The 1972 Election: Great for Nixon, Middling for GOP

The 1972 election was for Richard Nixon an unparalleled triumph. Although he was expected to win and win big, he won a whopping 49 states, a feat repeated only once more since. Senator George McGovern of South Dakota had a disastrous if principled run for president, and even that was challenged given his quick dropping of Senator Thomas Eagleton of Missouri as his running mate upon revelation that he had seen a psychiatrist even though he had initially denied it would happen. However, for his party, things didn’t quite go that way. Part of it was that the GOP at this time was really picking and choosing their battles when it came to the South, and many voters were still clinging onto their traditional Democratic Party affiliation even if their vote for president was going to Nixon. In races in which there were open seats in the South, the GOP did well, but in other places in the nation, they could have used some coattails.

The House: Moderately Positive

The Democrats had a formidable House majority, so it was unlikely that an election would flip control to the Republicans, but they won a net of 12 seats. They had net gains in the following states:

Arizona – The 1970 census had produced an extra House seat, and this was won by John B. Conlan.

Colorado – Republicans lost a seat in the Denver-based 1st but won a newly created district as well as the 4th district.

Connecticut – Ronald Sarasin defeats Democrat John Monagan for reelection.

Illinois – Staunchly liberal Democrat Abner Mikva lost reelection to Republican Samuel Young, and Republicans gained two seats from redistricting. Mikva would be back after the 1974 midterms though.

Indiana – Democrat Andy Jacobs Jr. loses reelection to Republican Bill Hudnut. Like Mikva, he would be back after the 1974 midterms.

Louisiana – Republican Dave Treen wins in the 3rd district, the first one to win a Congressional seat in Louisiana since 1888.

Maine – Although Democrat Bill Hathaway moves up to the Senate, his successor is Republican William Cohen, who will later trounce Hathaway in the 1978 Senate race.

Maryland – Marjorie Holt wins a newly created district in the D.C. suburbs.

Michigan – Robert Huber is elected in a newly created district, but he only lasts a term.

Mississippi – Republicans had a bit of a false start in this state with the election of Prentiss Walker to Congress in 1964. However, the elections of Thad Cochran and Trent Lott, two major figures in the rise of Republicans in Mississippi, is their real start.

Nevada – Republican Dave Towell succeeds Democrat Walter Baring, who endorsed him after losing renomination to a liberal.

New Jersey – Joseph Maraziti wins a newly created district. However, he is swept away in the 1974 midterms.

New York –Angelo Roncallo wins a newly-created district (he doesn’t last), while Republican Ben Gilman defeats Democrat John G. Dow for reelection. Democrats keep one seat when Republican Seymour Halpern’s district is merged with Democrat Lester Wolff’s.

North Dakota – Republicans essentially gain by a seat being held by a Democrat being dropped from the census. Mark Andrews continues representing the state.

South Carolina – Republican Edward Young succeeds Democrat John McMillan. He doesn’t last.

South Dakota – Republicans had a bit of a rough time in the state lately, but Jim Abdnor winning the 2nd district helps things.

Tennessee – Republican Robin Beard wins the newly created 6th district, which merged Democrat William Anderson’s and Ray Blanton’s.

Texas – Republican Alan Steelman defeats Democrat Earle Cabell for reelection in Dallas, and Republican Bob Price’s district is merged with Democrat Graham Purcell’s, with Price coming out on top. Price loses reelection next time around.

Virginia – Republican Bob Daniel succeeds Democrat Watkins Abbitt. It’s not much of a change, as Abbitt was already quite conservative.

Net Losses:

Georgia – Atlanta’s Fletcher Thompson retired to run for the Senate, and the seat was won by Democrat and civil rights activist Andrew Young, the first black representative elected in Georgia since Reconstruction.

Iowa – Fred Schwengel loses reelection in the 1st district, and Rep. John Kyl loses reelection in his district merging with Democratic Rep. Neal Smith. Republicans are similarly disappointed in the Senate, as I will cover later.

Massachusetts – Hastings Keith opts to retire, and is succeeded by liberal Democrat Gerry Studds, who narrowly prevails over his Republican opponent. In the 5th district, future senator and presidential candidate John Kerry runs for the seat, but is defeated.

Oklahoma – In 1970, Republican Page Belcher faced a tough challenge from Democrat James Jones. Instead of facing him again, he opts to retire, and Jones wins the seat.

Utah – Republican Sherman Lloyd loses reelection to Democrat Douglas Owens. A candidate of the American Independent Party notably takes over 11% of the vote.

Wisconsin – Redistricting places Democrat Dave Obey and Republican Alvin O’Konski in the same district; the latter loses. Obey will serve until 2011.

The Senate

The Senate is a much grimmer picture for the Republicans, and some significant incumbents lose. However, there are offsets in gains in other states.

Wins:

New Mexico – Republican Pete Domenici succeeds retiring Democrat Clinton Anderson. He will serve until 2009.

North Carolina – Jesse Helms succeeds Democrat B. Everett Jordan, who had lost renomination. He will serve until 2003.

Oklahoma – Governor Dewey Bartlett wins the election, succeeding the very liberal Democrat Fred Harris. He lasts only a term, as he develops lung cancer and dies shortly after his term ends.

Virginia – Democrat William B. Spong loses reelection to Republican Congressman William Scott. Scott only lasts a term as his time as senator is marked by numerous verbal blunders. His successor, Republican John Warner, will be in office until 2009.

Losses:

Colorado – Republican Gordon Allott, running for his fourth term, loses reelection by a point to Democrat Floyd Haskell. Haskell would only serve a term before being defeated by Republican Congressman Bill Armstrong.

Delaware – Republican Cale Boggs, who was reluctant to run again but pushed into doing so by President Nixon, is defeated by none other than the current president. That’s how long he’s been on the scene, folks!

Iowa – Although Nixon handily wins reelection in Iowa as he does just about everywhere, Republican Jack Miller loses reelection by over ten points to Democrat Dick Clark. Like Haskell, he lasts only a term, being defeated by Roger Jepsen in 1978.

Kentucky – Republican John Sherman Cooper retires, and former Governor Louie B. Nunn just doesn’t make it against Democrat Dee Huddleston.

Maine – Perhaps the most stunning Senate loss was that of Margaret Chase Smith. Smith was a trailblazer for women in the Senate and a known centrist, but by 1972 the state of Maine had changed from when she first got into politics. Congressman Bill Hathaway defeats her, and I have already written what happens in 1978.

South Dakota – Republican Karl Mundt retires on account of him being in bad health after suffering a major stroke, and staunchly liberal Democratic Congressman James Abourezk wins the election to succeed him.

The 1972 election was amazing for Nixon, but the Congressional GOP could have used a better election, especially given what was coming after Watergate.

References

1972 United States House of Representatives elections. Wikipedia.

Retrieved from

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1972_United_States_House_of_Representatives_elections

1972 United States Senate elections. Wikipedia.

Retrieved from

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1972_United_States_Senate_elections

The Truman Committee  – A Springboard to the Presidency

Senator Harry S. Truman (D-Mo.) was not a particularly known figure nationally at the start of 1941 save for being an FDR loyalist, although in Missouri he was controversial. He had won his renomination in 1940 by the skin of his teeth and had a close election given that his career was boosted extensively by the corrupt Pendergast machine, which was now crippled given Tom Pendergast’s imprisonment for voter fraud. Indeed, when first elected in 1934, Truman was known as the “Senator from Pendergast”. However, what he would do after the election would be a reputation changer for the ages.

