Stevenson and the Intellectuals

Howe, Irving

For American radicals these are not times of easy political choice. They are all the more difficult if we continue to think in terms of elections, candidates and parties. Raised, as most of us...

...had he dis cussed why the ADA, in which he is a leading figure, had first proposed Eisenhower, his article would have been an act of high courage...
...Under the circumstances it hardly mattered to the intellectuals what he said, just as to the bulk of the middle class it hardly mattered what Eisenhower said...
...But it is a perspective that is likely to keep us thoroughly employed...
...After the election Arthur Schlesinger Winter 1954 • DISSENT • 15 Jr...
...His most remarkable speech—the speech of acceptance— was a prolonged exercise in ambivalence, a skillful teetering between the Winter 1954 • DISSENT • 13 desire to pull out and the appetite to plunge in: I say "skillful" to suggest that he was a man both torn by doubts and shrewdly able to exploit his state of division...
...I have argued elsewhere that Bell's theory is inadequate 16 • DISSENT • Winter 1954 because it fails to recognize those patterns of subordination among interest blocs which depend upon relationships of social classes...
...People voted for Eisenhower not merely because he promised to clean up the mess or because he satisfied the conservative moods of the new managerial strata...
...His round-the-world tour could be the subject of an article on the relationship between rhetoric and realpolitik, but here I would only say that his American admirers might at least have raised a whisper or a whimper, of protest when he came out with praise for Chiang-Kai-Shek (which led one political wag to remark: keep that man away from Madrid) The breathless reports of Stevenson's tour in The New Republic have had a kind of fabulous quality, as if Michael Straight had smuggled himself into Marco Polo's party...
...they were bored with crusading accents yet still enjoyed a mild idealistic lilt...
...what is one to make of his utterly disingenuous remarks that the Truman administration should not be blamed for corruption since "corruption is personal and knows no party"— as if corruption might not be more indigenous to one party, or one kind of party, than another...
...Let but such figures as Walter Reuther and Arthur Schlesinger Jr...
...In an age of "the liberal imagination" and "the new conservatism," those Siamese twins of cultural adaptation, the intellectuals themselves were beginning to cast a warm eye on that restrained yet elegant style of life which Stevenson so beautifully embodied...
...I don't mean to deny that principled people have to make concessions to expediency...
...Yet this stance could not have been entirely without a disingenuous element, for Stevenson was hardly a political novice...
...His innumerable references to the split of the Republican Party into several parties seem rather cheap when one notices his refusal to face the equally obvious fact that the Democratic Party is also and indeed far more seriously split...
...I do not mean to imply that Eisenhower had dictatorial ambitions, merely that he won because he was endowed, in the public eye, with the supraclass characteristics of the Bonapartist leader...
...The Marxist scheme of a conflict between two major classes, says Bell, does not apply very well to America: here, instead of a class struggle we have a jockeying among competing yet not incompatible power groups or interest blocs (labor, farmers, business, veterans, minority groups, the aged, etc...
...he is responsible and restrained...
...It may, of course, be that the British have an altogether mistaken view of what the Democratic Party is, and that these various puzzled reactions just show our ignorance and naivete...
...wrote a slashing piece for Partisan Review about the troubles and timidities of liberals in a nation that had not chosen Stevenson...
...in that case, why not say so and thus take some of the poison out of the current anti-American campaign...
...Surely not because Stevenson was a liberal or a New Dealer...
...this collection of moral weaklings who tremble every time McCarthy lets out his breath...
...In a permanent war economy there are certain to arise grave conflicts between the needs of the bureaucratic state and the masses of trade unionists over issues ranging from civil liberties to taxation...
...Why does Stevenson remain silent...
...When Adlai Stevenson made his rather cryptic remark about "egghead ecstasy," he was registering a certain irritation with the cult that sprang up around his image in the intellectual world...
...By and large they voted for him, but with little of the fervor they had felt for Roosevelt and Truman...
...Had Stevenson really been an intellectual in the limited "professional" sense of the word, his proclamations and gestures of delicacy might have seemed annoying, since there is nothing very novel in the sight of an intellectual turning squeamish about tasks he has set himself...
...Truman was one of the plebes, and after his triumph over Dewey there was a remarkable elation in the Detroit auto plants for the workers felt, and with some reason, that they had put Truman in the White House...
...In a way that he did not and could not specify, he and the Democratic Party were to provide a universal ideological binder in our society of competing yet not basically conflicting interests...
