Can 'Peace' Be a Winning Issue in Presidential Campaigns?
by
Lawrence S. Wittner
by Lawrence S. Wittner
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In
recent years, the conventional wisdom has been that Peace
is a losing issue in U.S. presidential campaigns. Proponents of
this view point to George McGoverns run for the presidency
in 1972, when he called for peace in Vietnam and was trounced at
the polls.
But a more
thoroughgoing analysis of the peace issue in presidential races
supports a more nuanced conclusion. Indeed, it indicates that peace
has been a winning issue numerous times.
First of all,
peace is only one of many issues raised in most presidential campaigns
and, therefore, its influence on the outcome is hard to disentangle
from other issues. Moreover, the issue can be muted even further
when the candidates of the opposing parties take roughly similar
positions on it. In addition, people are not always driven by the
issues. Indeed, they are often motivated by party loyalty, by the
personality of the candidates, or in recent years by slick campaign
ads.
Even so, there
have been numerous times when the peace issue has been very prominent and
when the candidates raising it have won.
During the
1916 presidential race, in the midst of World War I, President Woodrow
Wilson campaigned strongly as a peace candidate. With the Republicans
adopting a hawkish line on the conflict, the Democrats rallied behind
the slogan: He Kept Us Out of War! And it worked. Between
1912 (when he won only because of a split in Republican ranks) and
1916, Wilsons share of the popular vote rose from 42 to 49.4
percent, carrying him through to victory.
Another sharp
division on the question of peace occurred in 1952. When the Democratic
Party was blamed for the bloody, unpopular Korean War and its presidential
candidate, Adlai Stevenson, promised to fight the war as long as
it took, Dwight Eisenhower, the Republican candidate, made a strong
peace appeal. Americans must avoid the kind of bungling that
led us into Korea, he told a campaign audience. The
young farm boys must stay on their farms; the students must stay
in school. That fall, Eisenhower proclaimed that the Democrats
had given the false answer . . . that nothing can be done
to speed a secure peace. But, if he were elected, he said,
he would concentrate on the job of ending the Korean war,
adding: I shall go to Korea. It was perhaps the most
popular and most-quoted statement in his campaign. He surged to
victory, with 55 percent of the vote.
In 1964, the
Republicans nominated a bona fide hawk, Barry Goldwater, who bluntly
declared that his goal was winning the Vietnam War and casually
chatted about the use of nukes in world affairs. Addressing
the Republican national convention, Goldwater assured his audience
that extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice.
Not surprisingly, the Democrats seized the opportunity to paint
the GOP candidate into a corner. Party ads played skillfully upon
the widely shared view that Goldwater was trigger-happy, with
the best known of them showing a little girl plucking a daisy as
the world exploded in nuclear war. Meanwhile, Johnson campaigned
as a peace candidate. We are not about to send American boys
nine or ten thousand miles away from home to do what Asian boys
ought to be doing for themselves, he told voters. We
are not going north and drop[ping] bombs. Johnson easily won
the election, securing the greatest vote, the greatest margin of
victory, and the greatest percentage (61.1 percent) up to that point
in American history.
By 1968, Johnsons
betrayal of his peace promises had made him and the escalating Vietnam
War so unpopular that he was forced out of the Democratic primaries
by two peace candidates, Eugene McCarthy and Robert Kennedy. Furthermore,
even Richard Nixon, the GOP candidate, now chose to criticize the
war and to claim that he had a secret plan to bring
it to an end. Although Nixons credibility as a peace candidate
was not high, the peace credentials of his Democratic opponent,
Hubert Humphrey, seemed even lower, for Humphrey was clearly Johnsons
stand-in. In the election, Nixon eked out a narrow victory.
Finally, in
1976, Jimmy Carter, the Democratic presidential candidate, sounded
many strong peace themes during his campaign. Attacking the Nixon-Ford
administrations cynicism in world affairs, he promised a new
foreign policy, based on peace and human rights. In addition, he
called for the scuttling of the B-1 bomber, a comprehensive nuclear
test ban, and for movement toward the elimination of all nuclear
weapons. So impressive was Carters peace position that the
executive director of SANE, Americas largest peace group,
resigned to work in Carters campaign. Carter, too, emerged
victorious, with 50 percent of the vote.
Even
in the case of George McGoverns 1972 election defeat, it is
worth noting that Nixon neutralized the peace issue to some extent
by emphasizing his withdrawal of most U.S. troops from Vietnam,
his claim that his administration had secured peace with honor,
and his policies of détente with China and the Soviet Union.
Thus, there
seems to be little basis for the assumption that Peace
is necessarily a losing issue. Indeed, Peace has been
(and can be) a potent force in U.S. presidential campaigns.
August
23, 2006
Lawrence
S. Wittner [send him mail]
is Professor of History at the State University of New York/Albany.
His latest book is Toward
Nuclear Abolition: A History of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement,
1971 to the Present (Stanford University Press).
This
article originally appeared on the History
News Network.
Copyright
© 2006 History News Network. Reprinted
with author's permission.
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