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After laying out the format and the rules, she said to the vast television audience, “And now I would like to add a personal note, if I may. As Dorothy Ridings [president of the League of Women Voters] said [in her introduction], I have been involved now in four presidential debates, either as a moderator or as a panelist. In the past, there was no problem in selecting panelists. Tonight, however, there were to have been four panelists participating in this debate. The candidates were given a list of almost one hundred qualified journalists from all the media and could agree on only these three fine journalists. As moderator, and on behalf of my fellow journalists, I very much regret, as does the League of Women Voters, that this situation has occurred.”

For Mondale, the stakes were high. He figured his only hope was that something would happen during the debates to turn things around. He also knew Reagan, the front-runner incumbent, didn’t have to debate him at all. The debate imperative was not yet that established.

BUT REAGAN AGREED
to two debates in October, in the last few weeks before the election. One was in Louisville, Kentucky; the other in Kansas City, Kansas.

Mondale went into those debates with a hard, fast mission.

“I wanted to show presidential stature,” he told me. “I wanted to show mastery of the issues. I wanted to show that progressive dimension again. I wanted to show that I was more alert than the president, without being negative.”

The former vice president was also ready for Reagan’s signature line. In the first debate in Louisville, Mondale suggested that Reagan would propose a tax increase on low- and middle-income Americans after the election, leaving wealthy Americans largely untouched.

REAGAN:
You know, I wasn’t going to say this at all, but I can’t help it: There you go again. I don’t have a plan to tax or increase taxes. I am not going to increase taxes. I can understand why you are, Mr. Mondale, because as a senator you voted sixteen times to increase taxes….

Reagan continued along these lines, and panelist Fred Barnes of
The Baltimore Sun
pressed him for details on his commitment not to raise taxes in his second term. Mondale, during his rebuttal, pounced.

MONDALE:
Mr. President, you said, “There you go again.” All right. Remember the last time you said that? You said it when President Carter said you were going to cut Medicare, and you said, “Oh no, there you go again, Mr. President.” And what did you do right after the election? You went out and tried to cut $20 billion out of Medicare. And so, when you say “There you go again,” people remember this.

Mondale happily agreed with the debate consensus that he had won the debate. But he said there was more to it than his prepared comeback. “The main thing, I think, that hurt him was he seemed to be ill-focused, seemed to lose his way, stumble, roam around in irrelevancies, and it was a pretty—it was an impressively unimpressive personal performance.”

Others had noted that Reagan seemed tired. I asked him about that.

“No, it wasn’t tired. I was overtrained…. I want to tell you, I just had more facts and figures poured at me for weeks before than anyone could possibly sort out and use, and I call it overtraining. When I got there, I realized that I was racking my brain so much for facts and figures on whatever subject we were talking about that I knew I didn’t do well.”

But two weeks later in Kansas City, things changed. Reagan said later he definitely did not go into that one overtrained. And panelist Henry Trewhitt of
The Baltimore Sun
asked a question that enabled him to turn a potential liability into a strength:

TREWHITT:
You already are the oldest president in history, and some of your staff say you were tired after your most recent encounter with Mr. Mondale. I recall yet that President Kennedy had to go for days on end with very little sleep during the Cuba missile crisis. Is there any doubt in your mind that you would be able to function in such circumstances?

REAGAN:
Not at all. And, Mr. Trewhitt, I want you to know that also I will not make age an issue of this campaign. I am not going to exploit, for political purposes, my opponent’s youth and inexperience.

When I asked if he had been lying for that one, Reagan said it just came to him right off the top of his head.

Whether the line was preprogrammed on not, Mondale knew he had just taken a hit.

“Well, I’ll tell you, if TV can tell the truth, as you say it can, you’ll see that I was smiling. But I think if you come in close, you’ll see some tears coming down because I knew he had gotten me there…. That was really the end of my campaign that night, I think. That’s what I thought.”

That night?

“Yes, I walked off and I was almost certain the campaign was over, and it was.”

Did you say that to anybody?

“My wife.”

MY INTERVIEW WITH
Ronald Reagan took place five years after the 1984 debates in his Century Plaza office in Los Angeles. There was already talk that the former president was having memory problems and, in fact, one of his own aides suggested to me not to expect a full accounting of every little thing that had happened in every debate.

Reagan implied that himself as we chatted before the cameras started taping. It was clear that somebody had to force him to talk about the debates in the first place. Let’s just get it over and be done with it, his body language suggested.

Making small talk, Reagan mentioned that he had just autographed—for the makeup artist—an old copy of
Photoplay
magazine that featured him and Paul Muni on the cover. Reagan amused everyone by recounting how Muni had always insisted on standing on the left-hand side for all group studio stills, as it offered a “better angle.”

I brought up that just a month before, by chance, I had watched his 1940 movie
Santa Fe Trail
on television.

Reagan gave me one of those famous smiles and recounted with considerable detail how he had posed for a
Santa Fe Trail
group cast photo that included Errol Flynn, Raymond Massey, Olivia de Havilland, Alan Hale, and Van Heflin. Reagan played Custer; Flynn was Jeb Stuart.

He told me that Errol Flynn, “as always,” had insisted on posing in the front row in the most prominent position. Both were tall, but Reagan, behind Flynn, wanted to appear to tower over him. So he stood on a small box of some kind. Reagan held up his hands to show the size of the box and raised his head as he had to appear even taller.

He continued talking like that for several delightful minutes, and I think we both had private regrets that we had to move on from his movie memories to presidential debates.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

This is
JIM LEHRER’S
seventeenth novel. He is also the author of two memoirs and three plays and is the executive editor and anchor of
The News Hour with Jim Lehrer
on PBS. He and his novelist wife, Kate, have three daughters.

Copyright © 2007 by Jim Lehrer

Excerpt from Tension City copyright © 2011 by Jim Lehrer.

All rights reserved.

RANDOM HOUSE
and colophon are registered trademarks
of Random House, Inc.

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGLNG-LN-PUBLICATION DATA
Lehrer, James.
Eureka: a novel / Jim Lehrer.

p. cm.
This book contains an excerpt from the forthcoming title Tension City by Jim Lehrer. This excerpt has been set for this edition only and may not reflect the final content of the forthcoming edition.
eISBN: 978-1-58836-788-4
1. Insurance agents—Fiction. 2. Midlife crisis—Fiction.
3. Self-actualization (Psychology)—Fiction. 4. Kansas—Fiction.
5. Psychological fiction. I. Title.
PS3562.E4419E97 2007      813’.54—dc22     2006051884

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