A Good Government Committee

Truman went on a trip in early 1941, touring the country to see how $10.5 billion was being spent on national defense, and he saw a lot of waste and war profiteering, which disgusted him, recalling, “…there were men, hundreds of them, just standing around collecting their pay, doing nothing” (Levin Center).

On February 10, 1941, he delivered a speech calling for the creation of a committee, officially called the Special Committee to Investigate the National Defense Program, as a watchdog committee to make sure that funds were being spent properly and to uncover waste and malfeasance. President Roosevelt was not enthusiastic about this committee to say the least, but decided that it was better for a Democrat to take the lead on this than Republicans who were itching to lead investigations (Inskeep). On March 1, 1941, the Senate voted without objection to create this committee and give it a little money. This would be popularly dubbed the “Truman Committee”, as he was selected to chair it.

The Truman Committee Gets to Work

 Although Senator Truman was pressured by the Roosevelt Administration to fill the committee with loyalists, he filled the committee with men he had found to possess integrity and practicality, whatever their party or wherever they stood on the New Deal (Levin Center). Interestingly, one of these men was Maine Republican Owen Brewster, who would have a major conflict with Howard Hughes and be portrayed as a villain in Martin Scorcese’s The Aviator, but Brewster’s story, and my take on him as a politician, is for another time. This committee discovered a good deal of waste and malfeasance. Examples included:

“The Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corporation sold faulty slabs of steel to be sued in shipbuilding and falsified quality control reports;

Defective engines made by the Curtiss-Wright Company and used in airplanes led to the death of student pilots;

Standard Oil Company and Alcoa, which had exclusive patents or monopolies on critical war materials, had intentionally slowed the development of substitutes or created artificial shortages; and

The Remington Company, according to Senator Truman, got “$600,000 for acting as advisors to the Government” but in his words: “[n]o one knows what this advice is or what it is worth.” (Levin Center)

Although Truman did publicize the committee, he also was not taking every opportunity he could to do so. If he found mismanagement in certain places, he’d give the department heads a chance to fix it by giving them a call and telling them of the problem (Inskeep & Drummond). If they were not receptive, then Truman’s temper would flare up and he would go after them, including holding a public hearing. In their first report, the Truman Committee found $100 million in waste on upgrading army camps, and that these camps were not being modernized in the process (Inskeep & Drummond). The committee also issued recommendations based on their findings, and such recommendations would save the government money, which became all the more valuable when the United States entered World War II.

Although only $1 million was spent on the committee, the committee throughout World War II is estimated to have saved between $10-15 billion in costs, saved thousands of lives through exposing defective military equipment and materials, and easing federal contracting processes (Levin Center). This was a remarkable turnaround from past perceptions of him, and made him a popular figure. Truman’s highly capable chairmanship of this committee, his good relations with Southern Democrats, being from a border state, and Majority Leader Alben Barkley’s (D-Ky.) defiance of FDR on tax legislation set him up for the vice presidential nomination in 1944. Although he didn’t want the nomination, it was foisted upon him as a service to his party, as many Democrats on the inside knew that FDR’s running mate would likely be president. And indeed, it only took three months into Roosevelt’s fourth term for that to happen. The Truman Committee to this day is a model for legislative investigative committees.

References

Portraits in Oversight: Harry Truman and the Investigation of Waste, Fraud, & Abuse in World War II. Levin Center.

Retrieved from

Special Committee to Investigate the National Defense Program. U.S. Senate.

Retrieved from

https://www.senate.gov/about/powers-procedures/investigations/truman.htm

Inskeep, S. & Drummond, S. (2023, May 11). Truman Committee became the model for scrutinizing giant public expenditures. NPR.

Retrieved from

https://www.npr.org/2023/05/11/1175403633/truman-committee-became-the-model-for-scrutinizing-giant-public-expenditures

An Ideologically Interesting Vote: Funding the Selective Service

Note: I will be posting this and two others early as I will have unreliable internet connection over about the next week.

In 1973, President Nixon ended the draft, and by 1975 men no longer were obligated to sign up with Selective Service, leaving the program in limbo. However, on December 24, 1979, the USSR began their invasion of Afghanistan, and on January 24, 1980, President Carter as one of his responses restored the Selective Service in case the US should need to quickly mobilize. While national security advocates praised the move, civil liberties and student groups were strongly opposed (UPI). However, what makes this matter interesting is that in the 1980 campaign, it placed Ronald Reagan to the left of Carter. Reagan condemned the resumption of the Selective Service and promised to eliminate it as president. He was quite critical of military conscription as a concept, asserting that it “rests on the assumption that your kids belong to the state…That assumption isn’t a new one. The Nazis thought it was a great idea” (Gregory). What’s more, it produced some interesting divisions within the Republican and Democratic parties when funding came for a vote. The critical vote for funding in the House was on April 22nd, passing 218-188, with Democrats voting for 135-122 and Republicans voting for 83-66. The Senate followed up on June 12th, passing the bill 58-34, with Democrats breaking for 33-18 and Republicans at 25-16.

Divides Among Republicans

The frightening idea that your children belong to the state brought up by Reagan was on the minds of numerous conservatives on the Republican side who voted against, fearing a restoration of the draft. These included Senator Orrin Hatch of Utah as well as Representatives John Rousselot of California, formerly a spokesman for the John Birch Society, Phil Crane of Illinois, who was conservative on almost everything, and Ron Paul of Texas, consistent with his libertarian brand. However, there were plenty of prominent conservatives who voted for. Senators Barry Goldwater of Arizona and Jesse Helms of North Carolina voted for, as did future Vice President Dick Cheney and future Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich. This vote also split, interestingly enough, moderate to liberal Republicans. Resuming the Selective Service won the vote of the ultimate liberal Republican of the Senate, Jacob Javits of New York, as well as those of John Chafee of Rhode Island and Robert Stafford of Vermont. However, Mac Mathias of Maryland and Mark Hatfield of Oregon voted against.

Future Presidents and Hopefuls

Joe Biden did not cast a vote on the Selective Service measure, while future Presidential candidate Bob Dole voted against as did 1984 contender for the Democratic nomination Gary Hart of Colorado. Ted Kennedy of Massachusetts, actively campaigning for president, saw this vote as important enough to show up to vote against. The service-minded John Glenn of Ohio, who would run for the Democratic nomination in 1984, voted for, as did South Carolinian Fritz Hollings. John B. Anderson of Illinois, seeking the Republican nomination and then running as an Independent, voted against.

The “Solid South” Comes Out in Full Force

The politicians of the states of the former Confederacy were strongly for this measure. Senators from these states voted 19-0 for, and representatives on the key amendment to appropriate funds voted 87-9 for. Then nine dissenters were Edward Stack (D-Fla.), W. Henson Moore (R-La.), Mendel Davis (D-S.C.), Harold Ford (D-Tenn.), Jim Collins (R-Tex.), Mickey Leland (D-Tex.), Ron Paul (R-Tex.), Herb Harris (D-Va.), and Joe Fisher (D-Va.). Of the Democrats, only one was in the moderate camp, while the others were staunch liberals. Of the three Republicans, Collins was known as arch-conservative and Paul, well, we know where he is. Moore was the only Deep South Republican opposed.

