Rendezvous with Destiny: Ronald Reagan and the Campaign That Changed America
“A first-rate work of insider his­tory . . . A monumental accomplishment.” —National Review
 

The election that changed everything: Craig Shirley’s masterful account of the 1980 presidential campaign reveals how a race judged “too close to call” as late as Election Day became a Reagan landslide—and altered the course of history.
 
To write Rendezvous with Destiny, Shirley gained unprecedented access to 1980 campaign files and interviewed more than 150 insiders—from Reagan’s closest advisers and family members to Jimmy Carter himself. His gripping account follows Reagan’s unlikely path from his bitter defeat on the floor of the 1976 Republican convention, through his underreported “wilderness years,” through grueling primary fights in which he knocked out several Republican heavyweights, through an often-nasty general election campaign complicated by the presence of a third-party candidate (not to mention the looming shadow of Ted Kennedy), to Reagan’s astounding victory on Election Night in 1980.
 
Shirley’s years of intensive research have enabled him to relate countless untold stories—including, at long last, the solution to one of the most enduring mysteries in politics: just how Reagan’s campaign got hold of Carter’s debate briefing books.


1100261545
Rendezvous with Destiny: Ronald Reagan and the Campaign That Changed America
“A first-rate work of insider his­tory . . . A monumental accomplishment.” —National Review
 

The election that changed everything: Craig Shirley’s masterful account of the 1980 presidential campaign reveals how a race judged “too close to call” as late as Election Day became a Reagan landslide—and altered the course of history.
 
To write Rendezvous with Destiny, Shirley gained unprecedented access to 1980 campaign files and interviewed more than 150 insiders—from Reagan’s closest advisers and family members to Jimmy Carter himself. His gripping account follows Reagan’s unlikely path from his bitter defeat on the floor of the 1976 Republican convention, through his underreported “wilderness years,” through grueling primary fights in which he knocked out several Republican heavyweights, through an often-nasty general election campaign complicated by the presence of a third-party candidate (not to mention the looming shadow of Ted Kennedy), to Reagan’s astounding victory on Election Night in 1980.
 
Shirley’s years of intensive research have enabled him to relate countless untold stories—including, at long last, the solution to one of the most enduring mysteries in politics: just how Reagan’s campaign got hold of Carter’s debate briefing books.


12.99 In Stock
Rendezvous with Destiny: Ronald Reagan and the Campaign That Changed America

Rendezvous with Destiny: Ronald Reagan and the Campaign That Changed America

by Craig Shirley
Rendezvous with Destiny: Ronald Reagan and the Campaign That Changed America

Rendezvous with Destiny: Ronald Reagan and the Campaign That Changed America

by Craig Shirley

eBookDigital Original (Digital Original)

$12.99  $16.99 Save 24% Current price is $12.99, Original price is $16.99. You Save 24%.

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

“A first-rate work of insider his­tory . . . A monumental accomplishment.” —National Review
 

The election that changed everything: Craig Shirley’s masterful account of the 1980 presidential campaign reveals how a race judged “too close to call” as late as Election Day became a Reagan landslide—and altered the course of history.
 
To write Rendezvous with Destiny, Shirley gained unprecedented access to 1980 campaign files and interviewed more than 150 insiders—from Reagan’s closest advisers and family members to Jimmy Carter himself. His gripping account follows Reagan’s unlikely path from his bitter defeat on the floor of the 1976 Republican convention, through his underreported “wilderness years,” through grueling primary fights in which he knocked out several Republican heavyweights, through an often-nasty general election campaign complicated by the presence of a third-party candidate (not to mention the looming shadow of Ted Kennedy), to Reagan’s astounding victory on Election Night in 1980.
 
Shirley’s years of intensive research have enabled him to relate countless untold stories—including, at long last, the solution to one of the most enduring mysteries in politics: just how Reagan’s campaign got hold of Carter’s debate briefing books.



Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781497636385
Publisher: Intercollegiate Studies Institute (ORD)
Publication date: 04/08/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 752
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Craig Shirley is the author of the critically acclaimed bestsellers Reagan’s Revolution: The Untold Story of the Campaign That Started It All and December 1941. He is also president of Shirley & Banister Public Affairs in Alexandria, Virginia.


