Ken Coon
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Kenneth Lloyd "Ken" Coon | |
Born | October 14, 1935 Marshall, Harrison County, Texas, USA |
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Residence | Little Rock, Pulaski County, Arkansas |
Occupation | Psychologist; Educator |
Political party | Republican; Arkansas gubernatorial nominee, 1974; lieutenant governor nominee, 1972; Republican state chairman, 1988-1990 |
Religious beliefs | Church of Christ |
Spouse | Sue Lynn Thompson Coon (born 1938, married 1956) |
Children | Catherine Lynn Coon (born 1957) of El Dorado Kenneth Coon, Jr. (born 1962) of Mountain View |
Notes
Though he polled few votes in his 1974 campaign for governor of Arkansas against David Pryor, Coon was part of the persistent organization which attempted to establish a two-party system in the heavily Democratic state.
(2) Coon once joked that he was "so honest that I might appear to be naive." |
Kenneth Lloyd "Ken" Coon, Sr. (born October 14, 1935), is a Little Rock educator, professional psychologist, and counselor who was also a pioneer in the development of the Republican Party (GOP) in the U.S. state of Arkansas. He was the GOP state chairman from 1988 to 1990. Earlier, he was the party's nominee for lieutenant governor (1972), its executive director (1973-1975), and its gubernatorial candidate (1974). He also ran for the United States House of Representatives in 1996 but lost in the primary.
Contents |
[edit] Early years, family, education
Coon was born in Marshall, the seat of Harrison County in east Texas, to Loyd Wesley Coon (1912-1998) and the former Ida Mae Sparks (1916-1994). The senior Coon was a native of Brookhaven, Mississippi, but had moved to Marshall with his family when he was a youngster. Loyd Coon was a farmer and dairyman. The family moved to Calhoun, a community in western Ouachita Parish near Monroe in northeastern Louisiana. Coon was among the thirty-one 1954 graduates of West Ouachita High School (then Calhoun High School). After high school, he did a stint in the United States Air Force.
In 1956, Coon married the former Sue Lynn Thompson (born 1938), also of Calhoun. They have two children, Catherine Lynn Coon (born 1957) of El Dorado, the seat of Union County in southern Arkansas, and Kenneth Coon, Jr. (born 1962), of Mountain View, the seat of Stone County in northern Arkansas, and two grandchildren.
Coon attended Louisiana Tech University in Ruston, the seat of Lincoln Parish, where he obtained a bachelor of science degree in biology. In 1962, he entered the master of science program in fisheries at Utah State University in Logan and received his degree in 1965.
[edit] Jaycees state president
After receipt of the graduate degree in Utah, Coon took a job with a federal agency, the Bureau of Commercial Fisheries, in Dumas, the seat of Desha County in southeastern Arkansas. He then worked for a catfish farmer in Tuckerman in Jackson County.
While he was in Dumas, Coon joined the Arkansas Jaycees. He was a member of the organization, officially the American Junior Chamber, from 1964-1972. In his last year, while in Fort Smith, he was the state Jaycee president.
[edit] Running for lieutenant governor, 1972
Recruited to run for office by both political parties, he chose the more difficult route in Arkansas: the fledgling Republican Party. It was not even until he ran for lieutenant governor in 1972 that his state party had even won its first presidential election since Reconstruction.
When he announced that he would seek the office of lieutenant governor, Coon was in his third year as a biology instructor at the University of Arkansas at Fort Smith (then West Ark Community College) in Sebastian County in western Arkansas, the more politically conservative part of the state. He challenged Democratic incumbent Bob C. Riley (1924-1994), a political science professor from Ouachita Baptist University in Arkadelphia, the seat of Clark County in south central Arkansas. Having lost an eye in World War II, Riley wore a trademark black patch. He claimed not even "to know" Coon when the Republican entered the race. Coon tried to tie Riley to Democratic presidential nominee George McGovern of South Dakota after Riley urged Arkansans to cast straight Democratic ballots.
The gubernatorial contest featured incumbent Democrat Dale Leon Bumpers of Charleston in Franklin County against Rockefeller's preferred successor, Len E. Blaylock of Perryville, who polled barely a fourth of the ballots. Bumpers had unseated Rockefeller in 1970.
