Mark Odom Hatfield (July 12, 1922 – August 7, 2011) was an American politician and educator from the state of Oregon. A Republican, he served eight years as Governor of Oregon, followed by 30 years as one of its United States senators, including time as chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee. A native Oregonian, he served in the United States Navy in the Pacific Theater during World War II after graduating from Willamette University. After the war he earned a graduate degree from Stanford University before returning to Oregon and Willamette as a professor.
While still teaching, Hatfield served in both houses of the Oregon Legislative Assembly. He won election to the Oregon Secretary of State's office at the age of 34 and two years later was elected as the 29th Governor of Oregon. He was the youngest person to serve in either of those offices, and served two terms as governor before election to the United States Senate. In the Senate he served for thirty years, the longest tenure of any Senator from Oregon. At the time of his retirement, he was seventh most senior Senator and the second most senior Republican. In 1968, he was considered a candidate to be Richard Nixon's running mate for the Republican Party presidential ticket.
Hatfield was born in Dallas, Oregon, on July 12, 1922,[1] the only child of Dovie E. (Odom) Hatfield, a schoolteacher, and Charles Dolen Hatfield, a blacksmith for the Southern Pacific Railroad.[2] Hatfield's father was from California and his mother from Tennessee.[2] When he was five years old, his maternal grandmother took over the household while his mother, Dovie attended Oregon State College and graduated with a teaching degree after four years.[2] Dovie taught school in Dallas for two years before the family moved to Salem, where she taught junior high school.[2]
Encouraged by his mother, Hatfield's first experience with politics came at the age of 10, when he campaigned in his neighborhood for President Herbert Hoover's 1932 re-election campaign.[3] In the late 1930s Hatfield worked as a tour guide at the new Oregon State Capitol Building in Salem, using his key to enter the governor's office, where he sat in the governor's chair.[3]
On June 10, 1940, the 17-year-old Hatfield, driving his mother's car, struck and killed a pedestrian, Alice Marie Lane, as she crossed the street.[4] Hatfield was not held criminally liable for the crash, but was found civilly liable to the family.[5] The case made its way to the Oregon Supreme Court in 1943, with the court affirming the trial court's decision.[4]
Hatfield graduated from Salem High School in 1940 and then enrolled at Willamette University, also in Salem.[6] While attending Willamette, Hatfield became a brother of Alpha Phi Omega and Kappa Gamma Rho, which he later helped become a chapter of Beta Theta Pi.[7] (In 1964, Hatfield was elected to the National position of Third Vice President of Alpha Phi Omega).[8] In college he also worked part-time for then Oregon Secretary of State Earl Snell, where he learned how to build a political base by sending out messages to potential voters after reading about life changes posted in newspapers, such as deaths and graduations.[3] He also sketched out a political career path beginning with the state legislature and culminating in a spot in the United States Senate, with a blank for any position beyond the Senate.[3] Hatfield graduated from Willamette in 1943 with a Bachelor of Arts degree after three years at the school.[1] While at the school he lost his only election, for student body president.[9]
Hatfield then enrolled at Stanford University, where he obtained a master's degree in political science in 1948.[1] He returned to Salem and Willamette after Stanford and began working as an assistant professor in political science.[3] During his tenure as professor, he built a political base by sending out messages and speaking at any public forum where he could get an invitation.[3]
Political career
Mark Hatfield's career in public office spanned five decades as he held office in both the legislative and executive branches of Oregon's state government, including two terms as governor.[3] On the national stage he became the longest serving U.S. Senator from Oregon and a candidate for the Republican vice presidential nomination in 1968. In the U.S. Senate he would twice serve as chairman of the Appropriations Committee, and twice be investigated for possible ethics violations.[3]
Oregon
In 1950 while teaching political science and serving as dean of students at Willamette, Hatfield began his political career by winning election to the Oregon House of Representatives as a Republican.[14] He defeated six others for the seat at a time when state assembly elections were still determined by county-wide votes.[3] He served for two terms representing Marion County and Salem in the lower chamber of the Oregon Legislative Assembly.[15] At the time he was the youngest legislator in Oregon and still lived at his parents' home.[16] Hatfield would teach early-morning classes and then walk across the street to the Capitol to legislate.[16]
