Call & Times

Rep. Louise Slaughter, 88; was longest-serving member of Congress

- By HARRISON SMITH

WASHINGTON – Rep. Louise Slaughter, a folksy New York liberal who championed women’s rights and American manufactur­ing for more than three decades as a Democratic congresswo­man, and who became a top lieutenant for House Speaker Nancy Pelosi as the first and only woman to lead the powerful Rules Committee, died Friday at a hospital in Washington. She was 88 and the oldest sitting member of Congress. The death was announced by her chief of staff, Liam Fitzsimmon­s. Slaughter had been hospitaliz­ed and treated for a concussion after falling at her home in the District of Columbia, The Washington Post reported Wednesday.

The daughter of a blacksmith in a Kentucky coal mine, Slaughter traced her lineage to Daniel Boone and attacked her political opponents with a marksman’s accuracy and, not infrequent­ly, a disarming grin. “She’s sort of a combinatio­n of Southern charm and back-room politics, a Southern belle with a cigar in her mouth,” Jane Danowitz, executive director of the Women’s Campaign Fund, told The Post in 1992.

A microbiolo­gist with a master’s degree in public health, Slaughter moved to western New York with her husband in the 1950s and entered politics two decades later, after fighting to preserve a stand of beech-maple forest near their home in the Rochester suburbs. She served in the Monroe County Legislatur­e and New York State Assembly before being elected to Congress in 1986 and soon establishe­d herself as a defender of blue-collar constituen­ts who worked for Xerox or Kodak.

Breaking with Democratic Party leaders, she argued that internatio­nal trade agreements did little more than drain the United States of manufactur­ing jobs. When President Bill Clinton asked her to support the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), according to the Almanac of American Politics, she replied, “Why are you carrying George Bush’s trash?”

Initially one of just 29 women in the House of Representa­tives, Slaughter was a flinty advocate of women’s access to health care and abortion.

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