldwater would have fought hard against.
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>> rick perlstein, let's go back to where your book begins and talk about his influence here in arizona as he tried to build the republican party in the late 1940s and early 1950s. >> it's a fascinating story. it was a democratic state. when he ran for the senate, i believe, in 1952, i think there were 92 members of the lower house, might have been 96, and two were democratic. he came from a republican family. his mom was a midwesterner, she was a republican. more and more republicans came after world war ii for the climate and also for the new defense industries that were opening up in arizona. >> before he entered politics, he did what? >> he was an executive at the family department store. he was, actually, interestingly enough, we talk about him being a straight-shooting guy, he was actually the marketing guy for the department store. but he -- a guy named eugene pulliam moved to phoenix, and he
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was a newspaper publisher, dan quayle's father-in-law, and he wanted to help build a republican party and non-partisan city government to clean up a corrupt town. it was called sin city. so barry goldwater was involved in both, and in 1950, he was the campaign manager for a guy named howard pyle who ran for governor, and he flew howard pyle around the state in his plane, people would say, wow, which one's the candidate? but here's the thing, when he ran for senate, he decided he would run for senate by building a republican party, so he recruited for people every office in the state. one quick point. someone said why should you -- why are you qualified to run for senate in arizona, this was his answer, he said i can call 10,000 people in this state by their first name. he built the republican party in arizona. >> i'm going to call on you for just a moment, because you remember going to the goldwater
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department store. >> correct. when i first came to arizona in 1970, i worked for the old adams hotel, which was in downtown, and i bought a bathing suit at the goldwater department store on central avenue. and at the time, you talk about him being in marketing, they gave you, with every purchase, a little vile of water that had gold flakes in it, and everybody that had flown in from texas to buy that hotel, all when i went back to the hotel, all ran down and bought a bathing suit so they could get a vile of water with gold flakes in it, so he was good at marketing. >> i just want to comment about the '52 election. barry -- barry ran against ernest mcfarland, who was the majority leader of the united states senate at the time. barry supported mcfarland in earlier elections, raised money for him and all that.
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barry was upset with harry truman, which is ironic today, because what former president was barry most like? harry truman actually, you know, give him hell harry, actually. but barry told me many times, he said i ran for president. i knew i didn't have a chance in hell in winning, but even in the senate, he didn't think he had a chance of winning that 1952 senate race at all, so maybe he was building a republican party, he had been on the city council for two years and sort of decided to run against harry truman, in most senses, in '52, but he didn't. he was not some big political organizer that said let's build a republican party. it was sort of natural. it wasn't like he had some big plan to do that. he was just running thinking he
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didn't have a chance in hell of winning. >> well, we came across some early film of senator barry goldwater in 1952 after he was elected to the senate but before coming to washington, d.c. let's look. >> speaking of washington, sir, where of course, you're going. there was a great deal of talk on the part of the republicans doing the campaign about communism in washington and the mess in washington. do you anticipate finding anything like that when you take your seat in the senate? >> well, i don't know. i can't say. i think that there must be communism in washington, but i would hate to stand up and say there is without knowing more about it. >> let me say it this way, is there any fear or concern about communism or the so-called mess in washington among the people that voted for you in arizona? >> i think the fear of communism is one of the underlying reasons of the success of the republican party all across the country. >> now that the republican party
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is in, do you think there will be any letting down of this concern, any complacency? >> i think it's already happened. i'm amazed to walk around new york to find in my own communities well generalized elected, the new deal's been thrown out, we can go back to our work the same as usual, and as always happens in politics, the man who benefits the most from good government goes on with the least interest in it. that's the average citizen. >> are you going to do anything to point out the need for continuing concern in the situation in washington? >> i'll never be quiet about it. >> from 1952, never be quiet, of course, that became his mantra as senator. and kennedy, 1964. who helped him win the '52 race? >> he had a very, very slick operator for a campaign manager, a name familiar to arizonians,
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steven shadag, and he wasn't necessarily the most savory guy. he once wrote a book called "how to win an election." in which he said i adopted the technique of mao tse tung to take over villages. they sent out 50,000 postcards hand signed by volunteers from barry. he said that, you know, if the -- if the situation is propitious, you can get millions of people to vote for someone who has the absolute opposite ideology they do. so he was a very tough campaign manager. >> we have a question here in the audience. please, introduce yourself and go ahead. >> good evening, my name is richard muser, i was 16 years -- 16 months old when we moved to arizona, so i claim to be a native. it's a pleasure to hear the information about senator goldwater from so many experts. the reason i'm here is because in the second grade, i met a gentleman named bill mccune, and we have been friends since then.
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in 1964, i was a lowly specialist fourth class in the army in georgia. i wasn't old enough to vote at that time because arizona was 21 and i was only 20. when i listened to the senator discuss using low-yield nuclear weapons in vietnam, it made sense to me, as a military person, and it made sense to a lot of my fellow soldiers at the time. the point that the johnson campaign exaggerated the impact of using huge hiroshima/nagasaki bombs was a total exaggeration. he was an air force man. he knew what low yield meant and what it would do, and my
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question is, what was wrong with the term "low yield," that i believe i only heard it once or twice. >> rick perlstein, you wrote about that in the book. >> i actually talked to one of the physicists at lawrence livermore laboratory who designed those weapons and he said it was absolutely insane to believe you could contain the explosions from those weapons. so i'm not so sure that's true. >> can i go? i want to comment, only because dick muser brought this up. he and i grew up in the same neighborhood on 25th drive north of thomas road. in about 1952,'53, '54, that period, my father would wake me and my brothers up at 4:00 in the morning on a couple of occasions. we would go up on to the roof of our house and sit facing north.
