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The Unmaking of a Mayor. William F. Buckley Jr.Читать онлайн книгу.

The Unmaking of a Mayor - William F. Buckley Jr.


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the slimmest of margins. He withdrew partly as a matter of general fatigue, partly because Lindsay had more or less made it plain that he would, if necessary, challenge him in a primary contest; and Coudert, already resentful over the frequency of Congressional elections, did not want yet another political contest on his agenda.

      It would certainly appear, from the heavy Democratic registration plurality, that the Seventeenth District is irretrievably liberal, though the fact of Barton’s election, and more recently of Coudert’s, does not appear to make the district’s bias absolutely conclusive, unless it is held that the district forever after consolidated, after Coudert’s last term, into liberalism. To be sure, in 1961, as the result of redistricting, the area was enlarged, with the result that a greater number of registered Democrats were drawn into it. At any rate, Coudert’s diminishing pluralities and Lindsay’s increasing pluralities would appear to suggest that a Barton-Coudert Republican would not have much of a chance in the Silk Stocking District at this point. Lindsay’s successor Republican, Theodore Kupferman, ran on a platform which his opponent, the liberal Democrat Orin Lehman, was forced to concede did not differ in any interesting particular from his own.

      It is inconceivable to suggest (a) that Mr. Lindsay would have been denied the Democratic designation in the Seventeenth had he at any time, formally renouncing the GOP, desired it; or (b) that his successively increasing pluralities would have been other than still greater, had he been running as a Democrat. What would have been missing is, of course, the piquancy, so stimulating to the jaded taste, that someone of Lindsay’s views should call himself a Republican. The squares who pause to wonder why it is generally said with relish that someone is a “Lindsay Republican” and with disrelish that someone is a “Byrd Democrat” are gloriously unaware of the implications of the Zeitgeist.

      The “political writer,” “gossip columnist,” and “trustee of Vassar College” are quoted anonymously in Daniel E. Button, Lindsay, a Man for Tomorrow (New York: Random House, 1965).

      In a word, the appeal to Fusion-for-New York, together with a sort of intellectual pledge by everyone in the country to disregard the national repercussions of a Lindsay victory, was always unrealistic. If Lindsay won, Republicans in Ohio and California would not be permitted to pass off his victory as meaningless, as merely a triumph of Goo-gooism in a jaded municipal situation. The opinion-making press, which would herald Lindsay’s victory as charting the road ahead for a resurgent Republicanism, would not permit it, for one thing. In this sense those Democrats who all along insisted that a victory for Lindsay in New York would work to “Republican” advantage were technically correct; correct in predicting that the Republican Party would inevitably take heed of Lindsay’s showing in New York and attempt to profiteer on it. The help-Lindsay-and-you-help-the-Republican-Party objection to Lindsay was superficial only when uttered by highly ideologized liberals—Harry Golden, for instance, and a few members of the Liberal Party—who refused to reflect that, after all, if the Republican Party could be brought to fashion itself after Lindsay, their cherished dogmas would have little to fear from any aggrandizement of the Republican Party.

      D. E. Button, op. cit.

      When John Kennedy became President, John Lindsay was, by contemporary—and certainly by posthumous—standards, positively irreverent. “The President,” he said on the eve of the Vienna summit meeting in 1961, “will now meet with Khrushchev after disavowing personal diplomacy. He will continue to dole out give-aways after calling for national sacrifice. He will now affirm both a growing economy and a healthy picture in defense after causing gloom and despair with his campaign appraisals. This kind of ambivalence demands our scrutiny.” (The demanded scrutiny was not forthcoming.)


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