Russell B. Long

Russell B. Long

Infobox Officeholder
name = Russell Billiu Long


imagesize =
small

caption =
jr/sr = United States Senator
state = Louisiana
term_start = December 31, 1948
term_end = January 3, 1987
predecessor = William C. Feazel
successor = John Breaux
order2 = 15th United States Senate Majority Whip
term_start2 = January 3, 1965
term_end2 = January 3, 1969
vicepresident2 =
viceprimeminister2 =
deputy2 =
president2 =
primeminister2 =
predecessor2 = Hubert Humphrey
successor2 = Ted Kennedy
order3 = Chairman of the Senate Committee on Finance
term_start3 = January 3, 1965
term_end3 = January 3, 1981
vicepresident3 =
viceprimeminister3 =
deputy3 =
president3 =
primeminister3 =
predecessor3 = Harry F. Byrd
successor3 = Bob Dole
birth_date = November 3, 1918
birth_place = Shreveport, Louisiana
death_date = May 9, 2003 (aged 84)
death_place = Washington, D.C.
constituency =
party = Democratic
spouse = 1. Katherine Mae Hattie (div.) 2. Carolyn Bason
profession = politician, lawyer
alma_mater = Louisiana State University
law school =
religion = Methodist


footnotes =

Russell Billiu Long (November 3, 1918May 9, 2003) was an American politician who served in the United States Senate as a Democrat from Louisiana from 1948 until 1987.

Early life

Long was born in Shreveport, and received bachelor's and law degrees from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, where he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. He was a naval officer during World War II.

Early career

Long was the son of the flamboyant Louisiana Governor and Senator Huey P. Long and Rose McConnell Long, who served about a year in the Senate following her husband's death. When Russell Long was elected in November 1948, he became the only person in U.S. history to have been preceded in the Senate by both his father and his mother. The U.S. Constitution requires Senators to be at least 30 years old and Long barely met this requirement. He was elected to the Senate on November 2, 1948, one day before his 30th birthday. He did not take office, however, until December 31, giving him a few days of seniority over others in the Senate class of 1948, including Lyndon Johnson and Hubert Humphrey. Before he ran for the Senate, Long had served as executive counsel to his uncle, Earl Kemp Long, who returned to the governorship in 1948.

Defeating Kennon and Clarke, 1948

To win the Senate seat vacated by the death of Democrat John Holmes Overton, Long first defeated Judge Robert F. Kennon of Minden in the Democratic primary, 264,143 (51 percent) to 253,668 (49 percent). The margin was hence 10,475 votes. Long then overwhelmed Republican Clem S. Clarke of Shreveport, 306,337 (75 percent) to 102,339 (25 percent). Clarke was the first Republican senatorial nominee in modern Louisiana history and did carry Iberia Parish, Caddo Parish, Lafayette Parish, and East Baton Rouge Parish.

Clarke had tried get the courts to forbid Long from running on both the Harry Truman and Strom Thurmond slates in Louisiana, but he failed to convince the judges, and Long's votes on each slate were counted. According to William J. "Bill" Dodd, who was running for lieutenant governor at the time, Judge Leander Perez of Plaquemines Parish, a segregationist and conservative member of the Democratic State Central Committee, wanted the panel to tap Clarke as the official "Louisiana Democratic" senatorial nominee. Had Perez pursued that strategy, Clarke may have won the seat on combined Thurmond-Dewey coattails. Dodd claimed that Governor Earl Long reconciled with Perez on other matters of importance to Perez to make sure that Russell Long got the "Louisiana Democratic" position on the ballot.

Because the 1948 election was for a two-year unexpired term, Long had to run again in 1950 for his first full six-year term. That year, he had no trouble defeating a minor Republican opponent, Charles S. Gerth, a businessman from New Orleans. Long polled 220,907 (87.7 percent) to Gerth's 30,931 (12.3 percent).

pecialist on tax law

Long was known for his knowledge of tax laws, much like his House colleague, Wilbur D. Mills of Arkansas. In 1953, he began serving on the tax-writing Senate Finance Committee and was the chairman from 1966 until Republicans assumed control of the Senate in 1981. During his time in the Senate, Long was a strong champion of tax breaks for businesses, once saying, "I have become convinced you're going to have to have capital if you're going to have capitalism." On the other hand, he was aware of some of the political ramifications of "tax reform," stating that it simply meant "Don't tax you, don't tax me, tax that fellow behind the tree!" [ [http://www.museum.upenn.edu/new/research/Exp_Rese_Disc/AfricaEgypt/taxes/taxes.mesopotamia.shtml Taxes in Ancient Mesopotamia] ]

Long's contributions to the United States' tax laws include the Earned Income Tax Credit, a program aimed at reducing the tax burden on poor working families, and Employee Stock Ownership Programs (ESOPs), employee benefit plans designed to allow employees to invest in the stock of their employers. In the year 2006, the Earned Income Tax Credit lifted more than four million people above the poverty line and was called “the nation’s most effective antipoverty program for working families.” [ [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/17/us/17poor.html?pagewanted=print The New York Times - Tax Credit Seen as Helping More Parents] ] Long also initiated the provision that allows a taxpayer to allocate $1 of taxes for a presidential campaign-financing fund (the "dollar checkoff").

enate career

After his election in 1948, Long never again faced a close contest for reelection. In 1962, he defeated attorney Philemon A. "Phil" St. Amant in the Democratic primary, 407,162 votes (80.2 percent) to 100,843 votes (19.8 percent). He then defeated Republican challenger Taylor W. O'Hearn, a Shreveport attorney and accountant, with 318,838 votes (75.6 percent) to 103,066 (24.4 percent). Both St. Amant and O'Hearn challenged Long from the right.