...it was shared by the liberals, e.g., the ADA's endorsement of Eisenhower not despite but because of its ignorance of his social views...
...One wonders: why this sudden burst of uncritical enthusiasm...
...it would have been a conservative or reactionary one...
...they could admire the spectacle of such behavior on a higher social level than their own...
...They received no assistance from him...
...In any case he completely captured the intellectuals, not least of all those who had declared themselves irrevocably disabused with the political life...
...the ideological explanation seems weakest...
...He was an unknown quantity, a chaste vessel into which every voter could pour his own desires...
...Part of the secret, I should think, must be that he so vividly symbolized their mixed feelings toward politics itself...
...Or if he was, then one could not help taking seriously the charges of such a malicious reactionary as James Burnham that Stevenson was unfit to be President through temperamental disability...
...One can hardly suppose that Stevenson really believes McCarthy is basically doing a good job...
...the trouble with protest candidates in major elections is that they no longer register any significant protest...
...Stevenson's evidently sincere devotion to civil liberties was badly compromised by his readiness to support the Smith Act and by his praise of Truman for having "put the leaders of the Coxnmunist Party in this country where they belong—behind bars," (as if that were any solution to the problem of Stalinism, or of civil liberties...
...Rovere repeats this sort of thing in a tone of sympathetic understanding, as if to imply that we liberals, so raucous in the past, now possess a statesman too...
...And one begins to suspect that Mr...
...It seems obvious that the running of independent socialist candidates can, at best, have only occasional local value...
...They amounted to this: that McCarthy's `methods' were not perhaps all they might be, but that it was a good thing to draw attention to the Communist menace...
...but he was clearly not one of "the people," he didn't pretend to be, he was the candidate who would rise above mere group interests...
...Probably he meant both...
...Thus it was that Stevenson made it possible for the liberal intellectuals to see themselves as both realists and idealists at the same time: they could sanction a theory that American liberalism meant little more than the proper regulation of a division of the social spoils while yet invoking, through Stevenson's soaring rhetoric, a vision of that good society which once, long ago, had some actual relationship to liberal politics...
...But for the liberal-labor movement to do this, it will have to come into increasingly frequent collision with whatever administration, of whichever party, happens to be in power...
...To prod and criticize, in firm but friendly terms, the dominant labor-liberal tendency is not, one must admit, an obviously exciting perspective, certainly not as exciting as that which lies open to the socialists of England, where there is a real possibility of leading a democratic transition to socialism...
...Had the ADA favored Eisenhower with full knowl edge that he would soon show himself a political weakling and a captive of Big Business, it would not have been a liberal organization at all...
...I have italicized what seem the key phrases: phrases of dissociation which Roosevelt would have been too shrewd to utter and Truman would never have felt any desire to...
...3) But if American society consists of an essentially healthy jostling among equally hearty social appetities, where do the intellectuals come in...
...but it can hardly stimulate those latent impulses toward the ideal which the intellectuals cannot quite (though they try hard enough) obliterate in themselves...
...In his introduction to his collected speeches Stevenson has written a remarkable passage about his campaign experience: You must emerge, bright and bubbling with wisdom and well-being, every morning at 8 o'clock, just in time for a charming and profound breakfast talk, shake hands with hundreds, often literally thousands, of people, make several inspiring, `newsworthy' speeches during the day, confer with political leaders along the way and with your staff all the tine, write at every chance, think if possible, read mail and newspapers, talk on the telephone, talk to everybody, dictate, receive delegations, eat, with decorum—and discretion!—and ride through city after city on the back of an open car, smiling until your mouth is dehydrated by the wind, waving until the blood runs out of your arm, and then bounce gaily, confidently, masterfully into great howling halls...
...It may be argued that the ADA acted from ignorance, that it did not know how mediocre and reactionary Eisenhower would prove to be...
...And here was this remarkable man from Illinois, so charming and cultivated, so witty and so...
...Again, there was his curious evasiveness about McCarthy...
...The appetite for a Bonapartist leader above classes was quite prevalent in this country in the period before the election...
...Roosevelt might be admired for things he had done, Stevenson was to be admired and identified with simply because of what he was...
...Others say that an incipient laborliberal party, the hope for a revived American left, is slowly growing within the loose structure of the Democratic Party, and that socialists should support this incipient movement conditionally and critically--e.g., by voting for Stevenson while making it clear that this does not mean a political bloc with the dominant liberal trend...
...12 • DISSENT • Winter 1954 I Only the eggheads surrendered unconditionally...
