Gillis William Long

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Gillis William Long (May 4, 1923January 20, 1985) was among numerous members of the powerful Long political dynasty who held public office in Louisiana during the twentieth century. He served seven nonconsecutive terms in Congress but placed third in two campaigns for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination -- 1963 and 1971. Though he was elected to an eighth term in the U.S. House in 1984, he died seventeen days into that final term. He was a member of the Baptist Church.

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[edit] Early years

Long was born to Floyd H. Long and the former Birdie Shumake in Winnfield in Winn Parish. He was a cousin of Huey P. Long, Jr., Rose McConnell Long, Russell B. Long, Earl Long, Dr. George Shannon Long, and Speedy O. Long. Long was the representative of the since disbanded Eighth Congressional District between 1963 and 1965 and again from 1973 until his death of heart failure in 1985. He attended public schools in Winnfield and Alexandria. He received a bachelor's degree from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, where he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. In 1951, he received his J.D. law degree from LSU. He was admitted to practice before the Louisiana Supreme Court in 1951 and before the United States Supreme Court in 1954.

He served in the infantry in World War II, rose from the rank of private to captain, and was awarded the Purple Heart. He was part of the Internal Security Detachment at the Nuremberg war trials in Germany after the war. He was legal counsel to the Senate Select Committee on Small Business from 1951-1952. Long was chief counsel to the U.S. House of Representatives Special Committee on Campaign Expenditures from 1952-1954 and in 1956.

[edit] First election to Congress, 1962

In 1962, Gillis Long unseated incumbent U.S. Representative Harold B. McSween, a savings-and-loan executive, also from Alexandria, in the Democratic primary. McSween had been elected to Congress in 1958 and 1960, after the death of Earl Kemp Long, who had defeated him in the 1960 Democratic primary. McSween in turn was chosen by the Democratic State Central Committee to run in the 1960 general election as the party's nominee. Because he had no Republican opposition, McSween was in effect reelected some two months after he had been denied renomination!

In 1962, Gillis Long, after he turned aside McSween, faced Republican opposition from John W. "Jack" Lewis, Jr., the postmaster in Alexandria since 1954, who resigned to make the race. A former lumberman, Lewis said that he was challenging Long to bring the two-party system to Louisiana. Long prevailed, 25,682 (64 percent) to Lewis's 14,448 (36 percent). Lewis won only in La Salle Parish, one of the most Republican of Louisiana's 64 parishes. This was the same seat vacated by the death of Dr. George Shannon Long, a lawyer and a dentist, in 1958. The legendary Earl Long had been nominated for the seat but had died before the general election. Indeed, Gillis Long saw himself as the long-term heir of Earl Long, whom he greatly admired.

[edit] Bitten by the gubernatorial bug, 1963

Hardly had he taken office as a congressman in 1963 than Long was bitten by the gubernatorial bug. In what proved to be a major error in judgment, Long entered the December 1963 Democratic primary for governor. One of his campaign advertisements featured the 40-year-old crew-cut Long standing before a state charity hospital and declaring that the "Longs Have Always Stood for Progress." He was hence running "as a Long" not just as a candidate who happened to be named Long.

Gillis Long finished a close third behind John McKeithen and former New Orleans Mayor deLesseps Story Morrison, Sr. The Long forces that year were divided between Congressman Long and Public Service Commissioner McKeithen, whose affiliation with the Longs went back to his one term in the Louisiana legislature during an Earl Long administration from 1948-1952. The family split hence worked against Gillis Long's chances of securing the Democratic gubernatorial nomination. Mrs. Blanche R. Long (1902-1998), Earl's widow and a former Democratic national committeewoman, was McKeithen's campaign manager. Her nephew by marriage, Senator Russell Long, was allied with Gillis Long.

Moreover, his less than a year of service in the U.S. House at that point did not impress many voters in regard to elective office experience. McKeithen went on to win the party runoff primary against the more liberal Morrison and the general election against the conservative Republican Charlton Lyons of Shreveport.

