He worked as a journalist for the Richardson Daily News while attending college.[2] He was also a contributing editor to The New Guard, the magazine of Young Americans for Freedom.[3] As a college student, he sold two magazine articles, one to Writer's Digest about lessons he had learned from Bruce Catton,[4] the other to Family Weekly, about billionaire H. L. Hunt,[5] with whom he later conducted a Playboy interview.[6]
Returning to Rochester, he joined the area's largest advertising and public relations agency as an account executive working on Kodak and Mobil accounts. At age 27, he was elected town supervisor of Greece, New York.[8]
Congressional Quarterly ranked Eckert as the member of Congress most supportive of President Reagan[11] and Reader's Digest ran a profile feature portraying him as an example of the sort of "gutsy" leader unintimidated by special interests that Washington needs.[12] In May 1966, the Oxford University Union selected Eckert to debate the British's government Shadow Minister for Foreign Affairs on how best to counter international terrorism; Eckert was criticized by newspapers in his district for arguing at Oxford that state-sponsored terrorism needed to be regarded as acts of war as opposed to mere violations of laws and dealt with by effective military force.[13] His one major break with the Reagan administration was his vote in opposition to the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986, which Eckert viewed as rewarding illegal immigrants who broke US immigration law and encouraging more of the same in the future.[14] Reagan later said his signing that bill into law was a mistake.
Following Eckert's defeat for re-election, President Reagan appointed him U.S. ambassador to the Food and Agriculture Organization in Rome, Italy.[15]
Later career
He resigned as US ambassador and returned from Rome to the United States and private life to accept an offer from the Government of Fiji to be a strategic advisor after the 1987 Fijian coups d'état. Fiji's prime minister publicly praised his work as "invaluable."[16] He also did other consulting work and teamed up with a friend to develop real estate subdivisions.
In retirement, Eckert, who as a public official had always written his own speeches, newspaper columns and newsletters and occasionally authored magazine and newspaper feature articles and op-eds for The Wall Street Journal and Outdoor Life.
He wrote the Reader's Digest profile about a then little-known computer entrepreneur named Michael Dell[17] also authored the Digest's iconic "Unforgettable" tribute to his friend and mentor Bruce Catton, a friendship that had developed when as a 15-year-old Eckert had called to Catton's attention a couple minor historical errors in This Hallowed Ground while it was the number one best-selling book in the country.[18] His early age interest in, and knowledge about, history and government was such that the nuns who operated Saint Charles Borromeo Elementary School had him teach eighth grade social studies to his fellow eighth-graders.[19]
He is also author/photographer of two coffee table books on Fiji – Fiji: Pacific Paradise[20] and Fiji: Some Enchanted Islands[21] – and one on Tonga – Tonga: The Friendly Islands.[22] A semi-professional photographer, his images have also appeared in books, magazines, advertisements, encyclopedias, postcards and travel brochures throughout the world and have won awards in competitions.
Personal life
Eckert and his wife, Karen, live in Raleigh, North Carolina. They have three grown children, including Cindy Eckert, and four grandchildren.