Fred R. Harris

Politician

Birthday November 13, 1930

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Walters, Oklahoma, U.S.

Age 93 years old

Nationality United States

#35323 Most Popular

1930

Fred Roy Harris (born November 13, 1930) is an American former politician who served as a U.S. senator from Oklahoma from 1964 to 1973.

Born in Walters, Oklahoma, Harris was elected to the Oklahoma Senate after graduating from the University of Oklahoma College of Law.

Harris was born on November 13, 1930, in Walters, Cotton County, Oklahoma, the son of Eunice Alene (Person) and Fred Byron Harris, a sharecropper.

1952

In 1952 he graduated from the University of Oklahoma (OU) with a bachelor's degree in history and political science.

He then entered the OU law school, where he was administrative assistant to the dean and successively book editor and managing editor of the Law Review.

1954

He received the LL B. degree with distinction and was admitted to the bar in 1954.

1956

He was elected to the Oklahoma State Senate in 1956 and served in it until 1964.

For most of the time, he was one of its youngest members.

1962

He made an unsuccessful bid for governor of Oklahoma in 1962, which made him better known throughout the state.

1964

He ousted the appointed U.S. Senate incumbent J. Howard Edmondson and won a 1964 special election to succeed Robert S. Kerr, narrowly defeating football coach Bud Wilkinson.

Harris strongly supported the Great Society programs but criticized President Lyndon B. Johnson's handling of the Vietnam War.

In 1964, Harris ran to serve out the unexpired term of U.S. Senator Robert S. Kerr, who had died in office.

He defeated former governor J. Howard Edmondson, who had been appointed to succeed Kerr, in the Democratic primary.

The general election was a high-profile campaign against the Republican nominee, legendary University of Oklahoma football coach Bud Wilkinson.

Both parties invited political leaders from out of state to campaign for their candidates.

Republicans brought former Vice President Richard Nixon to campaign for Wilkinson, while Harris hosted President Lyndon Johnson.

Harris defeated Wilkinson, 51% to 49%, becoming one of the youngest members of the U.S. Senate.

Harris was a firm supporter of President Lyndon Johnson's Great Society programs, which were often unpopular in Oklahoma.

1965

He voted for the Voting Rights Act of 1965, while not voting on the Civil Rights Act of 1968 or the confirmation of Thurgood Marshall to the U.S. Supreme Court.

1966

He was reelected in 1966 and declined to seek another term in 1972.

Despite being strongly liberal from an increasingly conservative state, he was elected to a full term in 1966, defeating attorney Pat J. Patterson, 54% to 46%.

Patterson had tried to unseat Harris by announcing his support for a constitutional amendment proposed by Senator Everett M. Dirksen to allow school boards to provide for prayers in public schools.

Dirksen's amendment had enthusiastic political support in Oklahoma, but Harris opposed it in a public letter: "I believe in the separation of church and state and I believe prayer and Bible reading should be voluntary".

During his Senate term, Harris also served briefly as chairman of the Democratic National Committee, preceded and succeeded in that position by Larry O'Brien.

1968

In the 1968 presidential election, Democratic nominee Hubert Humphrey strongly considered him as his running mate.

In March 1968, Johnson appointed Harris to the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders.

He quickly became one of its most active members and was deeply concerned about economically deprived inner-city African Americans.

He also strongly supported agricultural programs, the Arkansas River Navigation Program, and the Indian health programs, which were all very popular in Oklahoma.

Harris was one of the final two candidates considered by Vice President and presidential nominee Hubert Humphrey to be the Democratic Party's nominee for Vice President of the United States in 1968; Humphrey chose Senator Edmund Muskie of Maine because of Harris's young age of 37.

According to O'Brien, Humphrey vacillated between the two until finally choosing Muskie at the last minute.

Harris broke with Johnson and Humphrey over the Vietnam War.

1969

From 1969 to 1970, Harris served as chairman of the Democratic National Committee.

1970

In 1970, Harris was a major player in the successful legislation to restore to the inhabitants of the Taos Pueblo 48,000 ac (19,425 ha) of mountain land that had been taken by President Theodore Roosevelt and designated as the Carson National Forest early in the 20th century.

The struggle was particularly emotive since this return of Taos land included Blue Lake, which the Pueblo consider sacred.

To pass the bill, Harris forged a bipartisan alliance with President Richard Nixon, from whom Harris was sharply divided on numerous other issues, notably the Vietnam War.

In doing so, he had to overcome powerful fellow Democratic Senators Clinton Presba Anderson and Henry M. Jackson, who firmly opposed returning the land.

As recounted by Harris's wife, LaDonna, who was actively involved in the struggle, when the bill finally passed and came up to be signed by the president, Nixon looked up and said, "I can't believe I'm signing a bill that was sponsored by Fred Harris."

1971

In 1971, Harris was the only senator to vote against confirmation of Lewis F. Powell, Jr. as associate justice of the United States Supreme Court.

1972

Harris unsuccessfully sought the Democratic presidential nomination in 1972 and 1976.

1976

After 1976, he became a professor at the University of New Mexico.