James L. Buckley
Vorlage:Infobox Senator James Lane Buckley (born March 9, 1923 in New York City) was a United States Senator from the state of New York as a member of the Conservative Party of New York. Buckley served from January 3, 1971 to January 3, 1977. Formerly, he was vice president and director of the Catawba Corporation from 1953 to 1970, and afterwards served as Undersecretary of State for Security Assistance 1981–1982, President of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Inc. 1982–1985, and as a federal judge 1985–2000.
He was also the lead petitioner in a landmark Supreme Court case, Buckley v. Valeo, in which he successfully challenged the constitutionality of a law limiting campaign spending in Congressional races.
In 1970 he was elected to the U.S. Senate as a member of the Conservative Party of New York, winning 38.7 percent of the vote in a three-way race, and served from 1971 until 1977. To date he has been the only member of his party, and the last member of a third party, elected to the U.S. Senate.[1]
Education and early career
A 1943 graduate of Yale University, where he was a member of Skull & Bones[2][3][4], Buckley enlisted in the United States Navy in 1942 and was discharged with the rank of lieutenant in 1946. After receiving his law degree from Yale Law School, he was admitted to the Connecticut bar in 1950 and practiced law until 1953, when he joined Catawba as vice president and director.
Senate career
In 1968, Buckley challenged liberal Republican Senator Jacob Javits for re-election. Javits won easily, but Buckley received a large number of votes from disaffected conservative Republicans, and in 1970, ran for the U.S. Senate against liberal Republican incumbent Charles Goodell. Goodell had been appointed to the Senate by New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller following the assassination of Senator Robert F. Kennedy and had made a name for himself in the Senate as an opponent of the Vietnam War. Buckley's campaign slogan, plastered on billboards statewide, was "Isn't it time we had a Senator?"[5]
With Goodell and the Democratic nominee, Richard Ottinger, splitting the liberal vote, Buckley won a plurality (38 percent) and entered the Senate in January 1971.
In 1974, he proposed a "human life" amendment, which defined the term "person" in the Fourteenth Amendment to include the unborn.
In his 1976 re-election bid, with Rockefeller's liberal GOP faction falling apart, Buckley received the Republican nomination. Initially, he was favored for re-election, because the frontrunner in the crowded Democratic field was Manhattan Congresswoman Bella Abzug, a liberal feminist reviled by the right. But when Daniel Patrick Moynihan, the U.S. Ambassador to the UN, made a late entrance into the Democratic primary and narrowly defeated Abzug, Buckley could no longer count on getting the votes of moderate Democrats. Moynihan went on to defeat Buckley by a wide margin.
After his loss, Buckley moved to Connecticut, and in 1980 received the Republican nomination for the Senate seat being vacated by the retirement of Abraham Ribicoff. He lost the general election to Christopher Dodd, who still serves in the Senate.
He was the last Senator to be elected from a party other than the Democrats or Republicans. Since 1974, two independent candidates (Bernie Sanders of Vermont and Joe Lieberman of Connecticut) have been elected, but no minor-party candidates have won election to the Senate.
1976 Republican National Convention
During the 1976 Republican National Convention, then-Senator Jesse Helms encouraged a "Draft Buckley" movement, as an effort to stop the nomination of Ronald Reagan for President. Reagan had announced that Pennsylvania Senator Richard Schweiker would be his running-mate if picked; Helms believed that Schweiker was too liberal. The "Draft Buckley" movement was mooted when President Gerald Ford very narrowly won the party's nomination on the first ballot.[6][7]
Judicial career
In the first Reagan administration, Buckley initially served as an undersecretary of State and then as president of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty from 1982 until 1985. Appointed a federal judge in 1985 by Reagan, he left his post at Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty to serve on the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. He became a senior (semi-retired) judge of that Court in 1996.
Personal life and relatives
Buckley is married to Ann Cooley Buckley and resides in Washington, D.C. and Sharon, Connecticut.
Buckley is the older brother of famed conservative writer William F. Buckley, Jr. and the uncle of Christopher Taylor Buckley. He is also the uncle of Brent Bozell.
References
External links
Further reading
- Buckley, James Lane (1975). If Men Were Angels: A View From the Senate. New York: Putnam. ISBN 0-399-11589-7.
- Buckley, James Lane (2006). Gleanings from an Unplanned Life: An Annotated Oral History. Wilmington: Intercollegiate Studies institute. ISBN 978-1-933859-11-8.
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- ↑ Independents Jim Jeffords, Bernie Sanders and Joe Lieberman, and Minnesota Independence Party's Dean Barkley, who was appointed for less than three months, are not included.
- ↑ Alexandra Robbins, Secrets of the Tomb: Skull and Bones, the Ivy League, and the Hidden Paths of Power, Little, Brown and Company, 2002, page 168, 174
- ↑ "People in the News", Associated Press, May 27, 1983
- ↑ Bob Dart, "Skull and bones a secret shared by Bush, Kerry", The Gazette, March 7, 2004
- ↑ http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/chi-0703150099mar15,1,850637.column
- ↑ World Almanac and Book of Facts 1977
- ↑ >http://openweb.tvnews.vanderbilt.edu/1976-8/1976-08-11-NBC-2.html
- New York Republicans
- 1923 births
- American Roman Catholics
- American military personnel of World War II
- Bonesmen
- Judges of the United States Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
- Living people
- United States Senators from New York
- Yale University alumni
- Yale Law School alumni
- Irish-American politicians
- Buckley family
- United States Senators of a third party
- United States Navy officers
- Radio Free Europe people