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Gerald R. Ford Library1000 Beal Avenue,
www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov |
PRESIDENT FORD COMMITTEE
Records, 1975-78
SUMMARY DESCRIPTION
Working files of the staff of President Ford's 1976 presidential election campaign committee, including materials on politics, finances, legal matters, public opinion polls, advertising, press relations, and appeals to specific interest groups or segments of the population. Although the collection contains significant materials on numerous aspects of the campaign, the records are by no means complete as several senior staff members apparently removed files upon their departure from the Committee. The files of the office of the treasurer remain unprocessed.
QUANTITY
348.8 linear feet (152 ft. unprocessed)
DONOR
President
Ford Committee (accession numbers 77-44, 77-105, 78-44, 79-2, 80-31, 83-25,
84-3, 86-7, 87-10)
ACCESS
Open. Some items are temporarily restricted under
terms of President Ford Committee letter of gift, a copy of which is available
on request.
COPYRIGHT
Works
prepared by U.S. Government employees as part of their official duties are in
the public domain. In addition, Mr. Ford
has donated to the
[s:\bin\findaid\president ford committee - records.doc]
LIST OF CONTENTS
Introduction
List of Series
Office Files
Campaign '76 Media Communications, Inc.
Vice Presidential Nominee Office
Treasurer's
Office
Related Audiovisual Material
List of Processing Archivists
INTRODUCTION
The President Ford Committee Records
partially document the election committee's activities on behalf of the
President from the organization's creation in July 1975 until Committee staff
filed final reports with the Federal Election Commission in 1978. The following sections briefly outline new
regulations affecting the 1976 campaign for president, the history and
organization of the President Ford Committee (PFC), PFC activities during the
prenomination and postnomination campaigns, and the nature of the files
produced by the PFC staff. For more
detailed descriptions of the functions and files of various divisions within
the PFC organization, see the accompanying sections of this finding aid.
New Regulations
Affecting the 1976 Campaign
Major differences between how
presidential candidates conducted campaigns in 1976 and how they operated in
previous contests were precipitated by passage of the Federal Election Campaign
Act (FECA) Amendments of 1974. This
legislation, signed into law by President Ford on October 15, 1974, established
the first spending limits ever for candidates in presidential primary and
general elections, provided for disclosure and reporting on campaign
contributions and expenditures, introduced public financing for general
election campaigns and matching funds to cover part of the costs of primary
campaigns, and created the Federal Election Commission (FEC) to develop
specific regulations implementing the law and enforcing its provisions.
The new restrictions on fundraising
and spending by presidential campaign committees provided the organizations
with new challenges during the 1976 campaign.
The confusion concerning their implementation and the implications
surrounding their application is directly and indirectly reflected in the
records of President Ford's election organization.
An immediate impact of the new
regulations had on the staffs of election committees is reflected in the
structure of the PFC. From its inception, the Committee allocated a significant
portion of staff resources to interpret and comply with FECA regulations. This particularly affected staffing of the
counsel's office, the finance division, and the treasurer's operation but the
concern for compliance is reflected in other PFC divisions as well.
A less direct affect of the new
regulations was on the level of the candidates' media spending. Strict limits placed on campaign expenditures
(10.2 million for the prenomination campaign and 23 million for the general
election) made the allocation of resources even more important than in previous
presidential campaigns. The level of
spending on media and media experts for the 1976 campaign was proportionally
larger than in previous presidential campaigns because media advertising was
perceived as the most cost-effective means of reaching the voters. This is reflected in the large proportion of
Committee records documenting the activities of Campaign '76 Inc., the in-house
advertising agency. Other more
traditional forms of campaigning, such as elaborate efforts to attract special
interest or ethnic groups, the development of large grassroots volunteer
organizations, and high levels of spending on campaign paraphernalia like
bumper stickers, buttons, and literature were deemed as less cost-effective in
attracting voters. The relatively small
amount of Committee records on these topics reflects their relative
insignificance.
Another provision of FECA which had
direct impact on election committee staffing was the detailed reporting
required by the Federal Election Commission to determine a candidate's
eligibility for public funding and to monitor the candidate's election
committee spending. Particularly during
the primary campaign period of active fundraising, the compliance process was
time intensive. In addition to
contracting some bookeeping tasks to outside operations, the PFC had staff
members specializing in specific areas of compliance, such as certification of
donations and preparation of applications for matching funds. During both the primary and general elections
the PFC headquarters staff dedicated large portions of their time monitoring
the spending of the organization nationwide to be certain to stay within the
FECA expenditure limits.
