The Minnesota senator Eugene McCarthy nominated Stevenson. On Wednesday night, McCarthy rose to make his speech. “Do not leave this prophet without honor in his own party,” he pleaded. “Do not reject this man.” By Morgan’s count, the applause lasted for twenty-seven minutes. And there was the unending chant, “We Want Stevenson!” Morgan described “a giant papier-mâché ‘snowball’—made of petitions bearing more than a million signatures calling on the convention to ‘Draft Stevenson’ ” floating up from the rostrum. Someone yelled, “Look, it’s Sputnik!”

As the galleries seemed to surge and throb, the delegates on the floor were strangely silent. McCarthy asked them to set themselves free from whatever pledge they’d made, no matter the caucuses and the primaries. But most delegates considered themselves bound, at least in the first ballot, by their instructions from the voters. “This the delegates knew; but not the galleries,” White wrote. Stevenson, in any case, had already lost. Earlier that day, he’d tried to persuade Chicago’s Mayor Richard Daley to deliver the Illinois delegation to him, and Daley had refused. His campaign ended before it had begun.
Caro revives Kennedy-Johnson feud - POLITICO
Kennedy was persuaded to offer the Vice-Presidency to Lyndon Johnson, as a means of assuring that, as President, he would have the full support of Johnson as Senate Majority Leader. No one expected Johnson to accept. “You just won’t believe it,” Kennedy said, when he came back from meeting with Johnson. “He wants it!”

Finally, on Friday, July 15th, an exhausted Kennedy delivered an acceptance speech so lacklustre that it gave Nixon confidence that he would have no trouble handling Kennedy in a televised debate. Schlesinger watched with a twinge. “I believe him to be a liberal,” he wrote in his diary. “I also believe him to be a devious and, if necessary, a ruthless man.” The next day, seeking out that ruthless man, Pool wrote to the Kennedy-for-President headquarters, formally offering the services of the Simulmatics Corporation.
Minow thought Project Macroscope was unethical and ought to be illegal. Schlesinger thought it just might work. On August 11th, Simulmatics began to compile three reports for the Kennedy campaign. Two weeks later, the firm presented its findings to Bobby Kennedy and top campaign staff, at a briefing held in R.F.K.’s office.
There’s really no way to measure the influence of the Simulmatics reports on the Kennedy campaign. After the briefing, the campaign followed Simulmatics’ advice about what Kennedy should do. The question is whether the Kennedy campaign would have done these things, anyway.

To conventional polls and political analysis, Simulmatics added computer simulations, not unlike, say, the simulations used by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to predict the number of new covid-19 cases given various scenarios. A simulation program works by way of endless if/then statements: if this, then that. if/then was the syntax of Simulmatics’ reports. They began with the state of play: Kennedy was behind Nixon in the polls, but nearly a quarter of voters had not yet made a decision. “Negro voters are a danger point for the Kennedy campaign,” the Simulmatics team observed, and Jewish support for Kennedy was fairly weak, suggesting that “a straightforward attack on prejudice will appeal to these minorities since they are ideologically inclined to oppose such prejudices.” What Kennedy viewed as a liability might be turned into a strength. “The issue of anti-Catholicism and religious prejudice could become much more salient in the voters’ minds. If that occurs, what will happen?” The team had run a computer simulation, analyzing the effect of further discussion of religion on each of four hundred and eighty voter types concerning “(1) its past voting record; (2) its turnout at the polls; and (3) its attitude toward a Catholic candidate.” 

As a result of this analysis, Simulmatics recommended that Kennedy confront the religious issue, with the aim not of averting criticism but of inciting it: “The simulation shows that Kennedy today has lost the bulk of the votes he would lose if the election campaign were to be embittered by the issue of anti-Catholicism. The net worst has been done.” If Kennedy were to talk more and more openly about his Catholicism, then he would be attacked for it. And, if he were attacked, that would shore up support where he needed it most. Simulmatics made this case on August 25th. Kennedy began tackling the issue of his Catholicism head on in early September. 

Instead of deflecting anti-Catholic opposition, the campaign drew attention to it, seeking opportunities for the candidate to respond by decrying religious prejudice. Speaking before Protestant ministers of the Greater Houston Ministerial Association on September 12th, Kennedy squarely condemned religious intolerance. “I may be the victim, but tomorrow it may be you,” he said. And he warned, “I am not the Catholic candidate for President. I am the Democratic Party’s candidate for President who happens also to be a Catholic. I do not speak for my Church on public matters, and the Church does not speak for me.”
Kennedy, who had been trailing Nixon in the polls all summer, gained on him after Labor Day because of his frank talk about religion, because of his new stand on civil rights, and because of his performance in televised debates with Nixon. In each of these cases, the approach he took had been recommended by Simulmatics. 