In 1952 he won re-election to his seat in the Oregon House. He also received national attention for his early support for coaxing Dwight D. Eisenhower to run for President of the United States as a Republican.[17] This earned him a spot as a delegate at the Republican National Convention that year.[17]
While in college he saw firsthand the discrimination against African Americans in Salem when he was tasked by his fraternity, Alpha Phi Omega, after a dinner with driving their guest, black artist Paul Robeson back to Portland, as African Americans were prohibited from staying in hotels in Salem.[3] In 1953, he introduced and passed legislation in the House that prohibited discrimination based on race in public accommodations before federal legislation and court decisions did so on a national level.[3] In 1954, Hatfield ran and won a seat in the Oregon State Senate representing Marion County.[18] While in the legislature, he continued to apply the grassroots strategy he learned from Earl Snell, but expanded it to cover the entire state to increase his political base.[3]
After serving in the state senate,[1] he became the youngest secretary of state in Oregon history after winning election in 1956 at age 34. Hatfield defeated fellow state senator Monroe Sweetland for the office, receiving 51.3% of the vote in the November general election.[19] He took office on January 7, 1957, and remained until he resigned on January 12, 1959.[20]
For his first run for Governor of Oregon in 1958, the Republican Party opposed his candidacy going into the primary election.[3] The large political base he had cultivated allowed him to win the party's primary despite the party's opposition.[3] In the primary he defeated Oregon State TreasurerSig Unander for the Republican nomination.[5] In July 1958, after the primary election, Hatfield married Antoinette Kuzmanich, a counselor at Portland State College (now Portland State University).[5] The marriage during the campaign drew some attention as the Catholic Kuzmanich converted to Hatfield's Baptist religion.[5] They had four children: Elizabeth, Mark Jr., Theresa and Charles ("Visko"). He continued his campaign for the governor's office after the wedding, but avoided most public appearances with fellow Republican candidates for office and did not mention them during his campaign, despite requests by other Republicans for joint appearances.[5]
In the November general election Hatfield faced Democratic incumbent Robert D. Holmes.[5] In the final days of the campaign U.S. Senator Wayne Morse, a Democrat, implied Hatfield lied in his trial regarding the deadly car accident when he was 17.[21] This tactic backfired as the press denounced the comments, as did Holmes and other Democrats.[5] Hatfield defeated Holmes in a landslide, winning 55.3% of the vote in the election.[5] That same election saw the Democratic Party gain a majority in both chambers of the state legislature for the first time since 1878.[5] Holmes' defeat was attributed in part to the image and charisma portrayed by Hatfield and in part due to the campaign issues such as the declining economy, increased taxation, capital punishment, labor, and education.[5] After the election, Holmes attempted to appoint David O'Hara as Secretary of State to replace Hatfield, who would have to resign to become governor.[5] Hatfield appointed Howell Appling, Jr. to the office,[20] and O'Hara challenged the appointment in state court. The Oregon Supreme Court ruled in favor of Hatfield on the constitutional issue, with the appointment of Appling confirmed.[22] He was the youngest governor in the history of Oregon at that point in time at the age of 36.[5]
In 1962 Hatfield had been considered a possible candidate to run against Morse for his Senate seat, but Hatfield instead ran for re-election.[23] He faced Oregon Attorney GeneralRobert Y. Thornton in the general election, winning with 345,497 votes to Thornton's 265,359.[23] He became the state's first two-term governor in the 20th century when he was re-elected in 1962,[24] and later became only the second governor up to that point in the state's history to serve two full-terms.[5]
Hatfield was a popular Governor who supported Oregon's traditional industries of timber and agriculture, but felt that in the postwar era expansion of industry and funding for transportation and education needed to be priorities.[27] While governor he worked to begin the diversification of the state's economy, such as recruiting industrial development and holding trade missions.[3] As part of the initiative, he helped to found the Oregon Graduate Center in 1963 in what became the Silicon Forest in Washington County.[28] A graduate level school in the Portland area (Portland State was still a college with no graduate programs at this time) was seen by business leaders as essential to attracting new industries and by Tektronix as needed to retain highly skilled workers.[28] In lieu of the standard portrait for former governors, Hatfield is represented by a marble bust at the Oregon State Capitol.[3]