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my dad had his watch and tell us one minute, 30 seconds, and we would see nuclear atomic bombs explode at the test sites, above-ground nuclear bombs exploding in the test sites in nevada, which was, what, 300 miles away. four or five times i saw it. i'm one of the few people alive today that's seen a nuclear bomb explode. maybe some of you have, too. hopefully nobody else will ever again. this was sort of a ritual, we'd get up and watch the nuclear bombs going off in nevada. well the point is -- first off, why are we dropping nuclear bombs on nevada, i thought they were on our side, but realizing that whether it was 250 or 300 miles away to those test sites, thinking my god. it would light up, like summer flash lightning, if you know what that means, except the
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flash and the light would stay in the air longer than summer lightning, you know, and just -- wow, that's 300 miles away. think about that. that kind of thing is what contributes to the great fear of the soviet union and nuclear war. >> let me put a domestic issue on the table, rick perlstein, organized labor and the legislative record senator goldwater had in the 1950s. >> extremely important in barry goldwater's rise. of course, arizona, after the taft/hartley act became the first right to work state, the circle he was in, his friends, people like denison kitchel, he was the labor lawyer for the big mining company, so the idea that fighting labor power was essential to conservative politics was absolutely part of what barry goldwater was all about.
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and he became -- he basically rose to national prominence in the late '50s on two kind of wings. the first was, he gave a speech attacking dwight eisenhower for -- for a big budget, which he called squander bus spending. the silent song of socialism. the other was there was a big labor hearing in the late '50s run by senator mcclellan and it was meant to take on jimmy hoffa's corruption and barry goldwater kept interrupting saying i'd rather have jimmy hoffa stealing my money than my freedom. walter ruther was the head of the united auto workers who pioneered things like the automatic cost of living increase. he was fighting to make the operations of corporations much more transparent. he was the most politically aggressive labor leader in history, and one of the most successful. and by taking on someone like
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walter reuther, businessmen all over the country flocked to barry goldwater as their savior. these were the guys that ended up organizing the group, that again, under barry goldwater's nose, without him being involved at all, put together conscience of conservatism. first put him forward as a presidential candidate. >> let's get a quick call. >> can i halfway disagree with what he just said? >> you can all the way disagree with what i just said. >> my experience in interviewing him, he wasn't -- i'm convinced he wasn't against unions. bring back that small "l" libertarian things. he said many times in our shows, i think a man should be able to join a union or not join a union, it's their choice. he was most vociferous about corruption in the unions and
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didn't like the -- what do you call it, the closed shop. where you had to join the union in order to have a job. >> he liked weak unions. >> yeah, okay, that's your view. >> i'll build on what you're saying there. i think that's absolutely correct that -- >> two to one, rick. >> he believed that unions were an expression of human freedom if you joined them voluntarily. he believed wholeheartedly in freedom of association. he thought that was great if you wanted to join. what he didn't believe in is what unionism has become, compulsory, forced membership. that's something he vehemently opposed. you have a situation today where they are trying to take away the right to vote by secret ballot when you're forming a union. that was something that he opposed. there was the issue of -- what was his other big issue -- >> right to work. >> yeah, right to work, right, right. they were making membership compulsory and it was a condition of employment, which
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he said that is antithetical everything we believe in as americans so he fought for work to right laws in the state. but he didn't oppose the idea of associating unions. he opposed the idea of what unions have become, forcing people to do something against their will, completely contrary to what goldwater believed. >> marvin has been waiting next. we'll go to him next in los angeles. good evening. >> yes, thank you for your programming. i'm wondering if barry goldwater were alive today with his lifespan of points of view, could he get the nomination of the republican party? that's the first part of my question. and number two, based on the extreme right-wing state of some leaders in arizona politics, as in the election last tuesday where jerry lewis defeated a leader in the senate, how would barry goldwater have stood in the ideas of the current republican party in the state of
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arizona? thank you very much. >> thank you. so two points. first, rick perlstein, could barry goldwater get the nomination today? >> no, because he would have been vetoed by the christian right. i'm looking over some of these quotes, in 1981, can anyone look at the carnage in iran, bloodshed in northern ireland, or bombs bursting in lebanon and question injecting religion into the affairs of state. he believed very firmly by the end of his political career that people who enter politics from a religious motivation are so impassioned and so impervious to compromise that it made the give and take necessary for politics impossible, which is kind of ironic, because in 1964, you know, extremism and defensive liberty is no vice, no virtue, that was what he was accused of at the time, but he really did seem to come to an extremely firm and impassioned notion.
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he didn't want pat robertson to run for president in 1988. he thought that was a violation of the separation of chump and state. >> darcy olsen, let me begin with the first sentence and first chapter. barry goldwater said, "i had been much concerned that so many people today feel compelled to apologize for conservative instincts. conservative," to this day remains the best statement of what it means to be a conservative in this country. it is -- he is so clear, and i think earlier on you had used the word "simple," and i think, for me, i was thinking principled. that's all it was. >> not simplicity. >> not simpleton or simplistic, but it was clean and clear and those principles are beautifully outlined in that book. it's just as good of a read today as it was back in the day.
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>> as an author and writer, i have to give credit to the guy who actually wrote the book. barry goldwater might have read it, but he definitely wasn't involved in the production of the book, which is a fascinating story i tell in my book, "before the storm". >> let's go the 1960 convention. i'll come back to you, i promise, but as he spoke to the delegates at the republican convention, which nominated vice president richard nixon. >> as an american who loves this republic and as a member of the senate, i am committed to the republican philosophy and to the republican candidates. it is my belief the people of this land will return a republican administration to office in 1960, and i shall work to that end. >> that, again, is mrs. goldwater. >> but i might suggest, in all seriousness, that you and i will not have discharged our full
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responsibility unless we also return an effective republican congress. i would not imply that our party is a repository of all virtue, that only republicans can see the truth, that only republicans serve noble motives, but i must insist, those in control of the democrat party, through their platform, have announced their total commitment to what i regard as a lopsided concept of man, which puts americans in a shameful condition of everlasting dependence on the state. [ cheers and applause ] i have visited the people in the cities and towns and states of our nation, and i can tell you that the men and women of
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america face the future with courage. they are eager to accept their responsibilities. they are determined to work and sacrifice to defend our freedom. it's our task, as delegates to this 1960 republican convention, to make certain the american voter is provided with an opportunity to make a meaningful choice between the two philosophies competing today for acceptance in our world. the philosophy of the stomach or the philosophy of the whole man. >> bill mccune, you watched barry goldwater in 1960, how did that set the stage for his bid in '64? >> well, it fed red meat to the conservative movement, basically. he ended his speech saying conservatives, grow up, let's get to work, you know, that's, i think, the last line of his whole speech there.