Simulmatics had urged a stronger stance on civil rights in its first report, presented to the D.N.C. in May, sent by Pool to the Kennedy campaign in June, and handed to the chairman of the platform committee by Greenfield in advance of the Convention. Immediately after the Convention, Kennedy, who, according to White, was the Democratic candidate least appealing to African-Americans, set up a civil-rights “division” headed by Harris Wofford, the friend of Ed Greenfield’s who had drafted the civil-rights plank of the Party’s platform. 

In October, Kennedy dramatically improved his standing with African-American voters when (urged by Wofford) he called Coretta Scott King, after her husband was arrested at a sit-in in Atlanta. One of the Simulmatics reports given to Kennedy specifically addressed the upcoming debates, describing them as a risk for Nixon: “The danger to Nixon is that Kennedy can make use of his more personable traits—including a range of emotions such as fervor, humor, friendship, and spirituality beyond the expected seriousness and anger.”

Kennedy spent Election Night, November 8th, at his family’s compound in Hyannis Port, where a pink-and-white children’s bedroom on the second floor of Robert Kennedy’s house had been converted into a data-analysis center. All night, Kennedy walked back and forth across the lawn, from his own house, where Jackie, eight months pregnant, was trying to rest, to Bobby’s house, where teletype keys were clattering. But ordinary Americans had their own data-analysis centers in their living rooms, or their kitchens, or wherever they watched television. 

The election of 1960 was the fastest-reported one in American history. In Studio 65, CBS News’ election headquarters, an I.B.M. 7090 made a preliminary prediction at 7:26 p.m., when hardly any polls had closed, and with less than one per cent of all precincts reporting. CBS cautiously predicted a victory for Nixon. The mood at the Kennedy compound turned gloomy. But at 8:12 p.m., with four per cent of precincts reporting, the 7090 offered a new prediction: Kennedy would win with fifty-one per cent of the popular vote; two minutes later, CBS broadcast this prediction, absent any caveat.

I.B.M.’s prediction held. Kennedy’s electoral margin of victory, three hundred and three to two hundred and nineteen, was wide. But his margin in the popular vote—49.7 per cent to 49.6 per cent—was the closest since 1888, close enough to lead to two recount efforts led by the Republican National Committee but not endorsed by Nixon, who told a biographer that he wanted to spare the country the “agony of a constitutional crisis.” And, as Simulmatics had predicted, “Negro Voters in Northern Cities” turned out to be crucial to the Democrats’ victory. Kennedy won six of the eight states mentioned in the report.

“What we have demonstrated is how data from past situations can be used to simulate a future situation,” the scientists of Simulmatics had boasted. Were they flimflam men? Or had they reinvented American politics?
If Then, How the Simulmatics Corporation Invented the Future by ...Simulmatics launched a publicity blitz. Five days after the election, the Boston Globe ran a piece about how Simulmatics had told Kennedy “why and what he must do” and credited the data company with both his victory in the debates and his position on civil rights. “We know the Kennedy brothers read our reports the day they got them—and knew what was in them three days later,” Pool told the reporter. “They are great readers.”
Even before the election, word had got out that White was writing a book about the campaign. Pool decided to write his own book about the making of the President, the story of how a “starry-eyed notion on the frontiers of science became a reality.” 

Meanwhile, Morgan pitched an article to Harper’s. His story, “The People Machine,” appeared in the January, 1961, issue, which hit newsstands the week before Christmas and stayed there nearly until Kennedy’s Inauguration.

Most of the Cambridge Analytica-era questions and concerns raised in the early decades of the twenty-first century about computers and politics were first raised by Morgan’s essay in Harper’s, nearly six decades ago: “If, in a free society, information is power, how do we prevent tampering with the data provided by the machine? . . . As we seek more and more data for the machines, can we maintain our traditions of privacy?” The story was picked up all over the country. 

The New York Herald Tribune reported that “a big, bulky monster called a ‘Simulmatics’ ” had been Kennedy’s “secret weapon.” An Oregon newspaper editorialized that the Kennedy campaign had reduced “the voters—you, me, Mrs. Jones next door, and Professor Smith at the university— . . . to little holes in punch cards,” implying that the tyranny of the People Machine made “the tyrannies of Hitler, Stalin and their forebears look like the inept fumbling of a village bully.” “Mouth more or less agape and breath more or less bated, we have been reading how by ‘simulmatics’ this marvelous contrivance gave young Mr. Robert Kennedy the ‘advance dope’ on problems as opaque as the religious issue,” the editors of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch wrote dubiously. “Hinkle-pinkle! If Mr. Kennedy took serious stock in the machine—‘a model of the American people’ better than the original since it knew what the people would do even before they were sure—that would be enough to explain how he came so close to losing the election.” The distance between then and now is the measure of how entirely the American voting public now takes this kind of political shenanigan for granted. “Mouth agape” is not how Americans view the ordinary undertakings of the thousands of data-analytics firms that have come to advise our political campaigns.