President Ford
Committee History, Organization, and Activities
At the urging of members of his senior
White House staff, President Ford authorized the creation of a campaign
planning group in May 1975. Some of
those advocating an early candidacy announcement were concerned about what
impact new regulations might have on the conduct of a campaign, others were
hoping an early announcement might head off a divisive struggle for the
Republican nomination. On
The President Ford Committee,
headquartered in
At various points during the
campaign, the Committee was perceived as an inefficient, disorderly
organization troubled by structural and personnel problems. These problems were dramatically apparent early
in the primary campaign when, in the face of fundraising problems and a looming
challenge by Ronald Reagan for the party nomination, the PFC's finance chairman
and the director of political organization resigned over strategic differences
with Chairman Callaway. In April 1976, Callaway also stepped down in the midst
of charges that as secretary of the Army he had used his influence for personal
gain. Rogers Morton took over as
chairman until he too was replaced by James Baker five months later.
The PFC staff was organized
primarily along functional lines, its size and activities alternately expanding
and contracting to meet needs and control costs. Major activities of the organization during
the primary campaign period included, 1) raising enough money to qualify for
public matching funds, 2) building a national network of state and local
campaign organizations and, 3) developing and implementing an effective
strategic plan to win as much delegate support as possible before the
Republican National Convention in August 1976.
As the primary season ended and the
political and financial workload decreased temporarily, the PFC headquarters
staff was dramatically downsized in order to keep costs within mandated
expenditure limits. From June 1976 until
mid-August those still on the payroll focused on the delegate monitoring
program in preparation for an anticipated nomination battle at the Republican
National Convention. Following Ford's
selection as the nominee, the PFC quickly expanded, overhauling its internal
structure and reporting relationships, reopening all state headquarters,
revamping the in-house advertising operation, and developing and implementing a
strategic plan for the general election campaign.
Several significant changes in the Committee's
structure and function occurred between the prenomination and postnomination
campaigns. One was the elimination of
the fundraising apparatus developed to support the primary campaign. (The new FECA regulations prohibited
candidates from accepting donations during the publicly-funded general election
campaign.) Another major structural
difference was the addition of a large internal operation responsible for
developing specific appeals to various special voter groups. Additionally, Chairman James Baker
significantly flattened the reporting structure of the organization. This resulted in all the division directors
and office heads reporting directly to him during throughout the fall campaign. (See Attachments 1 and 2)
The Records of
the President Ford Committee
The records of the President Ford
Committee housed at the Ford Library include nearly 350 linear feet of material
divided among eleven office divisions.
The files include material on finances, legal matters, public opinion
polls, advertising, press relations, politics, a variety of domestic and
foreign policy issues, and appeals to specific interest groups or segments of
the population. The file for each office
division might include material created and accumulated by as few as two staff
members, in the case with the Counsel's Office, or as many as fifty individuals
for an office as large as People for Ford or Campaign '76 Inc..
The President Ford Committee Records
are to a study of the 1976
campaign. Researchers should be alerted
however, that although the collection contains significant materials on various
aspects of the campaign, the records are by no means complete as several senior
staff members apparently removed files upon their departure from the Committee. The result is great variation in the quality
and completeness of the documentary record from office to office. The extant files for example, do not reflect
the activities of Rogers Morton and James Baker during their respective tenures
as PFC chairman. In contrast, the files
of PFC Counsel Robert Visser, are extensive and include no obvious gaps. Information on the strengths and weaknesses
of a particular series of records is included in the finding aid for that
office division.
The records provide researchers with
some sense of the close but sometimes stormy relationship between the Committee
and the White House staff. They also
illustrate some of the problems intrinsic in simultaneously acting as both a
president and a candidate. To research
any election issue, or the campaign as a whole,
it is important to examine the files of the campaign principals in both
the White House and the Committee. For
example, more high-level strategic and political information is in the files of
the White House Chief of Staff Richard Cheney and his support staff than in the
files of PFC Chairman Bo Callaway. Other
important points of liaison where the documentary record is complementary
include the PFC's General Counsel and the White House Office of the Counsel;
the PFC's Communication Director and the White House Press Secretary; and the
PFC's Political Director and the White House Scheduling Office, Domestic
Council, and advance staff.
For a complete list of collections
at the Ford Library which include material on the 1976 campaign researchers
should refer to "The 1976 Presidential Election: A Guide to Manuscript
Collections Available for Research."