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he was, not again, he wasn't -- who's that republican guy who ran campaigns the last few years? >> karl rove? >> yeah, he wasn't a rove at all, but he had feelings, let's get to work, let's take this back, let's do something for a conservative movement, as it were. he had no use for nixon, especially later, you know, and probably no use for rockefeller other than they were probably friendly, but ideologically, no use for rockefeller, so he was saying get to work, let's do this. >> ed in morristown, new jersey, good evening. >> wrote my senior thesis on the goldwater presidential campaign and had a good fortune of interviewing the author, theodore white, at his home in manhattan, he had vivid memories
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of the weeks he spend on the campaign trail with goldwater in preparation of the 1964 installment in his famous series, "the make being of the president." white told me he'd come away from the tour with great admiration for goldwater and contempt for the liberal media he was a part of and thought was doing so much to demonize goldwater and distort the case goldwater was trying to present to the people. white told me goldwater had tried earnestly to lecture the people about what the proper limits of federal involvements in race relations should be, especially in the so-called public accommodations. white also said that when goldwater eventually came to fear that discussing civil rights issues further on the campaign trail might worsen racial tensions, he met with president johnson and the two agreed to take those issues out of their campaigns.
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white said the decision cost goldwater a lot of votes among working class whites and was one of the most selfless acts white had seen a politician engage in. one last thing, white told me how dismayed he'd been after getting back to new york. he said his liberal media friends received him as though he was a jew just released from a nazi camp. white said he astonished them by insisting what a worthy candidate goldstein was. i thought you'd want to know. >> thank you for the call. sharing your story, darcy olsen? >> you know, it's really interesting on the civil rights issue. i think that barry did get a bum rap from the media and continues to do so today when you hear people talk about his civil rights record and they'll talk about how he didn't vote for the 1964 act, he didn't speak out enough, so really he must not have had that in his heart. that couldn't have been further from the truth about who barry was.
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barry, you know, in the goldwater department store, they had integrated that store long before anybody else had done that. he really did have a color-blind heart. anybody you meet will tell you that. anybody who met barry would tell you that. and one of the greatest stories that i love that relates to this, and we don't know if it's true or not, i was talking to his son, barry jr., i don't know if it's apocryphal or true, but the story goes he went to a fancy golf course in bel air and wanted to play a round of golf. they said barry goldwater, you can't play here, because you're jewish, and he responded by saying, you know, i'm only half jewish, do you think i can play nine holes? [ laughter ] >> let me say something about civil rights real quick, because i was there. barry goldwater and harry rosenzweig, as city council members, integrated the airport
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in phoenix, which had been segregated before. after world war ii, the department of defense asked barry goldwater to organize the arizona air national guard, which hadn't existed before. he said, i'll do it on one condition, it's racially integrated, and they gave in and said fine. in the senate, he voted for civil rights legislation consistently through the '50s and into the early '60s. the only one he voted against was the final one, and he voted against it for one reason, a thing in there called the mrs. murphy law, which would have said that if mrs. murphy wants to rent her spare bedroom out, you know, she couldn't discriminate. he has a long history of pro civil rights activity. >> let me ask you about the relationship between barry goldwater and john kennedy. they both came to the senate together in 1952.
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>> yes, and they had affection for each other. in fact, when barry goldwater was kind of rising as a national star in the early '60s, he was very much compared to kennedy, also this handsome, charismatic guy. there's a very famous story they talked about campaigning together, riding the same campaign trail -- campaign plane, and debating each other lincoln and douglas style. this is often taken as a testament of this more civil time. i actually suspect that john f. kennedy was thinking kind of cynically and thought if i could get this guy on a platform and force him to kind of mouth his, what were then, very unpopular views, i can wipe the floor with them, so i'm not sure it was that magnanimous act on kennedy's part. >> history changed following the assassination of president kennedy. senator barry goldwater said this. >> well, he was a very decent fellow. he was a gentleman.
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he's the kind of antagonist that i've always enjoyed. he would fight like a wildcat for his points and his principles, but there was never anything personal about it. i imagine that i've debated with the president more on the floor of the senate than any other man, and it never affected our friendship. we had some rather violent arguments in sessions of committee and never affected our friendship. that's the kind of a man that you respect. that's the kind of a man you like to work with in politics. >> and so after the assassination and before he entered the race in '64, how ambivalent was he about running? >> he was ambivalent, but leaning towards running. and one of the reasons he was so ambivalent after the assassination was because he
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knew that the public would be so longing for stability and that the idea of having three presidents in the space of one year would just be too much for people to bear. >> a question here in the room. >> ray miller from phoenix. i had the good fortune to be involved in the formation of the goldwater institute, and as a result of that, i want to make a comment and a question. one of senator goldwater's unique features was he never sought publicity. that made him unusual for a politician. when we were trying to form the organization, even with the persuasion of senator kyle, congressman shady, representative jim scully and others, he was still reluctant, and after we got going, we wanted to have an award in his name and he was reluctant again to step forward and have the award named after him. he was unusual in so many ways. my question is, is there anybody to compare him with? i mean, we think of ronald reagan, maybe somebody like bob taft. is there anybody else we can compare barry goldwater to?
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>> who would like to take that one? >> not alive today. >> well, i would say -- i would say there are two people. ron paul and ronald reagan. i think he compares to ron paul in that ron paul is a very straight-forward speaker who doesn't really care what the press thinks, but he just speaks from his heart about his ideas. it is his downfall, it was part barry's downfall. but also reagan-like in that the core of his ideas that barry ran on, reagan later implemented, but he just had -- reagan had a smoother style. he was mr. hollywood. he, not only did he not have a tin ear, but he had that wonderful smile and people loved him and he made people laugh. but he ran, basically, on the same ideas that goldwater did and brought over, you know, won in a landslide. so sometimes when rick says that
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people didn't like barry's ideas or weren't ready for them. i don't really think that is a very fair assessment. i think the assassination played the key role at that time. i think the poor messaging that barry did was a factor, but i don't think it was the ideas. i think it was the timing and the way that the ideas were sold. >> can i speak to a favorite politician who i think is in this mold, the liberal congresswoman from illinois, jan schakowsky is just as principled as barry goldwater. >> bruce is joining us from murrieta, california, welcome to "the contenders" program here in phoenix. >> thanks for this program. it's great. i'm a liberal who only voted for one republican in my life, and that was barry goldwater. i guess my attitude at the time, kennedy was such a young, new generation, articulate and johnson seemed to be so much the old politics.