Divides Among Democrats

Among Democrats, the figures were of interest as well. Conservative Democrats in the Senate to a man voted for, while there were some splits among liberals. Birch Bayh of Indiana, who was generally known as quite a liberal, voted for, as did Abe Ribicoff of Connecticut, the latter who had become a bit more conservative on defense issues in his later career. Pete Williams of New Jersey, known as a staunch liberal, voted for as well. As might be expected, certain outspoken foes of the Vietnam War were opposed, such as George McGovern of South Dakota and Bill Proxmire of Wisconsin. My home state of Washington split on this one, with the anti-détente Henry “Scoop” Jackson voting for and Warren “Maggie” Magnuson voting against. Although the men agreed on most things, they did split on the Vietnam War. Speaking of Washington, its House delegation was overwhelmingly against, with only Democrat Norm Dicks voting in favor.

The Curious Cases of Oklahoma and Utah and South Dakota Meeting Expectations

Of the states, two had divisions that would seldom be expected: Senator Henry Bellmon and Representative Mickey Edwards, Oklahoma’s Republicans, voted against while all the state’s Democrats voted for. Utah’s Democratic Representative K. Gunn McKay voted for while the state’s Republican senators and its representative voted against. South Dakota, on the other hand, is the only state that would likely fit common perceptions of the parties among today’s young, with voting Democrats against and Republican Senator Larry Pressler for.

Conclusion

I see this vote in several ways. For one, it does function on a conservative/liberal scale (although not strongly on the conservative side), as Americans for Constitutional Action counted a vote for as favorable and Americans for Democratic Action counted a vote against as favorable. However, it also functions to determine who the more libertarian individuals in the parties are as well as establishment vs. anti-establishment. Ideologically, on the opposition side, there is a horseshoe effect going on with many of the Vietnam War’s prominent opponents against but also those who shared Reagan’s opposition, fearing it would lead to the resumption of the draft. Incidentally, Reagan as president walked back on that one, supporting an extension of the Selective Service in 1982 after being advised by the Presidential Military Manpower Task Force to continue it, and we have had it since (Reagan).

References

Carter revives selective service. (1980, January 24). UPI.

Retrieved from

https://www.upi.com/Archives/1980/01/24/Carter-revives-selective-service/1941579661751

Gregory, A. (2004, June 15). Honor Reagan’s Promise and Abolish the Selective Service. Independent Institute.

Retrieved from

https://www.independent.org/news/article.asp?id=1317

Reagan, R. (1982, January 7). Statement on Continuation of the Registration Program Under the Military Selective Service Act. Ronald Reagan Presidential Library & Museum.

Retrieved from

https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/archives/speech/statement-continuation-registration-program-under-military-selective-service-act

To agree to Appropriations Committee Amendment to H.J. Res. 521, Draft Registration, that increases the transfer authority to Selective Service from $4.7 million to $13.295 million. Voteview.

Retrieved from

https://www.voteview.com/rollcall/RH0960842

To pass H.J. Res. 521. (Motion Passed) See Note(s) 29. Voteview.

Retrieved from

https://www.voteview.com/rollcall/RS0960708

Leverett Saltonstall: Collegiality and Compromise

For all the disagreements out there, I think we can all agree that we live in highly disagreeable times. The “culture war” is at fever pitch, partisanship is the highest its been since the era of the War of the Rebellion, and we have numerous political figures I will charitably call publicity hounds (I have worse words for them, but I will not express them here). This is a consequence of the long-standing effort across the board to have ideologically responsible parties. Although I am inclined to also point the finger at primaries, I am not as certain about it as a factor. Primaries have produced outcomes in the GOP that I have both agreed and disagreed with on grounds of “electability”. And the truth is that there are times in which primary voters have had some great hits over the party establishment choices (Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz) and horrific misses (Christine O’Donnell, Roy Moore). One figure whose politics deeply contrast with today in tone and in ideological purity is Leverett Saltonstall (1892-1979), a Massachusetts Republican.

Saltonstall came from one of the oldest families in Massachusetts and one that had a history of political involvement; his great-grandfather Leverett Saltonstall I (1783-1845) had been a prominent Whig politician in his day. Leverett began his political career as an alderman of Newton, which led to his election to the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1922, where from 1929 to 1937 he served as its speaker. In 1938, Saltonstall ran for governor. Jim Curley, who had been governor from 1935 to 1937, was a highly corrupt figure who had run for the office to avoid going to prison, but he had a fan base particularly among Boston’s ethnic Irish population, who held a grudge against the Boston Brahmins (wealthy WASPs). Although Saltonstall was a Brahmin, he was also of Irish descent, so he was in both worlds and could appeal to both camps. Curley blundered when he revived an old description of him by referring to him as “a man with a Harvard accent and a South Boston face”, which Saltonstall repeatedly used to his advantage, adding, “I’ll have the same face after election that I have before election” (Weeks, xiii). 1938 was a good year for Republicans and Saltonstall was the right sort of Republican, winning the election.

Saltonstall’s tenure as governor was ethically squeaky clean, a pleasant contrast to the grafting ways of Curley. He also managed to eliminate most of the state’s deficit, successfully mediated a major Teamster’s Union strike, and established an interfaith committee to curb discrimination (Blair). Saltonstall also had the benefit of having a craggy but trustworthy face. He would sometimes quote a limerick to describe his appearance,

“For beauty I am not a star.

There are others more handsome by far,

But my face, I don’t mind it,

For I am behind it,

It’s the people in front that I jar” (Blair).

In 1944, Saltonstall ran for the Senate to complete the term of Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., who had resigned to fight in World War II. By this time, he was popular with Republicans and Democrats alike and won the election with 64% of the vote, even winning the Democratic stronghold of Boston.  

In the Republican 80th Congress, he supported much of the party’s conservative economic agenda, but voted internationalist and in favor of more refugees being admitted to the US. Saltonstall also supported the Taft-Ellender-Wagner housing bill, which included public housing. Although he didn’t sponsor much legislation, his contributions came in the form of adding amendments to legislation, thus he was a bit of a behind-the-scenes player (Blair). In hearings on controversial issues, Saltonstall wouldn’t ask questions meant to solicit a specific answer or to grandstand, he would do so to find out information so he could better make decisions. Despite his nickname being “Salty”, he couldn’t have been further from it. Saltonstall was known for his unfailing courtesy and manners and this made him one of the most agreeable legislators on Capitol Hill. This set him up for being part of the Republican leadership, but he had to win reelection first.

In 1948, he pulled off another win for a full term, even though President Truman won by over ten points in Massachusetts that year. In 1949, Saltonstall was elected party whip, serving until 1957. As whip, he was able to effectively appeal to both the conservative and moderate to liberal wings of the party. From 1957 to 1967, he served as the chairman of the Republican Conference.

Although an internationalist, Saltonstall voted against Point IV aid in 1950, granting foreign aid to nations on the basis of being poor rather than recovering from post-war damage. He was strongly for Eisenhower, and indeed he was one of the figures Saltonstall respected most. In 1954, he voted to censure Senator Joseph McCarthy (R-Wis.). That year, Saltonstall had a close shave against Treasurer and Receiver-General Foster Furcolo, prevailing by 1.5% in an election that lost the GOP the Senate.

