Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Ex-Arkansas senator and governor Dale Bumpers

- By Ken Miller

Dale Bumpers, a former Arkansas governor and U.S. senator who earned the nickname “giant killer” for taking down incumbents and who gave a passionate speech defending Bill Clinton during the president’s impeachmen­t trial, has died. He was 90.

Bumpers died Friday night in Little Rock, according to his son, Brent Bumpers. Bumpers was under hospice care and died due to natural causes and complicati­ons from a broken hip suffered in a recent fall, his son said.

Bumpers was a little-known lawyer from Charleston when he ran for the Democratic gubernator­ial nomination in 1970, against a field that included former Gov. Orval Faubus. After finishing second in the primary, Bumpers defeated Faubus for the Democratic nomination, then beat Republican incumbent Gov. Winthrop Rockefelle­r in the general election.

Four years later, Bumpers challenged and defeated incumbent Sen. J. William Fulbright in a Democratic primary, and went on to win the U.S. Senate seat.

Bumpers’ signature moment on the national stage came in 1999, just weeks after leaving the Senate, when he defended Clinton — who had worked for Fulbright’s 1974 campaign against Bumpers — before the U.S. Senate during his impeachmen­t trial.

Clinton had been impeached by the House on charges of lying about his sexual relationsh­ip with Monica Lewinsky while testifying before a grand jury in the Paula Jones sexual harassment case.

Bumpers called the matter a sex scandal while delivering the closing argument as the Senate considered removing Clinton from office. Clinton was acquitted by the Senate. Bumpers would later say that he didn’t want to give the closing statement, but Senate leaders and Clinton asked him to do so.

A statement from Clinton and Hillary Clinton did not mention the impeachmen­t, but praised Bumpers’ work as governor and senator.

“For more than 40 years Hillary and I cherished his friendship. I am grateful that his advice made me a better governor and president,” Clinton said. “I loved him. I loved learning from him and laughing with him. I will miss him very much.”

Bumpers had been known in the Senate for his oratorical skills, as well as his opposition to amendments to the U.S. Constituti­on, including one that would prohibit busing of public school students.

Bumpers was considered a potential Democratic candidate for president in 1980 and 1984, but declined to run. He would later say he believed his best chance at winning the presidency had been in 1976, when Georgia Democrat Jimmy Carter won the White House.

Bumpers also was an attorney for the Charleston School Board in1954 when the board voted to integrate, two months after the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark Brown v. Board of Education ruling that outlawed segregated schools. It was the first district among the 11 former Confederat­e states to integrate.

“We did it because we thought it was the right thing to do,” Bumpers told The Associated Press in 2007.

Bumpers had won re-election to the Senate in 1986 by defeating current Gov. Asa Hutchinson, a Republican.

“The entire state mourns the loss of an Arkansas legend,” Hutchinson said in a statement Saturday. “In my first statewide race, Dale took me to school on Arkansas politics. He was a master storytelle­r, and his stump speaking was impossible to beat.”

 ?? AP FILE PHOTO ?? In this photo taken in 2013, former Arkansas Sen. Dale Bumpers speaks in Little Rock, Ark.
AP FILE PHOTO In this photo taken in 2013, former Arkansas Sen. Dale Bumpers speaks in Little Rock, Ark.

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