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two things i wanted to mention, haven't heard here, a choice, not an echo, was i thought one of his big themes, and then the other point i wanted to make, there was a book called "none there called a treason" that came out about the same time, and this was basically john birch society. we had the birchers then and have the birthers now, but barry never separated himself from that group. and the last point i wanted to make, the night before the election, reagan came on to boost goldwater's candidacy and a lot of the comment afterward was maybe we got the wrong man. >> well, thanks for the call. we're going to talk about ronald reagan in about 20 minutes and show you just a portion of what he spoke toward the end of the '64 campaign. but to the caller's first point, your thoughts?
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>> yeah, this was a book arguing every setback america every had in domestic or foreign policy was because there was secret communists infiltrating every part of the government. 20 million copies of this book was circulated. rich businessmen would buy thousands and thousands of copies and hand them out everywhere. he's right, barry goldwater didn't denounce this stuff. he would rationalize it by saying people know that there's something wrong out there, and this is pushing in the right direction and maybe i disagree with it, but he never denounced the john birch society. he said some of my best friends in phoenix are part of it, and i think that was one of his achilles heel. he really did -- i think he humored extremists. >> he's been quoted so often, and you used the quote earlier, "extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice." of course, that came from the
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1964 republican convention from the cow palace in san francisco. we want to put that in context of what he said before and afterwards, so here is barry goldwater accepting the republican nomination. >> anyone who joins us in all sincerity, we welcome. those -- [ applause ] those who do not care for our cause, we don't expect to enter our ranks in any case. [ applause ] and let our republicanism so focused and so dedicated not be made fuzzy and futile by unthinking and stupid labels. [ applause ]
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by the beauty of the very system republicans are pledged to restore and revitalize, the beauty of this federal system of ours is in its reconciliation of diversity with unity. we must not see malice in honest differences of opinion and no matter how great so long as they are not inconsistent with the pledges we have given to each other in and through our constitution. our republican cause. >> rick perlstein, how did that speech resonate among the republican electorate and the voters at large?
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>> well, richard nixon wrote in his memoires actually at that very moment when he heard him say that, he literally felt sick to his stomach. and the reason for that was they had an incredibly divisive convention and barry goldwater won the most votes by far because they had organized it so well. his -- his grass roots insurgency. but many people in the party felt like they had stolen the party, that moderation -- that the republican party was a moderate party and a conservative won by hook and by crook. and what you were supposed to do, your role in the acceptance speech was to bind the wounds together of a divisive campaign so people could unite and go forward. instead he seemed to be pushing in people's faces his acceptance of this extremism which meant things like the john burk society. it meant like the southern segregationists who were changing their democrat affiliation to republican
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affiliation. so the public itself also in the context of this kennedy assassination in which the idea that the bottom had dropped out of america's civility and people longing so much for normalcy, it really just seemed like something, once again, that was frightening, that was strange, that was perverse and his -- his numbers went way down. and by the way, a week after that there was a terrible riot in harlem. so it just increased people's sense that somehow barry goldwater was associated with his very frightening forces in american life. and when people were rioting in harlem, people were saying things like, well, they're shooting black people. this goldwater stuff is happening. so it just shows the paranoia, unfairly surley that surrounded barry goldwater in this
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atmosphere in which people really felt that the springs were being loosed in america's consensus. >> matthew is joining us miami, florida. good evening and welcome to the program. >> caller: thank you for taking my call. in 1986, congress passed a scholarship named after barry goldwater. and i don't know if the irony ever escaped them based on what i heard in the panel about barry goldwater's ideology that a federal scholarship would go to sick students. and i don't know if this is for the panel but if they don't know too much about this scholarship i wonder if there's a story about goldwater filibustering his own scholarship. but if that's not the case, his comments his views about public education and his feelings about the congress awarding him this scholarship. >> thank you, matthew.
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darcy olsen. >> you know, i had not heard that, and that is something that i would like to know more about. it would be ironic if there is it is. and if it is true, it is ironic. he looked at the constitution. he didn't see any roll in there given to the federal government to be involved in education and he spoke out about against federal involvement in education. and he said, you know, i don't want the federal government to educate my children. i don't want the state government to educate my children. i want to educate my children. and i think if we could bring this up to modern times, what's so interesting and i think a great tribute to barry goldwater is arizona is one of the leading states to offering choices to parents, school choice so people are not forced to go into government schools but can use some of their tax money and take that to private schools and use online constituters and things like that. i think barry would have loved that and been crazy about that because this is something he loved. at bottom he believed in freedom. and nothing is more fundamental than being able to direct how your children are educated.
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so certainly i would love -- do you know if the scholarship part is true? have you heard that. >> i have heard something or i remember just after the senator died it was something about congress passed something in science and technology in his name. i can't remember what it was, whether it was a scholarship thing or -- it's vague in my mind. >> you cannot talk about barry goldwater, the 1964 campaign without bringing up the ad you mentioned before. it aired once on september 7th, 1964, labor day monday. it aired on nbc. cbs and abc used it as subsequent stories and infamously known as the daisy ad. >> one, two, three, four, five, seven, six, six, eight, nine, nine.