In 1964, Long defied conventional wisdom by delivering a television address in Louisiana in which he strongly endorsed the Johnson-Humphrey ticket, which lost the state to the Republican Barry M. Goldwater-William E. Miller electors. The action had no impact on Long's future, however, as Republicans declined to challenge his reelection in 1968, 1974, and 1980.

Democratic senators named him the party whip in 1965. He lost his leadership position in 1969 to Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts. He had especially good relations with both of his senatorial colleagues from Louisiana, first Allen J. Ellender and, then, J. Bennett Johnston, Jr., who like Long was born in Shreveport.

The presumed Republican candidate against Long in 1968, Richard Kilbourne, the district attorney in East Feliciana Parish, withdrew from the race, and Long ran without opposition that year.

In 1974, Long defeated state Insurance Commissioner Sherman A. Bernard of Westwego in Jefferson Parish, 520,606 (74.7 percent) to 131,540 (18.9 percent), in the Democratic primary. (Another 44,341 (6.4 percent) went to a third candidate, Annie Smart.) State Republican Chairman James H. Boyce of Baton Rouge told the "Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report" that Louisiana Republicans were "so badly outnumbered that we can't find enough candidates to run in local elections". Boyce noted that the party could not find a suitable candidate to challenge Long.

In 1980, Long defeated State Representative Louis Woody Jenkins of Baton Rouge, 484,770 (57.6 percent) to 325,922 (38.8 percent). Jenkins was a Democrat in the jungle primary that year, but he later became a Republican and ran once more for the Senate in 1996, only to lose by some 4,000 votes. In the 1980 campaign, Long's friend and colleague, Robert J. "Bob" Dole, the Kansas Republican who had been his party's vice presidential nominee in 1976 and who would be the presidential nominee in 1996, cut a television commercial for Long in the race against Jenkins, who had also lost a challenge to Johnston in 1978. Dole and Long were both running for reelection that year. The 1980 jungle primary was the last time Long's name was on a ballot.

In 1986, Democratic Congressman John Breaux of Crowley was elected to succeed Long in the Senate. Breaux defeated the Republican Congressman W. Henson Moore, III, of Baton Rouge, who had served in the House since 1975, in the general election after having trailed Moore in the primary election. Breaux served three terms in the Senate; when he left the body he was as popular as Long had been. Breaux, unlike Long, however, did not secure the election of his chosen successor. The seat went Republican in 2004, with the victory of Congressman David Vitter of the New Orleans suburbs.

After he considered and rejected a run for governor of Louisiana, Long retired from the Senate in 1987. Summing up his career in the Senate, Ronald Reagan called him a "legend" and "one of the most skillful legislators, compromisers and legislative strategists in history." [ [http://www.reagan.utexas.edu/archives/speeches/1985/101685d.htm Ronald Reagan - Remarks at a Dinner Honoring Senator Russell B. Long of Louisiana - October 16, 1985] ] The Wall Street Journal once called Long "the fourth branch of government." [ [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990CE2DB123FF932A25756C0A9659C8B63 The New York Times - Russell B. Long, 84, Senator Who Influenced Tax Laws] ] He remained in Washington, D.C., as a highly sought-after lobbyist after his retirement. For a brief period of time following his retirement, he was a partner in the law firm of Finley, Kumble, Wagner, Underberg, Manley, Myerson & Casey, which dissolved in 1987. [ [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B0DE7DB1F3DF932A25752C1A961948260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=1 Finley, Kumble, Major Law Firm, Facing Revamping or Dissolution - New York Times ] ] He later founded the Long Law Firm, where he remained a partner until his death. Long also served on the Board of Directors of The New York Stock Exchange, Lowe's Companies, Inc. and Metropolitan Life Insurance Company.

Death

At the time of his death from heart failure, Russell Long was the only former senator still living whose service went back as far as 1948. He was in the Senate, for instance, six years before the legendary Strom Thurmond arrived for what turned out to be 48 years of service. The funeral, held in Baton Rouge, is remembered in part for the moving eulogy delivered by his grandson, Russell Long Mosely, and for those delivered by former colleagues Bennett Johnston and John Breaux.

Personal life

Long married the former Katherine Mae Hattic in June 1939. They had two daughters, Rita Katherine (born 1944) and Pamela. The Longs divorced, and the senator thereafter married the former Carolyn Bason, a former Senate staffer from North Carolina.

References

External links

William J. "Bill" Dodd, "Peapatch Politics: The Earl Long Era in Louisiana Politics", Baton Rouge: Claitor's Publishing, 1991
* [http://la-cemeteries.com/Maps/East%20Baton%20Rouge/Pics/EB70Pics1.htm#RBL Cemetery Memorial by La-Cemeteries]
* [http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=L000428 Congressional biography]
* [http://www.jfk-online.com/jfk100senlong.html A debunking of the Russell Long scene in "JFK"]
*findagrave|7428137 Retrieved on 2008-01-27
* [http://216.109.125.130/search/cache?p=jimmy+d.+long+of+natchitoches+genealogy&ei=UTF-8&fr=yfp-t-501&x=wrt&u=www.libertychapelcemetery.org/files/family/long02.html&w=jimmy+d+long+natchitoches+genealogy&d=XbIjkOxsOMgC&icp=1&.intl=us Long Families of Corinth and Zion - Winn Parish, LA]


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