While he could be conservative on numerous issues regarding budgets and organized labor, he also was supportive of increasing the minimum wage, internationalism, and opposed certain domestic anti-communist policies such as maintaining a student loyalty oath on college campuses and giving states a broad authority to crack down on subversive organizations. Americans for Constitutional Action gave him a 69% for their first ratings, which covered his record from 1955 to 1959. Saltonstall’s DW-Nominate score was a 0.175, suggesting moderation.

While in 1960 John F. Kennedy had his third best performance in Massachusetts, Saltonstall won reelection by around 13 points. Interestingly, although he remained having clean hands, his campaign manager was Chuck Colson. Colson, who would gain infamy in the Watergate Scandal as Nixon’s “hatchet man”, was ruthless and behind his boss’s back, concocted a “grassroots” movement of voters who wished to split their tickets to vote for Kennedy and Saltonstall, which surely assisted in at least the margin of his victory (Massachusetts Historical Society).

On civil rights, Saltonstall was supportive, backing both the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. However, he also was a supporter of state’s rights, and voted for the Anderson-Aiken Amendment to the Civil Rights Act of 1957, which struck out the section that granted the attorney general authority to initiate lawsuits in civil rights cases, which numerous senators outside the South thought went too far beyond protection of voting rights (Douglas).

Saltonstall had a mixed record on the Great Society. While he voted against the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964 and had voted against Medicare proposals in 1960, 1962, and 1964, he did vote for Medicare in 1965 and supported the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, providing federal aid to schools. In 1966, Saltonstall voted for both of Minority Leader Everett Dirksen’s (R-Ill.) proposals to amend the Constitution. First, to allow legislative districts in states to not solely be based in population, and second, to permit teacher led prayer in public schools.

Although Saltonstall was still in good health in 1966 and probably could have capably served another term, at 74 he wished to retire before he declined. As he explained, “I wanted to quit when I was still doing the job rather than just fade away in the Senate…Too many of my Senate colleagues overdid it. They stayed on too long – napping through committee hearings when they should have packed up and gone home” (Blair). Saltonstall lived 12 years after his final day in the Senate, and in 1971 published his autobiography written with Edward Weeks of Atlantic Monthly, titled Autobiography of Leverett Saltonstall; Massachusetts Governor, U.S. Senator, and Yankee Icon. He died on June 17, 1979 of congestive heart failure.

Saltonstall was the right sort of Republican that the GOP could run in Massachusetts statewide at the time, and although he certainly fits the characterization of a “Country Club Republican”, his record was golden by conservative standards compared to his Republican successor, Ed Brooke. Among the characters I have covered, I admit a great admiration for Saltonstall, even though his politics fall a bit short of mine on the conservative scale. He played the game of politics honorably and won. We should hope for the same for all our office seekers.

References

Blair, T. Saltonstall, Leverett. Harvard Square Library.

Retrieved from

Douglas, P.H. (1957, December). The Right to Vote. The Atlantic.

Retrieved from

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1957/12/the-right-to-vote/642205

Object of the Month: The Next Four Years. (2020, September). Massachusetts Historical Society.

Retrieved from

https://www.masshist.org/object-of-the-month/objects/september-2020

Saltonstall, Leverett. Voteview.

Retrieved from

https://www.voteview.com/person/8185/leverett-saltonstall

Weeks, E. (2015). Preface to The autobiography of Leverett Saltonstall: Massachusetts governor, U.S. senator, and Yankee icon. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield.

Retrieved from

RINOs from American History #16: Claudine Schneider


Congressman Eddie Beard (D-R.I.) was a bit of an unusual fellow. In his first campaign for Congress in 1974, he was a 34-year-old house painter and he often campaigned in painter’s clothes to appeal to working class voters, against the wishes of the Democratic establishment who thought him a “grandstander” and a “loudmouth” (Szkotak). Despite opposition from the Democratic establishment, he defeated incumbent Robert O. Tiernan in the primary in the Providence-based 2nd district. However, the 1978 election saw a compelling alternative come in the form of Claudine Schneider (1947- ). Interestingly, she had been a Democrat until then, but the GOP offered her more for a political career. Although Schneider lost that year, she lost by only 5 points. Beard had won reelection in 1976 with 76.5% of the vote. The 1980 election was different, as Beard was increasingly harmed by his propensity to be “quarrelsome and ill-informed” and Schneider had gained publicity by hosting a public affairs TV program and enhanced her appeal with ethnic Italians by taking Italian lessons (Wasniewski, 611). Although Jimmy Carter won Rhode Island, Carter’s victory in the state was not enough to save Beard, and Schneider won the election by over 10 points, making her the first Republican elected to the House from Rhode Island since 1938.

Congresswoman Schneider

Schneider supported a number of Reagan’s budget and tax policies in 1981 but she also voted favorably on many policies typically opposed by conservatives, such as arts funding, the Legal Services Corporation, food stamps, and the use of busing as a means of desegregation. Schneider also opposed the Reagan Administration on funding of military priorities such as the B-1 Bomber and the MX-Missile. In 1983, Schneider was the only Republican in the House that Americans for Democratic Action scored as a liberal, meaning she voted liberal on at least 14 of 20 of their selected votes (Associated Press). She was foremost an advocate for environmental issues and was an early proponent of climate change legislation. One of her major victories in Congress was defeating the Clinch River Breeder Reactor in 1983, which was strongly supported by the Reagan Administration and the GOP leadership and opposed by environmentalists. Schneider said of the reactor that it was “a confederacy of corporate issues” (Wasniewski, 612). Her DW-Nominate score was an unusually low -0.026 and she had an average of 21% by Americans for Constitutional Action for her first four years in Congress. Schneider opposed President Reagan’s position 75% of the time and became extremely popular in her district, whose voters were largely against Reagan and in 1988 she won reelection with 72.1% of the vote, the highest for any Republican since 1878 (Wasniewski, 612). However, this came at the cost of being passed over for committee assignments best suited to her specialty.

Schneider in 1989 originated a joke about Dan Quayle which was mistaken by a number of publications as one of his gaffes, “I was recently on a tour of Latin America, and the only regret I have was that I didn’t study Latin harder in school so I could converse with those people” (O’Connell). Given her popularity in her district, Republicans saw her as a top contender to take on Democratic Senator Claiborne Pell. Pell had been in office since 1961, and perhaps it was time for a change in Rhode Island. However, he had high favorables in Rhode Island overall, and many Democratic voters, although they liked Schneider, didn’t want to risk the Senate being majority Republican, and Pell won reelection with ease (Wasniewski, 614).


Post-Career

After her career in Congress, Schneider was further involved in the environmental movement. She also accepted a teaching position at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University and served on the Competitiveness Policy Council during the Clinton Administration (Wasniewski, 614). Although her Congressional career has long passed, she isn’t quite history. Schneider has lately been critical of GOP environmental policy and in a 2019 interview she asserted that they had been “bought off by the fossil fuel industry” (Bologna & Borchers). She endorsed Democrat Seth Magaziner in his campaign for Congress in 2022 and as a resident of Colorado was one the plaintiffs in the case to remove Donald Trump from the ballot.

References

Bologna, J. & Borchers, C. (2019, April 28). How The GOP Became The Party To Oppose Climate Change Legislation. WBUR.