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>> nine, eight, seven, six, five, four, three, two, one. these are the stakes, to make a world in which all of god's children can live are to go into the dark. we must either love each other, or we must die. >> vote for president johnson on november 3rd. the stakes are too high for you to stay home. >> 50 years later they are still talking about this ad. why? >> well, it was devastating at the time. >> but he'd never mentioned barry goldwater's name. >> he didn't need to. keep in mind the whole campaign up to that point focused, the
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jobs of the democratic campaign focused on the word, extremist, extremist, extremist. that's over and over again. and this was just another little piece of barry goldwater is an extremist. he's going to get us into nuclear wars. but i want to tell you something about that ad. that ad was written and designed by -- what's his name? >> tony schwartz. >> bill moyers. >> that's not true. that's absurd. >> go ahead. >> no, no, no. let me finish. let me finish. barry goldwater in my show is on camera, and he said, yeah, bill moyers was behind that, okay. and he said i tried later, years later afterwards, to talk to bill moyers about it because barry thought it was pretty rotten deal. and i tried to talk to bill moyers and bill moyers never returned my phone call. years went by. barry passed away. susan, his second wife, told me
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after -- later. she said bill moyers was in town for something not related to politics and she had occasion to talk to him, and bill moyers said to susan. this is susan saying this. she said bill moyers said, yeah, question, it was a shame. i tried to get a hold of barry to talk to him about that a lot of times but we could just never meet up, which susan was implying that was baloney. >> well, i mean, i can sate categorically having read through memos where advertisements were created in 1964 that bill moyers has nothing to do with creating that ad. >> he was white house secretary at that time. >> he was involved in the campaign. he wrote memos about the ad and he was involved in the media strategy, but the idea he created the ad is a sole schism. >> question here. >> ron from arizona depending on the season. mr. perlstein, the subtitle for
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your book is the unmaking of a consensus, and i'm interested in what makes something a "the unm consensus, and i'm interested in what makes something a ", and i in what makes something a consensus. what was it that was unmade and did he make a new one? >> excellent question. i think in a sense the word consensus would have to appear in quotation marks. that was a myth that after world war ii, certainly since the eisenhower administration, accepting the new deal as a basic template eisenhower saying that anyone who fiddled with social security would, you know, never live to another political day, him expanding the welfare state in certain ways. this idea that, you know, if i might even sort of read just a classic statement of how the american consensus was thought of at the time. the dean of rutgers wrote in the magazine "partisan review" in america there are no basic disagreements between intellectuals, bankers, trade unionists, artists, big businessman, beatniks and
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politicians, to name a few, or between the economic classes. there are no real critics, no real ideas, no fundamental differences of opinion. the idea that the western world, not just america, had converged on the idea of a welfare state as the way to organize the world was just seen as permanent, and what is so fascinating to me and why i call the book before the storm is almost immediately the 1960s give lie to that notion. americas are at each other's throats. we're debating over the role of the state in the most fundamental ways. so that was the american consensus. in 1964 is when we begin to see these fishers come apart and barry goldwater is an absolutely central figure in that. >> if you could, the issue of civil rights in the 1964 vote, barry goldwater voted against it and it became one of the issues of that campaign. >> yes. now, a couple very fascinating points about that.
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we talk about the lyndon johnson television commercials. they had a bunch of television commercials in the can boasting about that bill. they did not run those because the idea of a backlash against civil rights was already present. and in california -- and in the book i publish a headline in "the new york times," what backlash does not develop. so people were terrified maybe people would vote for barry goldwater because they were so terrified of blacks having civil rights. in california on the same day that lyndon johnson won by a million votes, there was another vote for a referendum and that was on open housing. and by one million votes californians voted to reject the idea of open housing, to reject a law that said you cannot discriminate on the base of race to whom you rent your home. so the idea of a backlash
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against civil rights was latent at the time and became the most explosive issue in american politics in the decades to come. >> so if you look at what happened in 1952 when dwight eisenhower won, but you look at the south and the impact the civil rights vote had for democrats in 1964, what is the difference? >> well, of course, no -- no one in the south voted for the republican party because that was the party of the carpet backers. that was the party if you voted for the republicans and they got a toe hold, they would, you know, monopolize the black vote and there were all these panics about -- we've all seen gone with the wind, right? and the shift began in 1964. five southern states voted for goldwater. 87% of mississippi voted for goldwater. when lyndon johnson signed the civil rights bill he said i'm signing away the south for the democratic party for a generation.
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so that was one of the most profound hinges in the electoral alignment of the united states. the south now is a primarily republican region, and that's because conservatives led by barry goldwater decided to retreat from the idea of the federal government advancing civil rights for african-americans. >> two years after ge basically ended the program, the ge theater that robert gregman was hosting two years before he became governor of california he was involved in this campaign, and we have just a portion of the speech he delivered. it's titled, "a time for choosing" late in the campaign as ronald reagan talked about the virtues of barry goldwater. >> but i think it's time we ask ourselves if we still know the freedoms that were intended for us by the founding fathers. not too long ago two friends of mine were talking to a cuban
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refugee, a businessman escaped from catastro. in the midst of his story, my friend turned to him and said we don't know how lucky we are. and the cuban said how lucky you are? i had someplace to escape to. in that sentence, he told us the entire story. if we lose freedom here, there is no place to escape to. this idea that government is beholden to the people, that it has no other source of power beside the sovereign power is the newest and unique idea in all the history of man's relation to man. you and i have a ran day view with destiny. we'll preserve for our children the best hope on man or sentence them to take a step into darkness. we will keep in mind that barry goldwater has faith in us. he has faith that you and i have the ability and the dignity and the right to make our own decisions and determine our own destiny. thank you very much.