...But that would be the way of a politician and not of a Winter 1954 • DISSENT • 19 statesman who can quote from William James until the intellectuals quiver with delight...
...20 • DISSENT • Winter 1954 V Very likely, for some years to come, American socialists will have no electoral course of their own...
...This appetite, in turn, is related to and perhaps is an aspect of that yearning for a social savior I have previously mentioned...
...You can't admire Stevenson as a principled idealist and then justify his evasions on the grounds that he was a candidate...
...But if today the struggle of labor, or any other social group, is merely for a little more of the contaminated swill —well, all right...
...Traditionally, this has been the appeal of the Bonapartist leader...
...That therefore is priceless...
...well, somewhat weary...
...The only intelligent discussion of Stevenson that I have seen comes from an English journalist, G. L. Arnold, who reported on Stevenson's trip through England in The New Leader...
...he believes in calling a spade an implement for the lifting of difficult objects...
...Yet there seems to me to have been a certain unconscious consistency, if not a very strong devotion to liberal principles, in the ADA endorsements of both Eisenhower and Stevenson...
...Somehow he, Stevenson, represented no less than "the people as a whole...
...The conservative press was always delighted to praise him for not indulging in Truman's "demagogy," that is, for not employing Truman's "anti-plutocrat" vocabulary...
...2) The favorite theory, at the moment, of American liberals about the nature of our society is advanced in economic terms by Kenneth Gailbraith ("countervailing powers") and in more general terms by Daniel Bell...
...I am far more concerned with the terms and the nature of the support the liberal and left intellectuals gave to Stevenson...
...Therefore, no group is more devoted to peace...
...Even those who have never heard of Gailbraith or Bell hold similar views...
...My liberal friends cry out, After all, Stevenson was the candidate of a major party, which means he was trying to get elected...
...But some qualifications are necessary: the middle class had no critical tradition to abandon and when it saw Eisenhower as its patron it was not far from wrong...
...and it so happens that this mood has few defenders here, even on the extreme Right or the Tory party, let alone among people further to the left...
...It is a theory that replaces the image of basic social conflict with an image of controlled or controllable social competition among peer groups...
...Raised, as most of us have been, in a tradition of supporting only socialist or labor candidates, we find the immediate problem of the elections perplexing: what shall we do and advise others to do...
...And what is one to make of his preposterous declaration that "communist materialism" can 18 • DISSENT • Winter 1954 not be answered with "a different brand of materialism," a statement worthy of the Rev...
...Not only could the intellectuals identify with Stevenson's public indecisions and hesitations...
...In the past, when radical intellectuals identified with the working class, it was with the expectation and hope that the working class, preparing the way for a new society, would abolish itself in common with all other social classes...
...To some extent, the suspicion of Stevenson indicated the usual anti-intellectualism, but this could hardly have been the whole cause, since I'm told that even among those secondary UAW officials who make an effort to avoid the more obvious forms of anti-intellectualism there was a distinct coolness toward Stevenson...
...One may feel comfortable in the kind of society described by Bell but one can hardly find it a cause for enthusiasm...
...That must certainly be true...
...This report is so germane to my remarks that I would quote at some length...
...this incredible group of blunderers and reactionaries—could there be a better target for liberal criticism...
...Whether he objected from a principled dislike of hero worship or from a fear that it would hurt his chance with other, somewhat larger segments of the population, we don't know...
...stand firm in behalf of their own tradition, and they will have to invigorate their liberalism with far more critical spirit—they will have to make it more radical—than they thus far have...
...Appearing at a moment of national bewilderment, when the Korean War seemed likely to continue for ever and the Truman administration was shown to be shot through with corruption, Eisenhower, that stern yet homely figure, could speak as one who was not a professional "politician" yet "sound" in his views, a man alive to every need yet beyond the claim of any class or group...
...and Mr...
...This fact the ADA would as soon forget, but for its own good we should be so unkind as not to let it...
...Nothing is at present more likely to appeal to liberal intellectuals...
...Does it take any effort of the imagination to see Stevenson presiding at a faculty tea in Morningside Heights...
...But you can't have it both ways...
...What made it, char acteristically, a liberal organization was that it stood ready to support a man about whom it knew nothing except that he had been, it was reliably said, a competent general...
...From what we have seen of the liberals in the recent election, we need not worry that they will render criticism from the left superfluous...
...Winter 1954 • DISSENT • 21...
