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George McGovern Gets the Last Laugh

Posted by Guest Blogger at 12:02 AM on July 16, 2007.


Al Eisele: As George McGovern celebrates his 85th birthday, history has proven he is no longer one of the biggest losers in American politics, but one of its biggest winners.
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This post, written by Al Eisele, originally appeared on The Huffington Post

Thirty-five years after losing a landslide election to Richard Nixon and winning only one state -- Massachusetts -- that branded him as one of the biggest losers in American politics, George McGovern claimed his place in history as one of its biggest winners.

It was only appropriate and fitting that he did so with the help of Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, the famed duo of reporters who disproved Nixon's claim that "I'm not a crook."

Woodward, speaking at a luncheon honoring McGovern on his 85th birthday on Saturday, said that after listening to hundreds of hours of secret Nixon White House tapes, "You realise that the character of Nixon becomes clearer. You see not only the criminality of his abuse of power but you see the dog that never barks, which is that he never says what would be the right thing to do, what would be good for the country?'"

McGovern, by contrast, Woodward said, illustrates "the irony of American politics," that he "asked exactly that question, 'What do the people want, what do they need, what would be good for the country?'"

Bernstein, Woodward's raffish former partner who is fresh off a revealing biography of Hillary Clinton, said, "There is so much in our political system and in our journalism that is about George McGovern, his legacy of decency, his absence of cynicism, his civility. ... We see where there's still hope and that's the life of George McGovern. Obviously, we need those McGovern rules more than ever today. ... I'm grateful for that lesson, and I think we all are."

McGovern, basking in the adulation of former aides and campaign workers,called this "the best day of my life, except maybe for the day I was nominated." Still recovering emotionally from the recent death of his wife Eleanor, the former South Dakota senator said, "I feel love in this room and it means more to me than anything."

He credited his staff and suporters for helping him win the 1972 Democratic presidential nomination, but lamented, with tongue in cheek, that despite the "army of volunteers" that made that possible, he had to "hail a cab to get over here."

McGovern, who now heads an International Food for Education and Child Nutrition Program named forhim and his longtime political adversary, former Kansas Senator and GOP presidential nominee Bob Dole, made clear that his experience as a combat veteran of World War II-- he flew numerous dangerous missions as a B-24 bomber pilot over Nazi-occupied Europe -- would have given President Bush pause before invading Iraq.

He also promised that he will work, for the rest of his life, on meeting the challenge of world hunger.

That was, in fact, the title of the symposium held at George Washington University on Saturday before the luncheon. And McGovern, who was President Kennedy's ambassador to the Food and Agriculture Organization before being elected to the Senate, made it clear that he hopes to convince Congress to expand the McGovern-Dole programt o provide school meals to children in the world's poorest countries.

"One of the great things about getting interested in hunger is that is is a solveable problem," he said. "We have the resources, we have the know-how, we have the distribution capability, we know about nutrition... If we would really get behind this, we could lick this problem."

He noted that he and Woodward and Bernstein, who were sitting next to him at lunch, had discussed the fact that the U.S. is spending $250 million each day in Iraq, or one billion dollars every four days. "If we just had that money for four days and could get the United Nations and other countries to help out, we could whip this problem," he said.

After the lunch, I talked to McGovern, and reminded him that I was the only Washington correspondent who represented a newspaper in South Dakota -- the Aberdeen American News -- when he was in the Senate. He thanked me and readily signed a copy of the luncheon program. I promptly got Woodward and Bernstein to sign it as well.

I'm sure it's the only piece of paper bearing the autograph of McGovern, Woodward and Bernstein. Maybe I'll put it on E-Bay and see what I can get for it. Whatever it brings, I'll donate it to the George and Eleanor McGovern Legacy Fund, which supports his two favorite causes, preparing students at Dakota Weslayan University for careers in public service, and the United Nations Food Program, which fights hunger among the world's poorest children.

You can contribute, too, by donating online at http://www.mcgovern72.org/

As I said at the beginning, George McGovern is no longer one of the biggest losers in American politics, but one of its biggest winners.

