Michael Dukakis, three-term governor of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts who served longer in that post than any other person in
history, is best remembered in history as the 1988 Democratic candidate
for President in an election in which
Ronald Reagan's vice president,
George H.W. Bush, effectively used "Swift Boat"
tactics to undermine Dukakis' candidacy.
Born Michael Stanley Dukakis on November 3, 1933 to Greek-immigrant
parents in Brookline, Massachusetts (the birthplace of both
John F. Kennedy and his 1988
Presidential opponent Bush). Dukakis' father was a Harvard-educated
physician and his mother was a Massachusetts schoolteacher. She worked
to eliminate first her native Greek accent and then her New England
accent to remove imperfections from her speech pattern that might
hinder her teaching ability. In a time and place where non-Anglo-Saxon
ethnicity was looked down upon (even that of the Irish Americans who
emigrated to the U.S. with the ability to speak English and a knowledge
of Anglo-Saxon politics) and even proved a hindrance to social
mobility, the Dukakis family was committed to assimilation. Part of the
bad rap against Dukakis that would cost him his first reelection
campaign as governor and his bid for the White House was that he was
too stiff and formal; yet, being brought up in an era and place in
which overt displays of emotion were looked down upon upon by the
ruling class of Boston Brahmins as too "ethnic" (as well as betraying
lower-caste origins), one can understand Dukakis' coolness and reserve
as being an attempt not to be stereotyped by his social "betters". (His
contemporary, three-term New York governor
Mario Cuomo, said that when he entered law
practice in the early 1950s, he was told to ditch his Italian name and
rename himself something along the lines of "Mike COnnors". He, of
course, refused, though that type of ethnic cleansing was considered
normal among upwardly mobile and socially ambitious "urban ethnics" of
the time.)
The class system in Boston was so strict before being shattered by
John F. Kennedy's presidency that JFJ's
father, Joseph P. Kennedy, felt the
need to relocate his family to New York City in the 1930s so that they
would no grow up amidst anti-Irish prejudice. Despite the fact that he
was one of the richest men in the country and his wife was the daughter
of a Boston mayor, an Irish Catholic was beyond the pale, socially, to
the Boston Brahmins, the brethren of the Cabot and Lodge families that
dominated the self-proclaimed "Hub" of the universe. (A local ditty
went about Boston hailed the Hub as "...the land of the bean and the
cod,/Where the Lodges speak only to the Cabots,/And the Cabots speak
only to God.)
After graduating from Swarthmore College in 1955, Dukakis served as an
enlisted intelligence analyst in the U.S. Army. After completing his
military service, he graduated from Harvard Law School in 1960. After
serving in the General Court (Massachusetts legislature), Dukakis was
elected governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts in 1974,
defeating the incumbent Republican Francis W. Sargent. The commonwealth
was undergoing a fiscal crisis and the Republican Party was very
unpopular in the commonwealth, the only state that had been won in the
electoral college by 1972 Presidential candidate
George McGovern two years before.
Dukakis' victory was the result, partially, of his taking a pledge not
to increase the state's sales tax to balance the state budget, but he
reneged on the promise soon after taking office. During the great
Blizzard of 1978, which shut down Boston and a good deal of the
Commonwealth, "The Duke" went into local TV studios in a sweater to
announce emergency bulletins. The coldness of his public persona in the
midst of the crisis was likened to that of the weather itself, and hurt
his popularity. Combined with a nation-wide and local backlash against
the high property tax rates, and his reneging on his promise to not
raise the sales tax, he lost to Edward J. King in the Democratic
primary, as King capitalized on the issue of taxes. Following
California's lead, the voters of the Commonwealth voted for Proposition
2 and 1/2 that limited property tax rates to 2 1/2% of the property
valuation.
