Thursday, July 26, 2012

Happy Birthday, Estes

Estes Kefauver in a coonskin capBorn today in 1903 in Madisonville, Tennessee, one of the great progressive populist politicians of all time, Estes Kefauver. He fought tirelessly for civil rights, civil liberties, antitrust enforcement, and consumer protection legislation. "Too liberal for Tennessee," he was nonetheless reelected twice to the Senate, where he died of a heart attack he suffered during a debate on consumer protection. He and his colleague from Tennessee, U.S. Senator Albert Gore Sr., were the only members of the Senate from the South (not counting Lyndon Johnson, who wasn't asked - but probably would have joined them) who categorically refused to sign the so-called Southern Manifesto in 1957, and Kefauver was the only man to vote against legislation to make simply being a Communist illegal. He wore that coonskin cap because E H Crump, a powerful Memphis politician, accused him of being a raccoon-like Communist stooge. Donning the cap during a campaign stop in Memphis, Kefauver announced: "I may be a pet coon, but I'm not Boss Crump's pet coon."

He was one of my parents' favorite politicians; I remember how sad they were when he died. He was much loved - thousands of people turned out for his funeral - and much missed. Would that we had more like him now.

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1 Comments:

At 9:28 PM, July 26, 2012 Blogger Bonnie had this to say...

There was a Kefauver poster on the wall of Harold's Deli on Gay Street in Knoxville for many years -- one of many reasons I loved the place. We sure could use more men like both Estes Kefauver and Harold Shersky!

 

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