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>> from october 22nd, 1964, what's the history behind that speech? why did he deliver it? >> well, i don't know where he delivered it. reagan you mean? >> why did he deliver it? >> here's why. first off, i don't know who actually drafted the speech. he probably knows. but that's okay. that's okay. barry himself -- i have to get a little background here. barry himself was a great extemporaneous speaker. dramatic. he was wonderful. but he didn't like prepared written speeches, okay? somebody wrote that speech for barry and submitted it to him and my source on this is both bob goldwater and john shad dick and some other historians. wrote it and gave it to barry. barry read it and said this is a great speech but i'm not good at giving speeches. ronny reagan can do this speech a lot better and they sent it over to ronald region to deliver
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it on tv or wherever it was and reagan did it and somebody said that was the beginning of reagan ending up as president, which was that speech which was written for barry. >> which also led a number of california executives to coach him into running for governor in 1966. >> yeah. that was -- it's a little different. he had given a similar speech through the early '60s. and the people who had been in charge of basically handling the money for goldwater's television account were so fed up with the terrible tv commercials, they basically said unless you let us spend it the whole way, we are going to spend it the way we want to. we are basically going to sequester this money. so they kind of played hardball and that's how they got ronald reagan on the air. and after that he gave that speech, telegrams poured into the campaign and money poured into the campaign and people
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started talking about ronald reagan as a curatorial possibility and david froeder said it was the best political debut he had heard of since the cross of gold speech of william jennings brian in 1986. >> just one very quick side note. the relationship in 1964 between barry goldwater and reagan, was it close or an acquaintance? >> ronald reagan vacationed in arizona. his father-in-law, loyal davis, was a wealthy chicago physician who knew the goldwaters and there is a whole fascinating soap opera i write about in my book about how the people around barry goldwater were running his campaign, what they called the arizona mafia, didn't want ronald reagan to give this speech. so it is a little different. because he had said things about social security that ronald -- that goldwater had gotten in trouble for earlier in the year. and basically ronald reagan said
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to goldwater, why don't you listen to it and if you object to it, we don't have to run it. and goldwater heard it. he said, "this is great. i don't see what the fuss is about." and the rest is history. >> we'll go to dan next joining us from cambridge city, indiana. good evening. >> good evening, sir. you pretty much answered my question. i was wondering what mr. goldwater thought of the way reagan gave the speech that night and also their -- mr. goldwater and mr. reagan and william f. buckley, did they ever have any difference of opinion as far as conservatism or they were pretty much in accord? and with that, i thank you for taking my question. >> thank you. >> william f. buckley actually was shut out of the goldwater campaign late in 1963 by a kind of powerplay by a fellow by the
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name of bill baroody, who was the head of the american enterprise institute. it was power politics. he leaked a story that bill buckley was trying to tame over the campaign. william f. buckley said he didn't think that barry goldwater would make a good president. he wasn't ready to be president that he wasn't smart enough to be president, that -- now, ronald reagan's relationship to william f. buckley is fascinating and complicated. they were at logger heads on a couple of major issues in the history of conservatism, for example, the panama canal. they had a famous debate in which william f. buckley argued that the panama canal was a good thing. ronald reagan had basically run his 1976 campaign on the idea it was a bad thing. so these are these kind of personality clashes that any movement will have. >> and can i just recommend a great book for this questioner? william f. buckley, his last book published after he passed
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is called "flying high" and a book about barry goldwater. it is a wonderful book. so if -- if that is your interest, i strongly recommend it. >> along with before the storm, right? we'll get a question here. go ahead. >> i actually have two quick questions i want the panel to address. first i wonder by engaging over the issue of vietnam in 1964 barry goldwater could have perhaps forced lyndon johnson to define victory in vietnam and articulate some sort of exit strategy there and hasten that war's conclusion. my second -- >> let's get that one first. we'll follow up on your second one. >> i'm not sure that -- there were forces trying to persuade lyndon johnson to do lots of things about vietnam and fun of them -- none of them prevailed. i'm not sure that -- that he could have had much influence on lyndon. i don't know. i'm not an expert on that. we have some vietnam veterans in the crowd here i know. maybe they'd know. but i don't know. >> your second point. >> my second point was we've
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heard a lot about barry's consistency. in the 1996 election, he endorsed bill clinton for president. i'd love it if the panel could speak to the motivations behind that endorsement. >> he was the guy who could bear grudges, and bob dole had around a lot in politics and i wouldn't be surprised if bob dole had angered him somewhere along the way. i don't know the back story behind it. i'd love to know. >> he also endorsed a woman named karen english for a congressional seat in arizona, democrat and she won and served one term. but -- >> yeah, along those lines. when you ask about his consistency, one of my favorite stories is about that. he endorsed someone who he believed was a fiscal conservative but who was a democrat over the republican who he thought was a big spender. and, so, the republican party
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chairman in arizona, this is how the story goes, called him up and said, barry, you're speaking out too much and you need to get in line and if you don't, you know if you don't stop endorsing this democrat, we are going to take your name off of the republican party headquarters. >> that's right. >> and barry said to him, if you republicans don't remember the principals that we stand for, i'm going to make you take my name off that billboard. >> over the years, especially as he was in retirement, a number of public figures, democrats and republicans you talk about bob dole or bill clinton would come out here to meet with barry goldwater. why? >> they admired him. he was one of a kind, a person of integrity. they may not agree with him on this, that or the other issue, but he was one of a kind. you keep in mind, when barry died, bill clinton, the democratic president, had the flag of the united states
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lowered to half-staff a day the day of goldwater's funeral of the opposite party. that never happened before and probably will never happen again. >> one point about clinton, hillary clinton being a goldwater girl. >> he had a very fascinating rehabilitation kind of in the '70s. there was an article in "the new york times" magazine in april of 1974. in 1964 he was bela lugosi, but the liberals loved barry goldwater now. and what it was about was about how, you know, it reviewed a lot of the unfairness that we have been talking about and the reconsideration centered around the fact that he was being so forthright in excoriating richard nixon for his lies. >> we'll go to judy next in san francisco. welcome to the program. >> thank you so much. i was raised in phoenix, and my family worshipped goldwater. we were active in his campaign.