National
Limited to two terms as governor, Hatfield announced his candidacy in the 1966 U.S. Senate election for the seat vacated by the retiring Maurine Neuberger. During the Vietnam War, and during an election year, he was one of the only people to vote against a resolution by a governors' conference that expressed support for the U.S. involvement in the war in 1966.[29][30] At that time the war was supported by 75 percent of the public, and was also supported by Hatfield's opponent in the November election.[3] He won the primary election with 178,782 votes compared to a combined 56,760 votes for three opponents.[29] Hatfield then defeated Democratic Congressman Robert Duncan in the election.[29] In order to finish his term as governor, which ended on January 9, 1967, he delayed taking his oath of office in the Senate until January 10 instead of the usual January 3.[1]
Hatfield's re-election victory for governor in 1962 and successful Senate campaign in 1966 made him something of a national figure. In 1968, Hatfield was on Richard Nixon's short list for vice president,[3] and received the strong backing of his friend, the Rev. Billy Graham.[31] Hatfield was considered too liberal by many conservatives and Southern moderates, and Nixon chose the more centrist Maryland Governor Spiro Agnew.[3] Hatfield would later find himself at odds with Nixon over Vietnam and other issues, including a threat by Hatfield to reduce funding for the White House's legal department in 1973 during the Watergate Scandal, after Nixon had failed to use funds appropriated for renovating dams on the Columbia River.[3]
On December 14, 1967, Hatfield appeared on William F. Buckley's talk show Firing Line. On the show, Hatfield and Buckley primarily discussed Senator Barry Goldwater's unsuccessful bid for the presidency in the 1964 election. Hatfield clarified that he believed it was "Goldwater's basic approach to problems," which "tended to evoke fear," that was rejected by many Americans in the election, rather than "Senator Goldwater as a person." In addition, Buckley criticized the system of the institution of a party convention which existed at the time, stating that "So, even if you can assume a situation in which John won all the presidential primaries, but James is the favorite of the Republican Party qua institution, then James is going to get nominated." Hatfield argued that the system of presidential primaries as a whole should be turned into a system of a simple "national primary." Buckley eventually prompted Hatfield to expand upon his ideal system of presidential nominations by asking, "If, in fact, you invite four candidates to participate in a national primary, would you then understand that the Convention would meet merely to ratify the process, or would that be an advisory judgment by the people," to which the Senator replied, "I would like to see this as the final decision by the people themselves. I would like to see this thing move toward that objective. It may not be achieved overnight."[32]
As a senator Hatfield took positions that made him hard to classify politically. In the Summer of 1969, he had told Murray Rothbard that he had "committed himself to the cause of libertarianism."[33] Rothbard remarked concerning Hatfield, "obviously his voting record is not particularly libertarian – it's very good on foreign policy and the draft, but it's not too great on other things", adding that "in the abstract, at least, he is very favorable to libertarianism."[33] Hatfield was opposed to abortion and the death penalty, though as governor he chose not to commute the sentence of a convicted murderer and allowed that execution to go forward.[34] As a prominent evangelical Christian, he opposed government-sponsored school prayer and supported civil rights for minorities.[35] Hatfield voted in favor of the Civil Rights Act of 1968 and the Civil Rights Restoration Act of 1987, as well as to override President Reagan's veto,[36][37][38] for the nomination of Thurgood Marshall to the Supreme Court[39] and the bill establishing Martin Luther King Jr. Day as a federal holiday.[40] Hatfield voted against the Supreme Court nominations of Clement Haynsworth[41] and George Harrold Carswell,[42] but voted in favor of the nominations of William Rehnquist,[43]Robert Bork[44] and Clarence Thomas.[45] Hatfield was the only Senator who voted for both Thurgood Marshall and Clarence Thomas.[46] Regarding political solutions, Hatfield believed that they were found in the center.
