USA TODAY International Edition

Turning 98, Bob Dole has a few things he’d like to say

- Susan Page

Bob Dole turns 98 years old Thursday and is battling lung cancer, but he is still outspoken about what’s going on in the Washington he once helped lead, including the need to protect the Senate filibuster, which some Democrats want to dismantle as a barrier to progress on their agenda.

“Both sides use it,” the former Senate majority leader noted of the parliament­ary rule, then he praised “the guy from West Virginia” who is defending it. That would be Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin. Dole decided on the spot that he’d like to meet Manchin – to invite him over for a chat, no big agenda, across party lines. Like the old days.

“I keep fairly busy,” Dole said during a 45- minute interview in his apartment in the Watergate complex, and

he has more things he wants to do.

He hopes to regain enough strength to make “one more trip home,” to Kansas, to visit the Veterans Affairs medical center in Topeka and meet with students at the University of Kansas’ Dole Institute of Politics in Lawrence.

When he blows out the candles on his birthday cake – at a celebratio­n hosted by his wife, former North Carolina senator Elizabeth Dole, and joined by a dozen or so friends – he’ll make a wish for “pretty good health” for a while longer.

Robert Joseph Dole has had no shortage of health challenges, beginning with the grievous wounds suffered on a battlefield in Italy during World War II. They cost the 22- year- old second lieutenant in the Army’s 10th Mountain Division the use of his right arm and nearly his life.

Early this year, he was diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer and started a regime of chemothera­py “that was about to kill me.”

Now he’s receiving immunother­apy instead, less effective in fighting the disease but easier for him to tolerate.

The day after a treatment at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, he rested in a hospital chair, using oxygen, his breath sometimes labored but his mind clear and memory sharp.

Dole has held many of the jobs that matter most in Washington politics.

He was a member of the House of Representa­tives and chair of the Republican National Committee. A senator and, ultimately, the majority leader. A nominee for vice president ( as Gerald Ford’s running mate in 1976) and, after his third bid for the top job, the nominee for president, in 1996.

He was one of the few elders of the traditiona­l Republican establishm­ent to endorse Donald Trump for president in 2016 and the only former presidenti­al nominee to attend the convention that nominated Trump. In a split with the 45th president, Dole said there’s no question that Trump lost his reelection race in 2020 – narrowly perhaps but fair and square.

“He lost the election, and I regret that he did, but they did,” Dole said. “He had Rudy Giuliani running all over the country, claiming fraud. He never had one bit of fraud in all those lawsuits he filed and statements he made.”

“I’m a Trumper,” Dole said at one point during the conversati­on. But he added at another, “I’m sort of Trumped out.”

In his day, Dole was known for a quick wit and a sharp partisansh­ip, defending President Richard Nixon during the Watergate scandal and controvers­ially citing “Democrat wars” during the vice presidenti­al debate in 1976. His tone is mellower now, and the proudest achievemen­ts he cites are those he won in partnershi­ps with Democrats.

He and New York Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan forged a bipartisan compromise to extend the solvency of the Social Security system in 1983, and he and Massachuse­tts Sen. Ted Kennedy worked to pass the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act in 1990.

That willingnes­s to have a conversati­on, make a compromise, reach a deal seems elusive these days, he worries.

“I don’t like to second- guess, but I do believe we’ve lost something,” he said. “I can’t get my hand on it, but we’re just not quite where we should be, as the greatest democracy in the world. And I don’t know how you correct it, but I keep hoping that there will be a change in my lifetime.”

When Dole’s cancer diagnosis was announced in February, President Joe Biden dropped by the apartment to visit, bringing several of his grandchild­ren and staying for an hour and a half. The two men served together in the Senate for nearly 24 years – Biden as a Democrat from Delaware, Dole as a Republican from Kansas.

“A great, kind, upstanding, decent person,” Dole said of Biden. Even so, he said the new president is leaning too far left.

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 ?? MANUEL BALCE CENETA/ AP ?? Bob Dole is presented with the McGovernDo­le Leadership Award by Vice President Joe Biden in 2013.
MANUEL BALCE CENETA/ AP Bob Dole is presented with the McGovernDo­le Leadership Award by Vice President Joe Biden in 2013.

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