...He had been in and near the Democratic Party for years, he had worked with that old Tory Frank Knox, he had served as the candidate of Jake Arvey's Illinois machine, which has never been noted for fastidiousness...
...The fact is that, to put it bluntly, Stevenson struck the British as unduly anxious to conform with the prevailing American popular mood...
...What is of major importance, however, is the general attitude one takes toward the dominant political drift of American society, whether one floats along or tries to maintain a sharp, fundamental criticism...
...Let me cite only a few examples...
...The general consensus among the initiated was that [Stevenson] seemed a very likable kind of liberal Republican and that it was a pity he could not be included in the Eisenhower Administration...
...And it is common knowledge that they were not very fond of Truman: even their efforts to admire him had a way of turning into condescension...
...He was admired for his cleverness and praised for his vocabulary, which was large for a presidential candidate...
...This administration of sanctioned mediocrity and open alliance with Big Business...
...Stevenson had not really "earned" his air of withdrawal and distance—he was not Henry Adams languidly collapsing on the Second Law of Thermodynamics...
...The American intellectuals felt that their fingers had been badly burned, though by comparison with the Europeans they had merely suffered a slight singe...
...The theory he advances is perfectly adjusted to, as it is a faithful reflection of, a moment of social stasis resulting from the full production of a war economy...
...Because, writes Richard Rovere, he fears that "the attacks will in many parts of the world be read as a repudiation of American ends rather than as criticism of Administration means...
...Sometimes one has to blink, but that doesn't mean to keep one's eyes shut...
...No doubt...
...It seems a blunder of history that it had to be Eisenhower, a country boy turned warrior, who became President of a University graced by such figures of worldly cultivation as Gilbert Highet and Jacques Barzun...
...Stevenson was the first of the liberal candidates in the post-Wilson era who made no effort to align himself with the plebeian tradition or with plebeian sentiments...
...Even if this were to happen, we would still be far from any basic solutions to our social problems—but then, we are far from seeing it happen...
...Here, one would think, is a golden opportunity for a liberal opposition...
...they chose him because he, in his stammering inscrutability, would relieve them of their burdens and take upon himself the whole intolerable weight of the nation...
...A striking characteristic of Stevenson's campaign, as distinct from Roosevelt's or Truman's, was that he did not speak in the name of the poor or the workers or "one third of the nation...
...Those who heard Stevenson] had come expecting to hear and see a man who could be trusted to continue the Roosevelt-Truman inheritance in foreign policy...
...IV Only after the election did Stevenson reveal his full inadequacy...
...His advocacy of Civil Rights legislation was painfully qualified by his prolonged silence about the opposition of his running mate Sparkman to such legislation...
...Admittedly he must be getting bored with having to explain that McCarthy is no Hitler, but then no one suggested that...
...they wished for liberal humaneness but felt that to identify with any social class or group was outmoded, deficient in tone...
...Which suggests the possibility that Stevenson won the admiration of the intellectuals not because he revived the tradition of American liberalism but because in several important ways he deviated from it...
...Which is their interest group...
...but I am strongly convinced that in the absence of any significant socialist movement, it is a problem of tenth-rate importance, almost a matter of personal choice...
...it revealed a curious reluctance to say anything that might cause unpleasantness at home...
...There is no way of "proving" this to be a causal relationship, but it would be naive to suppose it a mere coincidence...
...His courage in jibing at professional patrioteers at the American Legion convention is contaminated by such nonsense as his declaration that "Legionnaires are united by memories of war...
...Admired and identified with, above all, because he didn't seem really to like politics...
...Stevenson was the candidate whom the intellectuals, trying hard to remove plebeian stains, admired most...
...At the same time the liberal intellectuals, committed to a theory of American society that is "realistic" in the worst sense of the word, found themselves without a social place or tie, yet with an appetite for "transcending" even while retaining the theory of interest blocs...
...I incline myself to the latter point of view, though with considerable hesitation...
...but I fancy that neither Bell nor those who agree with him are likely to heed this criticism...
...come to represent and speak for them...
...Instead of ruling class and ruled we have a sharing, with desirable friction, of political power...
...Norman Vincent Peale...
...But Stevenson is no mere politician, he is a statesman...
...They are all the more difficult if we continue to think in terms of elections, candidates and parties...
...What is perhaps equally disturbing is that Mr...
...but the whole failure of recent liberalism has been precisely its inability to distinguish between expediency within the framework of principle and expediency that undermine and rots away principle...