Read an Excerpt

Rendezvous with Destiny

Ronald Reagan and the Campaign That Changed America


By Craig Shirley

ISI Books

Copyright © 2009 Craig Shirley
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4976-3638-5



CHAPTER 1

Exit, Stage Right

"It was the worst I'd ever seen him."

August 20, 1976


Ronald Reagan was angry, frustrated, and disappointed.

He left the Republican Party's convention in Kansas City satisfied that he'd done all he could do to wrest the nomination away from President Gerald Ford, yet at the same time Reagan was disquieted that he'd lost to a man he deemed a political inferior. Reagan gave an impromptu, eloquent, and bittersweet address to the delegates on the last night of the convention, and those assembled thought this would be the last time they would ever see him. Many in Kemper Arena wept. They sent Reagan off with a resounding outpouring of affection.

He had attempted the extraordinary: seizing the nomination from an incumbent president, albeit an embattled one. He'd come astonishingly close. Ford won the nomination by only 57 votes more than the 1,130 he needed, beating Reagan by just a handful of delegates. Had Reagan prevented Ford from winning the nomination on the first ballot and forced a second balloting, he may well have won the GOP nomination. The delegates in North Carolina, Kentucky, and other states were mandated to vote for President Ford on the first ballot but would have been free to vote for Reagan a second time around, and he was their real preference. Reagan had certainly been welcomed more warmly than the incumbent by the seventeen thousand GOP faithful in Kemper Arena. A California state senator, H. L. Richardson, summed up the abilities of the two when he said, "Reagan could get a standing ovation in a graveyard. Ford puts you to sleep in the third paragraph."

Lyn Nofziger, one of Reagan's closest aides, later confided, "To my surprise, Reagan, who is seldom bitter, went to California a bitter man, convinced that Ford had stolen the nomination from him."

Of Reagan's conservative crusade, Washington Post reporter Lou Cannon presciently wrote, "But whether the Republicans win or not, it is also quite conceivable that Reagan's campaign this year and his impact on the Republican credo may lead Americans to conclude that the GOP, once again, really stands for something."

"He almost certainly believed that his political career, in terms of any future candidacy, was at an end," Peter Hannaford wrote in The Reagans.

So, too, did the rest of America.

Departing Kansas City on his way to the airport, Reagan passed a hand-painted sign in a bakery shop that read, "Goodbye, Republicans. You picked the wrong man."

Reagan, as far as everybody was concerned, was finished as a prospective president. He had been around the track twice, and lost twice, and would be seventy years old by 1981. Political obituaries popped up in the mainstream press. Newsweek ran a small story on the end of Reagan with a headline that was characteristic: "Into the Sunset."

Though many in Kansas City thought a "unity" ticket between Ford and Reagan was best for the GOP, neither man thought it was best for him. It was the only thing they agreed on. Reagan, and especially Mrs. Reagan, could barely be in the same room with the Fords. President Ford, for his part, utterly rejected the notion of Reagan as his running mate, saying, "Absolutely not. I don't want anything to do with that son of a bitch." Ford ignored the pleas of his staff, including his young White House chief of staff, Richard Cheney, and his pollster, Bob Teeter, even after they came to Camp David several weeks before the convention armed with polling data showing that Ford's only chance against Jimmy Carter in the fall was with Reagan at his side. Cheney and Teeter understood Reagan's ability to connect with disaffected lunch-bucket Democrats in electoral-vote-rich states like New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania — voters who would eventually become known as "Reagan Democrats" — as well as Catholics and voters in Jimmy Carter's "Cotton South."

Reagan's militant supporters were just as contemptuous of Ford. When asked what the Reaganites' "demeanor" should be toward the victorious Ford supporters, the irreverent Nofziger quipped, "Da meaner da better." Reagan campaign staffers — now out of work — milled around, drinking, laughing, crying, and bitching about Ford and the convention, the real or perceived failures of Reagan campaign manager John Sears, and the various missed opportunities over the previous year. They, too, felt that despite all the discord and disorganization at the campaign committee, Citizens for Reagan, it had ultimately been luck, money, and naked power in the Ohio, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and New York primaries, along with betrayal in Mississippi, that had cost their man the nomination.



