Whitaker and Baxter
Clem Whitaker and Leone Baxter were a husband-and-wife team that started Campaigns, Inc., the first political consulting firm in the United States. Based in California, the firm worked on a variety of political issues, mostly for Republican Party candidates. Together, they developed strategies and tactics - such as media advertisement buys and direct-mail campaigns - that are still widely used in today's campaigns. Their public relations work would not only revolutionize politics in the modern era, but also deeply impact political issues that are still salient today.
Backgrounds
Clem Whitaker
Clem Whitaker was born in Tempe, Arizona, on May 1, 1899. He was the son of a Baptist minister. Clem was raised in Willits, California, where he submitted his first story for the Willits News at age 13. He began working for the Sacramento Union at age 18. Following a brief stint in the Army during World War I, Whitaker became city editor for the Union before moving to the Sacramento Examiner at age 21.[1] He would serve as a political writer for the Examiner until 1921, when he founded the Capitol News Bureau.[1] His company disseminated political news to 80 newspapers statewide. While living in Sacramento, he married a woman named Harriet Reynolds. The couple went on to have 3 children: Clem Jr., Milton, and Patricia.
Leone Baxter
Much less is known about Leone Baxter than Whitaker. Baxter's Social Security application lists her birthdate as November 20, 1906, in Kelso, Washington.[2] She briefly wrote for the Portland Oregonian. However, after becoming a widow at age 28, she moved to Redding, California. There she found work promoting a water carnival for the Chamber of Commerce. Baxter became the Chamber manager in 1929.
Origin of the firm
Lobbying
After selling his business to United Press in 1930, a barber friend whose trade association was having trouble lobbying the state legislature caught Whitaker's attention. For $4,000, Whitaker organized the barbers into a potent lobbying group, leading to legislation creating the State Board of Barber Examiners.[1]
In 1933, the Pacific Gas and Electric Company lobbied to place Proposition 1 on the ballot for California's December 1933 special election.[1] This measure was aimed at striking down recent legislation that would establish the Central Valley Project. The Central Valley Project was to be the nation's largest water irrigation project, supported by the progressivists who believed in non-privatized power. While PG&E wanted to pass Proposition 1 to defeat the CVP, lawyer Sheridan Downey was forming a team to help defeat Proposition 1.
Becoming Campaigns, Inc.
Clem Whitaker's lobbying efforts for the barbers' trade union attracted Downey, who hired him to help on the campaign. Knowing that the nearby City of Redding would also have economic interests in protecting the Central Valley Project, Downey recruited the city's Chamber of Commerce manager, Leone Baxter, to help with his undertaking. Downey paired Whitaker and Baxter together on the project. Together, Whitaker and Baxter were able to defeat the measure by 33,000 votes.[1]
This partnership led to the formation of their campaign management firm, Campaigns Inc., in 1933. Although called Campaigns Inc., the business would not actually be incorporated until 1950, under the name Whitaker & Baxter, Inc.[1] Whitaker separated from his then wife, Harriet Reynolds, in 1935. In 1938, after being in business together for five years, Clem Whitaker and Leone Baxter married.
Career Highlights
George Hatfield for Lieutenant Governor
Campaigns Inc. was retained for their first official political campaign in 1934.[1] George Hatfield, a prominent Republican who served as U.S. Attorney for California's Northern District, was running for Lieutenant Governor of California against Democrat Sheridan Downey, who had first introduced the pair of political consultants. For Hatfield's election, Whitaker & Baxter's company records from this campaign included many speeches and advertisements they produced. They also analyzed polling data to determine if their message was having an impact on voters. Ultimately, Hatfield would go on to win the election.
Frank Merriam for Governor
In 1934, Whitaker & Baxter were hired by the client who would ultimately put them on the map. Frank Merriam, California's former lieutenant governor who had been volleyed to the gubernatorial seat following the mid-term death of James Rolph, was running for re-election as governor. Merriam, who assumed the governor's office in June 1934, had immediately faced a union crisis. The International Longshoremen's Association was striking, effectively shutting down the ports in San Francisco. When police attempted to escort temporary workers to the docks, they became engaged in skirmishes with the strikers. Fearing political ruin if he sent the Guard in to subdue the strikers, Merriam is rumored to have worked a deal with state Republicans to the party's gubernatorial nominee in exchange for the deployment. Ultimately, both federal and state troops were able to handle the situation, and Merriam was able to blame the ordeal on the political Left. Merriam's main opponent in the gubernatorial election would be Upton Sinclair, author of The Jungle. A known Socialist, Sinclair had been able to win a surprise victory in the primary due to his EPIC Project, which stood for "End Poverty in California." The EPIC plan included government work programs and cooperatives. In their first major election, Whitaker and Baxter were able to lead Merriam to a victory over Sinclair, 48% to 37%, with a third party candidate taking 13%. Arthur Schlesinger called this the first all out public relations Blitzkrieg in American Politics, while Sidney Blumenthal considered it a landmark in the development of the political consultant.[1] For the time, their work was groundbreaking. However, the tactics they used to attack Sinclair are still a widely used campaign strategy today.
