Wearing a locomotive engineer's cap, Barry Goldwater took over the controls of his Whistle Stop Special in Logansport, Ind., guided the train on a brisk two-mile run down the line. That was about the only time Goldwater's campaign for the presidency seemed to be moving forward.
There has been hardly any Goldwater pronouncement the last month that seemed to be calculated to win to his cause any sizable new segment of voters. Everybody remembers how he went out of his way to alienate audiences, attacking TVA in Tennessee, medicare in front of Florida pensioners, and the President's anti-poverty campaign in the depressed, eleven-state Appalachian region. Now, as his prospects of election became dimmer and dim mer, he sounded wilder and wilder in his charges against the Johnson Administration.
Letting Out the Stops. Last week in Indianapolis he let out all the stops. Excerpts from his speech: "This nation has gone to war three times in this century," he cried, "but not under a Republican President! Republicans always have understood how to preserve freedom while keeping the peace. And despite the most strident and lie-filled campaign that the opposition can launch, the next Republican President this Republican President will keep the peace just as surely.
"A major concern of ours has been the preparedness of this nation, the ability of this nation to defend itself to deter war the ability of its soldiers, sail ors and airmen to protect themselves without being straitjacketed or stripped of weapons.
"This Administration is trying to dis tort that concern so that you will be frightened into thinking that we want a war. This is nothing but the Big Lie.
This is nothing but the Administration's version of the old tactic of spend and spend and spend, elect, elect and elect.
This time it's lie, lie and lie.
"Why does the leader of this Administration hide behind his White House fence, or behind his curious crew of camp followers? Why doesn't he face you? I charge that he shrinks from discussion, that he shrinks from the view of the publicexcept when in the middle of a mob scenefor the same reasons he has shirked leadership. He has no principles upon which to base his programs. The programs are solely political. He has no principles upon which to base his foreign policy. His policy is one of sidesteppingof drift, deceit and defeat. He cannot face the glare of discussion because he cannot face the glaring questions of his fellow citizens. He talks of peace, but he has no stomach to face up to the main threat to peace Communism."
Poor Politics. Entirely aside from the tastelessness of such a diatribe, there can be little question that it was poor politicsif only because a huge majority of the U.S. voting public clearly does not agree with Barry's estimate of the Johnson Administration.
But then Goldwater went even farther. He revived an old and ugly phrase "soft on Communism." Said he in Cincinnati: "I charge that this Administration is soft on Communism." He underlined the phrase in his text, repeated it in his barnstorming in Illinois and Indiana. "The cause of peace," he said, "will not be served by men who are soft on Communism."
