Everything about Everett Dirksen totally explained
Everett McKinley Dirksen (
January 4,
1896 –
September 7,
1969) was a
Republican U.S. Congressman and
Senator from
Illinois. As Republican Senate leader he played a highly visible and key role in the politics of the 1960s, including helping to write and pass the
Civil Rights Act of 1964. He later offered his support for the
Open Housing Act of 1968, another landmark piece of Civil Rights legislation. He was one of the Senate's strongest supporters of the
Vietnam War. He was a member of the
Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity.
Early life
Dirksen was born to Johann Friedrich Dirksen and his wife Antje Conrady, German immigrants who lived in
Pekin, Illinois, a small town near
Peoria, Illinois. Everett had a fraternal twin, Thomas Dirksen. Dirksen grew up on his parent's farm on Pekin's outskirts. He attended the local schools and then entered the
University of Minnesota. However, he dropped out during
World War I to enlist in the
U.S. Army, serving as a second
lieutenant in a field artillery battery. After the war, he went into private business. His political career began in 1927, when he was elected to the Pekin city council.
Congressman, 16th Illinois District, 1933-47
After losing in the 1930 Republican primary, Dirksen won the nomination and the Congressman's seat in 1932, and re-elected seven times thereafter. His support for many
New Deal programs marked him as a moderate, pragmatic Republican. During
World War II, he lobbied successfully for an expansion of congressional staff resources to eliminate the practice under which House and Senate committees borrowed executive branch personnel to accomplish legislative work. Dirksen was able to secure the passage of an amendment to the
Lend-Lease bill by introducing a resolution while 65 of the House's Democrats were at a luncheon. The amendment provided that the Senate and the House could, by a simple majority in a
concurrent resolution, revoke the powers granted to the President.
Dirksen served in the House until
1946 when he left due to a series of health problems.
U.S. Senator, 1950–1969
After recovering from his health problems, Dirksen was elected to the
Senate in
1950 when he unseated
Senate Majority Leader Scott Lucas. In this campaign, the support of
Wisconsin Senator
Joseph McCarthy helped Dirksen gain a narrow victory. Dirksen became an ally of McCarthy, and tried and failed to get him to apologize for his misdeeds to stave off censure in 1954. Dirksen voted not to censure him, but privately conceded that McCarthy "had lost his senses". Dirksen's canny political skill, rumpled appearance, and convincing, if sometimes flowery, overblown oratory (he was hence dubbed by his critics "the Wizard of Ooze") gave him a prominent national reputation.
In 1952, Dirksen was a supporter of the presidential candidacy of fellow Senator
Robert A. Taft of
Ohio, the longtime leader of Republican conservatives. Dirksen garnered attention at the convention when he gave a speech attacking New York Governor
Thomas E. Dewey, a liberal Republican and the leading supporter of Taft's opponent for the Republican presidential nomination, General
Dwight Eisenhower. During the speech Dirksen pointed at Dewey on the convention floor and shouted "Don't take us down the path to defeat again", a reference to Dewey's presidential defeats in 1944 and 1948. His speech was met by cheers from conservative delegates and loud boos from pro-Eisenhower delegates. Despite Dirksen's efforts, Eisenhower defeated Taft for the nomination; Dirksen then supported Eisenhower's presidential candidacy.
In 1959, he was elected
Minority Leader of the Senate, defeating
Kentucky's more liberal Senator,
John Sherman Cooper, by a vote of 20 to 14. Dirksen successfully united the various factions of the Republican Party by granting younger Republicans more representation in the Senate leadership and better committee appointments. He held the position of Senate Minority Leader until his death following cancer surgery on
September 7, 1969 at
Walter Reed Hospital in
Washington, DC.
Along with
Charles Halleck and later
Gerald Ford (the Republican Minority Leaders of the House), Dirksen was the official voice of the Republican Party during most of the 1960s, and he was often featured on television news programs. On several occasions during this period, political cartoonist
Herblock depicted Dirksen and Halleck as vaudeville song-and-dance men, wearing identical elaborate costumes and performing an act called "The Ev and Charlie Show".
Dirksen's voting record was consistently conservative on economic issues. He developed a good rapport with the Senate's majority leaders,
Lyndon B. Johnson and
Mike Mansfield. On foreign policy, he reversed his early isolationism to support the internationalism of Republican President
Dwight D. Eisenhower and Democratic President
John F. Kennedy. He was a leading "hawk" on the issue of the
Vietnam War — a position he held well before Democratic President
Lyndon B. Johnson decided to escalate the war. Dirsken said in February 1964: [Dietzp 59]
First I agree that obviously we can't retreat from our position in Vietnam. I've been out there three times, once as something of an emissary for then President Eisenhower. I took a good look at it. It is a difficult situation, to say the least. But we're in to the tune of some $350 million. I think the last figure I've seen indicates that we've over 15,500 military out there, ostensibly as advisors and that sort of thing. We are not supposed to have combatant troops, even though we were not signatories to the treaty that was signed at Geneva when finally they got that whole business out of the fire. But we're going to have to muddle through for a while and see what we do. Even though it costs us $1.5 million a day.
As President Johnson followed Dirksen's recommendations and escalated the war, Dirksen gave him strong public support, as well as strong support inside the Republican caucus, even as some Republicans advised him that it would be to the party's advantage to oppose Johnson. Ford commented, "I strongly felt that although I agreed with the goals of the Johnson administration in Vietnam, I vigorously criticized their prosecution of the war. Now, Dirksen never took that same hard-line position that I took." [Dietz149]
On
March 22,
1966, Dirksen introduced a
Constitutional amendment that would permit
public school administrators to provide for organized
prayer by students. This amendment was seen by many to violate the principle of
separation of church and state, and was defeated in the Senate with only 49 affirmative votes, falling short of the 67 votes required for a Constitutional amendment.
He is most often remembered for the quip: "A billion here, a billion there, pretty soon, you're talking real money". He made similar remarks but
probably not
that exact one. Dirksen is also quoted as having said "The mind is no match with the heart in persuasion; constitutionality is no match with compassion." (See .)
Dirksen was also legendary for his fondness for the
marigold. When political discussions became tense, Dirksen would lighten the atmosphere by taking up his perennial campaign to have the marigold named the national flower. Although he was ultimately unsuccessful in his campaign, in 1972 his hometown of Pekin started holding an annual Marigold Festival in his memory, and now calls itself the "Marigold Capital of the World".
He recorded four albums in his resonant bass speaking voice, one of which,
Gallant Men, unexpectedly made it to #29 on the U.S.
Billboard charts and won a
Grammy Award for Best Documentary Recording in 1968. Dirksen made TV guest appearances such as
What's My Line,
The Hollywood Palace and
The Red Skelton Show.
Dirksen made a cameo appearance, not identified by name but effectively portraying himself, in the 1969 film
The Monitors, a weird low-budget science-fiction movie in which invading extraterrestrials assert political dominion over the human race, claiming to do so for humanity's benefit.
In 1972, one of the Senate's buildings was renamed the
Dirksen Senate Office Building in his honor.
Dirksen's daughter, Joy, was the first wife of Senator
Howard Baker of Tennessee.
At the vote for
cloture on the
filibuster against the Civil Rights Act, Dirksen had this to say
» "Victor Hugo wrote in his diary substantially this sentiment, 'Stronger than all the armies is an idea whose time has come.' The time has come for equality of opportunity in sharing of government, in education, and in employment. It must not be stayed or denied."
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