[edit] Speedy Long challenges Gillis Long, 1964

Having failed to become governor, Long was challenged for renomination in 1964 by another cousin, Speedy O. Long (born 1928), of Jena, later Trout, in La Salle Parish], who as a young state senator had lost a race for insurance commissioner in the same December 1963 Democratic primary. Speedy Long ran on McKeithen's intraparty "ticket" that also included Ashton Mouton of Lafayette for lieutenant governor. Of course, only McKeithen had won; both ticket mates failed.

Speedy Long opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 on libertarian and constitutional grounds. He took the view that the owner of public accommodations could "discriminate" as he chose as part of his private property rights. It was the same position taken that year by the Republican presidential nominee, Senator Barry Goldwater of Arizona. Gillis Long and all eight Louisiana members of the House voted against the civil rights law. The segregationist Speedy Long, however, claimed that Gillis Long was really an integrationist because Long had voted to increase the size of the House Rules Committee in 1963 in order to permit the placing of the civil rights measure on the congressional agenda.

In this much watched "battle of the Longs," Speedy Long prevailed by 4,900 votes. Speedy Long noted that Gillis Long had compiled a voting record more like the most liberal member of the Louisiana delegation, Hale Boggs of New Orleans, instead of the most conservative members, Joe D. Waggonner, Jr., of Plain Dealing and Otto Ernest Passman of Monroe. As he pledged in the 1964 primary, Speedy Long voted in the Waggonner-Passman mode, rather than that of Representatives Boggs and Gillis Long.

[edit] Fighting the "War on Poverty"

After his defeat in the summer of 1964, Gillis Long accepted an appointment from President Johnson as assistant secretary of the Office of Economic Opportunity, often referred to as the "War on Poverty," in 1965-1966.

Despite his Long heritage, Gillis Long was reared in a poor family. Earl Long gave Gillis' father, Floyd Long, a job at the Central State Hospital mental institution in Pineville also in Rapides Parish. Hence Gillis' family moved to Alexandria. Throughout his long political career, Gillis Long struggled to find ways to address the lingering problems of poverty. He appealed to poorer voters, with the pledge that he would try to improve income levels in Louisiana.

[edit] A second gubernatorial bid, 1971

Main Article: Louisiana gubernatorial election, 1971-72

Gillis Long, as an ex-congressman, also ran in the 1971 Democratic primary. Again he finished third, behind State Senator J. Bennett Johnston, Jr., of Shreveport and Seventh District Congressman Edwin Washington Edwards of Crowley. Long nevertheless ran ahead of his cousin Speedy Long and the fourth-place finisher, former Governor Jimmie Davis. Edwards went on to take the governorship in a runoff with Johnston and then in a general election with Republican David C. Treen.

[edit] Succeeding Speedy Long in Congress

Speedy Long did not seek a fifth term in 1972. Gillis Long, who had resumed his private law practice, instead ran to reclaim the seat; his task was alleviated by a former gubernatorial opponent and a former congressional colleague, Governor Edwards, who supported a redistricting plan that required the Eighth District to take in new liberal territory far to the south of Alexandria. After winning the Democratic]] nomination for the seat, Gillis Long defeated (1) the surgeon Dr. S.R. Abramson of Marksville in Avoyelles Parish, the American Independent Party nominee, who ran second in the general election, and (2) a weak Republican opponent, Roy C. Strickland, a trucking executive from Gonzales in Ascension Parish. Long polled 72,607 votes (68.6 percent), to Abramson's 17,844 (16.8 percent), and Strickland's 15,517 (14.6 percent).

Long said that Dr. Abramson's attacks on him had backfired. Abramson had criticized Long for his role in the federal anti-poverty program in Louisiana after Long's defeat in the 1964 congressional primary by cousin Speedy O. Long. Through this agency, Long had become friendly with Senator George McGovern's vice-presidential selection, R. Sargent Shriver, an Illinois native and an in-law of the Kennedy brothers. Long's record moved sharply to the left in his later years in the U.S. House; at times, his votes were consistent with the Black Caucus, not with the more moderate of southern Democrats then still serving.

