Hartford Courant

Liberal candidate for Senate in ’70 dies

Professor, 88, ran anti-war campaign; Paul Newman was his honorary chairman

- By Daniela Altimari

Joseph Duffey, the quiet Hartford Seminary professor whose anti-Vietnam War-fueled Senate race helped launch the careers of senators, congressme­n, TVhosts and a future president, died Thursday.

He was 88 and had been ill for some time, said Barry Wanger, a friend and former campaign aide.

Born in Huntington, West Virginia, the son of a coal miner, Duffey came to Connecticu­t in the early 1960s to attend Yale University. A decade later, after receiving his doctorate from the Hartford Seminary Foundation, he launched a quixotic and unsuccessf­ul run for the U.S. Senate seat, which was held at the time by fellow Democrat Thomas Dodd.

Dodd, the father of future Sen. Chris Dodd, had been censured as part of a corruption investigat­ion and did not receive the endorsemen­t of the Democratic Party. In 1970, with the Vietnam War tearing the nation apart, Duffey took on the Connecticu­t Democratic machine run by John Bailey and won a three-way party primary. He became the Democrats’ nominee against Lowell P. Weicker, then a one-term Republican congressma­n. (Dodd wound up running as an independen­t.)

“He was a fine man and a fine public

servant,’’ Weicker said Friday. The 1970 race was “a tough race, one of the hardest races I had.”

Duffey’s campaign was fueled by strong anti-war activism and a passion for liberal causes. He drew a large crew of fired up young progressiv­es, some of whom had come to Connecticu­t from the 1968 presidenti­al races of Eugene McCarthy and Bobby Kennedy.

The group included writer Michael Medved, who was Duffey’s speechwrit­er; Tony and John Podesta; future Fox News host and Trump appointee Larry Kudlow and politician­s such as Joe Lieberman, Sam Gejdenson and a Yale Law School student from Arkansas named Bill Clinton.

“In those days, it was really a war in this country,” Duffey told the Courant in 1993, days before Clinton’s inaugurati­on as president. “It was between young people in college and blue-collar working people. Mycampaign was an effort to identify that and try to overcome that. Bill instinctiv­ely understood that.”

The campaign also drew star power: Paul Newman, fresh off “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid,” served as Duffey’s campaign co-chairman. The two barnstorme­d the state, creating traffic jams wherever the candidate and the famous actor appeared.

“You know where Joe Duffey stands,” Newmansaid in May1970, according to Courant archives. “He always gives you a straight answer. You may not like the answer, but he always gives you one.”

The pair drew a crowd of about 1,000 in Portland on Oct. 7, prompting one local to tell the Courant “we haven’t had that many people together in downtown Portland in 40 years — and the last time, it was when the bank was robbed.”

Sen. Richard Blumenthal, Clinton’s law school classmate, said Duffey was a manof faith who“led by the power of his conscience.”

“At a time when young people were so desperatel­y hungry for honesty and conviction, he met that moment with grace and eloquence,’’ Blumenthal said.

Another alumnus from the 1970 Senate race was Lieberman, who opposed the Vietnam War but, as a Democratic senator from Connecticu­t, later voted in favor of the Iraq War.

By the time he ran for the U.S. Senate, Duffey was already a veteran of several Civil Rights “Freedom Rides” and had led an anti-war delegation for Eugene McCarthy at the 1968 Democratic National Convention.

But even though he was a generation older, college students were drawn to his campaign. “Hewas 15 or 20 years ahead in chronologi­cal age but spoke to us from a conviction and spirit that evoked strong loyalty and passion,’’ said Blumenthal, who did not actively work on Duffey’s campaign.

Duffey lost the 1970 Senate race to Weicker but he gained something important in the process: In 1974, he married Anne Wexler, who managed his campaign.

Wexler became a powerful Washington lobbyist while Duffey went on to a career in higher education. He served as chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities from 1977 to 1982 before becoming the chancellor of the University of Massachuse­tts at Amherst (running the entire UMass system was later added to his responsibi­lities). He also spent two years as president of American University in Washington, D.C., and was appointed director of the U.S. Informatio­n Agency by his old protege, Bill Clinton.

In later years, Duffey worked for a for-profit educationa­l system before retiring in 2018.

But Duffey’s legacy might best be reflected in the generation of political leaders whose careers began with that 1970 Senate run.

About three weeks ago, the campaign staff reconnecte­d for a 50th anniversar­y gathering via Zoom. The group, which included Clinton, reminisced and shared campaign war stories.

“Wehada great time and people were talking about how much Joe meant to their lives,’’ said Barry Wanger, who served as Duffey’s press secretary in 1970.

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