Chattanooga Times Free Press

George Sinner, N. Dakota governor in tough times, dies

- BY JAMES MACPHERSON

BISMARCK, N.D. — George Sinner, the farmer-philosophe­r who served as North Dakota’s governor during one of the state’s roughest economic times, has died. He was 89.

His son, George B. Sinner, confirmed the death Friday. Boulger Funeral Home in Fargo posted on its website he died at Eventide Senior Living Communitie­s.

The Fargo native studied philosophy in college and considered becoming a priest. But family and public service beckoned.

George B. Sinner said his father never talked about money and was always focused on helping others.

“My dad picked up hitchhiker­s. He cared about immigrants. When I was a child he brought a young man home from one of the local colleges who was a visiting student from Africa, for Christmas,” his son said.

“That’s who he was and how he lived.”

The father of 10 children became a wellknown Democrat, serving in the Legislatur­e in the 1960s and early ’80s before defeating Republican incumbent Allen Olson for governor in 1984. His gubernator­ial campaign included a television commercial that showed a farmer pitching cow manure, which Sinner compared to his opponent’s campaign statements.

Looking back a decade later, Sinner told a group of students in Fargo he didn’t think about running for governor until 1982, after he had served in the Legislatur­e.

“I wasn’t really needed on the farm anymore,’” he said. “And I suddenly realized I was as qualified as anybody to run the state.”

His administra­tion, from 1985 through 1992, spanned one of the roughest periods in North Dakota’s economy. The state was hit hard by drought in the late 1980s, and slumping oil prices turned a western North Dakota boom into a bust. In 1990, Sinner endorsed a special day of prayer on the state Capitol grounds to pray for rain.

He also vetoed what would have been the country’s toughest abortion law at the time in 1991, saying he agreed with the Roman Catholic view that abortion was wrong but believed the issue was the role of law. The proposed law would have banned abortions except in cases of rape, incest or when a woman’s life was in danger.

“Government must not overstep its bounds,” he said in his veto message. “It must not play God.”

Sinner was born in Fargo in 1928, and grew up in nearby Casselton. He attended St. John’s University in Collegevil­le, Minn., where he received a bachelor’s degree in philosophy.

Sinner was part of a farm partnershi­p, Sinner Brothers and Bresnahan, in Casselton. He served in the state Senate from 1962 through 1966, as a delegate to North Dakota’s Constituti­onal Convention in 1972, and on the State Board of Higher Education before being elected to the state House in 1982. He was elected governor two years later.

His first term as governor began with a state Supreme Court battle over when Sinner could legally take office and fill two court vacancies. The high court ruled in Sinner’s favor, and he became governor Jan 1, 1985.

During his term, Sinner pushed for higher income, sales and gasoline taxes, as well as plans to restructur­e the executive branch of state government and reorganize North Dakota’s school districts. But his tax proposals were referred and rejected by voters, along with his restructur­ing plan.

In July 1991, Sinner had heart bypass surgery in Rapid City, S.D., after suffering chest pains while attending a conference there. That fall, he said his health was fine but he had decided not to seek a third term. He made the decision, he said, while on a hunting trip, and decided that, “It was time that I spend some time with a little less involvemen­t and a little less pressure.”

Since Sinner left office North Dakota has had an unbroken string of four Republican governors.

Sinner lobbied to become President Bill Clinton’s agricultur­e secretary but was twice turned down because Clinton was seeking someone from the South. (Clinton eventually chose Mike Espy from Mississipp­i and later Dan Glickman from Kansas.) Sinner instead went to work for Minnesota-based American Crystal Sugar Co. as its vice president of public and government­al affairs, but kept in touch with Clinton, whom he had gotten to know when Clinton was Arkansas’ governor.

Sinner, who raised 10 children with his wife, Jane, was known as someone who liked to tell jokes — but wasn’t especially good at it. Even political opponents liked him as a person.

“Bud was probably one of the most honest men we’ll ever have in state government,” former House Speaker Ron Anderson once said.

Bill Marcil, publisher of The Forum newspaper in Fargo, said at a party for Sinner in 1992 that affection for him crossed party lines.

“Regardless of his political leanings or personal views, people like George Sinner,” Marcil said, “and that’s just a plain fact.”

 ??  ?? George Sinner
George Sinner

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States