Oppositional research
Prior to the election, Sinclair was a renowned writer. I, Governor of California, and How I Ended Poverty was a work of Sinclair's set in the future. The basic scenario of the book was that Sinclair had been elected governor, and his EPIC plan had succeeded in one-hundred percent employment for California. However, his other writings did not help him achieve these lofty goals. Using oppositional research tactics, Whitaker and Baxter pored through all of Sinclair's writings, finding quotes that they could use against him. The Los Angeles Times began putting quotes from Sinclair on their front page six weeks before the election. Sinclair ultimately attributed his loss to Whitaker & Baxter, who were named only as "The Lie Factory" in his post-election book, "I, Candidate for Governor, and How I Got Licked."[3]
For their part, Whitaker and Baxter's oppositional research was not entirely factual. The following quote, which appeared in the L.A. Times reflecting Sinclair's opinion on marriage, was taken from a fictional character's dialogue in Sinclair's book Love's Pilgrimage.
"The sanctity of marriage. . . . I have had such a belief . . . I have it no longer."[4]
However, Whitaker believed that any quotes which could be attributed to his campaign were fair to use against him. In short, Whitaker believe Upton was beaten because he had written books.[2]
California League Against Sinclairism
Aside from oppositional research, Whitaker and Baxter used a variety of other tactics against Sinclair. They decided to organize a bipartisan front group known as the California League Against Sinclairism.[1] Whitaker and Baxter used this group to disseminate information regarding Sinclair's "socialist agenda."[3]
Media
Additionally, media was a key part of the Whitaker and Baxter campaign strategy. They believed in the extensive scripting of candidate's to keep them on message in the media, rather than allowing ragtag bands of volunteers to handle branding their candidate. They pursued earned media, meaning that they encourage candidates like Merriam to create news rather than simply sending in press releases. The team would go so far as to trade paid advertising for editorial space. However, if news could not be legitimately created, Whitaker and Baxter believed in creating the perception of news. Whitaker and Baxter teamed up with media tycoon Louis B. Mayer to promote Frank Merriam in an advertisement.[5] The ad was meant to look like the newsreels of the day, although the true purpose is to create the perception that people who support Sinclar are pro-Communism and Socialism. Whitaker and Baxter considered this type of advertisement to be effective as it was often perceived as earned media.
Healthcare reform
During his New Deal era, Franklin Roosevelt called for major healthcare reform in the form of government-subsidized medicine.[1] In 1945, President Harry Truman took up this fight, calling on Congress to overhaul the country's healthcare system. The American Medical Association began to lobby against the president's proposal. In 1949, they retained Whitaker & Baxter to help them with their efforts. The AMA paid Whitaker & Baxter $350,000 to defeat Truman's healthcare plan.[1] In their usual style, Whitaker & Baxter began an all out media war against the healthcare plan, distributing over 100 million pieces of literature. In just two weeks of the campaign, they spent $1.1 million in advertising on behalf of the AMA. As part of their messaging, they began calling the president's healthcare plan "socialized medicine,"[1] ushering in the same negative connotations and allusions to communism that they had brought upon Sinclair.
Branding reform
President Truman was quick to defend his plan. The plan included federal funding to attract doctors to rural areas, give funding to rural areas to build new hospitals, federal standards for hospitals and health centers to be implemented by a board of doctors and public officials, and the creation of a national health insurance fund to be managed by the federal government.[1] Unfortunately for Truman, the term "socialized medicine" stuck. In 1961, Ronald Reagan would continue using the phrase in his LP Ronald Reagan Speaks Out Against Socialized Medicine, released on behalf of the AMA. The term would fuel the so-called Operation Coffeecup of the 1960s, in which doctors' wives would invite friends over and speak to them about the evils of "socialized medicine," after which they would encourage them to write to their congressmen about the issue.