...Rovere is announced as an editor of a forthcoming publication to be called Critic...
...It is no exaggeration to say that his hearers were hoping, above all, that he would help them to project the image of a genuinely sane and liberal America...
...they were tempted to abandon politics entirely yet felt themselves forced—indeed, trapped—into a lukewarm, gingerly participation...
...For American radicals these are not times of easy political choice...
...What they got was a display of agility in ducking awkward questions...
...More serious is Stevenson's failure to speak up with any sort of firmness against the Eisenhower administration...
...11 But there were other, more important reasons...
...More important, what happens, given this theory of society, to the ideal claims and aspirations of the intellectuals, those claims and aspirations that are so deeply ingrained in their tradition...
...This was not merely inadequate andevasive...
...His friendly references to the Negroes must be set against his shameful remarks in a Richmond, Virginia, speech where he placed "anti-Southernism" on a place of equal abhorrence with "antiNegroism...
...III It would be easy to run through Stevenson's speeches and point to the many patches of shabbiness and cant which show him to be not quite the Knight of Principle his intellectual admirers took him for...
...So that if I speak harshly, as I shall, about the intellectuals, it is not here to challenge their formal choice but to evaluate the assumptions behind it and the kinds of behavior that accompanied it...
...At one time Roosevelt had seemed a savior, a man who crossed the social tracks never to return...
...To under stand why the ADA, for example, was so enthusiastic about Stevenson it would be well to remember that originally it was enthusiastic about Eisen hower...
...Just as Stevenson bewitched the intellectuals by miming, from on high, their political impulses, so did he fail to attract very much enthusiasm among the workers...
...A psychological equation can now be set up: the surrender of the managerial middle class to Eisenhower is as the surrender of the intellectuals to Stevenson...
...They are too weak to stand independently, and at present are largely disinclined to stand in alliance with any other group...
...Both groups, however, succumbed to their respective heroes with an alarmingly naive faith, and in no way more alarming than for what it suggests of their future political behavior...
...But, such as they are, they suggest that there is a gap between our image of American liberalism and theactual movement that goes by this name...
...Precisely this sense of separation from his audience, as from his public self, made Stevenson seem an emblem of the intellectual condition...
...For if it was Stevenson's forthright liberalism that endeared him to the intellectuals, then they should have been fonder still of Truman, a man considerably more forthright...
...Some socialists continue to favor a rigid intransigeance: no support to either of the two capitalist parties...
...Stevenson's little bodyguard of friends and admirers, with their literary contacts and facilities for the projection of their views, are not altogether innocent of having allowed this gap to become so wide...
...I have recently been going through Stevenson's campaign speeches, trying to discover the secret of his success with the intellectuals...
...I want therefore to put aside the question of whom socialists and liberals should have voted for...
...Consider, by way of introduction, the following points: 1) In a mild way, Eisenhower's political appeal was of the kind called "Bonapartist...
...But for the intellectuals to see their attitudes acted out 14 • DISSENT • Winter 1954 upon the public stage by a patrician who, unlike FDR, made no effort to be anything but a patrician, by a man whose grandfather had actually been Vice-President of the United States, by a man who had married into wealth with apparent ease and out of it with obvious forbearance—this, indeed, was pleasant...
...He was simply asked for his views...
...In foreign policy Truman and Stevenson—as, for that matter, Eisenhower— had few significant differences, while in domestic policy Truman was, if anything, slightly to the left of Stevenson, who let it be known throughout the campaign that he was a moderate, sensible Democrat...
...What they got was a more graceful and less bumbling edition of John Foster Dulles...
...At times Stevenson resembled a debutante who had contracted a hasty marriage and despite the use of the most advanced precautions had been blessed with issue: and there she stands, uncomfortably holding a diaper between thumb and forefinger...
...At this point: impatient interruptions...
...Whenever Stevenson spoke before a special interest group he went Winter 1954 • DISSENT • 17 out of his way to declare himself not merely for it, like any politician, but also above it—the mark of a statesman, no doubt...
...We shall probably be confined to the basic job of advancing and clarifying our ideas as to the nature of modern society and the need for a radical social change, and to serving as a radical gadfly to the labor-liberal movement, demanding from it what is at present no small or inglorious thing: that it remain faithful, at least, to the tradition of liberalism...
...What happens now if we bring together these three observations...
...One would think that the only possible way of reasserting "American ends" would be through a prolonged and sharp criticism of "Administration means...

Vol. 1 • January 1954 • No. 1


 
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