Morning Sun

Former DNC leader Don Fowler dies at 85

- By Meg Kinnard

Don Fowler, a former chair of the Democratic National Committee and mainstay of South Carolina and national politics for decades, has died. He was 85.

Trav Robertson, chairman of South Carolina’s Democratic Party, told The Associated Press that Fowler died Tuesday night, calling him “the Democrats’ Democrat.”

No cause was mentioned, but Fowler’s wife said on Facebook that he had been in the hospital this week.

DNC Associate Chairman Jaime Harrison said Fowler had leukemia.

Fowler, a native of Spartanbur­g, attended Wofford College, where he played basketball and baseball, and earned master’s and doctorate degrees in political science from the University of Kentucky.

He led the state party from 1971 to 1980, overseeing the 1988 Democratic National Convention in Atlanta.

Fowler served as national chairman of the Democratic National Committee from 1995 to 1997, running the party’s dayto- day operations. Part of that tenure also included defending an unsuccessf­ul legal challenge from candidate Lyndon Larouche, whom Fowler said was not a “bona fide Democrat” due to what he said were antiSemiti­c expression­s and other activities, instructin­g state parties not to vote for him.

Fowler was also accused of but not charged with contacting the CIA about a businessma­n and party donor, notably telling U.S. Senate inquisitor­s, “I have in the middle of the night, high noon, late in the afternoon, early in the morning, every hour of the day, for months now searched my memory about conversati­ons with the CIA. And I have no memory, no memory of any conversati­on with the CIA.”

Former Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle of South Dakota told the AP on Wednesday that Fowler, with whom he worked closely as both led the party, was “smart, but he wasn’t so full of himself that he couldn’t relate to anybody with whom he met.”

Daschle, who now lives with his wife in a home they built in Bluffton, South Carolina, said he felt numerous trips to the state for events, often with Fowler literally at the helm of their travels, played a role in his own ultimate decision to make a home in the state.

“I wish we had more like him today, in this polarized, divisive and confrontat­ional environmen­t,” Daschle said. “It was underappre­ciated in many ways, but certainly we could use it now.”

After decades of acquaintan­ce, including working together at the DNC and his communicat­ions firm, Fowler and his wife, Carol, married in 2005. Two years later, Carol Fowler would become chair of the state party.

Their home near Columbia’s Five Points district became a regular stop for many of the Democrats vying for their party’s attention in the prolonged runup to the pivotal Feb. 29 primary, the first balloting to take place in the South. Each event, which felt like a fundraiser but was free to anyone to attend, featured the couple introducin­g a candidate like Pete Buttigieg, Amy Klobuchar or Bill deblasio to dozens of people crowded into their living room, often spilling into a front hallway.

Robertson described Don Fowler as the most loyal and devoted of friends and mentors who remained unafraid to speak his mind, like during his recent unsuccessf­ul push to keep the Democratic Party from curbing the influence of superdeleg­ates in its presidenti­al nominating structure.

“If Don was with you, he was with you until the end of days,” Robertson said Wednesday. “He could disagree with you, and he might not like what you were doing, but he was with you.”

Fowler remained a mainstay in Democratic politics, serving as a sounding board for chairmen including Robertson and Harrison, who chaired the party during the 2016 president cycle and mounted a fundraisin­g record-shattering challenge to U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina this year.

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