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and later my brother became a libertarian and said there would never need to be a libertarian party if goldwater had just become president. and i was then later a '92 delegate to the republican convention, and there was going to be a big fight that year, a platform fight over putting abortion in the platform. well, a week before the convention, barry made a statement to the press about there was no blankety-blank-blank way that that should be in the platform. well, when i got to the convention a week later, there were all these paraphernalia tables. and here was this big button, big blue button that said "barry's right". i bought that. i wore it the entire week. and to this day, this is one of my most prized possessions because barry is still right. >> thank you for the call. darcy olsen. >> you know, that -- that is --
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i think that is a difficult issue, and i think a lot of people like to use that to call -- and i'm not saying you're calling into this, but to position barry as a libertarian. they know about 2% of the public considered themselves libertarian and they try to marginalize him that way. but the truth is that a lot of conservatives believed that the federal government should not have any role in the question of whether or not abortion, for instance, is a crime. william f. buckley is a pretty strong conservative. i don't think anybody would quibble with that. he also believed that was not the role of the federal government. but again, you know, marketing comes into play here, right? i mean, the way people took what barry said was not the way they took what william f. buckley said, but essentially they were saying the same thing. >> rick perlstein, you can't talk about barry goldwater -- first of all, we should point out he left the senate in 1964
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because his term expired. he came back in 1968 and he had a very important role in august of 1974 as he met with richard nixon two days before his resignation. what's the story? >> well, he was the guy who led a delegation of republicans. it was very simple, actually. you know, impeachment is a political process. he said that you do not have the votes in the senate to win at trial. and, therefore, if you don't want to be the first president to be thrown out on your ear by the senate, you ought to resign. and nixon took his advice and richard nixon resigned on august 9th, 1974. >> the relationship between the two? >> testy. barry goldwater, as i mentioned in this article about the liberals lionizing him consistently throughout
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watergate would prod richard nixon to tell the truth. he said this is beginning to smell like teapot dome. there was a very famous show down between ronald -- between barry goldwater and richard nixon at the 1960 republican convention, one of the most important set pieces in conservative history in which nelson rockefeller threatened a floor fight unless he could dictate the terms of the republican platform. and forced richard nixon to fly to new york to negotiate the terms of the platform. it was announced in chicago where the convention was as a fait accompli and barry goldwater was so mad he gave this vituperative, angry speech calling it the munich of the republican party. and that was when people started demonstrating for barry goldwater at that convention to usurp the nomination from
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richard nixon. so ever since that point, i don't think he ever really trusted -- >> i'm sorry. go ahead. >> richard nixon. >> jumping ahead to watergate is of course what brought on the resignation. barry told me and in my show, that bob goldwater reiterates after barry was dead. he said the reason why barry was so angry at nixon leading up to the resignation was because, quote, nixon was a gd liar lying about watergate. >> liar. it was in the report. >> bob goldwater talks about this in some length in the documentary. that from -- from childhood he said, if we did something wrong and we told the truth, we didn't get punished. if we lied, we got punished. and there was this very strong thing on the part of barry and bob and the others about lying. and he was so angry at nixon for lying through the watergate period that that's why he was so angry.
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>> edward is joining us in new orleans. go ahead, please. >> this is ed clancy in new orleans. in 1968 i was covering the republican convention in miami, and i was able to meet, of course, barry goldwater, who was there, and he was extremely nice. he struck me as totally different from his national image. and i also discovered ronald reagan in the back of the news section of the auditorium being interviewed in the booth by nbc. i was the only one to see him there. and, of course, reagan was making noises about running for president at that convention. and so i stood outside while he was finishing the interview. i believe it was with david brinkley. and then he came out. by that time, a whole bunch of other reporters had gathered out there and mr. reagan came out. and i asked him a bunch of questions and these reporters circled him.
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there was 20 or 30 of them. and we went in the circle and i was throwing questions over the top of him. he was very nicely yelling his answers back to my microphone. and then we went around the corner and -- and where the tables were of all the reporters and their typewriters and the whole gang of people swept into this table at the end of it, knocking over a little man at his typewriter with his typewriter on his floor, all his books. i let them go. i helped this man. i looked into his and it was theodore s. white, and that -- that stopped me right there. and he was just so -- he apologized to me actually for that. so i got to meet three really nice people right there, barry goldwater, ronald reagan and theodore s. white. >> and, clancy, thank you for the phone call from new orleans. of course, conventions were quite difference in 1964 and '68.
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>> and by the way, i do think that in the making of the president in 1964, teddy white was pretty patronizing to barry goldwater, despite what the earlier caller said. the 1964 convention was angry and violent. and he mentioned david brinkley. allen brinkley, who is david brinkley's son is a professor now at columbia told me that so kind of impassioned and angry, violently angry at the media, the eastern establishment press, where the goldwater delegates and supporters, that david brinkley told his son allen brinkley who was a teenager at the time, you are under no circumstances to wear your nbc insignia around san francisco. that's why people were afraid of the goldwater movement as this fashist thing. it was a dangerous frightening time. >> in 1986 barry goldwater in
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the u.s. senate before retiring and he put forth ronald reagan's nomination to be -- to serve a second term and to be the republican nominee in '84. >> a month ago, i sat in my den and watched the democratic national convention. speaker after speaker promised the moon to every narrow, selfish interest group in the country. but they ignored the hopes and aspirations of the largest special interest group of all, free men and free women. so tonight i want to speak about freedom. and let me remind you that
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extremism in the defense of liberty is our right. >> darcy olsen, quintessential barry goldwater? >> yeah, absolutely. you know, people love barry goldwater. and, you know, his -- what he was expressing is, you know, akin to the, you know, give me liberty or give me death. and, you know, in america, we believe this. you know, and i think sometimes that the -- you know, the loss of the '64 campaign is mistakenly interpreted as an outright rejection of those ideas. and it wasn't -- it wasn't anything of the sort. you can -- you can hear it from the cherry. you can see it from the reagan revolution. you see it from the ideas today.
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but that is what the liberal press at that time wanted people to believe. and in fact when he lost that campaign, "the new york times" washington bureau chief james reston had said that barry goldwater not only had lost, but he had lost the entire conservative cause and they were always talking about the death of conservatism. that is wishful thinking. it remains wishful thinking today on the part of the press. that is -- that is classic barry goldwater, and it reflects what many americans believe, which you cannot -- which is that you cannot be too passionate, too committed or too extreme if you want to use that word, in the defense of our constitutional freedoms. >> jay is joining us from new york city. go ahead, please. >> i'm just recently became a student to politics with the barack obama because you never really felt you had a stake.
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i tried to look to see what the backlash was regarding service. so i looked up barry goldwater, read the book conscious of a conservative, and you look at fox news and certain organizations they prize these conservatives. but when you look at the record i try to look why would african-americans not vote for conservatives. it doesn't look like a diverse party, which is the situation. and you look at all the civil rights. you look at ronald reagan making the speech in 1960 where the civil rights workers got killed. can conservatives understand that, when you keep praising ronald reagan and barry goldwater, all you have to do is pick up a book and the record is right there. they were wrong on this. you can't say freedom and equality when a whole segment of society feels like they are alienated. so i would like to take that comment off the air and thank you for taking my call. >> thank you, jay. bill mccune?
