JOHN GLENN ~ POLITICAL CAREER
John Glenn’s political career began in January
1964 when he resigned from his assignment as a Mercury astronaut
with National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and
retired from the U.S. Marines Corps to enter the Democratic primary
in Ohio for a seat in the U.S. Senate. This first attempt at a
career in politics turned out to be short-lived. Less than a month
into the campaign Glenn suffered a traumatic head injury as a result
of a fall in his home. The injury left him bedridden with severe
vertigo and unable to campaign. His wife, Annie, along with Rene
Carpenter, the wife of fellow astronaut Scott Carpenter, attempted
to carry on the campaign by giving surrogate speeches at scheduled
events throughout the end of February and into March. By the end of
March, however, Glenn conceded the fact that his injury, which
doctors said would take him close to a year to recover from, would
make it impossible for him to campaign. Unable in person to inform
voters of his position on public policy issues and not wanting to be
voted for solely on his fame as a Mercury astronaut, Glenn dropped
out of the race on March 31, 1964.
Glenn eventually made a full recovery from his
injury. He spent a great deal of the nine months of convalescence
required to regain his health reading through his mail. Glenn
received tens of thousands of letters following his historic space
flight aboard the Friendship 7 spacecraft on February 20,
1962. He received tens of thousands more in response to his
decision to enter politics and in reaction to his accident and
injury. While recovering from his injury, Glenn sorted through this
massive amount of correspondence and compiled more than four hundred
of his favorite letters. In late 1964, the World Book Encyclopedia
published these letters in a book titled, P.S. I Listened to Your
Heartbeat: Letters to John Glenn.
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After his recovery, Glenn continued to explore
the political arena throughout the rest of the 1960s. He campaigned
heavily in 1968 with Robert Kennedy during Kennedy’s tragically
aborted presidential campaign. In 1970, following Stephen Young’s
announcement he would not seek reelection to another term in the
senate, Glenn once again entered the Ohio Democratic primary. His
opponent in the primary was Cleveland businessman, Howard H.
Metzenbaum. Metzenbaum entered the race with the backing of the
Ohio Democratic Party and the major labor unions in the state.
Better funded and more organized, Metzenbaum won a close race in the
primary election, but lost the general election to Robert Taft, the
Republican candidate.
Although defeated at the polls, Glenn continued
to be active in the Ohio Democratic Party during the early 1970s.
In 1970, he was appointed by Ohio Governor John Gilligan to be the
chairman of the Citizens Task Force on Environmental Protection.
The task force surveyed the environmental problems in Ohio and in
its June 1971 final report made various recommendations to rectify
those problems. The meetings held by the task force, along with its
various reports, were major factors in the formation of the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency.
Glenn’s next chance for a seat in the U.S.
Senate came in October 1973 when William Saxbe resigned his place in
the senate to become President Richard Nixon’s attorney general.
Glenn lobbied to be appointed to the vacancy left by Saxbe’s
resignation, but Governor Gilligan instead chose to award the
appointment to Howard Metzenbaum. This move resulted in Glenn and
Metzenbaum once again opposing each other in the 1974 Democratic
primary election. Better organized than he was four years earlier,
Glenn still faced a tough campaign as Metzenbaum again had the
backing of the Ohio Democratic Party and the labor unions.
Metzenbaum, however, made what turned out to be a major campaign
blunder when during a speech in Toledo he accused Glenn of never
holding a real job. Glenn at first chose to ignore the statement,
but four days before the primary election, at a debate sponsored by
the Cleveland City Club, Glenn delivered what came to be known as
his “Gold Star Mother Speech.” In the speech Glenn asked Metzenbaum
to look any gold star mother (a mother whose son died in combat) in
the eye and tell her that her son had not held a real job. The
speech was devastatingly effective, made national news, and helped
Glenn win the primary election by over one hundred thousand votes.
Glenn went on to win the general election in November over the
Republican candidate, Cleveland Mayor Ralph J. Perk.
Glenn became a freshman senator in the first
Congress to meet after the resignation of President Richard Nixon.
During this immediate post-Watergate era, the Democratic Party held
the majority in the senate and the majority leader, Mike Mansfield
of Montana, became a friend and mentor to Glenn. During his first
year in the senate, Glenn obtained assignments on the Government
Operations Committee and the Interior and Insular Affairs
Committee. He served on the Energy Research and Water Resources
Subcommittee of the latter, and following the reorganization of
senate committees in 1977, chaired the Energy, Nuclear
Proliferation, and Federal Services Subcommittee of the newly formed
Governmental Affairs Committee. Through this subcommittee Glenn
worked quietly to learn the ways of the senate and successfully
introduced a number of bills on energy policy designed to alleviate
some of the effects of the 1970s energy crisis. Glenn also used his
position as chairman of the subcommittee to introduce legislation to
help stop the spread of nuclear weapons. The Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Act of 1978 proved to be the first of six major
pieces of legislation on nuclear non-proliferation that Glenn
introduced over the course of his twenty-four years in the senate.
