San Diego Union-Tribune

LIBERAL CHAMPION SERVED AS VP, MINN. SENATOR

- BY DOUG GLASS

Former Vice President Walter Mondale, a liberal icon who lost one of the most lopsided presidenti­al elections after bluntly telling voters to expect a tax increase if he won, died Monday. He was 93.

The death of the former senator, ambassador and Minnesota attorney general was announced in a statement from his family. No cause was cited.

Mondale followed the trail blazed by his political mentor, Hubert Humphrey, from Minnesota politics to the U.S. Senate and the vice presidency, serving under Jimmy Carter from 1977 to 1981.

In a statement Monday night, Carter said he considered Mondale “the best vice president in our country’s history.” He added: “Fritz Mondale provided us all with a model for public service and private behavior.”

Mondale’s own try for the White House, in 1984, came at the zenith of Ronald Reagan’s popularity. His selection of Rep. Geraldine Ferraro of New York as his running mate made him the first major-party presidenti­al nominee to put a woman on the ticket, but his declaratio­n that he would raise taxes helped define the race.

On Election Day, he carried

only his home state and the District of Columbia. The Electoral College vote was 525-13 for Reagan — the biggest landslide since Franklin D. Roosevelt defeated Alf Landon in 1936.

“I did my best,” Mondale said the day after the election, and blamed no one but himself.

“I think you know I’ve never really warmed up to television,” he said. “In fairness to television, it never really warmed up to me.”

Years later, Mondale said his campaign message had proven to be the right one.

“History has vindicated me that we would have to raise taxes,” he said. “It was very unpopular, but it was undeniably correct.”

In 2002, state and national Democrats looked to Mondale when Sen. Paul Wellstone, D-Minn., was killed in a plane crash less than two weeks before Election Day. Mondale agreed to stand in for Wellstone, and early polls showed him with a lead over the Republican candidate, Norm Coleman.

But the 53-year-old Coleman, emphasizin­g his youth and vigor, out-hustled the then-74-year-old Mondale in an intense six-day campaign. Mondale was hurt by a partisan memorial service for Wellstone, in which thousands of Democrats booed Republican politician­s in attendance. One speaker pleaded: “We are begging you to help us win this election for Paul Wellstone.”

Polls showed the service put off independen­ts and cost Mondale votes. Coleman won by 3 percentage points.

“The eulogizers were the ones hurt the most,” Mondale said after the election. “It doesn’t justify it, but we all make mistakes. Can’t we now find it in our hearts to forgive them and go on?”

It was a particular­ly bitter defeat for Mondale, who even after his loss to Reagan had taken solace in his perfect record in Minnesota.

“One of the things I’m most proud of,” he said in 1987, “is that not once in my public career did I ever lose an election in Minnesota.”

Years after the 2002 defeat, Mondale returned to the Senate to stand beside Democrat Al Franken in 2009 when he was sworn in to replace Coleman after a drawn-out recount and court battle.

Mondale started his career in Washington in 1964, when he was appointed to the Senate to replace Humphrey, who had resigned to become vice president. Mondale was elected to a full six-year term with about 54 percent of the vote in 1966, although Democrats lost the governorsh­ip and suffered other election setbacks. In 1972, Mondale won another Senate term with nearly 57 percent of the vote.

His Senate career was marked by advocacy of social issues such as education, housing, migrant workers and child nutrition. Like Humphrey, he was an outspoken supporter of civil rights.

Mondale tested the waters for a presidenti­al bid in 1974 but ultimately decided against it. “Basically I found I did not have the overwhelmi­ng desire to be president, which is essential for the kind of campaign that is required,” he said in November 1974.

In 1976, Carter chose Mondale as No. 2 on his ticket and went on to unseat Gerald Ford.

As vice president, Mondale had a close relationsh­ip with Carter. He was the first vice president to occupy an office in the White House, rather than in a building across the street. Mondale traveled extensivel­y on Carter’s behalf, and advised him on domestic and foreign affairs.

While he lacked Humphrey’s charisma, Mondale had a droll sense of humor.

When he dropped out of the 1976 presidenti­al sweepstake­s, he said, “I don’t want to spend the next two years in Holiday Inns.”

Reminded of that shortly before he was picked as Carter’s running mate, Mondale said, “I’ve checked and found that they’re all redecorate­d, and they’re marvelous places to stay.”

The son of a Methodist minister and a music teacher, Walter Frederick Mondale was born Jan. 5, 1928, in tiny Ceylon, Minn., and grew up in several small southern Minnesota towns.

He was only 20 when he served as a congressio­nal district manager for Humphrey’s successful Senate campaign in 1948. His education, interrupte­d by a two-year stint in the Army, culminated with a law degree from the University of Minnesota in 1956.

Mondale began a law practice in Minneapoli­s and ran the successful 1958 gubernator­ial campaign of Democrat Orville Freeman, who appointed Mondale state attorney general in 1960. Mondale was elected attorney general in the fall of 1960 and was re-elected in 1962.

As attorney general, Mondale moved quickly into civil rights, antitrust and consumer protection cases. He was the first Minnesota attorney general to make consumer protection a campaign issue.

After his White House years, Mondale served from 1993 to 1996 as President Bill Clinton’s ambassador to Japan, fighting for U.S. access to markets ranging from cars to cellular phones.

He helped avert a trade war in June 1995 over autos and auto parts, persuading Japanese officials to give American automakers more access to Japanese dealers and pushing Japanese carmakers to buy U.S. parts.

Mondale kept his ties to the Clintons. In 2008, he endorsed Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton for president, switching his allegiance only after Barack Obama sealed the nomination.

Mondale and his wife, Joan Adams Mondale, were married in 1955. During his vice presidency, she pushed for more government support of the arts and gained the nickname “Joan of Art.” She had minored in art in college and worked at museums in Boston and Minneapoli­s.

The couple had two sons, Ted and William, and a daughter, Eleanor. Eleanor Mondale became a broadcast journalist and TV host, with credits including “CBS This Morning” and programs with E! Entertainm­ent Television. Ted Mondale served six years in the Minnesota Senate and made an unsuccessf­ul bid for the Democratic nomination for governor in 1998. William Mondale served for a time as an assistant attorney general.

Joan Mondale died in 2014 at age 83 after an extended illness.

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 ?? PETER BREGG AP ?? Second lady Joan Mondale, Vice President Walter Mondale, first lady Rosalynn Carter and President Jimmy Carter pose in the White House after their inaugurati­on in 1977. Mondale and Carter worked closely together.
PETER BREGG AP Second lady Joan Mondale, Vice President Walter Mondale, first lady Rosalynn Carter and President Jimmy Carter pose in the White House after their inaugurati­on in 1977. Mondale and Carter worked closely together.
 ?? JACK SMITH AP ?? Democratic presidenti­al nominee Walter Mondale with his running mate, Geraldine Ferraro, in 1984.
JACK SMITH AP Democratic presidenti­al nominee Walter Mondale with his running mate, Geraldine Ferraro, in 1984.

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