Settling into his airplane seat for the flight back to California, Reagan looked quietly out the window, holding hands with Nancy. During the flight, Marty Anderson, the Gipper's key policy adviser, asked Reagan to sign his convention hall pass and Reagan wrote wistfully, "We dreamed — we fought and the dream is still with us."

Peter Hannaford, Reagan's soft-spoken, talented aide, was also on the plane. "I was right behind the Reagans. The seat-belt sign went off and the governor stood and said, 'Well, fellas, I guess we've got to get back to work.' I said, 'Yes, sir, your first taping is two weeks from Wednesday and your column is due.'" Reagan looked at him and jokingly said, "You didn't think I'd win, did you?" Hannaford replied, "Yes, sir, but you always have to have a contingency plan!" Everybody laughed, especially Reagan. Later, the Reagans walked up and down the aisles, Nancy hugging sobbing staffers, Reagan philosophically saying, "We do not know the reason, but someday we will." Michael Deaver, another young aide, said everyone was "devastated." Frank Reynolds of ABC did a touching story that evening, closing with a shot of the Reagans' plane flying off into the western horizon as Reynolds was saying, "So long, Rawhide. See you later, Rainbow." "Rawhide" and "Rainbow" were of course their Secret Service code names.


Reagan was exhausted after ten grueling months on the campaign trail. From the time of his announcement in November 1975 until the end of the convention in August, he had been on the road continuously, traveling perhaps one hundred thousand miles or more, eating on the run, sleeping in hotels, getting up early, going to bed late, shaking hands with thousands, giving innumerable interviews and speeches. He needed to recharge his batteries, and nothing did that for him like being at Rancho del Cielo — his "Ranch in the Sky" — with only Nancy and his horses for company. The ranch covered nearly seven hundred acres high in the Santa Ynez Mountains, thirty miles outside of Santa Barbara. There, for days on end, he woke early, rode, cut trees and underbrush, erected fences, rebuilt the 1,200 square-foot main building, tended the horses, soaked up the sun, and thought. At night, he'd relax with a book, write letters, go for long quiet walks with "Mommy" — Reagan's nickname for Nancy — and talk, as always, about the future.

He quickly set to work, however. As Hannaford had promised, Reagan needed to return to his nationally syndicated column, which King Features distributed to hundreds of newspapers twice a week. He also started recording five-minute radio commentaries that began broadcasting on September 20. The commentaries went to more than five hundred radio stations with a combined audience of around forty million people at any given time. One of Reagan's early radio segments touted the tax cuts in a bill offered by a young Republican backbencher in Congress, Jack Kemp of Buffalo. It was a revolutionary concept; tax cuts had been a Democratic issue, not a Republican one. John Kennedy had cut taxes, and the GOP was the balanced-budget, green-eyeshade party. Giving people back their money fit into Reagan's pro-growth optimism and evolving political framework. Tax cuts, which empowered individuals and lowered their dependence on government, were a critical part of the development of Reagan's new conservatism; his optimism involved much more than just a sunny personality.

In September, Reagan gathered the core of his defunct campaign staff, some members of his "Kitchen Cabinet" — a group of wealthy Californians who had advised him to run for governor back in 1964 — and a handful of other friends and aides at his home in Pacific Palisades for a "seafood salad served on avocado wedges and a raspberry desert," and conversation. Conspicuously absent from the meeting was the controversial John Sears, which was just fine with several of the attendees, especially Nofziger. They were still angry at Sears's missteps over the past year, which they believed had cost Reagan opportunities to overtake Ford. Many blamed Sears at least in part for the "$90 billion" gaffe in late 1975. At Sears's direction Reagan had given a speech in which he made specific proposals for shifting responsibilities to the states without proposing how to fund them. The flap contributed to Reagan's losing the New Hampshire primary. (Some years later Sears did take responsibility for the "$90 billion" mayhem.)

