- Phil Crane
Infobox Congressman
name=Phil Crane
state=Illinois
district= 8th
party=Republican
term_start=November 25 1969
term_end=January 3 2005
preceded=Donald Rumsfeld
succeeded=Melissa Bean
place of birth=Chicago, Illinois
date of birth= birth date and age|1930|11|3
spouse=Arlene Catherine Johnson
religion=Protestant
current occupation=Retired college professorPhilip Miller "Phil" Crane (born
November 3 ,1930 , inChicago, Illinois ) is a former American politician.Crane was a Republican member of the
United States House of Representatives from 1969 to 2005, representing the 8th District of Illinois in the northwestern suburbs ofChicago . At the time of his defeat in the 2004 election, Crane was the longest-serving Republican member of the House.Biography
Crane was educated at
Hillsdale College , theUniversity of Vienna , received hisPhD in history in 1961 from Indiana University and served in theUnited States Army . He also attendedDePauw University and theUniversity of Michigan .His brother,
Dan Crane , served alongside him as Congressman from another Illinois district for three terms. Another brother, David Crane, ran for Congress fromIndiana a few times simultaneously with Phil and Dan. The brothers were dubbed "the Kennedys of the Right".However, David never won a seat in Congress, and Dan ended up being defeated for re-election in 1984 due, in part, to his involvement in the
1983 Congressional page sex scandal . Philip Crane began to battlealcoholism , which he publicly acknowledged after winning reelection in 2000.Crane was a faculty member at Indiana University and at
Bradley University in Peoria, a staff member for theRepublican National Committee and a director of research for the 1964 Republican presidential candidateBarry Goldwater .Political career
Crane was first elected to the
United States Congress in the 13th District of Illinois in a 1969special election , succeedingDonald Rumsfeld , who was appointed to a position in the Nixon administration. Crane was a dark horse candidate in a field of seven aspirants and prevailed, despite the opposition of the Chicago North Shore GOP monied establishment by being the most pronounced conservative in that large field of candidates.He soon established himself as one of the House's most conservative members, leading a small but growing cluster of right-wing congressmen who had cut their teeth in the fledgling conservative intellectual movement of the early 1960s and drew their inspiration from Goldwater's presidential campaign. He was handily elected to a full term in 1970, and was reelected 16 times. His district number changed as Illinois lost congressional seats — from the 13th (1969–73) to the 12th (1973–93) to the 8th (1993–2005). His district was long considered the most Republican district in the Chicago area, if not in all of Illinois. He almost always won with 70 percent or more of the vote until the 1990s, when he had to fend off more moderate Republicans in the primary and better-funded Democrats in the general election.
Soon after being elected to his first full term in 1970, he was tapped by several conservative activists, including
Paul Weyrich , to form a group of conservative congressmen to keep watch on the Republican leadership, which at the time was seen as too moderate. This new group was known as theRepublican Study Committee , and Crane served as its first chairman. He remained a member of the group for the remainder of his time in Congress.In 1976, he was appointed Chairman of the Illinois Citizens for Reagan in which capacity he made numerous speaking engagements throughout the midwest on behalf of the conservative
California governor's unsuccessful GOP primary bid for the Presidential nomination.In 1978, he became chairman of the
American Conservative Union (ACU), a Washington, D.C. based conservative citizens' lobby and political action group. During his tenure the group waged a nationwide campaign against PresidentJimmy Carter 's proposed cession of thePanama Canal and against the proposedSALT II arms limitation treaty with theUSSR . As a result of these efforts, the organization's budget, staff and presence in Washington greatly increased.Presidential ambitions
In 1978, shortly before the general election, Crane announced that he would be a candidate for the Republican nomination for president. This surprised many observers, as Crane had supported Reagan for president two years earlier. At the time of his announcement, Crane expressed doubts that Reagan would run again (after two failed attempts for the nomination in 1968 and 1976), and intimated that, should Reagan run, he would likely drop out. However, he did stay in the race after Reagan's entry, and was one of the early candidates to drop out of the race during the Republican primaries.
Political eclipse
After the 1980 campaign, Crane's influence rapidly declined.
Newt Gingrich , who had been elected to Congress soon after Crane announced his candidacy for president, soon surpassed him as the leading conservative firebrand in the House. By the time the Republicans took control of the House in 1994, Crane was widely seen as merely a "foot soldier" to Republican interests.Crane did have some influence as a member of the House Ways and Means Committee, which handles tax issues. As chairman of its trade subcommittee, he was effective in his efforts to promote his staunch
free trade views. However, when the full committee's chairman, Bill Archer ofTexas , retired after the 2000 elections, Crane made a bid for the highly coveted post of Ways and Means chairman. He was the committee's most senior member, having been on the panel since 1975. However, he was passed over in favor ofBill Thomas ofCalifornia for the Chairman's job. Some believe that Crane was not chosen because prior to the vote he had admitted to being an alcoholic and sought a leave from the House to get treatment. Others believe that Thomas' ability to raise money for congressional candidates helped him win the chairmanship. [ [http://www.morerevealed.com/archives/crane.jsp Crane Rehabilitation ] ] . Crane did earn the vice-chairmanship of the powerful committee.Crane is also noted for the role he played in ending the
chewing gum ban inSingapore , as part of negotiations during theUS-Singapore Free Trade Agreement [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/3512498.stm] .Political defeat
In 2002, Crane's Democratic opponent was business consultant
Melissa Bean . A general theme of her campaign was that Crane was out of touch with his constituents. Indeed, even some Republican voters claimed they had not seen him in decades. He was one of the few congressmen whose Washington office lacked a publicemail address. Despite being dramatically outspent (she received almost no funding from the national level), Bean surprised both parties by garnering 43% of the vote in a district that supposedly had been redrawn after the 2000 Census to protect Crane (several previous opponents from both parties found their homes drawn out of the 8th and into the neighboring 10th).Bean sought a rematch in the 2004 election. Some considered the race unwinnable for Bean, but Crane's imminent retirement and his campaign's lack of enthusiasm, coupled with Bean's stance as a moderate Democrat (at least by Chicago-area standards) placed what had long been a very safe Republican seat in jeopardy. Bean also received endorsements from many major Chicago area newspapers, as well as support from then-Democratic Senate candidate,
Barack Obama .Bean raised almost as much money as Crane, claiming that she raised money from individual donors and that Crane received most donations from
political action committee s. Despite Republican efforts to help Crane, Bean defeated Crane by roughly 4 points even asGeorge W. Bush carried the district in the presidential election by 12 percentage points. TheAlmanac of American Politics described Crane as "an unusually bitter loser, refusing to speak to Bean or to arrange for the usually routine post-election transfer of district cases and other office files." [Michael Barone and Richard E. Cohen, The Almanac of American Politics, 2006 Edition, Washington, D.C.: National Journal, 2005, pp. 580-81.]References
External links
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