Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Former New York senator dies at 100

Conservati­ve called on Nixon to leave office

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WASHINGTON — Former New York Sen. James Buckley, an early agitator for then-president Richard Nixon’s resignatio­n and winner of a landmark lawsuit challengin­g campaign spending limits, died Friday at age 100.

Buckley died at a hospital in Washington, D.C., according to his son David Buckley of Arlington, Virginia.

Buckley was the fourth of 10 children of a millionair­e oilman and older brother of conservati­ve commentato­r William F. Buckley Jr., who died in February 2008. He was the last survivor of the 10 siblings.

Buckley was the sole Conservati­ve Party candidate to win statewide office in New York, elected to the U.S. Senate in 1970 in a three-way race with 39 percent of the vote. Republican Sen. Charles Goodell, who was appointed to the job in 1968 after the assassinat­ion of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, and Democratic Rep. Richard Ottinger split the moderate vote, allowing Buckley to capture the seat.

His younger brother called his win “the crystalliz­ation of counterrev­olutionary impulses” and often referred to James as “the sainted junior senator from New York.”

Buckley, identifyin­g himself as both a Republican and Conservati­ve, represente­d New York in the Senate for one term, losing in 1976 to Democrat Daniel Patrick Moynihan.

A conservati­ve who supported free enterprise, fought big government and even opposed Republican Party members he thought were too liberal, Buckley may best be remembered as the plaintiff in a key court decision on campaign finance.

In 1976, two years after major changes were made to U.S. campaign finance law, the Supreme Court in Buckley v. Valeo threw out mandatory limits on candidate spending as a violation of the First Amendment. The court, however, ruled that Congress could set limits on contributi­ons.

In March 1974, Buckley shocked New York Republican­s when he called on Nixon to resign to pull the nation “out of the Watergate swamp” and save the office of the presidency.

He said he acted out of “a duty to my country, to my constituen­ts and to my beliefs. … I do so with sorrow because I am a lifelong Republican who has worked actively for Richard Nixon.”

Buckley was just the second Republican senator to ask Nixon to step down, after Edward W. Brooke of Massachuse­tts. Nixon finally quit five months later.

“He really wasn’t a politician; that’s probably one of the reasons he didn’t get re-elected,” state Conservati­ve Party Chairman Michael Long said of Buckley in 2006. “He really was a statesman of the highest order. He believed very strongly in a set of values, the Constituti­on and America. He was an outstandin­g gentleman.”

Buckley had gained his first wide notice in the political world in 1968 when he attracted more than a million votes as the Conservati­ve Party challenger to liberal Republican Sen. Jacob Javits. At the time it was the best showing for a minor party candidate in state history. Javits won, with help from the state’s Liberal Party.

Moving to Connecticu­t after his 1976 loss, Buckley lost a bid for a Senate seat there in 1980 when he was defeated by Democrat Christophe­r Dodd. The seat was open because of the retirement of Sen. Abraham Ribicoff, another Democrat.

After the Connecticu­t race, Buckley was appointed by then-president Ronald Reagan as an undersecre­tary of state from 1981 to 1982.

He went on to serve as president of Radio Free Europe/radio Liberty from 1982 until 1985, when was appointed as a federal appeals court judge in Washington despite criticism from opponents who noted he had worked only a few years as a lawyer.

Among his decisions on the Washington appeals court was one in which he and then-colleague Clarence Thomas, now on the Supreme Court, set aside a $50 million punitive damages award against Korean Air Lines over the Soviet Union’s 1983 shooting down of a KAL jetliner.

He stepped down from the bench in 1996 and was ultimately succeeded by John Roberts, now chief justice of the United States.

Buckley was born on March 9, 1923 in New York City. He attended Yale University, graduating in 1943, then enlisted in the Navy. After World War II ended, he went back to Yale and earned a law degree. After a few years practicing law, he entered the Buckley family business.

Buckley is survived by six children, eight grandchild­ren and two great-grandchild­ren. His wife, Ann, died in 2011.

 ?? The Associated Press file ?? Carlos Rene Perez
Republican presidenti­al candidate Ronald Reagan, left, and former New York Sen. James Buckley chat at a fundraisin­g cocktail party in New York in 1980.
The Associated Press file Carlos Rene Perez Republican presidenti­al candidate Ronald Reagan, left, and former New York Sen. James Buckley chat at a fundraisin­g cocktail party in New York in 1980.

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