No one at the meeting talked about a 1980 Reagan campaign. It was just blue sky over the horizon. Still, Reagan was looking ahead. He decided to create a permanent political operation designed to assist candidates and campaign staffers of the Right in building for the future, spreading the word about Reagan's small-government approach to policy and politics, and keeping Reagan in front of the American people. The new organization would not be announced until after the election, however. Jimmy Carter was well ahead of Ford in the polls and few at the meeting thought the president would win; some Reaganites, in fact, were pulling for Ford to lose. But Reagan did not want to appear to be presumptuously dancing on the grave of Ford's presidency before Ford actually lost the election.

Although Reagan still felt wounded by the derision and ridicule that the Ford team and the GOP establishment had directed at him, he did agree to campaign for President Ford and his running mate, Senator Robert J. Dole of Kansas. Reagan also made a thirty-minute television appeal for the GOP, taping the entire speech in one take. It aired on Sunday, September 19, at 10:30 P.M. eastern time on NBC. The focus of the speech was not on Ford but on the differences between the Republican and Democratic platforms — an important issue for Reagan, since the GOP platform had his fingerprints all over it. Later in the campaign, he made four commercials in Hollywood, promoting the platform and, finally, Ford. But as the New York Times noted, "It was duty more than heartfelt enthusiasm that produced the Reagan ads for the Ford campaign."

Ford was lagging far behind Carter and needed desperately to shore up his base, but the president waited almost a month after the convention before actually calling Reagan and asking him to campaign. Even then, the Ford team did not make good use of the popular Reagan. Hannaford later recounted that "the Ford campaign had made few specific requests until near the end of the campaign, when they wanted [Reagan] in a place he could not get to one day without scrubbing several other long-promised appearances."

In late October, by which point the polls had tightened, a leak from Ford aides to the New York Times said, "Former Gov. Ronald Reagan of California has refused a request by President Ford's top election strategists to campaign on the President's behalf in three key states in the final days of the Presidential race." The story made it appear as if Reagan wanted Ford to lose the election, when in fact Reagan was campaigning heavily for Ford and the GOP in California, which Ford needed if he was to have any chance of winning the election. Reagan also campaigned in North Carolina, Texas, Louisiana, and the Midwest. All told, he appeared in twenty-five states for the Republicans in the closing months of the 1976 campaign. Reagan was also asked to become the honorary chairman of the Ford campaign, but he took a pass.

Despite his campaigning for the Ford-Dole ticket, Reagan made it unmistakably clear at a joint appearance in Los Angeles that he wanted to be anywhere other than with Gerald Ford. "It was the worst I'd ever seen him," remembered Lou Cannon, who was covering the event for the Washington Post. Reagan's body language and his refusal to address the president directly, much less talk up his chances against Carter, were lost on no one. "I can remember saying ... to my editors, this is not much of an endorsement," said Cannon. "The words do not begin to convey how distant he was. I've never seen Reagan like that in my entire life." The Ford children and the Reagan children stood at opposite sides of the room and simply glared at each other. Cheney had previously gone to California on a "peace mission" to smooth the relationship between Ford and Reagan, but he met with little success; when he reached Mike Deaver on the phone, "he got a distinctly cool reception."


Ford loathed Reagan, but he needed him. Reagan loathed Ford, but he needed to keep up appearances for the sake of any political future.



Carter began to decline in the polls but it was not because the voters had discovered that they had fallen in love all of a sudden with the wallflower Republicans. Far from it. Doubts were being raised about Carter. Even the old crook Willie Sutton said, "I've never seen a bigger confidence man in my life, and I've been around some of the best in the business." Sutton knew his psychobabble. When a psychiatrist once tried to plumb his depths, asking why he robbed banks, Sutton famously replied, "Because that's where the money is."

By Election Day 1976, Gerald Ford had battled back from a 30-point midsummer deficit in the polls, thanks in part to his so-called Rose Garden strategy, which amounted to staying in the White House and acting presidential. But in the end, Carter successfully ran out the clock on Ford. He won narrowly in the Electoral College, 297–240, and even more closely in the popular vote, defeating Ford by a hairsbreadth, 50–48 percent.

