Daily Press

Politician helped build up GOP in NC

Longtime US Rep. also served briefly in Senate

- By Gary D. Robertson

RALEIGH, N.C. — Jim Broyhill, a longtime North Carolina Republican congressma­n who served briefly in the U.S. Senate to fill a vacancy before losing a bid to keep the job, died Saturday, his family said. He was 95.

Broyhill, a scion of the Broyhill Furniture business in the North Carolina foothills that brought jobs and prestige to the region, died at Arbor Acres retirement home in Winston-Salem, according to his son, Ed. He had suffered from congestive heart failure for years, his son said Saturday.

The moderate Republican served more than 23 years in the House. He was considered a reliable conservati­ve who helped North Carolina turn into a competitiv­e two-party state, particular­ly as the GOP made national gains in the 1980s with Ronald Reagan.

In a video interview in 2015, Broyhill recalled the dearth of Republican­s on the first state ballot he filled out in 1948.

“I was determined that I’m going to do what I could to see if we could not develop a two-party system in our state,” Broyhill said. “And I think I had a great deal to accomplish that, but with the help and the leadership of many other people.”

GOP Gov. Jim Martin appointed Broyhill to replace Republican Sen. John East, who died by suicide in June 1986.

Broyhill had won the Senate GOP primary a month earlier. East wasn’t seeking reelection due to medical issues.

The Senate appointmen­t was viewed as an asset to help Broyhill in the general election against former Gov. Terry Sanford, a Democrat and outgoing

Duke University president. Sanford narrowly defeated Broyhill in two elections that November — one to serve out the rest of 1986 and another for the next six years.

Expected initially to be a low-key affair, the campaign took on the intensity of a modern, more divisive campaign. Reagan went to Charlotte to campaign for Broyhill. In a recent interview, Martin said he’s unsure whether appointing Broyhill to the Senate ultimately aided his campaign.

“He wasn’t able to spend as much time campaignin­g because he was intensely dependable on fulfilling his Senate duties,” Martin said.

Broyhill’s Capitol Hill career began with a surprising U.S. House victory in 1962.

When Democrats attempted to redraw the district of the lone Republican in the House delegation after the 1960 census in hopes of defeating him, the adjoining district became more Republican, according to a biography of Martin. That opened the door for Broyhill, who worked at the family business for close to two decades, to upset Democratic incumbent Hugh Quincy Alexander.

While he never served in a Republican-controlled chamber until his Senate appointmen­t, Broyhill flexed his political muscles for Republican presidenti­al administra­tions in the House and built support for their agendas with Democrats.

Frank Drendel, founder of coaxial cable producer CommScope based in Hickory, said Saturday that Broyhill’s work to get a law passed in 1978 so that cable companies could connect their cables to other utility poles helped the cable industry soar.

Broyhill “set an example that sadly we don’t have much of today and that is to cross the aisle and come up with solutions that are nonpartisa­n,” said former Glaxo Wellcome CEO Bob Ingram, a North Carolina resident who knew Broyhill while working in Washington. “He wanted to get to the best answer to solve problems.”

After his 1986 defeat, Broyhill served on North Carolina’s Economic Developmen­t Board. Martin later picked him to serve in his second-term Cabinet as commerce secretary, saying he had “impeccable connection­s with North Carolina industry.”

A native of Lenoir, Broyhill graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1950, according to his official congressio­nal biography. His father, J.E. Broyhill, began the family’s furniture dynasty in 1926 as the Lenoir Chair Company and was a well-known Republican in his own right.

“Jim added to that and made his contributi­on in a huge way as a member of Congress,” Martin said. “That family tradition has given an enormous boost to the Republican Party.” Ed Broyhill is now a Republican National Committee member.

Recently retired Sen. Richard Burr, a Republican who was recruited by Broyhill to run for Congress more than 30 years ago, said he would be remembered as “a gentlemen and a statesman,” and called him a “mentor and confidant.”

“I always knew I could trust his advice and counsel because he viewed everything through the lens of what’s best for the country,” Burr said.

Current Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper praised Broyhill on Saturday in a tweet for his commitment and service to the state.

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