Having decided not to run for Congress in the reapportioned district, Speedy Long was instead elected district attorney of the 28th Judicial District covering La Salle Parish. He served as the D.A. from 1973-1985. Speedy Long, like Gillis Long, twice sought the governorship in vain. In the 1971 Democratic gubernatorial primary, while he was still serving in Congress, Speedy Long ran far behind the other major candidates. The winner that year was Edwin Edwards. In 1987, Speedy Long ran in the jungle primary but again finished far behind the other major candidates. The winner that year was Edwards' main opponent, Charles E. "Buddy" Roemer, III.

[edit] Congressman Long cements his hold on 8th District

His gubernatorial fever seemingly behind him, Gillis Long thrust himself into the duties of a congressman once more in 1973. A man of great determination but who feared for his own health, Long believed that government was essential to protect the interests of the poorest, most vulnerable citizens. His voting record was liberal by southern standards. William J. "Bill" Dodd called Gillis Long the "most left-wing of all the Longs." Still, no strong conservatives emerged to challenge him for reelection.

In 1976, an independent with ties to the old White Citizens' Council and the defunct Louisiana States' Rights Party, Kent H. Courtney (1918-1997), also of Alexandria, ran against Long. No Republican filed for the race. Courtney, a brother of former States Rights' lieutenant governor candidate Cy Courtney of New Orleans, obtained only 6,526 votes (5.8 percent).

In September 1978, Republican Robert Mitchell of Forest Hill in south Rapides Parish challenged Long in the first jungle primary held in Louisiana for congressional elections. The conservative Mitchell, who did virtually no campaigning, polled 20,547 ballots (20.3) percent to Long's 80,666 (79.7 percent). Mitchell was setting the stage for potentially stronger Republican campaigns in the Eighth District in later years.

In 1980, another Forest Hill resident, Republican Clyde C. Holloway, an independent nurseryman, challenged Long. Robert Mitchell, the loser in the 1978 race against Long, ran again. Long prevailed with 75,433 votes (68.9 percent) to Holloway's 27,816 (25.4 percent) and Mitchell's 6,243 (5.7 percent). Holloway had used his candidacy in part to rally opposition to a cross-parish school busing order issued by U.S. District Judge Nauman Scott (1915-2001), based in Alexandria. Holloway would run again for the seat in 1985 in the special election called to select Long's congressional successor.

In 1982, Long defeated Democratic State Senator Edward G. "Ned" Randolph, Jr., of Alexandria, with 71,103 ballots (59.6 percent) to Randolph's 46,656 (39.1 percent). In 1984, Long, in what would be his last election, defeated Republican Darrell Williamson, the Alexandria city planning director and later the public works director. Long polled 116,141 votes (80 percent) to Williamson's 32,780 (20 percent). Gillis Long had indeed become entrenched in his heavily Democratic district. Not even the Ronald Reagan phenomenon of 1980 or 1984 could threaten Long in the least. Williamson was removed from his public works position in 2005 in a dispute with then Mayor Ned Randolph.

[edit] His widow succeeds Long in Congress

Ironically, Long, who had campaigned for failed Democratic presidential nominee Walter F. Mondale in 1984, died at the time of Reagan's second inauguration. The president honored Long, with whom he disagreed on many issues, by calling in his inaugural speech for a moment of silence. Long is buried in the Alexandria National Cemetery in Pineville.

In the special congressional election mandated in 1985 to choose a successor to Gillis Long, the winner was his popular widow, Catherine Small "Cathy" Long, a native of Dayton, Ohio. The Longs were married on June 21, 1947. At the time of his death, they had been together for nearly 38 years. William J. "Bill" Dodd, an astute observer of Louisiana politics, described Cathy Long in his memoirs as "the perfect wife for a politician. She was smart and made everyone feel perfectly at ease, and she was eager to help her husband . . . everyone loved Cathy." Coincidentally, Mrs. Long bore both the names "Small" and "Long."