Dukakis defeated King in in the Democratic primary in 1982, and easily
defeated his Republican opponent to be reelected governor. (Fellow
future Democratic Presidential nominee
John Kerry was elected Lieutenant
Governor on the same ballot with Dukakis, serving in the Dukakis
administration from 1983 to 1985, when he was took
Paul Tsongas's Senate seat.) The second
term and the first years of Dukakis' third term as governor were very
successful (he won re-election in 1986 with over 60% of the vote),
during which time he presided over a booming economy fueled by the
high-technology industry, second at the time only to that of
California. A reform-minded technocrat, Dukakis was given credit for
the "Massachusetts Miracle" (part of the credit of which should be
attributed to Masssachusetts Congressman Tip O'Neil, who had taken over
JFK's old congressional district, who as the powerful Democratic
Speaker of the House helped direct billions in defense spending to the
Commonwealth).
The National Governors Association voted Dukakis the most effective
governor in 1986, positioning Dukakis for a bid for the presidency.
Basing his candidacy as the architect of the "Massachusetts Miracle",
Dukakis overcame the other contenders for the Democratic Party
presidential nomination (a group dubbed the "Seven Dwarfs" by the media
for their collective lack of stature or prominence on the national
stage; Dukakis' own personal lack of stature). The success
of the Dukakis' campaign was largely attributed to campaign manager
John Sasso, who had originally worked for rival candidate Joseph Biden.
(Having also managed the campaigns of
Al Gore and
John Kerry, Sasso is now 0-3 in
presidential election contests.)
Dukakis came out of the Democratic convention with an overwhelming lead
over Ronald Reagan's heir-apparent, Vice President
George H.W. Bush, the Republican nominee, but
would not or could not handle the dirty campaign tactics that were the
stock-in-trade of all the Vice President's men, including
Lee Atwater. While the Dukakis camp expected
an attack on their candidate as a traditional liberal, they did not
seem to be able to cope with the McCarthyite vitriol from the Bush
camp, which sought to make the "L" word the equivalent of what
communism had been in the early 1950s. Harking back to McCarthy, Bush
had accused Dukakis during one of their televised debates as being a
"card-carrying member of the American Civil Liberties Union," replacing
"communist" with the ACLU (a variation of the "L"-word) and recycling
an old charge from the '50s against liberals and "fellow travelers".
Unlike future Democratic Presidential candidate Bill Clinton (who had
delivered the key-note address at the 19988 Democratic convention), who
when confronted with Bush's dirty tactics, such as pillorying hiswife Hillary, shot back that "I'm not running for First Lady", thus
touching on Bush's Achilles heel, the "Wimp Factor" -- Dukakis would
not fight back. He either was constitutionally unable to fight back, or
thought it beneath his dignity to answer the smears and accusations.
Issues the Bush campaign chose to highlight were his veto of
legislation requiring public school teachers to lead pupils in the
Pledge of Allegiance and his opposition to capital punishment.
As it had during the Big Blizzard, The Duke's stoical personality as
projected to the voting public was interpreted as a lack of passion
(which ran against the traditional stereotype of the Greek-American
being fiery if not hot headed, an image that Dukakis, like his mother
earlier, chose to expunge from his being). His opponents, touching on
his reputation as a technocrat and superb administrator, referred to
him as "Zorba the Clerk." Nevertheless, Dukakis widely was perceived to
have performed well in the first presidential debate with Bush, and his
candidacy was buoyed by his running mate, Texas Senator Lloyd Bentsen,
who was not afraid to take off the gloves. However, in the second
debate, the runner stumbled; Dukakis had been suffering from the flu.
Still, his performance was poor and played to his reputation as being
cold, particularly his response to moderator
Bernard Shaw's question, "Governor, if
Kitty Dukakis [his wife] were raped and murdered, would you favor an
irrevocable death penalty for the killer?"