Retrieved from

https://www.wbur.org/radioboston/2019/04/25/gop-climate-change

Liberal Vote Gains in House. (1983, December 28). Associated Press.

Retrieved from

O’Carroll, E. (2011, June 3). Political misquotes: The 10 most famous things never actually said. The Christian Science Monitor.

Retrieved from

https://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Politics/2011/0603/Political-misquotes-The-10-most-famous-things-never-actually-said/I-was-recently-on-a-tour-of-Latin-America-and-the-only-regret-I-have-was-that-I-didn-t-study-Latin-harder-in-school-so-I-could-converse-with-those-people.-Dan-Quayle

Schneider, Claudine. Voteview.

Retrieved from

https://voteview.com/person/14857/claudine-schneider

Szkotak, S. (1981, December 20). Eddie Beard — Ex-congressman, now a saloon keeper. Champion of the working class plans ‘one more shot’ at political office. UPI.

Retrieved from

https://www.upi.com/Archives/1981/12/20/Eddie-Beard-Ex-congressman-now-a-saloon-keeperChampion-of-the-working-class-plansone-more-shot-at-political-office/2648377672400/

Wasniewski, M.A. (ed.). (2006). Women in Congress, 1917-2006, 611-614. Washington D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office.

Civil Rights in 1950

Majority Leader Scott Lucas (D-Ill.), who led the pushes on both army desegregation and the FEPC.

In 1950, the Senate took on two issues on civil rights that had been pushed by President Truman. The first was army desegregation and the second was on a proposal for a permanent Fair Employment Practices Committee (FEPC), the purpose of which was to curb employment discrimination based on race.

Analyzing the Votes

Senator Richard Russell (D-Ga.), the leader of the Southern Democratic faction, managed to include an amendment to the draft bill allowing “voluntary” segregation in units. This had the potential to seriously undermine President Truman’s desegregation of the army, and Majority Leader Scott Lucas’s (D-Ill.) motion to delete the amendment carried 42-29 on June 12th. Democrats voting 25-16 against Lucas’s motion and Republicans voting 26-4 for. One might trot out the old “party switch” talking point, but the votes for defeating the Russell Amendment included most of the GOP conservatives too. There were also a few votes outside of the South from Democrats in Carl Hayden of Arizona as well as Lester Hunt and Joseph O’Mahoney of Wyoming. The Republicans who favored keeping Russell’s amendment included Chan Gurney of South Dakota, the ranking Republican on the Armed Services Committee, as well as westerners Zales Ecton of Montana, Guy Cordon of Oregon, and Arthur Watkins of Utah. I am curious what was with some westerners and supporting this amendment anyway? You also had many high-profile conservatives voting for, such as Jenner of Indiana, Wherry of Nebraska, and Bricker and Taft of Ohio.

The Fair Employment Practices Committee bill had a bit of a different thing going on as it involved in the invoking of cloture, or ending debate. The vote to end debate failed 55-39, with the vote going against ending debate 27-22 by Democrats and for ending debate 33-6 from Republicans. Interestingly, the number of Senate Republicans who would vote against the Civil Rights Act of 1964 would also be six. Of the GOP senators who voted against this year, Milton Young of North Dakota and Karl Mundt of South Dakota would later vote for the Civil Rights Act of 1964, vote to retain Title II (public accommodations), but support striking Title VII (employment discrimination). In Arizona and Nevada, senators had a long history of not voting to end debate in case legislation targeting their state was on the table and they wished to filibuster. Indeed, all senators from Arizona and Nevada voted against. This does not necessarily indicate opposition to civil rights. Hayden, for instance, voted against ending debate on the Civil Rights Act of 1964 but voted for the bill and voted to keep in Titles II and VII, the most debated parts of the measure. Nevada’s Pat McCarran and George Malone both voted to kill the Russell Amendment to hinder army desegregation, but Malone would also be one of the Republicans who voted to strike Title III from the Civil Rights Act of 1957 and for a jury trial amendment. Had Malone won reelection in 1958 and survived until 1964, I find it quite possible that he would have voted against the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Interestingly, only two Senate Republicans took the side of the South on both votes: Zales Ecton of Montana and Chan Gurney of South Dakota. People who would later be thought of as civil rights liberals in the South such as Estes Kefauver of Tennessee and Lyndon B. Johnson of Texas vote against both. You also see a curious left/right intersection on civil rights here, as some of the most left-wing senators vote alongside some of the most right-wing senators (of the North, anyway) in favor.

Interestingly, for the FEPC vote, Senator Kenneth Wherry (R-Neb.) says of it, “…I do not believe in the FEPC legislation in the form which it is now before the Senate. I am sincere about that. But I will state that I believe the time has come when we should terminate debate and agree to a motion to take up. I think, however, that the Members of the Senate should write an FEPC bill which will be acceptable in the four corners of the United States. On that basis, I am perfectly willing to vote for cloture, in order to bring the measure before the Senate, and enable it to perfect such a bill” (Congressional Record, 9979). Since Wherry was one of the Senate’s strongest conservatives and a good representative of the strongly conservative, there may have been quite a few more conservative Republicans who didn’t like the bill as presented, but wanted to give the measure a chance to be considered so it could be crafted more to their liking. Wherry’s support for cloture may have been of importance in winning as many conservative Republican votes as it did. The Democratic Party of 1950 in the Senate is fundamentally more split on civil rights and on the negative side, although a significant part of this is that Republicans had seats in states that would later elect staunchly pro-civil rights Democrats. In the states of Indiana, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, and Wisconsin all had two Republican senators in 1950, but by 1964 all the senators were Democrats. In none of those states were there “nays” for on striking the Russell Amendment nor on the FEPC. That’s right, folks, Joseph McCarthy voted for the FEPC! It may sound strange to some, but the whole conflating of civil rights and communism was primarily a John Birch Society and a Southern thing. McCarthy was also a bit less conservative than people might think he was given his rhetoric. Interestingly, Scott Lucas would lose reelection that year, and his successor, Everett Dirksen, would be minority leader in the 1960s, being a leading figure in the Senate push for the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Oh, yes, and the votes I have analyzed with DW-Nominate Scores:

References

Federal Fair Employment Practice Act – Cloture Motion. (1950, July 12). Congressional Record. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office.

Retrieved from

Hayden, Carl Trumbull. Voteview.

Retrieved from

https://www.voteview.com/person/4227/carl-trumbull-hayden

Malone, George Wilson. Voteview.

Retrieved from

https://www.voteview.com/person/5944/george-wilson-malone

Mundt, Karl Earl. Voteview.

Retrieved from

https://www.voteview.com/person/6796/karl-earl-mundt

Young, Milton Ruben. Voteview.

Retrieved from

https://www.voteview.com/person/10450/milton-ruben-young

Alben Barkley – “The Veep”: Part 2



Barkley at the DNC

Barkley had as a senator become quite valuable for his oratory as well as advocacy for progressive positions, and this set him up for prime time. Barkley delivered the keynote address at the 1932 Democratic National Convention in which he condemned the Republican rule of the 1920s and called for the repeal of Prohibition, not because he personally disliked Prohibition, rather because the public wanted it. His speech was, to say the least, well received.

