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Nation: Republicans: Who Are the Goldwaterites?
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Charles Edison, a former New Jersey Governor, is disgusted with "power centralized in the hands of the Federal Government and with socialism. I am against states being pushed into oblivion. That is what is happening now." Says Kansas' Republican Representative Bob Dole: "Goldwater's victory anchors a party which has been adrift for some years. Now we can, in candor, go out and make speeches for spending cuts and sound conservative principles, certain that we won't be undercut by the leaders of our party."
Despite the pollsters, Goldwater's supporters are convinced that he can win in November. "In my own state, we have thousands of people who haven't been voting," says Dr. Durward Hall, chairman of Missouri's delegation to the G.O.P. Convention. "They'll vote this time. There is a great grass-roots uprising against the Republican me-too-ers and non-constitutionalists and one-worlders and the foreign press. This fellow Goldwater will sweep the nation." According to some Goldwaterites, the bulk of the 39 million Americans who failed to vote in 1960 were not lower income citizens who would be Democratically inclined. Instead, they were conservatives who considered both candidates too liberal. "We've never been offered a real choice in my lifetime," said Arlington, Va., Businessman Marvin Toombs, 43. "This is it."
Part of Goldwater's appeal is his undeniable personal magnetism. To teenagers his chief attraction may be his image as jet pilot, ham radio operator and driver of a flashy sports car, but his voting-age admirers couch it in more substantial termsintegrity, honesty and courage. Even his quick-draw, shoot-from-the-hip tendency has its defenders. "Truman shot from the hip," says Virginian Walter Conklin, a magazine production manager. "Kennedy did it against U.S. Steel. I think it's a very human frailty."
A Touch of Innocence. Beyond the personal appeal, there is a quality of emotionalism and degree of loyalty among Goldwater's supporters that is rare in U.S. politics. A measure of the loyalty is the fact that 40% of the $2,750,000 he raised for his pre-convention campaign came from some 400,000 "grassroots givers" who kicked in $10 or less apiece. The emotionalism was obvious in the wild cheers that greeted every mention of Barry's name in the Cow Palace. And, in a far different way, it was manifest in jeers for Nelson Rockefeller as he spoke to the convention. These were not so much for the man or what he was saying as for what he symbolizedthe urban Eastern "Establishment," the Eastern press and the Eastern cash that have dominated the G.O.P. for generations.
There is a touch of innocence and naiveté in the Goldwater movement, but there is also great pride and determination. And perhaps Mrs. Eleanor Ring of San Diego, widow of a Navy admiral and an alternate delegate to last week's convention, summed it up best when she said: "What's happened here is a real revolution. We aren't a bunch of extremists. All we are is a fast-growing group of people interested in law and order."
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