Ultimately, it would take the American Medical Association over 3 years and $5 million, which would equate to nearly $40 million by today's standards. After the onset of the Korean War, Congress and the president no longer had time to fight lobbying efforts against the measure, resulting in the legislation failing to pass.
End of the firm
In the late 1950s, Whitaker and Baxter had a falling out with then client Governor Goodwin Knight. While Knight had hired the duo for several of his earlier campaigns, he did not bring them back on for his run for the Senate in 1958.[1] Because of this and Whitaker's failing health, the company began to fade from the political scene. Later in 1958, Whitaker and Baxter sold their company to Clem Whitaker Jr., who would later redirect the focus of their business operations into corporate public relations. The duo formed Whitaker and Baxter International, a smaller public relations consulting firm, which they would run from a San Francisco hotel room. In 1961, Whitaker died of emphysema. Leone Baxter continued running Whitaker and Baxter International after her husband's death. In 2001, she died in Sacramento at the age of 96.
Notable clients
According to the inventory of Whitaker and Baxter Campaigns, Inc., the duo provided public relations, advertising, and/or other consulting work for these political campaigns:[2]
George Hatfield for Lieutenant Governor
Fred Stewart for Board of Equalization
Walter Scott Franklin for Lieutenant Governor
Wendell Willkie-Charles McNary (Presidential Campaign)
William Menzel for State Senate
George Reilly for Mayor of San Francisco
Justus Craemer for U.S. Senate
Dewey-Bricker Taskforce (Presidential Campaign)
Earl Lee Kelly for Governor
Hartley Peart for U.S. Senate
Goodwin Knight for Lieutenant Governor
Elmer Robinson for Mayor of San Francisco
Re-elect Elmer Robinson for Mayor of San Francisco
Governor Goodwin Knight for U.S. Senate (Primary)
A. Ronald Button for State Treasurer
Richard M. Nixon for President
Thomas O'Connor for City Attorney
George Christopher for Lieutenant Governor
Judge Tom Coakley for Attorney General
Ben Dillingham for U.S. Senate
Harold Dobbs for Mayor of San Francisco
Shirley Temple Black for Congress
45 unique local ballot options
Strategy
Inner workings of Campaigns, Inc.
Generally, Whitaker and Baxter worked on political and policy questions, though they also aided firms with corporate public relations, such as improving the image of cottonseed oil or imitation ice cream. Their political clientele was mostly Republicans of the 1940s and 1950s, including Governor Earl Warren, Governor Goodwin Knight, and Dwight Eisenhower's California Presidential campaign. Though Whitaker and Baxter ostensibly helped all those who approached their firm, in practice they were committed to small-government conservatism and forestalling or rolling back the New Deal. One of their most influential campaigns was helping the American Medical Association fight off the national health insurance plans of Franklin Roosevelt and Harry Truman.[3] Though unmentioned in the film, much of the archival anti-national health care propaganda seen in Michael Moore's Sicko, including Ronald Reagan's phonograph speech on how national health care is the first step towards socialism, was produced in 1949 under the direction of Whitaker and Baxter.[3]
Precepts
Whitaker and Baxter developed several precepts to justify their tactics with Campaigns, Inc. They included adages such as:[1]
1. “Never wage a campaign defensively! The only successful defense is a spectacular, hard-hitting, crushing offensive.”
2. “Attempt to create actual news instead of merely sending out publicity.”
3. “More Americans like corn than caviar.”
4. “The average American doesn’t want to be educated; he doesn’t want to improve his mind; he doesn’t even want to work, consciously, at being a good citizen. [But] most every American likes to be entertained. He likes the movies; he likes the mysteries; he likes the fireworks and parades…so if you can’t fight, put on a show!”
Tactics
Unlike the parties of the day, Whitaker and Baxter could and insisted on emphasizing pace, control, and rhythm in a campaign.They did not trust enthusiastic local volunteers to run an effective campaign, and thus made judgments for themselves on how to allocate resources, relying also on their employed Field Men to check up on district offices.
They were not above dirty tricks, as seen in their work for the 1934 re-election campaign of Governor Frank Merriam in his push to defeat social reformer Upton Sinclair. The major thrust of their work was a smear campaign against Sinclair, alleging in newspaper stories that he seduced young girls, and placing film reels that depicted Sinclair's supporters as socialist pro-Soviets.
