Sunday, October 13, 2013

A Proxy For Today's Mire


Senator William Proxmire (D-Wisconsin) filled out the remainder of Senator Joseph McCarthy's term (who died in office in 1957). Proxmire called McCarthy a "disgrace to Wisconsin, to the Senate, and to America". Proxmire was reelected in 1958, 1964, 1970, 1976 and 1982. I remember him, growing up in Wisconsin. He was widely popular.

From the Wiki:
He was an early, outspoken critic of the Vietnam War. He frequently criticized Presidents Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon for their conduct of the war and foreign policy decisions. He used his seat on the Senate Armed Services Committee to spotlight wasteful military spending and was instrumental in stopping frequent military pork barrel projects. His Golden Fleece Award was created to focus media attention on projects he felt were self-serving and wasted taxpayer dollars. He was also head of the campaign to cancel the American supersonic transport. Despite his support of budgetary restraint in other areas, he normally sided with dairy interests and was a proponent of dairy price supports.
I remember reading his newsletters, sent to every household. Again from the Wiki:
Proxmire was famous for issuing his Golden Fleece Award, which identified what he considered wasteful government spending, between 1975 and 1988. The first was awarded in 1975 to the National Science Foundation, for funding an $84,000 study on why people fall in love. Other Golden Fleece awards over the years were "awarded" to the Justice Department for conducting a study on why prisoners wanted to get out of jail, the National Institute of Mental Health to study a Peruvian brothel ("The researchers said they made repeated visits in the interests of accuracy," reported the New York Times), and the Federal Aviation Administration, for studying "the physical measurements of 432 airline stewardesses, paying special attention to the 'length of the buttocks.'" Proxmire stopped numerous science and academic projects which were, in his opinion, of dubious value.
He was hounded for his outspoken critiques:
Proxmire's critics claimed that some of his awards went to basic science projects that led to important breakthroughs, such as the Aspen Movie Map (though the Aspen Movie Map project did not receive the award). For example, Proxmire was criticized in 1987 for the Aspen Movie Map incident by author Stewart Brand, who accused Proxmire of recklessly attacking legitimate research for the crass purpose of furthering his own political career, with gross indifference as to whether his assertions were true or false as well as the long-term effects on American science and technology policy. Proxmire later apologized for several of those, including SETI.
One winner of the Golden Fleece Award, Ronald Hutchinson, was so outraged that he sued Proxmire for defamation in 1976. Proxmire claimed that his statements about Hutchinson's research were protected by the Speech or Debate Clause of the U.S. Constitution. The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that that clause does not immunize members of Congress from liability for defamatory statements made outside of formal congressional proceedings (Hutchinson v. Proxmire, 443 U.S. 111 (1979)). The case was later settled out of court.
Proxmire earned the unending enmity of space advocates and science fiction fandom for his opposition to space colonization, ultimately eliminating spending on said research from NASA's budget.
I got only one chance to vote for Proxmire, in 1982. Where have those types of Democrats gone?

17 comments:

Eric the Fruit Bat said...

I'm sorry, what was that again about bringing home the bacon?

ricpic said...

Proxmire: How dare McCarthy expose communist infiltration of the government. Let's make sure Americans are scared away from even thinking about the possibility. I've got it! We'll call McCarthy a disgrace and have our MSM shills repeat it ten thousand times.

Montana Urban Schmendrik: Brilliant ruse, Comrade!

chickelit said...

Consider this a retort to all the Democrat concern trolls posting on other threads trying to tell the GOP how to improve.

edutcher said...

Those Democrats (and, remember, he was an opponent mostly of military spending) were either silenced (think Casey Sr of PA) or saw the writing on the wall.

I'm Full of Soup said...

I recall him for his Golden Fleece thing and for being the first person I ever saw with hair plugs.

I'm Full of Soup said...

Senator Jackson of Washington is the last Dem senator I recall as being moderate- today they are almost all in tune with the far left Shumers, Boxers, Reids and Durbins of the world. Some Dems talk a good game about being moderate but, like Manchin, they then vote 100% with Reid.

chickelit said...

AJ Lynch said...
I recall him for his Golden Fleece thing and for being the first person I ever saw with hair plugs.

Really? Before Burt Reynolds?

I'm Full of Soup said...

Reynolds went straight to the toupee I think.

Eric the Fruit Bat said...

Everyone knows William Shatner wore a rug but how many know he was copying Brando?

Michael Haz said...

Bill Proxmire was the first politician I volunteered to work for. A political science prof during my freshman year of college offered extra credit for students who provided proof of working for a politician's campaign.

Being a Bluto Blutarski quality student, I needed extra credit. Heck, I needed any kind of credit.

Anyhow, I volunteered to stand in front of a large grocery store for five hours on a Saturday afternoon and hand out bumper stickers that said "Prox!" to anyone who wanted them.

As a reward I got to shake Proxmire's hand and receive three seconds of eye contact. He was small and lean, mostly because of being an avid runner, had a damp handshake, and was clearly an early adapter to the then-new hair plug technology.

The Golden Fleece thing kept him in the news, and softened the impression that he was a big spender (he was) like other Democrats. He didn't do much harm, but he didn't do much good, either, a tradition long held by most Democrats elected tot he Senate from Wisconsin.

Proxmire was known for shaking every Wisconsin citizen's hand, at least three times. He'd stand at the entrance to the State Fair, every day from opening to closing time, and shake everyone's hand, for the ten day run of the Fair. He'd smile and nod and pretend to know your name and ask how you've been.

I got a look at the underbelly of political influence a couple of years later, while a student at UW. Proxmire's son was a braggadocious drunk undergraduate, often accused of unseemly conduct with coeds, and never accused of being a scholar. His arrests always resulted in releases without charges, and his grades always seemed to be Bs, even though he failed every exam. Chick may remember his first name; I'm not posting it here. He'd always boast that his father had gotten him out of whatever trouble he had gotten into that month.

I think there were also episodes of Proxmire's wife clobbering him now and again, but I might be confused because the governor at the time was Pat Lucey, who was also being clobbered by his alcoholic wife on a regular basis. Such were politics in Wisconsin.



chickelit said...

@Haz: Miles McMillan -- who wrote the editorial "Hello Wisconsin" gracing the front page of The Capital Times six days a week -- shot and killed Proxmire's first wife, Elsie Rockefeller. Odd because I recall McMillan being rather anti-gun. McMillan married her after she and Proxmire had divorced. Proxmire had originally come to Madison to work for the Cap Times and McMillan. There had to have been some good copy there.

WWIII Joe Biden, Husk-Puppet + America's Putin said...

The anti anti did not compute.

The over-the-top-anti McCarthyism is a little troubling.

He was a rare democrat who liked to point out waste. If he were alive today, he'd fall in line.

chickelit said...

A political science prof during my freshman year of college offered extra credit for students who provided proof of working for a politician's campaign.

I can just imagine how "political" poly sci was at Madison then. I steered mostly clear of the humanities (except foreign languages). The oddest politics I recall was a chemistry prof who wore a necklace made from IUD's. He was big on Planned Parenthood and lefty causes.

I'm Full of Soup said...

Haz and CL can tell some good stories. CL- was Elsie from "the" Rockefeller family?

chickelit said...

@AJ: Yes, related as second or third cousins I believe.

ndspinelli said...

I shook his hand @ a Brewer game, I was living in Chicago but came up to games during that great 1982 season. Over 30 years ago and the Brewers haven't done shit since.

ndspinelli said...

Red Sox aren't doing shit this series. Did they shoot their wad?