Projecting himself as a man of reason, Dukakis replied with no visible
emotion, "No, I don't, and I think you know that I've opposed the death
penalty during all of my life," and then explained his stance. Many
observers felt Dukakis' answer lacked the normal emotions one would
expect of a person discussing a loved one's rape and death. Many -
including the candidate himself - believe that this, in part, cost
Dukakis the election, as his poll numbers dropped from 49% to 42%
nationally overnight. Other commentators thought the question itself
was unfair, in that it injected an irrelevant emotional element into
the discussion of a policy issue.
Arguably the greatest issue of the campaign was that of race and crime,
as articulated by the Bush camp in the prison furlough program issue.
Framed by Lee Atwater, the Bush camp ran ads
that criticized Dukakis for a prison furlough program that resulted in
the release of convicted murderer
Willie Horton, an African
American, who committed a rape and assault in Maryland after fleeing
Massachusetts. While it was Al Gore
during the Democratic primaries that was the first candidate to
publicly raise the furlough issue and highlight the fact that a
furloughed prisoner had broken into a house, raped a woman and beaten
her husband, Gore never mentioned Horton by name or highlighted the
fact that he black, as the TV ads did merely by running his picture.
Despite the fact that the furlough program was started before Dukakis'
gubernatorial administration and that the federal government under
Ronald Reagan had a similar
program that had resulted in similar outcomes, candidate Bush decided
to play the race and crime card to boost his candidacy. Bush mentioned
Horton by name in a speech in June 1988 and an "independent" political
action committee (PAC) legally not affiliated with the Bush campaign,
the National Security Political Action Committee, aired an ad entitled
"Weekend Passes" which used a mug shot image of the African American
Horton. The Bush campaign refused to repudiate it, and indeed, followed
it up with its own, official campaign ad, "Revolving Door," criticizing
Dukakis over the furlough program without mentioning Horton.
The first Bush to be president also hammered on the patriotism theme
(and unlike his son, an errant National Guard pilot during the Vietnam
War, George H.W. Bush was an authentic war hero, serving honorably
during the Second World War) to undermine Dukakis by portraying him as
soft on defense, in regards to the controversial "Star Wars" Space
Defense Initiative program, which Dukakis promised to scale down. The
response to this provocation lead to a public relations disaster when
the Dukakis campaign engineered a photo-op at the General Dynamics
plant in Michigan in September 1988, in which The Duke was photographed
driving an M1 Abrams tank. Filmed wearing a safety helmet that seemed
too large for his head, Dukakis looked awkward, out of place, and
decidedly uncomfortable in such a military setting. Footage of Dukakis
was used by the Bush campaign as evidence he would not make a good
commander-in-chief, and "Dukakis in the tank" is still shorthand among
political operatives for disastrous public relations outings.
The campaign arguably was the dirtiest since the 19th century until
Bush's son ran for reelection against John Kerry in 2004. Dukakis lost
the 1988 election and retired from active politics after his
gubernatorial term expired in 1991. The "Massachusetts Miracle" expired
during the lead up to the recession that gripped America in the Bush
administration, and The Duke's popularity withered as he was forced to
significantly raise taxes. He did not run for a fourth term in 1990;
controversial Boston University President John Silber, a social
reactionary who was dubbed by Ronald Reagan his "Favorite Demcorat" won
the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, and narrowly lost the general
election to William Weld, ushering in
nearly two decades of Republican governors in the heavily Democratic
Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
After the end of his term, he served on the board of directors for
Amtrak. Splitting his time between Boston and Los Angeles, California,
he became a professor of political science at Boston's Northeastern
University and a visiting professor of public policy at the University
of California, Los Angeles. Dukakis has recently developed a strong
passion for grassroots campaigning and the appointment of precinct
captains to coordinate local campaigning activities, two strategies he
feels are essential for the Democratic Party to compete effectively in
both local and national elections. His policies have become gospel to
Howard Dean, the head of the Democratic Central Committee. He also has
taken a strong role in advocating for effective public transportation
and high speed rail as a solution to automobile congestion and the lack
of space at airports.