After FDR’s election, Barkley was one of the point men for pushing New Deal legislation, including the Agricultural Adjustment Act and the National Industrial Recovery Act, key parts of the New Deal.  In 1934, Barkley, who had one of the most faithful records in supporting the first New Deal, went on the radio to defend it against the attacks of GOP chairman Henry Fletcher (Ghaelin, 76).  He participated heavily in campaigning in the midterms, which saw one of the few times in which the president’s party gained rather than lost seats.

Barkley’s record as one of the most loyal Democrats in the Senate to Roosevelt was noticed, and he would again in 1936 give the keynote address at the Democratic National Convention. Frustrated with the Supreme Court’s decisions striking down multiple New Deal laws, he rhetorically asked in this address, “Is the court beyond criticism? May it be regarded as too sacred to be disagreed with?” (Ghaelin, 76) This foreshadowed Barkley’s support of FDR’s “court packing plan”, following the lead of Majority Leader Joe Robinson (D-Ark.) in support. However, Robinson died on July 14, 1937, of a heart attack, which may have been in part attributable to the strain of pushing forward this plan. Roosevelt publicly declared neutrality for the following majority leader race, but made it clear that he supported Barkley in his letter to him in which he called on him to continue Robinson’s fight for the court packing plan, starting “My Dear Alben”. This letter became a subject of ridicule among his opponents with them derisively referring to him as “Dear Alben” to highlight his seemingly subordinate status, much to Barkley’s embarrassment (U.S. Senate). Barkley was up against Mississippi’s Pat Harrison, who although he had a history of progressive voting was growing more conservative and had opposed the court packing plan. Worse yet for FDR, Harrison if elected would leave his post as chairman of the Senate Finance Committee and his successor would be Utah’s William H. King, who was of the party’s conservative wing and become quite antagonistic to the New Deal (Hill). Harrison had plenty of loyalists and had managed to sway future President Harry S. Truman to vote for him, but FDR rallied his loyalists as well. The deciding vote was that of Theodore Bilbo of Mississippi. Harrison despised Bilbo and the feeling was mutual, and Bilbo conditioned supporting him on Harrison personally asking him. When told of this, Harrison thought for a moment, and then replied, “You tell that son-of-a-bitch I wouldn’t speak to him if it meant the presidency of the United States!” (Hill)

Barkley as Majority Leader

Despite him having been favored by Roosevelt and initially backing the court packing plan, on July 22, 1937, he voted with 69 other senators to kill the plan, at that point such a vote was a simple acknowledgement of political reality. Barkley’s start as majority leader was not the easiest, as he had to contend with an anti-lynching bill introduced by Republicans and attempted to adjourn the Senate, but Republicans agreed to shelve the bill after Barkley promised that it would be considered in the next session (Ghaelian, 78). Although Barkley was true to his word and pushed for anti-lynching legislation, the measure fell to defeat. He also in August 1937 lost on a parliamentary motion by Minority Leader Charles McNary (R-Ore.) to recess, concluding the first session of the 75th Congress (U.S. Senate). However, he won over his Democratic colleagues and proved easier to get along with than his predecessor, who could be a bully and tough as nails. Rather than intimidation or coercion, he used persuasion to move along legislation plus many an amusing story, like another man who was born in Kentucky…Abraham Lincoln. As Barkley himself said, “A good story is like a fine Kentucky bourbon. It improves with age and, if you don’t use it too much, it will never hurt anyone” (U.S. Senate). Barkley’s talent for persuasion as well as negotiation made him quite valuable to FDR and the Democrats.

The 1938 Democratic Primary & Controversies

In 1938, Barkley drew a significant challenger in the primary in Governor A.B. “Happy” Chandler. Chandler was to Barkley’s right, being less supportive of the New Deal, and Roosevelt went to Kentucky to campaign for Barkley. During the campaign, allegations over the use of Works Progress Administration (WPA) workers to boost Barkley arose. In Kentucky, there were 72,000 people employed for numerous projects, great and small, and would ultimately over eight years employ 8.5 million people at a cost of $11 billion (Myers, 31-32). On May 27, 1938, Chandler’s campaign manager alleged in an open letter that “every federal relief agency in Kentucky is frankly and brazenly operating on a political basis”, a claim contested by Kentucky’s WPA director George Goodman (Myers, 35). However, Chandler’s campaign wasn’t above using such tactics. Indeed, state employees were being used to try to influence voters for Chandler (Myers, 36). This race was a nailbiter, but Barkley prevailed. The truth of the matter was hit upon after an investigation by journalist Thomas L. Stokes that uncovered that federal WPA employees were working extensively to intervene on behalf of Barkley while Kentucky state employees were doing so for Chandler (Myers, 41). This resulted in the passage of the Hatch Act in 1939, which prohibited the use of civil service employees for certain political activities, with the exceptions of the president and vice president.

Barkley was a Wilsonian on foreign policy, as was Roosevelt, and he successfully pushed the Senate into passing the repeal of the arms embargo in 1939, the peacetime draft in 1940, Lend-Lease in 1941, and lifting the ban on U.S. ships carrying goods to belligerent ports.

A Break with Roosevelt

Contrary to the perception that the United States was politically united during World War II (they were on the war effort), the 78th Congress was the least friendly Congress President Roosevelt faced. Barkley in this Congress in one debate that required overcoming a filibuster ordered the arrests of senators staying absent to force them to vote, including his friend Kenneth McKellar (D-Tenn.). McKellar, a man known for his hot temper, was so resentful over this incident that he denounced him on the floor of the Senate, withdrawing his recommendation of Barkley on the Supreme Court, and after refusing to speak to him (Hill). FDR’s legislative demands were thus wearing on his legislative wheelhorse. Another contentious subject was taxation to pay for the war. President Roosevelt had asked for a $10.5 billion tax increase to pay for the war effort and restrain inflation, but the bill that was passed by the House, spearheaded by House Ways and Means Committee chairman Robert Doughton (D-N.C.) included only $2.1 billion in increases (Glass). The previous revenue bill, the Revenue Act of 1942, had been highly redistributive. Although Barkley may have wished to deliver a more substantive bill to the president, he figured this was the best bill he could deliver. Thus, he agreed to the legislation (U.S. Senate). Roosevelt in turn vetoed the bill. He, however, did not just veto it, he ripped on Congress in his veto message, denouncing the measure as a “tax relief bill providing relief not for the needy but for the greedy” and finished with “The responsibility of the Congress of the United States is to supply the Government of the United States as a whole with adequate revenue for wartime needs, to provide fiscal support for the stabilization program, to hold firm against the tide of special privileges, and to achieve real simplicity for millions of small income taxpayers. In the interest of strengthening the home front, in the interest of speeding the day of victory, I urge the earliest possible action” (Glass). This inflamed the legislators and increased support for the bill. Barkley responded by resigning in protest, denouncing Roosevelt’s veto and message as “a calculated and deliberate assault upon the legislative integrity of every member of Congress. My resignation will be tendered and my services terminated. If the Congress…has any self-respect left, it will override the veto” (U.S. Senate). Barkley, previously known as FDR’s man in the Senate, had wowed his colleagues by demonstrating independence. McKellar responded in delight, “I forgive him everything! I forgive him everything he’s ever done!” (Hill) The veto was overridden, and  Senate Democrats united the next day to unanimously elect him majority leader. Senator Elbert Thomas (D-Utah) said to journalist Allen Drury of the change in perception surrounding Barkley, “the impression was given…that he spoke to us for the President. Now that he has been unanimously elected, he speaks for us to the President” (U.S. Senate). Roosevelt hastily backtracked and apologized to Barkley, endorsing his reelection in 1944. However, Barkley would not be selected for vice president, an outcome you already certainly knew otherwise history would tell of a “President Barkley”.