Mrs. Long defeated two opponents, Republican Clyde Holloway, who had lost in 1980 to her husband, and then State Representative John W. "Jock" Scott, son of U.S. District Judge Nauman Scott. (Though Scott was a Democrat at the time of the special election, he switched parties later in 1985. He ran again for Congress in the revised Fifth District in 2004 but was defeated by incumbent fellow Republican Rodney Alexander.)

Unlike some of his fellow officeholders in Louisiana, Gillis Long was immensely loyal to the Democratic party, having never bolted to support any Republican candidate for any reason. In addition to his commitment to party, Gillis Long was known for his deep patriotism, enhanced by his military service.

When he died, Gillis Long was the chairman of the House Democratic Caucus. Long was a transitional figure from the hegemony of conservative "Louisiana Democrats" who had supported segregation and states' rights to the later era of liberal "national Democrats," who embraced civil rights and federal social programs without hesitation. Long also consolidated his hold on the district and provided a textbook case how one could use effective constitutent service, media coverage, and public relations to remain in Congress even when he repeatedly voted against the wishes of his conservative constituents.

[edit] Bill Dodd assesses Gillis Long's legacy

In his Peapatch Politics, Dodd offered this view of Gillis Long:

"Gillis tried too hard and tried at the wrong times to become governor, plus he never did analyze his own strong and weak points. He didn't want to be a hypocrite or compromiser like Huey and Earl, but he never determined what his real goals were. He didn't want to be a liberal, yet he has been labeled the wildest and most left-wing of all the Longs. What Gillis never could understand was that Long is synonymous with people -- poor people and working people. The Long name is to the political dreams of the majority what whiskey is to the poor wage earner on a Saturday night. To win with a Long gave the poor citizens a surge of synthetic power. The pulpwood cutter could get drunk on Saturday night and for a few hours fancy himself the owner of the paper mill. That the Longs didn't always deliver, just as the drunken worker's dream didn't come true, was not the point. It was better for the worker to be happy with a hope while drunk than to live without hope . . . with his unsolvable problems and hopeless desires. . . .

"Gillis didn't want to lie to the poor devils, and he didn't have enough political sense to know that they wanted him to lie to them. He told them about the wonderful things they wanted the government to do, but he dashed their dreams by showing them that their great expectations could not be realized. He was right morally, but dead wrong politically. The Long clan [Blanche Long et al] wouldn't go for him because he was truthful,; and the other side [anti-Longs] wouldn't because he was a Long. To Gillis, the end did not justify the means."

[edit] Remembering Gillis Long

Gillis Long was inducted posthumously into the Louisiana Political Museum and Hall of Fame in Winnfield in 1994, along with his late colleague, Longite Senator Allen J. Ellender. Also inducted was former Representative Lindy Boggs, widow of Representative Hale Boggs of New Orleans.

Long is also remembered through the Gillis Long Center in Carville, a facility for the treatment of Hansen's disease patients, the Gillis Long Poverty Law Center of Loyola University School of Law in New Orleans, and the Gillis Long Bridge across the Red River from Jackson Street in Alexandria into Pineville.

[edit] References

  • Billy Hathorn, "The Republican Party in Louisiana, 1920-1980," Master's thesis (1980), Northwestern State University in Natchitoches
  • William J. "Bill" Dodd, Peapatch Politics: The Earl Long Era in Louisiana Politics, Baton Rouge: Claitor's Publishing, 1991


Preceded by:
Harold B. McSween
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Louisiana's 8th congressional district

1963–1965
Succeeded by:
Speedy O. Long
Preceded by:
Speedy O. Long
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Louisiana's 8th congressional district

1973–1985
Succeeded by:
Mary Catherine Small Long