The Arizona Republic

MONDALE MOURNED

Former VP championed civil rights, education

- Walter Mears and Kathleen Hennessey

MINNEAPOLI­S – In the last days of his life, former Vice President Walter Mondale received a steady stream of phone calls of appreciati­on. Former Presidents Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris all called to say goodbye and thank you.

It was a sign of respect for a man many Americans remember largely for his near-shutout defeat for the White House in 1984. But well after his bruising loss, Mondale remained a revered liberal elder – with a list of accomplish­ments still relevant today.

As a young senator, he co-wrote the Fair Housing Act of 1968, a pillar of federal civil rights legislatio­n. He later engineered a 1975 bipartisan deal that ended the two-thirds rule for stopping filibuster­s, so that 60 senators instead of 67 could cut off debate.

Under Carter, he became the first vice president with a day job, as adviser to the president, not just a bystander. He called it the “executiviz­ation” of the vice presidency.

And as a Democratic presidenti­al nominee, he chose the first female nominee for vice president from a major party.

Harris, who won the job 36 years later, specifical­ly thanked him for all he did to change the office, according to a person familiar with the calls who asked for anonymity to discuss the private conversati­ons.

Mondale, 93, died Monday at his home in Minneapoli­s, as the city awaits a verdict in a murder trial that has forced the nation to again wrestle with structural racism. He welcomed that debate, his family said in a statement: “We are grateful that he had the opportunit­y to see the emergence of another generation of civil rights reckoning in the past months.”

Mondale was appointed senator from Minnesota to succeed his political mentor, Hubert H. Humphrey, who resigned to become vice president. He won Senate elections in 1966 and 1972, and stepped down to become vice president in 1977. Carter lost to Ronald Reagan in 1980 and Mondale went into private law practice – while beginning his own campaign for the presidency. He won the nomination in 1984, chose Rep. Geraldine Ferraro of New York as his running mate, and was crushed in the landslide that reelected Reagan, carrying only Minnesota and the District of Columbia.

Mondale was ambassador to Japan from 1993-1996. In 2002, at 74, he was drafted for a political reprise, running a truncated campaign for the Senate after Sen. Paul Wellstone, the Democratic nominee, was killed in a plane crash shortly before the election. Mondale was favored at first, but he lost the election.

After his 1984 defeat to a former actor, Mondale said one of his campaign problems was that “I’ve never really warmed up to television and … it’s never really warmed up to me.”

Even so, Mondale has some striking moments on television, none more so than in a 1984 campaign debate against

Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado, whose primary upsets threatened Mondale’s front-runner standing for the Democratic nomination. “You know, when I hear your new ideas I’m reminded of that ad ‘Where’s the beef ?’ ” he told Hart, using a fast-food chain’s slogan to question the substance of his rival’s campaign proposals.

Against the favored Reagan, Mondale’s best opening came when the president’s age, 73, became an issue. The president seemed disengaged and even confused in early campaign debates. Reagan undid that one with his own quip in the final debate. Asked about it, the president said: “I will not make age an issue of this campaign. I am not going to exploit for political purposes my opponent’s youth and inexperien­ce.”

Mondale could only smile as the audience laughed. But he said later he was smiling through tears because he knew from that moment that his quest was hopeless.

Mondale,

“Fritz”

to

some

of

his friends, was a dedicated liberal. He used the label in the subtitle of his 2010 memoir, “The Good Fight.” As attorney general of Minnesota and in the Senate, his major causes included civil rights, consumer protection, education, housing and the problems of migrant workers.

The son of a Methodist minister and a music teacher, Walter Frederick Mondale was born Jan. 5, 1928, in tiny Ceylon, Minnesota, 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 as state attorney general in 1960. Mondale was elected attorney general in the fall of 1960 and was reelected 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.

As Clinton’s ambassador to Japan, he fought for U.S. access to markets ranging from cars to cellphones. 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 returned to the Senate 2009 to stand with Al Franken.

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

in

 ?? AP ?? Former Vice President Walter Mondale, who died Monday at age 93, left a legacy of accomplish­ments that are still relevant today.
AP Former Vice President Walter Mondale, who died Monday at age 93, left a legacy of accomplish­ments that are still relevant today.
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 ?? SUSAN WALSH/AP FILE ?? “We are grateful that he had the opportunit­y to see the emergence of another generation of civil rights reckoning in the past months,” the family of former Vice President Walter Mondale said in a statement after his death Monday.
SUSAN WALSH/AP FILE “We are grateful that he had the opportunit­y to see the emergence of another generation of civil rights reckoning in the past months,” the family of former Vice President Walter Mondale said in a statement after his death Monday.

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