A Change on Civil Rights

Although in the House, Barkley had been an opponent of civil rights legislation, he was a strong supporter, including supporting retaining the Fair Employment Practices Committee, for anti-lynching legislation, and for anti-poll tax legislation. This change closely coincided with the majority of the black vote going to Democrats. His change on this subject, an even more dramatic change than seen in his Arizona colleague Carl Hayden, was demonstrative of the Democratic Party having a solid degree of political motivation for backing civil rights legislation. To be fair, there was certainly a good deal of political motive in opposing such legislation, as undoubtedly it was unpopular in Barkley’s 1st district.

Barkley and Truman

If Barkley had a fairly good relationship with FDR despite the Revenue Act bump in the road, he had a better one with his successor, Harry S. Truman. The 1946 election had produced a Republican majority in the House and Senate for the first time since the Hoover Administration, and, like Truman, Barkley battled the domestic prerogatives of the 80th Congress while assisting Truman in passing foreign policy priorities. Americans for Democratic Action graded him perfect scores in 1947 and 1948 for defending the liberal position on key issues, including opposing the Taft-Hartley Act and opposing Republican-backed tax reduction legislation. In 1948, Truman, who had no vice president while finishing FDR’s fourth term, selected his most valuable Senate ally as his running mate. The 1948 election, which produced one of the more notable “upsets” in U.S. history, made Barkley the third vice president from Kentucky.

As VP, or as his grandson called him, “The Veep”, Barkley did his best in his function as the Senate president to help the fractured Democratic majority, but things weren’t the same without him in the driver’s seat as majority leader, and his successor, Scott Lucas of Illinois, struggled mightily to unify his divided party. In 1949, Barkley made a favorable ruling on Majority Leader Scott Lucas’s (D-Ill.) rule change to make ending debate easier. A major issue coloring that debate so to speak was the matter of civil rights, so Senator Richard Russell (D-Ga.), the leader of the Southern Democrats of the Senate, appealed, and the Senate sided with Russell 46-41. Barkley also hit the campaign trail for Democrats in both 1950 and 1952, but with the unpopularity of President Truman Democrats suffered losses, and both times their majority leaders, Scott Lucas of Illinois and Ernest McFarland of Arizona, lost reelection too. In 1952, Barkley wanted to run for president, but he bowed out after many in the party regarded him as too old at 75. How quaint!

In 1954, Barkley, now 77 years old, was up for another go at the Senate. The Democratic Party was in luck that he was up to go again, as Republican incumbent John Sherman Cooper, who was one of the most liberal Republicans in the Senate, was proving quite popular. The campaign generally revolved around the idea that Barkley was too old to run again, but he dispelled this notion by campaigning with a vigor that spoke of a considerably younger man, resuming his “Iron Man” campaign style. Barkley defeated Cooper by nine points. He then supported President Eisenhower’s nomination of Cooper as Ambassador to India and Nepal.

The Best Death in the History of American Politics?

It turned out that there was something to what the Republicans were saying about Barkley and age. On April 30, 1956, Barkley was delivering a speech at the Washington and Lee Mock Convention and referring to his willingness to sit in the back row of the Senate despite his 40 years in public office declared, “I’m glad to sit in the back row, for I would rather be a servant in the House of the Lord than to sit in the seats of the mighty” (U.S. Senate). Upon a standing ovation for his words, Barkley then collapsed, dead from a heart attack at 78. However, something that was not so great of a revelation after his death is that despite Barkley being such a proponent of more government programs through the New Deal and the Fair Deal, he had not paid income taxes for years (Hill). His death opened the door for Cooper’s return to the Senate, and indeed in the 1956 special election he won the election to finish his term.

Barkley was a figure who could be quite liberal by inclination and also showed willingness to change in how he voted, and that change was generally in a liberal direction. He was also capable of compromise and defiance if he felt the Senate’s prerogatives were being trodden on. He also serves as quite a contrast in many ways to politics as we know them now. As a Kentucky liberal his philosophy of government was favored by the state’s voters for at least most of his time in office. That Kentucky would today be represented in the Senate by Mitch McConnell and Rand Paul and that they would win reelection multiple times are developments that frankly couldn’t have been foreseen in Barkley’s lifetime. The Republicans that were elected to the Senate after Barkley’s passing, Cooper and Thruston Morton, were moderate in inclination, with Cooper siding more with liberals and Morton more with conservatives.

References

Congressional Supplement. (1948, July). Americans for Democratic Action.

Retrieved from

Ghaelian, J. (2008). Alben W. Barkley: Harry S. Truman’s Unexpected Political Asset. Kaleidoscope, 7(15).

Retrieved from

Glass, A. (2018, February 24). House overrides FDR’s Revenue Act veto, Feb. 24, 1944. Politico.

Retrieved from

https://www.politico.com/story/2018/02/24/house-overrides-fdrs-revenue-act-veto-feb-24-1944-421684

Harrison, L.H. & Klotter, J.C. (1997). A new history of Kentucky. Lexington, KY: The University Press of Kentucky.

Hill, R. Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky. The Knoxville Focus.

Retrieved from

Myers, R.M. (2018, May). “To prevent pernicious political activities”: the 1938 Kentucky Democratic primary and the Hatch Act of 1939. College of Arts & Sciences Senior Honors Theses. Paper 169.

Retrieved from

Report Card for 80th Congress. (1947). Americans for Democratic Action.

Retrieved from

Senate Leaders: Alben Barkley. U.S. Senate.

Retrieved from

https://www.senate.gov/about/origins-foundations/parties-leadership/barkley-alben.htm

Alben Barkley – “The Veep”: Part I

A young Alben Barkley in Congress, 1913.

On February 28, 2024, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell announced he would be stepping down as leader at the end of the year. With his departure from political leadership, he will certainly be remembered as one of the three most influential Kentuckians in the Senate. The most remains the “Great Compromiser” Henry Clay. The Kentuckian who rivals McConnell in influence and impact is Alben William Barkley (1877-1956).

Barkley was one of those politicians, who, like Lincoln, was born in a log cabin in Kentucky. Although initially born Willie Alben Barkley, he opted to from a young age to go by “Alben William” and legally changed his name as an adult. He was raised in a religious household and this informed his opposition as an adult to betting on horse races (a difficult stance in Kentucky) as well as support for Prohibition.

Barkley got his start professionally working for Congressman Charles K. Wheeler, who at the time was supportive of free coinage of silver while he identified as a Gold Democrat. He worked without pay in exchange for access to Wheeler’s law library, where he studied and read law, being admitted to the bar in 1901. Barkley would also attend the University of Virginia School of Law.

Political Beginnings

On December 19, 1904, Barkley announced that he was running for county attorney of McCracken County. Since the region he lived was overwhelmingly Democratic, the Democratic primary was tantamount to election. He went up against incumbent Eugene A. Graves, and managed to win due to his likeability, his strong oratorical talent, and his hard work in his campaign. In 1908, Barkley mainstreamed himself with the Democratic Party by endorsing William Jennings Bryan. That year he ran for county judge, a position in Kentucky that controlled funds and patronage, so a very politically powerful role. Barkley won that contest too.