In 1970, with Senator George McGovern (D-South Dakota), he co-sponsored the McGovern-Hatfield Amendment, which called for a complete withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam.[47] In 1973 he explained to the Eugene Register-Guard his "Neighborhood Government Act" which he repeatedly introduced in congress. It would have permitted Americans to divert their personal federal tax money from Washington to their local community. He explained that his long-term goal was to have all social services provided at the neighborhood level.[48][49]
Hatfield appeared alongside Frank Church, Charles Goodell, Harold Hughes, and George McGovern on a bipartisan broadcast concerning the Vietnam War on May 12, 1970. The broadcast specifically concerned the McGovern-Hatfield Amendment, and was primarily for the purpose of promoting it. The Amendment had not yet reached the Senate, where it eventually failed on September 1 of the same year. The Senators primarily discussed issues of the Constitution in relation to the war, as Senator McGovern began with, "There is no way under the Constitution by which the Congress of the United States could act either to continue this war or to end it, except by a decision on whether we will appropriate funds to finance the war."[50]
On December 2, 1981, Hatfield was one of four senators to vote against[51] an amendment to President Reagan's MX missiles proposal that would divert the silo system by $334 million as well as earmark further research for other methods that would allow giant missiles to be based. The vote was seen as a rebuff of the Reagan administration.[52][53]
In the 1980s, Hatfield co-sponsored nuclear freeze legislation with Senator Edward M. Kennedy, as well as co-authoring a book on the topic.[54] He also advocated for the closure of the N-Reactor at the Hanford Nuclear Site in the 1980s,[55] though he was a supporter of nuclear fusion programs.[56] The N-Reactor was used for producing weapons grade plutonium while producing electricity.[55]
Hatfield frequently broke with his party on issues of national defense and foreign policy in support for non-interventionism,[57] such as military spending and the ban on travel to Cuba, while often siding with them on environmental and conservation issues.[35][58] Senator Hatfield supported increased logging on federal lands.[59][60] He was the lone Republican to vote against the 1981 fiscal year's appropriations bill for the Department of Defense.[61] He was rated as the sixth most respected senator in a 1987 survey by fellow senators.[62] In 1991, Hatfield voted against authorizing military action against Iraq in the Gulf War, one of only two members of his party to do so in the Senate.[47][63] Most famously, in 1995, Hatfield was the deciding vote against a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution. Hatfield compared the balanced budget amendment to President Reagan's tax cuts, claiming that both were examples of "imagery versus substance".
Scandal and rebukes
Hatfield was sometimes called "Saint Mark" because of his squeaky-clean reputation,[47] but in 1984 columnist Jack Anderson revealed that Hatfield's wife Antoinette, a Washington, D.C., real estate lawyer, had been paid $55,000 by Greek arms dealer Basil Tsakos in connection with a real estate purchase.[64] Tsakos had been lobbying Hatfield, then Appropriations Committee chairman, to support a trans-Africa oil pipeline megaproject.[65] The Hatfields apologized and donated $55,000 to a Portland hospital.[66][67] The Senate Ethics Committee investigated and decided to take no action. However, after Hatfield's death, an FBI report released under Freedom of Information law revealed that Tsakos had been indicted for bribery and had offered to plead guilty to lesser charges (though this never occurred), and that the Department of Justice had decided against charging Hatfield in the case.[68]
Hatfield received another rebuke from the Senate after the Ethics Committee investigated two gifts that he had received in the form of forgiven loans from a former congressman and a California businessman.[70]