These bills remain a cornerstone of U.S. nuclear foreign policy.
In 1978, Glenn became a member of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee and obtained the chairmanship of the
East Asian and Pacific Affairs Subcommittee. As a member of this
committee, Glenn traveled widely throughout East Asia, making a
number of fact-finding trips to Japan, Korea, the Republic of China
(Taiwan), and to the People’s Republic of China. From the
information he gathered during meetings with foreign dignitaries,
Glenn formulated, introduced, and helped pass the Taiwan Enabling
Act of 1979. This legislation, still the foundation of
U.S.-Taiwanese foreign relations, established the basis for
continued relations between the United States and Taiwan in the wake
of the recognition by the United States of the People’s Republic of
China.
The “Keating Five” affair, along with the
lingering debt from his presidential campaign, became issues in 1992
when Glenn sought reelection to his fourth term in the senate. His
Republican opponent, Ohio lieutenant governor Mike DeWine, used
these issues in an attempt to smear Glenn’s reputation in the eyes
of voters. After what the media described as the dirtiest campaign
in the country that year, Glenn beat DeWine at the polls and became
the first person from Ohio ever to be elected to four terms in the
U.S. Senate.
During his fourth term in the senate, Glenn
resumed his steady work on policy issues in which he held a special
interest. He continued to oversee the implementation of reforms in
the management of the nation’s nuclear weapons facilities by the
Department of Energy. He furthered his efforts to establish the
offices of inspector general and chief financial officer in federal
agencies as a means to curtail waste, fraud, and abuse in federal
spending. Through his position as a member of both the Governmental
Affairs Committee and the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence,
he strengthened federal legislation designed to stop the spread of
nuclear weapons with the passage of the Nuclear Proliferation
Prevention Act of 1994. He advocated the need for the United States
to strongly support the nuclear non-proliferation activities of the
International Atomic Energy Agency. He became the senate champion
for the appropriation of federal funding for the International Space
Station and remained a staunch proponent for larger federal support
to fund basic research into science and technology. In 1995, after
the Republican Party gained the majority in both houses of Congress,
Glenn mediated compromise legislation on some of the more sweeping
regulatory reform measures called for by the Republican Party’s
“Contract with America.”
During his last term in the senate, however,
Glenn will probably be best known as the minority leader during the
Senate Governmental Affairs Committee’s hearings on campaign finance
reform. When the Republican Party gained control of the U.S. Senate
following the 1994 elections, Glenn turned over his position as
chairman of the Governmental Affairs Committee to Senator Fred
Thompson of Tennessee. Two years later, after the most costly
presidential election in history, leaders within the Republican
Party decided to look into campaign financing. The Governmental
Affairs Committee, through its Permanent Investigations
Subcommittee, was chosen as the logical vehicle for the
investigation. Glenn initially approached what became known as the
“Thompson-Glenn Hearings” with enthusiasm. He felt the hearings
might lead to some significant and much needed reforms in the manner
in which political campaigns were funded. By late February 1997,
however, it became apparent that the hearings were going to focus
mainly on the activities of the Democratic Party, and specifically
on the White House, rather than focus on the inherent problems in
the current system of campaign funding. Glenn attempted to use his
position to shift the committee’s focus onto the larger issues, but
for the most part was unsuccessful. The hearings ended later that
year without making any significant impact towards campaign finance
reform.
On February 20, 1997, the thirty-fifth
anniversary of his historic space flight aboard the Friendship 7
spacecraft, Glenn announced during a speech given in New Concord
that he would not seek a fifth term in the senate. He planned to
retire at the end of his current term in December 1998. At the time
of his announcement he had already made some inquiries with NASA
into the possibility of returning to space to study the effects of
space flight on the aging process. These plans came to fruition the
following year with his much heralded participation as a member of
the crew aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery mission STS-95.
Glenn’s return to space in many ways was an
appropriate finale to his career in politics, a career that started
thirty-four years earlier when he resigned from NASA’s Mercury
program to enter his first political campaign. During the
intervening years Glenn ran two unsuccessful and four successful
senate election campaigns and was at one time the front-runner for
the Democratic Party’s nomination for president. After twenty-four
years in the U.S. Senate, he left the United States a safer nation,
both internationally through his nuclear non-proliferation
legislation and environmentally through his reforms in the
management of nuclear weapons sites. By his legislation mandating
federal inspector generals and chief financial officers he actively
sought to make the federal government function more efficiently and
better serve the needs of its citizens. He left a solid progressive
voting record in such policy areas as aging, education, civil
rights, veterans’ affairs, and women’s issues and was instrumental
in opening Congress to the same employment laws governing the nation
as a whole. John Glenn left the senate with a reputation for quiet
hard work. His years in the United States Senate, just like his
years in the United States Marine Corps and with NASA, epitomized
the best standards to be found in a life dedicated to public
service. |