In 1912, Barkley was elected to Congress from Kentucky’s 1st district, which included Jackson Purchase, a portion of the state that had been most sympathetic to the Confederacy. While in the House, he could be thought of as a pragmatic Wilsonian progressive. Barkley would later reflect that Wilson was the “greatest statesman and greatest president” of his lifetime (U.S. Senate). Barkley’s career also reflected the significant change of the Democratic Party on race. While in the House he was quite against civil rights measures. He voted to ban interracial marriage in Washington D.C. in 1915, to ban immigration of blacks and Africans from the United States in the same year, and in 1916 he voted for segregation of Washington D.C. youth probation departments. In 1922, Barkley voted against anti-lynching legislation. Although Barkley opposed women’s suffrage in 1915, he voted for it in 1918 and 1919. His stance on civil rights would change considerably later in his career, which I will cover in the next post. Barkley also favored Prohibition and delivered speeches on behalf of the Anti-Saloon League.

Although Barkley was quite supportive of Woodrow Wilson’s New Freedom programs, although during the 1920s he wasn’t a hardline Democratic partisan in how he voted. He did, however, push strongly for measures that crossed the railroads, including the Howell-Barkley bill for labor dispute settlements and his proposal to prohibit the railroads from charging customers a Pullman car fee. Barkley also regarded the Harding Administration as well as the succeeding Republican administrations as too favorable to big business. In 1923, he said of the Harding Administration that if it had returned America to “normalcy”, “then in God’s name let us have abnormalcy” (U.S. Senate). That year, Barkley had his first and only defeat when he lost the Democratic Party nomination for governor, but better things would prove to be ahead for him.

The Senate

Barkley’s campaign style was the stuff of legends. He would put in 16 hour days and had given up to sixteen speeches a day, or as people of his time would call it, his “Iron Man Style”. Barkley went up against incumbent Richard P. Ernst, who had won by less than a point in the Republican landslide of 1920. Ernst was a conservative corporate lawyer who had voted against soldier bonuses and had refused to defend Republican Congressman John W. Langley, who had been convicted of assisting in bootlegging (Harrison & Klotter, 355). However, Ernst was not the easiest to take down even in a midterm year, but Barkley did pull off the win by over three points. Barkley got some Republican votes too, as there were Republicans unhappy that Ernst refused to defend Congressman John W. Langley, who had been convicted of assisting in bootlegging.

References

Barkley, Alben William. Voteview.

Retrieved from

https://www.voteview.com/person/437/alben-william-barkley

Harrison, L.H. & Klotter, J.C. (1997). A new history of Kentucky. Lexington, KY: The University Press of Kentucky.

Hill, R. Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky. The Knoxville Focus.

Retrieved from

Senate Leaders: Alben Barkley. U.S. Senate.

Retrieved from

https://www.senate.gov/about/origins-foundations/parties-leadership/barkley-alben.htm

Donald Rumsfeld in Congress

Today, Donald Rumsfeld is most known for his troubled time as Secretary of Defense in the George W. Bush Administration. From what I recall, two policies turned out to be of great trouble for the US in Iraq. One was the policy of “De-Baathification”, in which anyone who was in government during Saddam Hussein’s regime was barred from participating in government, which remained in place for a year. The second was that too few troops had been committed on the ground in Iraq. Both decisions came from his department. Today I wish to cover a less known part of Rumsfeld’s career, his time in Congress from 1963 to 1969.


In 1962, Congresswoman Marguerite Church, who had represented Chicago suburbs since 1951 following the death of her husband and predecessor, was calling it quits. Given this territory was staunchly Republican at the time, a 30-year-old Donald Rumsfeld (1932-2021) won easily. Interestingly, Rumsfeld had been inspired into public service by a speech from a Democrat while a student at Princeton. Illinois governor and two-time presidential candidate Adlai Stevenson II called on Princeton University students to use their education for public service (Graham).


In Congress, Rumsfeld voted in many ways as expected from someone of his district. In his first year in Congress, the conservative group I have discussed so much, Americans for Constitutional Action (ACA), saw him as a perfect representative of their preferences, giving him a 100%. However, one issue he would regularly disagree with ACA on was civil rights. During the 1960s, ACA opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, strengthening the 1964 law’s Title VII in 1966, keeping the fair housing title in the Civil Rights Act of 1966, the proposed Civil Rights Act of 1966, and adopting fair housing into the Civil Rights Act of 1968. Rumsfeld voted for all of them. After the 1964 election, Rumsfeld was one of the “Young Turks” who sought to oust Minority Leader Charles Halleck of Indiana for Gerald Ford of Michigan. Ford won 73-67, and Rumsfeld’s role in backing Ford certainly figured when Rumsfeld was nominated and confirmed as Secretary of Defense.


After the 1964 election, Rumsfeld’s record moved toward moderate as opposed to staunch conservatism, and his ACA scores would never reach an 80 after that election. He voted for foreign aid, supported funding for the arts, supported home rule for D.C., highway beautification, and for the Urban Mass Transporation Act in 1966 after supporting LBJ-backed cuts. Rumsfeld, however, was quite conservative in other ways, voting against the Economic Opportunity Act in 1964 (War on Poverty), the Appalachian Regional Development Act, rent supplements, the creation of the Housing and Urban Development Department, the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 (federal aid to education), Medicare, and the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1968. Rumsfeld also opposed the Johnson Administration’s effort to repeal the “right to work” section of the Taft-Hartley Act, an effort which would die in the Senate in one of the few victories of the Conservative Coalition in the Great Society Congress. His DW-Nominate score was a 0.369, which despite his reputation placed him to the right of most House Republicans of the time.


Rumsfeld was known for possessing a sharp wit and being combative with the Johnson Administration in ways that really mattered, such as over the “credibility gap” surrounding what the Administration was saying as opposed to the truth about the Vietnam War (Latimer). Rumsfeld in 1968 co-chaired the “Republican Truth Squad” to back Richard Nixon and rebut the Humphrey campaign. He ultimately proved a sufficiently prominent presence among Republicans that in 1969, Richard Nixon unexpectedly tapped him to head the Office of Economic Opportunity. This was an odd appointment given that Rumsfeld had been a critic of the office, and he didn’t initially want to do it, but he resigned Congress to accept the role and did what he could to make it effective. His full career is perhaps for another time.


References


Graham, B. (2021, June 30). Donald H. Rumsfeld, influential but controversial Bush defense secretary, dies at 88. The Washington Post.

Retrieved from

https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/obituaries/donald-rumsfeld-dead/2021/06/30/21a8d69a-c5dc-11df-94e1-c5afa35a9e59_story.html

Hedges, S.J. (2006, November 13). The rise and fall of Rumsfeld. The Seattle Times.

Retrieved from

https://www.seattletimes.com/nation-world/the-rise-and-fall-of-rumsfeld/

Latimer, M. (2021, June 30). The Don Rumsfeld the Obituaries Won’t Write About. Politico.

Retrieved from

https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2021/06/30/donald-rumsfeld-what-the-world-got-wrong-497275


Rumsfeld, Donald Henry. Voteview.

Retrieved from

https://voteview.com/person/10622/donald-henry-rumsfeld