Copies of this publication are available at the Library.
At the time of this writing, (April
1992), 150 linear feet of files from the PFC Treasurer's Office remain
unprocessed and unavailable for research use.
LIST OF SERIES
ContainersSeries
A1‑A4 Callaway Subject File
A5‑A10
A11‑A15 DeBolt Subject File
B1‑B3 Robert Marik File
B4‑B10 Royston Hughes File
B11‑B12 James Cochran Subject File
B13‑B14 James Cochran Budget File
B15‑B17 Convention File
B18‑B33 Correspondence Card File
B34‑B44 Correspondence Chronological File
B45‑B73
B74‑B83 Correspondence Topical File
C1‑C5
C6‑C11 Primary Campaign Coordinators' File
C12‑C20
C21 Norman Watts Chronological File
C22‑C24 Norman Watts Subject File
C25‑C27 William Russo Subject File
C28‑C34 Republican National Committee Campaign
File
C35‑C38
D1‑D15 Political File
D16‑D30 Federal Election Commission Subject File
D30‑D35 Federal Election Commission Meetings
File
D36‑D40 General Subject File
D41‑D45 State Legal File
D46‑D48 Administrative Subject File
D49‑D51 State Receipt File
Campaign '76 Media Communications, Inc.
E1‑E2 Primary Elections ‑ Bruce
Wagner Files
E3‑E9 Primary Elections ‑ Dawn
Sibley Files
E9‑E14 Primary Elections ‑ Carol
Karasick Files
E14‑E16 Primary Elections ‑ Denise Considine
Files
E17 Primary Elections ‑
Production Accounts File
E18‑E22 Primary Elections ‑ Dodie
Kazanjian Files
E23‑E37 Primary Elections ‑ SFM Media,
Inc.
E38‑E42 General Election ‑ John
Deardourff Files
E42‑E43 General Election ‑ Dawn Sibley
Files
E44‑E54 General Election ‑ Carol Karasick
Files
E55 General Election ‑ Dodie
Kazanjian Files
E56‑E64 General Election ‑
E65‑E87 General Election ‑ SFM Media,
Inc.
E88‑E91 Primary Elections ‑ Barry Lafer
General Subject File
E91‑E97 Primary Elections ‑ Barry Lafer
Paid Invoice File
E97‑E99 Primary Elections ‑ Barry Lafer
Bank Reconciliation File
E100‑E107 General Election ‑ Barry Lafer
General Subject File
E107‑E120 General Election ‑ Barry Lafer Paid
Invoice File
E120‑E126 General Election ‑ Barry Lafer Bank
Reconciliation File
F1‑F7 Thomas Ruffin Files
F8‑F11 Pamela Curtis Files
F12‑F13 Robert Keyes Files
F14‑F17 Black Desk Files
F18‑F23 Business and Professional Desk Files
F24‑F26 Ethnic Desk Files
F27‑F33 Farm Desk Files
F34‑F39 Jewish Desk Files
F40‑F52 National Volunteer Desk Files
F53‑F54 Older Americans Desk Files
F55‑F62 Veterans Desk Files
F63‑F73 Youth Desk Files
G1‑G7 Peter Kaye Files
G8‑G12 Peter Teeley Files
G13‑G15 Mark Rosenker Files
G15‑G20 Clippings File
H1‑H20 Market Opinion Research Polls
H21‑H34 Carter Quotes File
H35‑H38 President Ford Quotebooks
H39‑H41 Answer Desk Coordinator's Subject File
H42‑H44 Publication/Organization Questionnaires
H45‑H50 General Subject File
H51‑H55 Campaign News Summaries
I (Letter Not
Assigned)
J1‑J2 General Subject File
J3‑J15 State File
Vice Presidential Nominee Office
K1‑K5 Subject File
Treasurer's
Office (Unprocessed)
Speeches ‑
Senator Dole (1)-(6)
PROCESSING ARCHIVISTS
Chairman's
Office Leesa
Tobin
Office of
Administration Leesa
Tobin
Political Office Leesa
Tobin
General
Counsel's Office William
McNitt
Campaign '76
Media Communications Inc. Nancy
Mirshah
People for Ford
Office Elizabeth
Dawson
Kellee
Green
Leesa
Tobin
Press Office Nancy
Mirshah
Research Office William
McNitt
Delegate Office William
McNitt
Vice
Presidential Nominee Office Nancy
Mirshah
Treasurer's
Office (unprocessed)
Audiovisual Materials Kenneth
Hafeli