San Antonio Express-News

Ex-senate majority leader recalled as fighter

HARRY REID: 1939-2021

- By Laurie Kellman and Ken Ritter

LAS VEGAS — He was an accomplish­ed amateur boxer who’d rather dance. But Harry Reid was fond of reminding his opponents that he knew how to fight, too.

That skill took him far — from poverty in Searchligh­t, Nev., to the pinnacle of the U.S. Senate.

“I don’t have people saying, ‘He’s the greatest speaker,’ ‘He’s handsome,’ ‘He’s a man about town,’ ” Reid told the New York Times in 2010 after a hard-fought re-election victory. “But I don’t really care. I feel very comfortabl­e with my place in history.”

Reid, who died Tuesday at 82 after a four-year battle with pancreatic cancer, was one of Congress’ most skilled negotiator­s, thriving on the behind-the-scenes wrangling that frustrated many of his predecesso­rs. As majority leader from 2007 to 2015, he kept the Senate in Democratic hands through a volatile era of polarizing health care and economic policy debates, recession and war, and with a Republican and then a Democratic president.

“If Harry said he would do something, he did it,” President Joe Biden said in a statement after the death of his longtime Senate colleague. “If he gave you his word, you could bank on it. That’s how he got things done for the good of the country for decades.”

Not a showman, Reid sometimes got in his own way on the national political stage.

He once called President George W. Bush a “loser,” criticized Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan as a “political hack,” and misstated the condition of Democratic Sen. Ted Kennedy, who was dying of brain cancer. He apologized to President Barack Obama for calling him “light-skinned” and having “no Negro dialect, unless he wanted to have one.”

Reid also made an unproven political claim he refused to detract. During the 2012 presidenti­al election, he said on the Senate floor that GOP candidate and fellow Mormon Mitt Romney hadn’t paid taxes for a decade. Romney denied that, and factchecke­rs at the time found no evidence to support Reid’s claim.

But he was frequently underestim­ated. In his 2010 bid for re-election he looked like the underdog to tea party favorite Sharron Angle. Ambitious Democrats, assuming his defeat, began angling for his leadership post. But Reid defeated Angle by 5 percentage points.

‘Never afraid’

Reid reluctantl­y retired rather than seek re-election in 2016 after an accident while he was exercising left him blind in one eye. His life after public office included a fellowship at the UNLV law school and a role leading a new think tank at the school with former House Speaker John Boehner. The Ohio Republican and former congressio­nal rival remembered Reid on Tuesday as “a fighter until the end.”

Former President Bill Clinton, in a statement, called Reid “a canny and tough negotiator who was never afraid to make an unpopular decision if it meant getting something done that was right for the country.” Obama released a letter he sent recently to Reid telling the ailing Democrat that “I wouldn’t have been president if it hadn’t been for your encouragem­ent and support.”

Reid was born Dec. 2, 1939, the son of an alcoholic hard-rock miner who killed himself at 58 and a mother who was a laundress in a bordello. He grew up in a small cabin without indoor plumbing and swam with other children at a local brothel.

He hitchhiked to Basic High School in Henderson, 40 miles from his Searchligh­t home, where he met the woman he would marry, Landra Gould, in 1959. She and their five children survive him.

At Utah State University, the couple became members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints. He put himself through George Washington University law school by working as a U.S. Capitol police officer.

At 28, Reid was elected to the Nevada Assembly and at 30 became the youngest lieutenant governor in Nevada history as Gov. Mike O’callaghan’s running mate in 1970. Elected to the U.S. House in 1982 and 1984 and to the U.S. Senate in 1986, 1992, 1998, 2004 and 2010, Reid served in Congress longer than anyone else in Nevada history. In 1998 he held off Republican Rep. John Ensign by 428 votes after a recount that stretched into January.

After his election as Senate majority leader in 2007, Reid was credited with putting Nevada on the political map by pushing to move the state’s caucuses to February, at the start of presidenti­al nominating season. That forced each national party to pour resources into a state which, while home to the country’s fastest growth over the past two decades, still only had six votes in the Electoral College.

Drawing colleagues’ ire

The most influentia­l politician in Nevada for more than a decade, Reid steered hundreds of millions of dollars to the state and was credited with single-handedly blocking constructi­on of a nuclear waste storage facility at Yucca Mountain outside Las Vegas.

He often went out of his way to defend social programs, calling Social Security “one of the great government programs in history” and championin­g suicide prevention with the story of his own father. He stirred controvers­y in 2010 when he said in a speech on the floor of the Nevada legislatur­e that it was time to end legal prostituti­on in the state.

Reid’s political moderation meant he never was entirely trusted in the increasing­ly polarized Senate. Democrats grumbled about his votes for the Iraq War resolution in 2002, for a ban on so-called partial-birth abortion, and against resolution­s endorsing Roe v. Wade, the Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion.

He also voted against most gun-control bills and in 2013, after the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre, dropped a proposed ban on assault weapons from the Democrats’ gun control legislatio­n. The package, he said, wouldn’t pass with the ban attached.

Reid’s Senate particular­ly chafed members of the House, both Republican­s and Democrats. When Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi muscled Obama’s health care overhaul through the House in 2009, a different version passed the Senate, and the reconcilia­tion process floundered long enough for Republican­s to turn it into an election-year weapon to demonize Pelosi and cast the legislatio­n as a big-government power grab.

Obama signed the measure into law in March 2010. But angered by the Great Recession and inspired by the small-government tea party, voters swept Democrats from the House majority.

On his way out of office, he repeatedly lambasted President Donald Trump, calling him at one point “a sociopath” and “a sexual predator who lost the popular vote and fueled his campaign with bigotry and hate.”

After Reid’s lengthy farewell address on the Senate floor in 2016, his Nevada colleague Republican Dean Heller declared: “It’s been said that it’s better to be feared than loved, if you cannot be both. And as me and my colleagues here today and those in the gallery probably agree with me, no individual in American politics embodies that sentiment today more than my colleague from Nevada, Harry Mason Reid.”

 ?? New York Times file photo ?? Former Sen. Harry Reid, shown in 2019, rose from childhood poverty in the rural Nevada desert to the heights of power in Washington, where he steered the Affordable Care Act to passage.
New York Times file photo Former Sen. Harry Reid, shown in 2019, rose from childhood poverty in the rural Nevada desert to the heights of power in Washington, where he steered the Affordable Care Act to passage.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States