His final re-election campaign came in 1990 against businessman Harry Lonsdale.[66] Lonsdale aggressively went after Hatfield with television attack ads that attacked Hatfield as out of touch on issues such as abortion and timber management and accused the incumbent of being too closely allied with special interest groups in Washington. Lonsdale's tactics moved him even with, and then ahead of Hatfield in some polls.[71] Hatfield, who had typically stayed above the fray of negative campaigning, responded in kind with attack ads of his own.[71] He raised $1 million in a single month after trailing Lonsdale in the polls before the November election.[3] He defeated the Democrat with 590,095 (53.7 percent) votes to 507,743 (46.2 percent) votes.[72]
Length of service
In 1993, he became the longest-serving senator from Oregon, surpassing the record of 9,726 days in office previously held by Charles McNary.[10] In 1995, Hatfield was the only Republican in the Senate to vote against the proposed balanced budget amendment, and was the deciding vote that prevented the passage of the bill.[73] In 1996 the National Historical Publications and Records Commission, a group he served on previously, granted him their Distinguished Service Award.[74]
Hatfield retired in 1996, having never lost an election in 46 years and 11 campaigns as an elected official.[75] During his tenure he gained billions of dollars in the form of federal appropriations for projects in Oregon.[10] This included funding for transportation projects,[76] environmental protection of wilderness areas and scenic rivers,[35] facilities for research on AIDS, Alzheimer's disease, and Parkinson's disease and health care facilities.[47]
In July 1999, Hatfield and his wife were passengers on a tour bus when a car collided with the bus.[77] They received only minor injuries, but the experience led them to advocate for seat belts to be required on buses.[77]
Numerous buildings, organizations, awards, and outdoor areas have been named in honor of Hatfield. These include:
From February 2000 to May 2008 Hatfield served on the board of directors for Oregon Health & Science University.[85] His papers and book collection are stored in the Willamette University Archives and Special Collections, inside the Mark O. Hatfield Library.[86] Senator Hatfield merited his own chapter in Tom Brokaw's The Greatest Generation.[87]
In 2014, a 90-minute documentary about Hatfield's life and career called The Gentleman of the Senate: Oregon's Mark Hatfield was released.[88][89]
Hatfield was admitted to the Mark O. Hatfield Clinical Research hospital at the National Institutes of Health in Maryland in November 2010 for observation after his health began to decline.[90] Mark Hatfield died at a care facility in Portland on August 7, 2011, after several years of illness. A specific cause of death was not immediately given.[91][92]
Works authored
A selection of items Hatfield authored or contributed to:[93]
^ abcdef"Hatfield, Mark Odom". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. United States Congress. Archived from the original on December 10, 2011. Retrieved April 13, 2007.
^ abcdEells, Robert; Nyberg., Bartell (1979). Lonely Walk: The Life of Senator Mark Hatfield. Chappaqua, New York: Christian Herald Books. pp. 19–20.
^State ex rel. O'Hara v. Appling, 215 Or. 303, 334 P.2d 482 (1959)
^ abBalmer, Donald G. "The 1962 Election in Oregon"Archived 2016-11-03 at the Wayback Machine. The Western Political Quarterly, Vol. 16, No. 2, A Symposium: The 1962 Elections in the West (June, 1963), Western Political Science Association. pp. 453-459.
^Waltzer, Herbert (Spring 1966). "In the Magic Lantern: Television Coverage of the 1964 National Conventions". The Public Opinion Quarterly. 30 (1). American Association for Public Opinion Research: 33–53. doi:10.1086/267380. JSTOR2747369.
^Graham, Billy. Just As I Am: The Autobiography of Billy Graham. San Francisco: Harper SanFrancisco/Zondervan, 1999. p. 446.
^"Was Goldwater a Mistake?". Hoover Institution Library and Archives: Firing Line broadcast records. December 14, 1967. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
^ abRothbard, Murray N. (February 25, 1972). "Exclusive Interview With Murray Rothbard". The New Banner: A Fortnightly Libertarian Journal. Archived from the original on June 18, 2015. Retrieved February 2, 2016.
^de Leon, Peter (March 1983). "Review: Freeze: The Literature of the Nuclear Weapons Debate". The Journal of Conflict Resolution. 27 (1). Sage Publications, Inc.: 181–189. doi:10.1177/0022002783027001007. JSTOR173847. S2CID145018623.
^ abRaloff, J. (August 16, 1986). "Hanford Reactor's Safety Is Questioned". Science News. 130 (7). Society for Science & the Public: 101–102. doi:10.2307/3970795. JSTOR3970795.
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