DEMOCRATS According to the conventional script and timetable, this is the period in which the out party's presidential aspirants try to sound like statesmen in public while maneuvering for support and money in private. Senator George McGovern has decided to write his own scenario by declaring his candidacy for the Democratic nomination this weekthereby becoming the earliest self-certified contender in recent memory.
Why the rush? After a two-hour interview with the South Dakotan, TIME Correspondent Neil MacNeil explained: "McGovern has to move a full year ahead of time because to wait would mean his ruination. He would be forgotten in the melee to come. He had to offer something now, or give Edmund Muskie the chance to wrap up the nomination in the year before the convention." For a McGovern candidacy, it is not a question of staying alive but of striking the initial spark of life.
McGovern. 48, fully acknowledges the favored position that Muskie enjoys. To cut the Maine Senator's lead, McGovern believes that he must offer formal competition that will put pressure on Muskie to take hard positions on controversial issues. Further, if McGovern can demonstrate that a genuine contest is shaping upa gigantic if Muskie's ability to nail down commitments of support from party leaders will suffer. The strategy also calls for stressing the importance of the primary season next year. Said McGovern: "I think that there's a different mood in the Democratic Party since the 1968 Chicago experience. You're going to have to demonstrate strength in the primaries. It's not going to be settled in the back rooms."
McGovern said that he would enter a "representative group" of primaries, probably including some, like New Hampshire, in which New Englander Muskie has a natural advantage. If he makes enough of an impact between now and then, McGovern believes, Muskie will be compelled to fight it out. In the interim, "to lay the basis for the primary contests," McGovern plans to travel widely and speak loudly.
As one of the earliest and most consistent doves, McGovern figures that Muskie's record is vulnerable on the war and military spending in general. "Viet Nam," said McGovern, "is just the most grievous manifestation of a world view that is based on what we're afraid of rather than what we stand for. I was a bomber pilot in World War II. I'm not a pacifist. I think we've now lost sight of the absolutely essential need for coexistence, even with countries with whom we don't agree." He has also championed the poor, argued for larger federal food-distribution programs and led the fight for internal reform of Democratic Party procedures.
Hence McGovern hopespresuming the continued presidential reticence of Edward Kennedyto appear as the political heir to Robert Kennedy. By seeking the same constituency that Kennedy did in 1968. McGovern. by implication at least, will be trying to shove Muskie into the old-politics ditch of Hubert Humphrey and Lyndon Johnson.
