- Gale W. McGee
Infobox Senator | name=Gale W. McGee
jr/sr=United States Senator
state=Wyoming
party=Democratic
term_start=January 3 ,1959
term_end=January 3 ,1977
preceded=Frank A. Barrett
succeeded=Malcolm Wallop
date of birth=March 17 ,1915
place of birth=Lincoln, Nebraska
dead=dead
date of death=death date and age|1992|4|9|1915|3|17
place of death=Washington, D.C.
spouse=Loraine Baker McGee (died March 21, 2006)
religion=Presbyterian Gale W. McGee (
March 17 ,1915 –April 9 ,1992 ) was a United States Senator of the Democratic Party, andUnited States Ambassador to the Organization of American States (OAS). He representedWyoming in theUnited States Senate from 1959 until 1977; as of 2008, he is the last Democrat to have been elected to a Senate seat from that state.Early life
McGee was born in Lincoln,
Nebraska , onSaint Patrick's Day . He attended public schools, and had planned to study law at university, but was forced by theGreat Depression to attend the State Teachers College in Wayne, Nebraska, instead. He graduated from the Teachers College in 1936, and worked as a high school teacher while studying for a master's degree in history at the University of Colorado. He continued as a college instructor atNebraska Wesleyan University ,Iowa State College , and Notre Dame. In 1946 McGee received his Ph.D. in history from theUniversity of Chicago and accepted a position as a professor of American History at theUniversity of Wyoming . McGee also served as chair of the University of Wyoming’s Institute of International Affairs, which he founded. In addition, McGee took leave of the University of Wyoming to serve as a Carnegie Research Fellow in New York with theCouncil on Foreign Relations from 1952 to 1953.Career
Active in Democratic Party politics, McGee was asked to run for the
United States Congress in 1950 but declined saying he wanted to get more in touch with Wyoming and its people. In 1955–1956 he took a leave of absence from the university to work as top aide to Wyoming SenatorJoseph C. O'Mahoney .In 1958 McGee left the university to make his bid for the U.S. Senate, running on a program of youth and new ideas. His campaign even attracted the attention of Eleanor Roosevelt, who conducted a national fund-raising drive for him. [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,91771,810557,00.html] He won a very tight race against incumbent
Frank A. Barrett by making campaign stops in almost every town in Wyoming. He was a member of the Democratic class of 1958 which was elected in the middle of President Eisenhower's term. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Senate_elections,_1958] After his victory he was appointed to the Interstate and Foreign Commerce Committee and to the prestigious Appropriations Committee, the first freshman senator to so be honored.The Confirmation of
Lewis Strauss In 1958, President Eisenhower nominated Lewis Strauss to serve as Secretary of Commerce. Previously, Mr. Strauss had served in numerous government positions in Administrations of Presidents Truman and Eisenhower. At the time, the 13 previous nominees for this Cabinet position won Senate confirmation in an average of eight days. [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,91771,892639,00.html] Because of both personal and professional disagreements, Senator
Clint Anderson took up the cause to make sure that Mr. Strauss would not be confirmed by the Senate. Senator Anderson found an ally in McGee on the Senate Commerce Committee, which had jurisdiction over Mr. Strauss' confirmation. During and after the Senate hearings, Senator McGee had charged that Mr. Strauss with "a brazen attempt to hoodwink" the committee. [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,91771,892639,00.html] After 16 days of hearings the Committee recommended Mr. Strauss' confirmation to the full Senate by a vote of 9-8. In preparation for the floor debate on the nomination, the Democratic majority's main argument against the nomination was that Mr. Strauss' statements before the Committee were "sprinkled with half truths and even lies...and that under rough and hostile questioning, [he] can be evasive and quibblesome." [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,91771,892639,00.html] Despite an overwhelming Democratic majority, the86th Congress was not able to accomplish much of their agenda since the President had immense popularity and a veto pen. [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,91771,892639,00.html] With the 1960 elections nearing, congressional Democrats sought issues on which they could conspicuously oppose the Republican administration. The Strauss nomination proved tailor made. [http://www.senate.gov/artandhistory/history/minute/Cabinet_Nomination_Defeated.htm]On June 19, 1959 just after midnight, the Strauss nomination failed by a vote 46-49. At the time, It marked only the eighth time in U.S. history that a Cabinet appointee had failed to be confirmed. [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,91771,864640,00.html]
1960 Democratic Convention
From
Harper's Magazine (King, L. (1966, October). My Hero LBJ. Harper's Magazine, 59-60.):"With
