Dayton Daily News

Nasty rhetoric part of many U.S. presidenti­al campaigns

Use of hyberbole, insults, falsehoods a part of politics.

- By Alexia Fernandez

This year’s presidenti­al campaign has been described as outrageous, coarse, unfitting of a civilized country. But there might be another way to describe it: thoroughly American.

The United States is no stranger to scandalous and strange presidenti­al elections. In fact, they were the norm in the country’s early years, when candidates resorted to invective that not even Donald Trump has equaled.

Presidenti­al campaigns have evolved with developmen­ts in technology as well.

Throughout the evolution, however, words — sometimes hyperbolic, insulting, even blatantly false — have always mattered.

1800: Early days and a vicious campaign

The presidenti­al campaign of 1800 gave the American public its first taste of how outrageous and fierce candidates could be in pursuit of the highest office.

Thomas Jefferson, who lost the 1796 election against John Adams, campaigned formidably against the incumbent.

He paid the editor of The Richmond Examiner to print anti-Federalist and anti-Adams articles and praise his own campaign.

Written attacks by Jefferson supporters claimed Adams was a “hideous hermaphrod­ital character, which has neither the force and firmness of a man, nor the gentleness and sensibilit­y of a woman.”

Adams’ campaign retaliated, calling Jefferson a “mean-spirited, low-lived fellow, the son of a half-breed Indian squaw, sired by a Virginia mulatto father.”

1828: Round 2 of Jackson vs. Adams

Andrew Jackson, a decorated Tennessee war hero, lost the presidenti­al election of 1824 to John Quincy Adams. So there was bad blood between the two when Jackson challenged Adams four years later, in 1828. The race turned into one of the ugliest in the country’s history.

Jackson and his wife, Rachel, were vilified by Adams’ campaign. They were called “adulterers,” after Jackson’s opponents discovered Rachel was still married to her first husband when she married Jackson.

Jackson’s enemies called his wife a bigamist and his mother a “common prostitute.”

Mudslingin­g also came from Jackson’s supporters, who referred to Adams as a “corrupt bargainer” and an “unscrupulo­us aristocrat” who had misused tax dollars.

After Jackson won the election, Rachel said she “would rather be a door-keeper in the house of God than to live in that palace in Washington.”

On Dec. 22, 1828, just three months before her husband’s inaugurati­on, she died of a heart attack.

1884: ‘Ma, ma, where’s my Pa?’

Grover Cleveland admitted to an affair with a woman named Maria Halpin 10 years earlier. The entangleme­nt produced a son who was given the surname Cleveland. The baby was placed for adoption and Halpin was promptly sent to an asylum.

The scandal didn’t prevent Democrats from creating their own jingles. They began spreading rumors of Blaine’s crookednes­s with, “Blaine, Blaine, James G. Blaine, The Continenta­l Liar from the State of Maine!”

After Cleveland won the election, Democrats had the last word with this rebuttal to their opponents’ jingle: “Ma, Ma, where’s my Pa? Gone to the White House, ha, ha, ha!”

1964: The ‘Daisy’ ad

Midway through the 20th century, one of the most notorious ads ever shown during a political campaign ran on Sept. 7, 1964.

President Lyndon B. Johnson’s “Peace Little Girl (Daisy)” campaign ad aired only once, during an NBC broadcast of “Monday Night at the Movies.”

In the ad, a little girl in a field plucks the petals off a flower. A voiceover begins a countdown while zooming in on the girl’s face. Once the countdown is complete, the video quickly cuts to a nuclear bomb detonating.

Then Johnson’s voice is heard: “These are the stakes. To make a world in which all of God’s children can live or to go into the dark. We must either love each other or we must die.”

Johnson had been vice president under John F. Kennedy, and ascended to the presidency in 1963 when Kennedy was assassinat­ed. He ran for president against Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater, whose ads were old-fashioned compared to Johnson’s.

Johnson wanted voters to focus on Goldwater’s rightwing views, and zeroed in on comments Goldwater had made about the possibilit­y of using low-yield nuclear weapons in the Vietnam War.

Johnson’s campaign released another ad, “Merely Another Weapon,” displaying the detonation of a nuclear bomb and quoting Goldwater as saying atomic weapons were “merely another weapon.”

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