Riley defeated Coon, 392,869 (62.8 percent) to 233,090 (37.2 percent). Coon won only three of the state's seventy-five counties: Pope, Searcy, and his home base of Sebastian. Coon almost won in frequently Republican Crawford County, where he received 49.6 percent of the vote.
In addition to Coon and Blaylock, the other Republican statewide candidates lost in Arkansas that year, including Wayne H. Babbitt for the U.S. Senate, future U.S. Representative Edwin R. Bethune for attorney general, and Jerry Climer for secretary of state.
After the race for lieutenant governor, Coon succeeded Neal Sox Johnson of Nashville, the seat of Howard County in southwestern Arkansas, as the party's paid executive director. It was his job to build up a party with little allegiance among the Arkansas electorate.
[edit] Coon and Nixon
Coon's gubernatorial race in 1974 was overshadowed by the Watergate scandal, which caused the defeat of many Republicans nationwide who had no connection to the stunning developments. Coon made a bold proposal: U.S. President Richard Nixon should "for the good of the country... temporarily turn over his duties" to then Vice President Gerald Ford Coon suggested that Nixon request an immediate trial on impeachment (then pending in the United States House of Representatives before the U.S. Senate, but he said that Nixon should not resign because the public needed the "absolute truth". Therefore, he maintained that a trial should be staged in the United States Senate once the House voted articles of impeachment.
"With the President's own admission that he lied to the American people about previous Watergate statements, that he kept pertinent information from the House Judiciary Committee, the courts, as well as his own lawyer, and his admission that, it is a foregone conclusion that the House will impeach him, it might seem to some that he should resign.... However, we must remain calm and not overreact. Our system of government provides that a man, even the President is innocent until proven guilty," Coon said in a press release.
Coon said that if Nixon resigned because of adverse poll ratings, the precedent would cause "irreparable damage" to the United States because "future presidents, if they made an unpopular decision, might also capitulate, leaving government solely in the hands of Congress." Coon's remarks came three days before Nixon resigned the presidency.
[edit] Challenging David Pryor, 1974
Coon's gubernatorial opponent was former U.S. Representative David H. Pryor, originally from Camden, the seat of Ouachita County in southern Arkansas. Two years earlier, Pryor had lost the Democratic senatorial primary to the more conservative incumbent John L. McClellan, also of Camden. Pryor emerged as a powerful candidate for governor after he defeated both Bob Riley and former Governor Orval Faubus in the Democratic primary.
While he ran for governor, Coon was enrolled in a Master of Arts program in career counseling at the University of Central Arkansas in Conway. He recalled that his wife often sat in on the classes with a tape recorder while he was campaigning.
Coon's campaign strategist was former state party chairman Odell Pollard, an attorney from Searcy in Conway County. Pollard called upon nursing home owners to support Coon because of Pryor's earlier congressional actions to increase federal regulations on the facilities. "He [Pryor] demeaned the nursing homes just so he could get national publicity," alleged Pollard, who became Republican national committeeman upon the death of Winthrop Rockefeller in 1973.
Coon filed a complaint with the Fair Campaign Practices Committee in Washington, D.C., that Pryor was "smearing" him. Pryor earlier had said that he might filed charges against Coon after Coon alleged that Pryor had received funds from Associated Milk Producers, Inc., which had also made an infamous illegal donation to U.S. Representative Wilbur Mills of Arkansas' Second Congressional District.
Coon proposed a one-year moratorium on construction of the proposed state office complex at the capitol grounds in Little Rock because of spiraling costs.
Arkansas voters chose Pryor for governor in an overwhelming vote in the Watergate year: 358,018 (65.6 percent) to Coon's 187,872 (34.4 percent). Coon won two of the three counties that he had carried for lieutenant governor in 1972: Sebastian and Searcy, and he polled at least 40 percent in twelve other counties. His defeat was nearly as bad numerically as had been Bumpers' margin over Rockefeller four years earlier. Coon's running mate for lieutenant governor, Leona Troxell of Rose Bud in White County north of Little Rock, was handily defeated by the Democrat former Attorney General Joe Purcell of Benton, the seat of Saline County.
[edit] Educational counseling
Coon left the GOP executive director's position in the fall of 1975 to begin work on his Ed.D.in counselor education at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville. He completed the program in 1979 and worked for two years for Blue Cross Blue Shield of Arkansas. He was licensed as a counselor in 1980.
