October
25, 2002 4:30 p.m. Paul
Wellstone, R.I.P.
The
Minnesota senator dies.
emocratic senator
Paul
Wellstone died in a plane crash Friday in Minnesota.
He was the most liberal
member of the Senate a title that had him beating out the likes
of Hillary Clinton and Ted Kennedy. At just under 5-and-a-half feet tall,
Wellstone was a short man, but high on principle. Probably no other member
of the Senate had been on the losing side of more 99-1 or 98-2 votes.
None had voted more consistently against the Bush administration, according
to Congressional Quarterly. Wellstone aspired to be a Barry Goldwater
of the Left; the title of his recent book, The Conscience of a Liberal,
is a deliberate echo of the conservative hero's own classic. Before the
2000 election, Wellstone was the clear favorite of his party's "progressive"
wing i.e., anti-New Democrats who swear by The Nation
to run for the White House. Yet he bowed out, citing a bad back, and stumped
for Bill Bradley. Al Gore was simply too mainstream.
Wellstone may have
sat at the far end of the political spectrum, but it was difficult to
dislike him on a personal level even Right-wingers must admit that
he would have made a good neighbor. Smiles and laughs came easily to him.
His personal life, in fact, seemed quite conservative: He married young,
had a few kids, and remained married to his wife, who was also on board
the fatal flight, for 39 years. He could be feisty, but was rarely rude;
even in Washington, there was still something of the college professor
about him, acquired over the 21 years he spent teaching political science
at Carleton College. When many Democrats talk about, say, extending unemployment
benefits, their fists pound podiums, their ears billow smoke, and their
faces turn red with rage. Not Wellstone. He spoke in measured tones, as
if believing reasonable people will agree with him if they just listen
long enough. He was an opponent of conservatism, but he was a decent man.
Today in Texas, President
Bush acknowledged the death of Wellstone, his wife, an adult daughter,
and five other people on board the plane: "Our prayers and heartfelt
sympathy goes to their sons, their loved ones, their friends and the people
of Minnesota. Paul Wellstone was a man of deep convictions. He was a plainspoken
fellow who did his best for his state and for his country.''
Under Minnesota law,
Wellstone's name must now come off the ballot; his party will have an
opportunity to replace it. His reelection race was regarded one of the
tightest in the nation this fall, though recent polls had him leading
the GOP's Norm Coleman, the former mayor of St. Paul.