- Al Ullman
Infobox Congressman
name= Albert Conrad "Al" Ullman
width= 196
state=Oregon
district= 2nd
party= Democrat
term= 1957 - 1981
preceded=Sam Coon
succeeded=Denny Smith
date of birth= birth date|1914|3|9|mf=y
place of birth=Great Falls, Montana
date of death= death date and age|1986|10|11|1914|3|9|mf=y
place of death=Bethesda ,Maryland
spouse= Audrey Ullman
current occupation=Albert Conrad "Al" Ullman (
March 9 ,1914 -October 11 ,1986 ), was a Democratic member of theU.S. House of Representatives who represented the ushr|Oregon|2| from 1957 to 1981. One of the most influential Oregonians ever to be elected to Congress, along with SenatorWayne Morse , Ullman presided over the powerful House Committee on Ways and Means during a period of time in which he was deeply involved in shaping national policy on issues relating totaxation , budget reform, federalentitlement programs ,international trade , and energy.Background
Ullman was born in
Great Falls, Montana , and raised inSnohomish, Washington , where his father was a farmer and carpenter. In 1935, he graduated fromWhitman College inWalla Walla, Washington (where he playedfootball as a running end) with a degree inpolitical science . After teachingAmerican history and government at Port Angeles High School inWashington for two years, Ullman earned amaster's degree inpublic law fromColumbia University in 1939.Later, from 1942 to 1945, he served as a communications officer with the
United States Navy in the South Pacific duringWorld War II . After the war, Ullman settled inBaker, Oregon (now known as Baker City) where, having taught himself how to design and build houses, he worked as a builder and real estate developer in the early 1950s.Political career
Ullman's first success in electoral politics came in 1956, when (following a failed try two years earlier) he was elected to the
United States House of Representatives , defeating the Republican incumbent,Sam Coon . Ullman won by waging apopulist campaign focused on issues regardingpublic power , of which Ullman was a fierce proponent, and whether thehydroelectric development ofHells Canyon on theSnake River should be turned over to private interests, which Ullman opposed. [http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/documents/retrieve.asp?docname=orucoll_040.xml] During his service in Congress, the vast and diverse Second District -- which includedalpine forest ,rangeland , anddesert , as well as the urban area in theWillamette Valley containing the state capital ofSalem, Oregon -- encompassed roughly 70,000 square miles, an area larger than any state east of the Mississippi River. (As the result ofredistricting based on the 1980 Census, the Second District was later divided into two smaller Congressional districts.) While in Washington, he devoted himself to the development of Oregon’s water resources and the improved management of public lands and national forests.Committees Ullman served on:
*U.S. House Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs (now theU.S. House Committee on Natural Resources )
*National Outdoor Recreation Resources Review Commission
*U.S. House Committee on the Judiciary
*Joint Study Committee on Budget Control (co-chairman, 1973)
*U.S. House Committee on the Budget (chairman, 1974)
*House Ways and Means Committee (chairman, 1975-81; acting chairman, 1973-75)
*Joint Committee on Taxation (co-chairman, 1975-81)
*Democratic Committee on CommitteesUllman, who for most of his Congressional career was viewed as a moderate Democrat. Among other things, Ullman is regarded by many as the father of the present-day
United States budget process . In 1973, he initiated and later co-chaired the Joint Study Committee on Budget Control, leading to major budget reforms which, for the first time, required Congress to reconcile spending with revenues in order to address mounting federaldeficits . He also served as chairman of the new House Budget Committee in 1974.In 1975, Ullman ascended to the chairmanship of the House's powerful Ways and Means Committee, on which he had served since 1961 (and as acting chairman since 1973). As chairman, he oversaw the drafting and enactment of numerous major tax reform bills. For example, as the
New York Times noted, "Among Mr. Ullman's most important actions as committee chairman was his sponsorship of sweeping legislation to cut taxes in an effort to help shore up the United States economy. His bill, which gave more than $20 billion in income tax rebates to Americans in the spring of 1975, brought the Oregon Democrat national recognition after almost two decades of relatively quiet Congressional service." Ullman also played a central role with respect to other key legislation, including theWindfall Profits Tax Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-223), which redirected an estimated $79 billion (according to theCongressional Research Service ) of oil companies' profits resulting from price deregulation toward support for mass transit, oil price relief for poor families, and the development of alternative energy sources.On many regional issues, Ullman was a de facto leader of the
Pacific Northwest 's Congressional delegation, along with SenatorHenry M. "Scoop" Jackson (D-Wash.) and Representative (later to be House Speaker)Tom Foley (D-Wash.). In addition, Ullman was well known for his longstanding advocacy on behalf of American Indian tribes inEastern Oregon , which he felt had historically been treated unjustly by the federal government with respect to treaty, land and other issues. [http://www.warmsprings.com/Warmsprings/Tribal_Community/History__Culture/Treaty__Documents/McQuinn_Strip_Boundary_Dispute.html]In the midst of the "Reagan landslide" -- which also led to the defeat of President
Jimmy Carter and the Republican takeover of theUnited States Senate -- Ullman narrowly lost his bid for a thirteenth term from the Second District in the November 4, 1980 general election. ("See"United States presidential election, 1980 .) Ullman's electoral defeat was widely attributed to the nationally prevalent anti-incumbent and anti-government mindset; the presence in his House race of an independent candidate; the increasing conservatism of the Second District; and to his advocacy for avalue-added tax similar to that now used in theEuropean Union and other nations as a partial alternative to what he viewed as inequities in the existing Federalincome tax system.After politics
After leaving office in 1981, Ullman remained in
Washington D.C. and established Ullman Consultants, Inc., a consulting firm in Georgetown, with his wife Audrey and former members of hisCapitol Hill staff. In 1981, Ullman gifted his extensive Congressional papers to theUniversity of Oregon . [https://scholarsbank.uoregon.edu/dspace/handle/1794/878] He lived inArlington, Virginia andFalls Church, Virginia until his death onOctober 11 ,1986 .References
Bates, Tom. "I'm just a country boy," "Oregon Times" "Magazine" (Portland, OR: New Oregon Publishers), September 1978.External links
*CongBio|U000004
* [http://nwda-db.wsulibs.wsu.edu/documents/retrieve.asp?docname=orucoll_040.xml Ullman biography]
* [http://waysandmeans.house.gov/Legacy/portraits/1899-2000/ullman.htm Ullman profile on House Ways & Means Committee Site]
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