Yet
the man who died yesterday at 90 deserves a better epitaph than that. He lost a
disastrous election as the last traditionally liberal Democrat to run for the
White House, but his story encompasses much more.
He
was at the cusp of change in American political and social life, from the
optimistic sense of Martin Luther King that “the arc of the universe is long but it
bends toward justice” to the darker vision that prevails today.
Less
than two years after McGovern lost to Richard Nixon, the victor resigned in
disgrace over criminality at Watergate, which began with a break-in of
Democratic offices to undermine McGovern’s 1972 run, which needed no help to
shoot itself in the foot.
After
selecting a running mate who had been treated for depression with electro-shock
therapy and having to drop him, it was all downhill for McGovern, who now goes
down in history as a hopeless loser but, with his passing, America loses
something as well.
Son
of a Methodist minister, he earned a Distinguished Flying Cross for
crash-landing a plane under fire and went on to become a U.S. Senator from South Dakota who opposed the
Vietnam War, but his timing was bad.
The
nation was reeling from the murders of Dr. King, JFK and Robert Kennedy while
running for the White House in 1968 and ready to turn away from the liberal activism
that had led to advances in racial and gender equality.
Nixon
promised to calm the fears of “the Silent Majority” who had been unsettled by all
that turmoil, and the time was not right for a relatively unsophisticated
McGovern, who was unable to navigate the new shark-infested political waters.
Yet,
he lived long enough to call for the impeachment of Bush and Cheney for the
Iraq War and, in his last years, restate his social credo:
“We are the party that believes we can’t let the strong kick aside the weak. Our party believes that poor children should be as well educated as those from wealthy families. We believe that everyone should pay their fair share of taxes and that everyone should have access to health care.”
McGovern’s passing is a reminder that, no matter how much life changes on the surface, some things remain the same and that it isn’t just the winners who fight the good fight.
2 comments:
Great obituary, but what I'm really waiting for are your comments on the passing of Newsweek. Surely a former magazine head like yourself must have something interesting to say about this development.
Great obituary, but what I'm really waiting for (and I'm sure I'm not alone) are your comments on the passing of Newsweek. Surely a former magazine head would have something interesting to say about this development.
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