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>> well, i certainly understand what the caller was saying and his views. but, see, when you talk about barry goldwater, i think more what he is referring to, whether he realizes or not, is the image of barry goldwater that was, you know, put out there of being a crazy guy or a racist or whatever, which he really wasn't. barry goldwater, you can say whatever you want. barry goldwater was never a hateful person. he was never a vengeful person in his handling of politics. i wish some of these 10 or 12 people we have running around running for president presently would adopt some of the, what, the niceness of barry goldwater, the niceness. >> it is important to note also by the end of that 12496964 by the end of that 12496964 campaign, barry goldwater did
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make a very important and shuttle shift on his position on civil rights. he would also say and he showed it, that he was an integrationist, that he was for integration. that was his goal for society. but by the end of that campaign as he was trying to win those southern states, he did say our goal is neither to have an integrated society, nor a segregated society. it is to have a free society. so he did seem to move away from the idea of integration as a positive good. >> quick note about the debates. there are four in 1960, no debates in 1964. why? >> well, that was kind of a dirty trick by lyndon johnson. in order to have a debate, you had to suspend a rule of the federal communications commission so that every candidate, i.e., all 30 candidates including the beekeepers party, you know, wouldn't have to be on the stage and lyndon johnson kind of wired that in congress so that it was impossible. he didn't want to face barry goldwater. that says something about maybe he thought barry goldwater would have been a worthy adversary. >> a question from somebody here.
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please go ahead. >> abraham from scottsdale. this is for darcy. do you see the tea party as a resurgence of the goldwater. >> as a what? >> resurgence of the goldwater movement? >> yeah. i definitely think there are a lot -- the tea party i guess is -- the best way to answer that is to say it's not monolithic, right? there are all kinds of people who constitute the tea party and a lot of different ideas in the tea party. but i think if you look at the tea party as a group of people who have fought these gigantic bailouts in washington, the -- they fought the raising of the debt ceiling, they fought the federal takeover of health care, all of those things i think barry goldwater would have been with them on. so certainly we see a lot of elements of goldwaterism coming out in some of the major pieces of what the tea party folks are
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working on. >> from watertown, wisconsin. franklin is on the phone. we welcome you. go ahead, please. >> yes. i would like to make a comment. i think if we would have elected barry goldwater as president in '64, we would have won the war in vietnam because he didn't believe in public opinions to guide the war. and i also like to say that i think barry goldwater told mr. nixon that he could not hold the south for him or make sure the south would stay for him, so they asked him to resign instead of be impeached. thank you. >> franklin, thank you. >> yeah. i mean, the stuff about how barry goldwater somehow could have miraculously won the vietnam war, the united states paved over the entirety of the land mass of north and south vietnam with a quarter inch of steel. somehow if we had done half an inch or three-quarters of an inch, that would have done it
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that is a fantasy. a pleasant one. but i think that that's a glib position. >> we have just a minute or two left. did barry goldwater's views change as he got older? did they evolve? >> my contention is absolutely not. views meaning his basic core philosophy and the way he looked at life and looked at politics. i've had battles in op ed pages where people say, oh, i said this earlier he got senile and turned liberal at the end. he did not. he was always a matter of, i call it, call libertarian freedom of choice, whether it was abortion issues, gay rights or any number of things. he was totally consistent his whole life, just -- >> yeah. i agree with that. almost -- almost any question at any time period in barry's life, if you look at what his position was and you ask the question of was it constitutional or not,
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that will give you the answer to what his position was. >> is that the position of his institute? >> absolutely. i mean, people look around today to find politicians who are as honest as barry and stand for principal and they are few and far between. that's one of the reasons he gave us his blessing, because he knew you couldn't get politicians to stand for principals all the time. but for american men and women supporting an organization to believe in those ideas you would always have a chance for freedom. >> i will give you the final word. what was the legacy of the 1964 campaign and what impact did barry goldwater have on american politics? >> i think the legacy of the 1964 campaign was organizational. it was the formation of organizations that became a permanent conservative movement that lost the battle in 1964 but lived to fight dozens of battles more. i think his legacy is to have inspired these people to become
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something, become part of something greater than themselves, to inspire people who felt frustrated with the course of the country to take civic action. >> the book is called "before the storm, barry goldwater and the unmaking of the american consensus" by rick perlstein. thank you were joining you. to darcy olsen for hosting us here at the goldwater institute, the president and ceo. we appreciate your time. >> our pleasure. >> and bill mccune, former arizona state legislature and officer and producer of the documentary of barry goldwater. >> barry goldwater and american life. >> thank you. and thank you to the audience. we want to leave you with some of the words of barry goldwater in an interview we did with him. as he was winding down his political career from the c-span archives in 1985. >> another thing i would tell young politicians coming in to washington, your re-election is not going to make or break the united states.
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do the best job you can do. that's what you're hear for, to defend the constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic. and be honest. that's all i tell them. >> how about the republican party leaders today? >> well, i think we have good leadership today. lord knows we spent a long enough time out of office that we should have learned some things. politics go in a circle. you'll find the liberal element running things for a while and now we find the conservative on the way up. the conservative will run the place until he runs out of ideas and runs out of people. then the other party or even the -- the other party or even the republican party that becomes a liberal party will take over. our politics in america go around in circles, and i think that's great.
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♪ go with goldwater ♪ go with goldwater ♪ you know where goldwater stands ♪ ♪ clap your hands ♪ go with goldwater ♪ let's go with goldwater's plan ♪ we'll have more on the life and legacy of 1964 presidential candidate barry goldwater in a moment. coming up, his republican nomination acceptance speech. and that's followed by a look at barry goldwater's impact on america's conservation program, starting in the 1950s. american history tv primetime continues tonight with a look at the 1964 presidential campaign of barry goldwater. it begins at 8:00 eastern with the contenders. the two-hour discussion of the life and career of the
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republican nominee. at 10:05 p.m. eastern, barry goldwater's nomination acceptance speech. and at 10:50, a look at his role in the conservation movement in the 1950s and '60s. sglrchlts the c-span radio app makes it easy to follow the 2016 election wherever you are. it is easy to download. get audio coverage and up to the minute schedule information from c-span radio and television, plus podcast times for our popular public affairs, book and television times. stay up-to-date on all the election coverage. c-span's radio app means you always have c-span on the go. barry goldwater accepted his party's presidential nomination at the 1964 republican national convention in san francisco. in his speech, the arizona senator outlined his commitment to conservative values and
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conservatism as a diverse and uniting ideology. senator goldwater lost to president johnson in the 1964 general election, winning only six states and earning less than 39% of the popular vote. this speech is just over 40 minutes and our coverage is from nbc news. ♪ glory, glory, hallelujah his ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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