Showing posts with label Jimmy Carter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jimmy Carter. Show all posts

Saturday, January 21, 2017

Donald Trump, Jimmy Carter and the definition of "populism"


Closing Conversation: President Bill Clinton and President Jimmy Carter - CGI America 2016

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Newly elected President Jimmy Carter and his family walk down Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington in 1977. The face circled in red belongs to Frank Moore, a deputy campaign manager who was part of the Carter transition team. AP file

Forty years ago, Trump Tower was located on West Paces Ferry Road in Buckhead.

That is to say, the headquarters of the president-elect was the Governors Mansion a spacious house, but hardly a gilded one, despite its tony location.

Then-Gov. George Busbee ceded the entire first floor of his home to Jimmy Carter himself a former resident. Thats where, in the weeks following his November 1976 victory, Carter sorted out the major appointments of his new administration.

The Southern locale the peoples house, as Lester Maddox had christened the mansion a few years earlier was as much a statement as Donald Trumps own decision to use his signature chunk of New York City real estate as his launch pad.

It is tempting to compare Carter and Trump. Both ran as outsiders. Carter set himself against a Washington still shaken by the Vietnam War and the corruption, then resignation, of Richard Nixon. Trump tapped the lingering, post-recession angst of white voters, and vilified the D.C. gridlock that had pit the nations first black president against a hostile Republican Congress.

Carter brought very different people into Washingtons power grid, and Trump is poised to do the same. Carter the Outsider had a rocky relationship with fellow Democrats who ran an insider Congress in particular, U.S. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.

Trump the Outsider has already been introduced to U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz.

Both Trump and Carter have been described as populists, but here the comparison breaks down. Or demonstrates how a words definition can change over the course of two generations.

The peanut farmers populism had its roots in his Southern Baptist religion and the tiny town of Plains, Ga. The New York businessmans populism springs from reality TV, social media, and a fierce belief in himself as the ultimate dealmaker.

Two very different worlds.

Ill never tell a lie, Carter famously said during that bicentennial campaign. This week, the president-elects chief spokeswoman advised us to pay less attention to words that pass Trumps lips, and more attention to whats in his heart.

Forty years ago, Carters campaign was nearly derailed by an interview in Playboy magazine, in which he admitted to lustful thoughts. Ive committed adultery in my heart many times, he said. In 1976, that qualified as too much information. We were embarrassed by the confession.

Compare that with the Access Hollywood video in which Trump bragged of activity that, his nominee for attorney general admitted this week, would clearly amount to sexual assault. Trump supporters ignored their candidates confession. Bombast, even the most vulgar variety, is part of his populist charm.

The best visual measure of how populism has changed might be that famous image of a freshly sworn-in Jimmy Carter and his extended family walking down Pennsylvania Avenue. Grandson Jason Carter, a toddler and future Democratic candidate for governor of Georgia, is perched on his fathers shoulders. James Earl Carter IV, now a political researcher in Atlanta, was under his mothers coat a month away from being born.

The walk was close to revolutionary. The shadow of JFKs murder still lingered. Eighteen months hadnt passed since the attempt on President Gerald Fords life in Colorado. Yet Carter was unfazed.

He told the Secret Service, I want to do it, said Frank Moore, a deputy Carter campaign manager. Which is how Moore came to be in those Pennsylvania Avenue photographs often mistaken as a Secret Service agent.

Witnesses able and willing to detail the 1976 transition are dwindling. The Georgia Mafia, the name given to the loyal triumvirate behind Carter, has disappeared.

Hamilton Jordan, the strategist, died in 2008 at age 63. Jody Powell, the ever-present press secretary, died in 2009 at age 65. Bert Lance, the small-town banker from north Georgia, died in 2013 at age 82.

Carter, even at 92, is too invested in the present the guinea worm still lives, if barely to chance comparisons between his entry into Washington and Trumps.

But we have Moore, who at 81 now lives on St. Simons Island. He was at the Governors Mansion as Carter settled on his big four appointments: Defense, State, Treasury and Justice.

Moore was in Plains when CIA director (and future president) George H.W. Bush helicoptered in to fill the president-elect in on intelligence matters. There wasnt a question of whether he was going to have an intelligence briefing or not have it, Moore said.

As the transition progressed, Moore shifted to the bottom floor of the Richard Russell building in Washington, where Georgia Sens. Herman Talmadge and Sam Nunn had donated some office space and the use of their phones.

The thing youre working on, the things going on right now, are all the appointments people forget about. Im not talking about Secretary of Defense and so forth, Moore said. Hundreds of patronage jobs have to be filled. U.S. marshals and attorneys have to be appointed, as do leadership spots within the rather obscure Natural Resources Conservation Service. Each appointment must be vetted through various state campaign networks. Then there were the interviews.