Fundraising
Whitaker and Baxter also specialized in fundraising, and maintained a massive web of operations throughout California, representing a range of industries, ethnic groups, and special interests. They developed early models of campaign finance and expenditure, including spending money early to drive out challengers (as in Goodwin Knight's 1954 gubernatorial campaign) or holding as much as 75% of their total funds to the end of the campaign (typically, the last three weeks), when voters were paying attention.[1]
California Features Service
In addition to the core of Campaigns Inc., Whitaker and Baxter had two side businesses which helped them satisfy their client's needs. Clem Whitaker Advertising Agency was the advertising arm of Campaigns Inc. With this, Whitaker would plan and design all advertising efforts for his clients in accordance with the campaign strategy he developed with Campaigns Inc. The California Feature Service was a newspaper wire service which delivered articles and editorials to about 300 local newspapers in California. Whitaker and Baxter would create these releases to mimic editorial copy. Editors looking for quick content to fill their papers often would not notice that the copy was from an advertising service.[2]
Contributions to public relations
Whitaker and Baxter made many lasting contributions to the field of public relations. Firstly, they developed the political consulting into what we know it today. To do this, they revolutionized the PR media tactics of the day, putting a heavy emphasis on television and radio advertising rather than simple word of mouth or grassroots efforts. Additionally, they started the use of direct mail campaigns, which are still popular to this day. In doing so, Whitaker and Baxter ensured the full service campaign management became the norm for political campaigns, from presidential campaigns all the way down to state house and more local races.
In addition, nearly all campaigns utilize the advertising, messaging, and strategic tactics that were first developed by Whitaker and Baxter. Money and advertising, which were not considered essential before Campaigns Inc.,[1] are still thought of as major aspects of today's campaigns. Where the political bosses of the day used throw their weight with bribes or incentives to attract voters, political consultants are able to carefully craft a message that both attracts voters and makes careful use of a candidate's budget. Because of their expertise, political consultants have now become the norm for campaigns, and the quality of a political consultant can make or break even a well-qualified candidate. In this way, political consultants have replaced party bosses as the power holders in politics.
The legacy of Whitaker and Baxter has also affected the political issues that we still consider salient. Healthcare reform today is still largely framed using the terminology introduced by Whitaker and Baxter. This political team was able to use effective advertising and messaging to not only halt the progress of healthcare reform for their client, but to hasten this process so much that it is still being debated today.
Theodore White, the famous American journalist and novelist, made the following remarks about the legacy of Whitaker and Baxter:
“Clem Whitaker and Leone Baxter are now gone, but their kind of politics, professional image-making, has not only persisted, but thrived; and, in thriving, swept East, where politics industry has grown up—a gathering of professionals who merchandise control of voter reactions.”[6]
References
- Notes
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Mitchell, Greg. The Campaign of the Century: Upton Sinclair’s Race for Governor of California and the Birth of Media Politics. New York City: Random House, 1992. Print.
- 1 2 3 4 "Inventory of the Whitaker & Baxter Campaigns, Inc. Records". California State Archives. 2009. Retrieved 25 September 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 Lepore, Jill. "The Lie Factory, How politics became a business"Lepore, Jill (September 24, 2012). "The Lie Factory, How politics became a business". The New Yorker: 50–59. Retrieved 26 September 2012. line feed character in
|journal=
at position 5 (help); Check date values in:|year=, |year= / |date= mismatch
(help) - ↑ Sinclair, Upton. Love's Pilgrimage: A Novel. New York: Mitchell Kennerley, 1911. Print.
- ↑ California Election News. Dir. Louis B. Mayer. Adapt. Kelsey Thomas. MGM, 1934. Advertisement. Oct. 2012. Web. <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-M9vfWjmON0>.
- ↑ White, Theodore H. Breach of Faith: The Fall of Richard Nixon. New York: Atheneum, 1975. Print.
- Bibliography
- Doherty, Kathleen, and Jeffery A. Jenkins (2009). Examining a Failed Moment: National Health Care, the AMA, and the U.S. Congress, 1948-50, University of Virginia. <http://faculty.virginia.edu/jajenkins/health_care.pdf>
- McCaun, Dave (2012). "There at the Creation: The Case of Whitaker and Baxter as Pioneers of Political Marketing", Sonoma State University Political Studies Association. <http://www.psa.ac.uk/journals/pdf/5/2010/1174_1536.pdf>