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Tagged as: woodward, nixon, mcgovern, bernstein

Albert Eisele, Editor-at-Large of The Hill, has been involved in journalism, government, academia and business for nearly four decades.


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Too often
Posted by: orwellwasn'tdreaming on Jul 16, 2007 6:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
people don't get to hear that people think well of them or that it's clear that they were correct all along--few of us will be able to appreciate our eulogies. I'm pleased that this good, decent, and intelligent man knows that those of us who supported him then support him now, and even many of those who didn't vote for him are looking back and saying "*That's* what a politician is supposed to be."
Mr. McGovern didn't lose in 1972; the American people (and the world) did.

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I never thought I could hate a president more than i hated Nixon,
Posted by: Ellie1 on Jul 16, 2007 9:16 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
but Bush has won the "prize". McGovern (who I voted for) was right.

There is no underestimating the general intelligence of the American public.

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free food to poor countries
Posted by: AsteroidMiner on Jul 16, 2007 9:20 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Research has shown that when we give free food to poor
countries the result is INCREASED suffering and
starvation. Parents in those countries have More children
they can't feed and then tell the extra children to go sneak
into the US. The stockholders of ADM, Cargill and
General Grain thank you for your donation.

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Decency
Posted by: Herr Oberinspektor on Jul 16, 2007 9:50 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I once met McGovern after a lecture. He was very approachable, warm, and honest. One of the most decent men ever to hold office in America.

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it's a shame...
Posted by: rue on Jul 16, 2007 10:08 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... that the american public didn't listen to mr. mcgovern back in the day; we would be in a much better place now, i'm sure, if he had been elected.

unfortunately, his lost election hi-lights a disturbing flaw in the american public psyche: we would rather hear sugar coated bullshit and lies over the bitter truth any day. a presidential candidate that tells us the truth, tells us that we have hard work to do, and that we need to make real sacrifices will be tossed by the wayside, while someone who comes in huffing and puffing, telling us that he'll changed things (while we all know that he won't, we just like the sound of the lullaby) will go all the way. and in the end, the sacrifices the country has to make, the ones we weren't told about, exact a price much higher than if we had listened to the truth in the first place.

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Ah, what could have been
Posted by: BitcoDavid on Jul 16, 2007 9:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In a parallel universe, somewhere, McGovern won. Perhaps in that same Utopian place, President in Absentia, Al Gore, brought us 8 more years of peace, prosperity and progress.

September 11th never happened, and in fact, the 42nd floor of Tower 1 now houses the new offices of the National Health Care Dept.

Since the American-World Peace act was passed unanimously, in 1989, the Pentagon has undergone a miraculous transformation into a public library and Internet Cafe, featuring free Starbucks Coffee.

The Prius has been recently taken off the road, for using too much gas, and Amtrak's new solar trains just won a Global Recognition Award at the Summit for Environmental Issues in Kyoto.

Ann Coulter has finally left home and started her first job, at McDonalds, working under Manager, Bill O'Reilly.

Etc. etc. You get the idea.

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Sen. McGovern is a good and decent man, but...
Posted by: truthteller on Jul 16, 2007 11:34 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have long admired the former Senator, but I believe his work on World hunger is misguided. The real problem is World overpopulation. Massive amounts of cash spent on sex education, contraceptive distribution, and voluntary sterilazation will do many times more in the long run to reduce World hunger than all the free food programs combined.

The late, great Harry Chapin made World hunger his major cause for most of the 10 years of his music career. I also felt back then that his efforts would have been better directed to population control. Population control also has the benefit of empowering women to control their lives and improving the overall standard of living of entire countries. In the almost 30 years since Harry's untimely death, World hunger has done nothing but get worse. It is time to try a different tact.

We need to focus our attention on putting the lie to the religious and cultural extremists who want women to be treated as breeding chattel - foremost being the Catholic Church, especially in the third World. They spew their lies and extremist anti-woman propaganda on the developed World, but it increasingly falls on deaf ears, given the falling birth rates in heavily Catholic Western countries. It does have an effect in the Third World, especially in Latin America, and has much to do with their overpopulation problems and our immigration crisis.

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