I interviewed Eric Holder. Somebody in Boston said, Weve got this guy just out of Harvard, and hes a wonderful guy. [Holder] went over to Justice, Moore said.

And decades later became Barack Obamas attorney general.

But about that walk down Pennsylvania Avenue. At the last minute, carter had decided he would exit his bullet-proof limousine.

I didnt even know it was contemplated, Moore said. Secret Service laid down one condition. Agents demanded the presence of someone in the family parade who could tell friend from foe in the crowd.

[Carter] turned to me and said, Frank knows everybody I know, said Moore. It was his backdoor into the history books.

Trumps plans remain a secret. But heres betting that he wont duplicate Jimmy Carters walk. First, Carters populism was a ground game that required personal contact over a long period of time. The man virtually lived in Iowa for two years. His walk was a natural extension of that campaign.

Trumps brand of populism, through the Internet and reality TV, is a digital phenomenon. Physical human contact isnt necessary. Trump, in fact, has an aversion to hand-shaking and has had to force himself to do it as a politician. Imvery much of a germaphobe, by the way. Believe me, the president-elect said this week.

Further, the crowds at Trumps massive rallies were well vetted, and well policed. Outside his debates with his GOP rivals and Hillary Clinton, Fridays inauguration ceremony will be the first in which Trumps organization wont control the make-up of his audience. The same applies to D.C. parade crowds.

The second reason Trump wont do it: Barack Obama and his family did.

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Jimmy Carter"s 1977 inauguration


Jimmy Carter Letterman 2014 0324 HQ

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The original design for the Jimmy Carter review stand for the 1977 inaugural, courtesy of Paul Muldawer

It was largely overshadowed by the Donald Trump-John Lewis brouhaha, but one couple in particular responded to Sundays column that compared Jimmy Carters presidential inauguration in 1977 with Donald Trumps upcoming swearing-in on Friday.

Carol Muldawer was a supporter of Andrew Young, then a congressman representing the (now horrible) Fifth District of Atlanta. She obtained a leave to become the first female advance person for the carter campaign. Her husband, Paul Muldawer, was already an architect of some note in Atlanta.

So this was going on in the late fall of 1976, according to Paul Muldawer:

When it looked like Carter was going to win, the inaugural committee contacted me about designing the inaugural facility, the inaugural pavilion, and media stand, and seating for three-quarters of a million people.

A small job, no doubt. But Muldawer said that he incorporated a few themes reflecting Jimmy Carters values. The first was frugality:

Muldawer wanted a reviewing stand that was cheaper than previous ones, which ran to $1 million or so, made out of wood, and was delivered to local landfills after the ceremony.

As he recalls, the reviewing stand cost $850,000. I made the structure steel, so it could be recycled. It was recycled, after the inaugural, and sent back to Atlanta as a band shell in Piedmont Park for free symphony concerts, Paul Muldawer said. It disappeared during the second Maynard Jackson administration. Hes not sure why. It was historic relic, the disappointed architect said.

Muldawer reoriented the inaugural reviewing stand so that it didnt block a view of the White House. The statement is that history is more important than the individual. I also turned it at a 45-degree angle, to create empathy between the president and the parade. Rather than marchers making a sharp eyes-left, they could develop a rapport as they approached, the architect said. CBS got very upset with that.

Another statement was energy efficiency. We tried to heat it with passive solar. We had solar collector plates brought in from Georgia Tech, Muldawer said. This was the era before photovoltaic cells, so the experiment was something of a bust. It was 15 degrees. We tried, okay? Muldawer chuckled.

The most successful aspect of the Carter inauguration, from an architectural point of view, might have been the introduction of handicapped-access not just in the space for VIPs, but along the whole of Pennsylvania Avenue. Sure enough, George Wallace was there in his wheelchair, Muldawer said. This was the first accessible inauguration in history. The architect said 20,000 handicapped people showed up for the parade.

Muldawer also designed a media stand that was elevated, but included no enclosures. They would sit there in the cold, he said. With the exception of Barbara Walters. She had a glass-enclosed, little cage, Muldawer said.

Four years later, the incoming Ronald Reagan administration asked for and paid for the plans for the media stand. But Muldawer was admonished not to let the press know that the Carter plan had been duplicated.

So now you know.

From the January 1977 inaugural of President Jimmy Carter, courtesy of Paul Muldawer

The inaugural review stand reconstituted as a band shell for Piedmont Park. Carol Muldawer, at far right, with friends. Courtesy of Paul Muldawer.

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