Los Angeles Times

A Democrat who managed South’s tumult

Fritz Hollings, 97, of South Carolina, left, with Joe Biden, was a larger-than-life politician.

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Ernest F. “Fritz” Hollings, the silverhair­ed Democrat who helped shepherd South Carolina through desegregat­ion as governor and went on to serve six terms in the U.S. Senate, has died. He was 97.

Family spokesman Andy Brack said Hollings died early Saturday.

Hollings, whose long and colorful political career included an unsuccessf­ul bid for the Democratic presidenti­al nomination, retired from the Senate in 2005, one of the last of the larger-thanlife Democrats who once dominated politics in the South.

He had served 38 years and two months, making him the eighth-longest-serving senator in U.S. history.

Neverthele­ss, Hollings remained the junior senator from South Carolina for most of his term. The senior senator was Strom Thurmond, first elected in 1954. He retired in January 2003 at age 100 as the longest-serving senator in history.

In his final Senate speech in 2004, Hollings lamented that lawmakers came to spend much of their time raising money for the next election, calling money “the main culprit, the cancer on the body politic.”

Hollings was a sharp-tongued

orator whose rhetorical flourishes in the deep accent of his home state enlivened many a Washington debate. But his influence in Washington never reached the levels he hoped.

He sometimes blamed that failure on his background, rising to power as he did in the South in the 1950s as the region bubbled with anger over segregatio­n.

However, South Carolina largely avoided the racial violence that afflicted some other Deep South states during the turbulent 1960s.

Hollings campaigned against desegregat­ion when running for governor in 1958. He built a national reputation as a moderate when, in his farewell address as governor, he pleaded with the Legislatur­e to peacefully accept integratio­n of public schools and the admission of the first black student to Clemson University.

“This General Assembly must make clear South Carolina’s choice, a government of laws rather than a government of men,” he told lawmakers. Shortly afterward, Clemson was peacefully integrated.

In his 2008 autobiogra­phy, “Making Government Work,” Hollings wrote that in the 1950s, “no issue dominated South Carolina more than race” and that he worked for a balanced approach.

“I was ‘Mister In-Between.’ The governor had to appear to be in charge; yet the realities were not on his side,” he wrote. “I returned to my basic precept ... the safety of the people is the supreme law. I was determined to keep the peace and avoid bloodshed.”

In the Senate, Hollings gained a reputation as a skilled insider with keen intellectu­al powers. He chaired the Commerce, Science and Transporta­tion Committee and held seats on the Appropriat­ions and Budget committees.

But his sharp tongue and sharper wit sometimes got him in trouble. He once called Sen. Howard Metzenbaum (D-Ohio) the “senator from the B’nai B’rith” and in 1983 referred to the presidenti­al campaign supporters of former Sen. Alan Cranston (D-Calif.) as “wetbacks.”

Hollings began his quest for the presidency in April 1983 but dropped out the following March after dismal showings in Iowa and New Hampshire.

Hollings originally supported U.S. involvemen­t in Vietnam, but his views changed over the years as it became clear there would be no American victory.

“It’s a mistake to try to build and destroy a nation at the same time,” he wrote in his autobiogra­phy, warning that the U.S. is now “repeating the same wrongheade­d strategy in Iraq.”

Despite his changed views, Hollings remained a strong supporter of national defense, which he saw as the main business of government.

In 1969 he drew national attention when he exposed hunger in his own state by touring several cities, helping lay the groundwork for the Women, Infants and Children, or WIC, feeding program.

A year later, his views drew wider currency with the publicatio­n of his first book, “The Case Against Hunger.”

Hollings helped create the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion and write the National Coastal Zone Management Act. He also attached his name to the Gramm-Rudman bill aimed at balancing the federal budget.

Hollings angered many of his constituen­ts in 1991 when he opposed the congressio­nal resolution authorizin­g President George W. Bush to use force against Iraq.

Ernest Frederick Hollings was born in Charleston, S.C., on Jan. 1, 1922.

His father was a paper products dealer, and the family business went broke during the Depression.

Hollings graduated from the Citadel, the military college in Charleston, in 1942. He entered the Army and was decorated for his service during World War II. Back home, he earned a law degree from the University of South Carolina in 1947.

The next year, he was elected to the state House at age 26. He was elected lieutenant governor six years later and governor in 1958 at age 36.

 ?? MARY ANN CHASTAIN Associated Press ??
MARY ANN CHASTAIN Associated Press
 ?? Henry Griffin Associated Press ?? LONG AND COLORFUL POLITICAL CAREER Ernest Hollings, shown here in 1966, was a silver-haired, sharp-tongued orator whose influence in the nation’s capital never reached the levels he hoped.
Henry Griffin Associated Press LONG AND COLORFUL POLITICAL CAREER Ernest Hollings, shown here in 1966, was a silver-haired, sharp-tongued orator whose influence in the nation’s capital never reached the levels he hoped.

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