(John F.) Kennedy only eleven votes short of the nomination,Ted Kennedy approached the Wyoming delegation, where Kennedy was known to have eight and a half solid votes, Johnson had six, and one-half vote remained loyal toAdlai Stevenson . Suddenly one of Wyoming's leaders broke away from a frantic huddle with Ted Kennedy, hopped on a chair, and held up four fingers to the delegates. "Give me four votes!" he begged. "We can put him over the top! Please give me four votes!" Hastily the Wyoming delegates decided to write themselves a footnote to history. Chairman(Teno) Roncalio proudly spoke of the honor that was his as Wyoming cast all fifteen of its votes for John F. Kennedy.""In the roar greeting the announcement, I kept my eyes on the man who had begged for four votes. He was jumping up and down, slapping a beaming Ted Kennedy on the back, apparently beside himself with joy. I recognized him as our old friend Senator Gale McGee."econd Senate Term
In 1964 McGee was re-elected to the Senate. In his second term he was appointed to the Foreign Relations Committee and became chairman of the Post Office and Civil Service Committee. During this period Gale McGee supported President Lyndon Johnson's views on the conflict in
Vietnam . Johnson strongly considered appointed Senator McGee to be Ambassador to the UN after the resignation of Arthur Goldberg. Source: LBJ Library 12504 GALE MCGEE 12/9/1967 11:00A WH6712.01 PNO 4 [http://www.lbjlib.utexas.edu/johnson/search/TelephoneConversations/conversations.html]He believed in the policy of containing
communism , and his pro-military views were accented by his firm support for foreign aid. McGee often took a liberal position on domestic issues and an internationalist stand on foreign affairs.Third Senate Term
In 1970 he was elected to a third term in the Senate and continued to be a leading member of the committees on which he served. McGee was a voice of moderation in the affairs of
Watergate and the impeachment proceedings of PresidentRichard Nixon . Against the wishes of his constituents, McGee fought hard for gas rationing and the 55-mile per hour speed limit in the era of the first Arab oil embargoes.Accomplishments
Among the major laws he has authored include an amendment that prevented a Nationwide rail strike in 1963, the act that created the National Commission on Food Marketing, and the Postal Reorganization Act of 1970. As chair of the Post Office and Civil Service Committee, McGee’s efforts led to greater equity in pay and benefits for those federal workers. McGee also specialized in problems of appropriations and foreign relations while serving on subcommittees and lobbied for legislation to allow voter registration by mail.
McGee was also the author of "The Responsibilities of World Power", published in 1968. The work warned against
isolationism and urged theUnited States to accept its power and position imposed upon it in the aftermath ofWorld War II . McGee further argued that the U.S. had a responsibility to be a Pacific power, to act as a counterweight toChina , and to support free nations in their efforts to remain nonaligned or western allies but not to fall into the communist fold. The work was nominated for aWoodrow Wilson Foundation award.A long-time supporter of the
United Nations , McGee was appointed byPresident Nixon to a four-member congressional delegation to represent the United States at theUnited Nation’s 27th General Assembly in 1972.Post Senate Career
In 1976
Malcolm Wallop defeated McGee in his attempt at a fourth term. He became involved in Latin American affairs while serving as chair of the Western Hemisphere Affairs subcommittee of the Foreign Relations Committee and in 1977 McGee was appointed by PresidentJimmy Carter asUnited States Ambassador to the Organization of American States , a position he held until 1981. During that time he headed the U.S. Delegation to four OAS assemblies and lobbied for the 1978Panama Canal Treaty .In September, 1981, Gale W. McGee Associates, a consulting firm specializing in international and public affairs activities was formed with its headquarters in Washington, D.C. The firm offered a broad range of political and economic services to both domestic and international companies with a special emphasis on developing new business opportunities with the nations of Latin America and in the Caribbean. McGee later served as president of the American League for Exports and Security Assistance, Inc. in 1986, a senior consultant at Hill & Knowlton, Inc. from 1987 to 1989, and was also president of the consulting firm of Moss, McGee, Bradley, Kelly & Foley, which was created with former U.S. Senator Frank Moss.
Source:
University of Wyoming (1997)Personal life
McGee married Loraine Baker in 1939 and together they had four children. Senator McGee died on
April 9 ,1992 , in Washington, D.C.Congressional recognition
In January 2007, the Wyoming congressional delegation introduced federal legislation (H.R. 335, S. 219) to rename the U.S. Post Office in
Laramie, Wyoming as the "Gale W. McGee Post Office." TheUnited States House of Representatives passed the legislation by voice vote on January 29, 2007. TheUnited States Senate passed the legislation byUnanimous consent on February 7, 2007. The President signed the bill into law on March 7, 2007. (Source: [Thomas.gov] )External links
• [http://ahc.uwyo.edu/usearchives/inventories/html/wyu-ah09800.html Gale McGee Papers at the University of Wyoming]
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