Coon established his counseling and motivational speaking bureau, the Life Guide Center of Human Resource Development and Career Counseling. He was licensed as a psychologist in 1985. He is also an adjunct professor of human resources development for the Little Rock campus of Webster University of St. Louis.
Coon is a member of the Church of Christ.
[edit] Later political activities
In 1976, Coon favored the nomination of former California Governor Ronald Reagan as the GOP standard-bearer, rather than the unelected incumbent President Ford, whom most of the Arkansas Rockefeller Republicans favored. In the general election in Arkansas, Ford barely polled a third of the ballots against the Democrat Jimmy Carter. He similarly supported Reagan in 1980 and 1984.
Coon resurfaced politically in 1981, not as a candidate, but as the appointee of newly-elected Republican Governor Frank D. White to head the Arkansas Employment Security Division in Little Rock. He served until White was unseated after a single term in 1982 by Bill Clinton. Mrs. Troxell, his former ticket-mate, had held the same position for a time in the Rockefeller administration.
Coon's chairmanship of the Arkansas party coincided with a heated 1990 Republican gubernatorial primary between then U.S. Representative Tommy F. Robinson, a controversial former Democratic sheriff known for shoot-at-the-hip remarks, and the more conventional Sheffield Nelson, also a former Democrat and the favorite of the business establishment. The Robinson-Nelson contest was in retrospect believed to have so divided the minority GOP that once again it could not compete effectively, with Nelson as the nominee, against Governor Clinton. The primary even split many Republican families. Coon himself insists that he has never told anyone how he personally voted in the Robinson-Nelson contest. Clinton went on to defeat Nelson and then announced his presidential candidacy less than a year later even though he had pledged if reelected governor to have served a full four-year term from 1991 to 1995.
In 1996, Coon ran unsuccessfully in the Republican primary for the Little Rock-based open Second Congressional District seat, which was ultimately won by the liberal Democrat Vic Snyder. Later GOP efforts to topple Snyder failed.
In retrospect, Coon was something of a Republican transitional figure between the governorships of Winthrop Rockefeller (1967-1971) and the later Mike Huckabee (1994-2007).
[edit] Whitewater, David Hale, and Ken Coon
Coon was a tangential figure in the Arkansas Whitewater scandal of the 1990s. Judge David Hale made Coon an officer of the National Savings Life Insurance Company, a burial insurance firm. In 1998, Hale was scheduled to be tried in Arkansas state court for fraud in connection with the company, but his medical needs — a heart condition — halted the proceedings. In 1995, Samuel Dash, the ethics counsel to Whitewater special prosecutor Ken Starr informed Mark Stodola of the Pulaski County (Little Rock) prosecutor's office, that Stodola, a Democrat, could be prosecuted for obstruction of justice if he proceeded with charges against Hale. Dash told Stodola that Hale was cooperating in a federal investigation. Starr said that he would like to handle the insurance fraud matter at Hale's federal sentencing, but Stodola filed state charges against Hale.
No charges were brought against Coon, who once declared that he was "so honest that I might appear to be naive."
Preceded by Sterling R. Cockrill, 1970 |
Arkansas Republican candidate for lieutenant governor
Kenneth Lloyd "Ken" Coon, Sr. |
Succeeded by Leona Troxell, 1974 |
Preceded by Len Everette Blaylock, Sr., 1972 |
Arkansas Republican gubernatorial nominee
Kenneth Lloyd "Ken" Coon, Sr. |
Succeeded by Leon Griffith, 1976 |
Preceded by Edwin Ruthvin "Ed" Bethune, Jr. |
Arkansas Republican State Chairman
Kenneth Lloyd "Ken" Coon, Sr. |
Succeeded by Sheffield Nelson and Asa Hutchinson, co-chairmen |
[edit] References
Arkansas Gazette, Little Rock, Arkansas, November 1, 1972
Arkansas Democrat, Little Rock, August 6, 1974
Arkansas Times, July 5, 1996
Arkansas Election Statistics (Little Rock: Secretary of State), 1972 and 1974
Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report, October 12, 1974, p. 2719
Arkansas Gazette, November 1-3, 1974
Arkansas Outlook (Republican Party magazine), February 1973, October 1975
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