On October 14, 1971, President Richard M. Nixon and Walter R. Tkach met in the Oval Office of the White House from 9:13 am to 9:14 am. The Oval Office taping system captured this recording, which is known as Conversation 592-002 of the White House Tapes.
Transcript (AI-Generated)This transcript was generated automatically by AI and has not been reviewed for accuracy. Do not cite this transcript as authoritative. Consult the Finding Aid above for verified information.
they had planned for next spring in the primary states they would spend much of their treasure to grasp the public's attention which while deciding who would be the candidate now they find that richard nixon has already blocked out that time for his travels and the headlines seem likely to follow him not the democrats it has raised the question whispered in the dead of night of just how much the democratic nomination is worth in 1972 here it is more than a year before the election already two democratic candidates have dropped out before the time a man might normally start
Yeah, one of the, uh... Bye.
Bye.
Excuse.
Then they say, for the Democrats, the problem is more than just world peace and the economy.
In the past, they were able to regroup and attack the president's Supreme Court nominees, at least.
Even that failed as a strategy.
The administration voted the name of Senator Robert Byrd as a possible court appointee last weekend.
Although he was compared unfavorably by many with an unnamed rip-out of Karsloff, Byrd isn't sentenced democratically.
Some of the most unequivocal Nixon critics found themselves equivocating.
Senator McGovern of South Dakota had earned the reputation of the most straight-talking of the potential candidates, a man who knew his mind, and unlike the cautious Edmund Muskie, did not require days of consultation before announcing his opinion.
But in the course of 36 hours, McGovern found his opinion a bird turning almost full of circles, and he recites that
what he had done.
It was all a painful experience, all the more so because McGovern and his aides do not believe that the President would ever send Berg's name to the Senate.
Husky avoided the Berg dilemma, but enhanced his own reputation as a silent equivocator.
Did you, I don't know whether you heard about the column in Chicago that was presented by Mike Royko, who is the most widely read columnist out there.
The whole column is one of the most sensational I've ever read.
He's certainly no friend of yours, but have you seen it then?
He likes it.
Unlike Mr. Nixon, Edward Kennedy is considered capable of great change and growth.
Mr. Nixon has been viewed with more contempt for having been an eager but incompetent football player at Whittier College than Edward Kennedy has for cheating in some of his college exams.
And you still hear some people asking you if you would buy a car from somebody like Mr. Nixon.
I wish that the same people just once would ask if you would ride in a car with Edward Kennedy.
Well, it's caused a hell of a sensation in Chicago.
I have people... That's it?
Oh, God, I've been working on it.
It'll be, uh... That's when they have a start.