By Donald H. Harrison
SAN DIEGO—The news yesterday of the death of U.S. Rep. Clair W. Burgener
(R-San Diego), 84, was expected but most unwelcome. The "gentleman
legislator" as he was described in his front-page obituary in The San
Diego Union-Tribune and I had first met in 1972 when he was making
his first successful run for Congress and I was a reporter covering the
political beat.
After I left The San Diego Union to enter into the field of public
relations, I gladly accepted an assignment in 1980 to serve as a press
spokesman for Burgener's congressional reelection campaign. Notwithstanding
the fact that I was then a Democrat, I wanted to rally everyone I possibly
could behind the Republican congressman's reelection campaign. The
alternative was unthinkable: the Democrats in their primary had nominated Tom
Metzger, the local Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan, who for the purpose of
the election had been attempting to change his image from that of a racist in
a white sheet to an American patriot in a business suit.
Our public relations problem was to get my former colleagues in the media to
understand that Metzger was not just a news novelty, or a human interest
story, but that having a member of the Ku Klux Klan as the official Democratic
party candidate represented a cancer on the body politic. For the media to
treat him simply as another candidate to be quoted on a wide variety of the
issues of the day—without shining a sterilizing spotlight on the white
supremacist cult that he led—would be to confer upon him undeserved
legitimacy.
Those of us in the campaign who strongly believed Metzger must be confronted
also had another problem. By that time, Burgener had been comfortably
reelected on several occasions to Congress. He knew that his
constituents liked him. Why should he draw more attention to
Metzger? he asked us. Why shouldn't he simply ignore him as he had
ignored other opponents during his political career? Wasn't the election
really about whether or not he, Clair Burgener, had done a good job in
Congress?
Unfortunately it wasn't. We argued successfully that Metzger would draw media
to himself the way offal attracts flies, and that if we didn't help shape the
public dialogue about Metzger's activities, the klansman would.
Reluctantly, Burgener gave us permission to design a public relations
campaign.
We followed a two-prong strategy. The first, to demonstrate that Metzger
was "beyond the pale" of the normal political process, was to have
what we called "Hatfield and McCoy" press conferences, in which we
would get well-known political rivals—Democrats and Republicans who had been
battling each other for years—to say that on this issue, at least, they were
united: Metzger must be defeated.
We got some "ink" with those news conferences, but ultimately
Metzger himself unwittingly helped us in our campaign to focus attention on
his virulently racist and anti-Semitic views. The occasion was a screening
that Burgener's campaign arranged for the media to view a documentary about
the Ku Klux Klan. In that film, Metzger himself appeared, spouting the
kind of white racist propaganda that truly characterized his views.
Having learned from some informant about the press conference, Metzger and
campaign aides decided they would stage a little guerrilla theatre. They
showed up wearing Richard Nixon masks and carrying boxes of popcorn. Ha.
Ha. But the story turned on Metzger after members of the media saw on
film the kinds of things he had to say when he was speaking at Klan
rallies. When the screening concluded, the media as one turned on
Metzger and machine-gunned him with questions: "Do you still believe what
you said on the film?" they asked. "Will you disavow your
comments against Blacks, Mexicans and Jews?" "Which is the
real Metzger?" From that point on, the media recognized exactly
what he represented and their stories reflected it.
Burgener was re-elected, as had been expected, but without Metzger making any
political headway. It was for the congressman the most uncomfortable,
disagreeable campaign that he had ever gone through. Gentleman that he
was, he was the kind of man who liked to quietly state his views on the issues
and not get personal. But he understood that such ugly bigotry, such
horrifying racism, had to be confronted. After Burgener won, and he
shook my hand and thanked me for my efforts, it was one of the proudest days
of my life.
Burgener was a man who had stepped up to his responsibilities. May his
name be a blessing.