Directly after that issue of Harper’s hit newsstands, Pierre Salinger, Kennedy’s press secretary, issued a public denial. “We did not use the machine,” Salinger said. “Nor were the machine studies made for us.” The rebuke ran in papers all over the country, under headlines like “kennedy camp denies use of an electronic ‘brain.’ ” But the denial only fanned the flames. “The fact remains,” the editors of the Cincinnati Enquirer remarked, “that the machine knew whereof it spoke.” The conservative columnist Victor Lasky confronted Salinger with the evidence. “Pierre’s recollection was somewhat refreshed,” Lasky later wrote, “after it was disclosed that Bobby Kennedy had helped finance the People Machine . . . and that reports based on its findings went directly to Bobby.” (Simulmatics’ reports can be found, today, in the archives at the Kennedy Library.) 
J.F.K. The Man & The Myth: Victor Lasky: 9780440144076: Amazon.com ...
In “J.F.K.: The Man and the Myth,” a fierce and partisan book published in September, 1963, Lasky would all but argue that, by using a computer simulation, Kennedy had stolen the election from Nixon. But after Kennedy was assassinated Lasky’s publishers halted printing. “I’ve cancelled out of everything,” Lasky said after the President’s death. “As far as I am concerned Kennedy is no longer subject to criticism on my part.”
Still, criticism endured. The University of California political theorist Eugene Burdick had worked for Greenfield in 1956, but decided not to join Simulmatics. Instead, he wrote a novel about it. In “The 480,” a political thriller published in 1964, a barely disguised “Simulations Enterprises” meddles with a U.S. Presidential election. “This may or may not result in evil,” Burdick warned. “Certainly it will result in the end of politics as Americans have known it.” 
4 SCI FI LOT CLASSIC DANIEL F GALOUYE SIMULACRON-3 (13th Floor ...
That same year, in “Simulacron-3,” a science-fiction novel set in the year 2034, specialists in the field of “simulectronics” build a People Machine—“a total environment simulator”—only to discover that they themselves don’t exist and are, instead, merely the ethereal, Escherian inventions of yet another People Machine. After that, Simulmatics lived on in fiction and film, an anonymous avatar. In 1973, the German filmmaker Rainer Werner Fassbinder adapted “Simulacron-3” into “World on a Wire,” a forerunner of the 1999 film “The Matrix,” in which all of humanity lives in a simulation, trapped, deluded, and dehumanized.

The first array of the matrix was erected in 1959. After the election of 1960, the Simulmatics Corporation ventured into nearly every realm of American life. In 1961, it introduced computer simulation to the advertising industry. In 1962, it was the first data firm to provide real-time computing to an American newspaper—the Times—for the purpose of analyzing election results. In 1963, it simulated the entire economy of a developing nation, Venezuela, with an eye toward thwarting Communist revolution. 
The Simulmatics Project | Humane Politics and Methods of Inquiry ...

Beginning in 1965, Simulmatics conducted psychological research in Vietnam as part of a larger project of waging a war by way of computer-run data analysis and modelling. In 1967 and 1968, at home, Simulmatics attempted to build a race-riot-prediction machine. In 1969, after antiwar demonstrators called Pool a war criminal, the People Machine crashed; in 1970, the company filed for bankruptcy. (Most of its records were destroyed; I stumbled across what remains, in Pool’s papers, at M.I.T.)

Simulmatics is a relic of its time, an artifact of the Eisenhower-Kennedy-Nixon Cold War; a product of the Madison Avenue of M&M’s and toothpaste ads; a casualty of mid-century American liberalism. The Simulations Enterprises of “The 480” is a mega-corporation and the “simulectronics” specialists in “Simulacron-3” are technical geniuses. The real Simulmatics Corporation was a small, struggling company. It was said to be the “A-bomb of the social sciences.” But, like a long-buried mine, it took decades to detonate. The People Machine was hobbled by its time, by the technological limitations of the nineteen-sixties. Data were scarce. Models were weak. Computers were slow. The men who built the machine could not repair it: the company’s behavioral scientists had little business sense, its chief mathematician contended with insanity, its computer scientist fell behind the latest research, its president drank too much, and nearly all their marriages were falling apart. The machine sputtered, sparks flying, smoke rising, and ground to a halt.

Simulmatics failed. And yet it had built a very early version of the machine in which humanity would find itself trapped in the early twenty-first century, a machine that applies the science of psychological warfare to the affairs of ordinary life, a machine that manipulates opinion, exploits attention, commodifies information, divides voters, atomizes communities, alienates individuals, and undermines democracy. Facebook, Palantir, Cambridge Analytica, Amazon, the Internet Research Agency, Google: these are, every one, the children of Simulmatics.

“The Company proposes to engage principally in estimating probable human behavior by the use of computer technology,” Greenfield promised investors in Simulmatics’ initial stock offering. By the time of the 2016 election, the mission of Simulmatics had become the mission of nearly every corporation. Collect data. Write code: if/then/else. Detect patterns. Predict behavior. Direct action. Encourage consumption. Influence elections. If Simulmatics had not begun this work, then it would have been done by someone else. But, if someone else had done it, then it might have been done differently. ♦