So it was that America ended up with this improbable president, James Earl Carter, the peanut farmer and former one-term Georgia governor. Carter, like Reagan, had grown up in an atmosphere of populism; also like Reagan, he had campaigned against the Washington buddy system. The beliefs of Carter and Reagan were based on cultural, religious, and moral values, though Carter was a distinctly more left-wing populist. But the media and the American people had a hard time figuring the Democrat out. "I was a conservative southern governor who believed in human rights ... and a balanced budget," Carter recalled. "It was kind of a strange mixture."

Some of Reagan's aides were delighted at the outcome of the election, because to them it proved that a conservative majority existed in America, outside the limited boundaries of a clannish, elitist GOP, which excluded Democrats and independents, but not outside the reach of Reagan, the conservative populist. They were convinced that had Reagan been the nominee, he would have made inroads into the South and won the election. They were also convinced that Reagan would have made mincemeat out of Carter in the debates, unlike Ford, who had made a hash of them.

Reagan himself remained publicly undecided about whether to take another shot at the GOP nomination and the White House. When a UPI reporter caught up with him on Election Day and asked him about his plans for the future, Reagan said frankly that he "'wouldn't rule out and wouldn't rule in' another try ... in four years."


Postelection, President Ford summoned Vice President Nelson Rockefeller, former Texas governor John Connally, and Reagan to discuss the future of the GOP. The time for the meeting was changed at the last minute and Reagan had to scramble to make it. He later confided in a letter to an old friend, former senator George Murphy of California, "Do you suppose they were hoping I wouldn't come?"

One of the key issues involved the chairmanship of the Republican National Committee (RNC). Ford and Rockefeller were quietly supporting James A. Baker III, Ford's skillful delegate hunter in the spring and summer of 1976. Baker had done more than anyone in the Ford operation to secure Ford's nomination, thwarting Reagan. Reagan objected, saying that Baker would be unacceptable to Sun Belt conservatives. The meeting was inconclusive — except for the fact that when the old curmudgeon of the Republican Party, Mr. Sun Belt himself, Barry Goldwater, caught wind of the meeting, he pitched a fit for not having been invited, said it was an "insult," and vowed never to raise money for the party again. By then, however, Ronald Reagan had eclipsed Goldwater as the conservative leader in America.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Rendezvous with Destiny by Craig Shirley. Copyright © 2009 Craig Shirley. Excerpted by permission of ISI Books.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Foreword by George F. Will,
Chapter 1 Exit, Stage Right,
Chapter 2 Return of the Republicans,
Chapter 3 Le Malaise,
Chapter 4 The Front-Walker,
Chapter 5 The Undiscovered Countryside,
Chapter 6 The Asterisk Also Rises,
Chapter 7 Bush Bears Down,
Chapter 8 Descent into the Maelstrom,
Chapter 9 Fast Times at Nashua High,
Chapter 10 Reagan Romps,
Chapter 11 Under New Management,
Chapter 12 Ford Tees Off,
Chapter 13 Now Anderson,
Chapter 14 Bush's Counteroffensive,
Chapter 15 Reagan's Democrats,
Chapter 16 The Appalachian Trail,
Chapter 17 West of Eden,
Chapter 18 Winning is Good,
Chapter 19 Six Men Out,
Chapter 20 Coming of Age,
Chapter 21 The Road to Detroit,
Chapter 22 Summer in the City,
Chapter 23 At Center Stage,
Chapter 24 Motown Madness,
Chapter 25 Family, Work, Neighborhood, Peace, and Freedom,
Chapter 26 Horse Latitudes,
Chapter 27 The Democrats,
Chapter 28 Corbin,
Chapter 29 General Quarters,
Chapter 30 Slouching Towards November,
Chapter 31 The Torrents of Autumn,
Chapter 32 Mission From God,
Chapter 33 Stalled,
Chapter 34 On Deck,
Chapter 35 Cleveland,
Chapter 36 Meltdown,
Chapter 37 Entrance, Stage Left,
Epilogue Destiny,
Author's Note,
Notes,
Bibliography,
Acknowledgments,
Index,

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews