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Lawton Chiles

Lawton Mainor Chiles Jr. (April 3, 1930 – December 12, 1998) was an American politician and military officer. A member of the Democratic Party, he served as a United States senator from Florida from 1971 to 1989 and as the 41st governor of Florida from 1991 until his death in 1998.

Lawton Chiles
41st Governor of Florida
In office
January 8, 1991 – December 12, 1998
LieutenantBuddy MacKay
Preceded byBob Martinez
Succeeded byBuddy MacKay
United States Senator
from Florida
In office
January 3, 1971 – January 3, 1989
Preceded bySpessard Holland
Succeeded byConnie Mack III
Chair of the Senate Budget Committee
In office
January 3, 1987 – January 3, 1989
Preceded byPete Domenici
Succeeded byJim Sasser
Chair of the Senate Aging Committee
In office
January 3, 1979 – January 3, 1981
Preceded byFrank Church
Succeeded byJohn Heinz
Member of the Florida Senate
In office
November 8, 1966 – November 3, 1970
Preceded byRedistricted
Succeeded byBob Brannen
Constituency26th district (1966–1967)
28th district (1967–1970)
Member of the
Florida House of Representatives
from Polk County, Group 1
In office
November 4, 1958 – November 8, 1966
Preceded byRoy Surles
Succeeded byJohn R. Clark
Personal details
Born
Lawton Mainor Chiles Jr.

(1930-04-03)April 3, 1930
Lakeland, Florida, U.S.
DiedDecember 12, 1998(1998-12-12) (aged 68)
Tallahassee, Florida, U.S.
Resting place"Jubilee," Chiles family estate
Tallahassee, Florida
Political partyDemocratic
Spouse
(m. 1951)
Children4
RelativesKay Hagan (niece)
Alma materUniversity of Florida (BA, JD)[1]
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/service United States Army
Years of service1952–1954
RankFirst lieutenant
Battles/warsKorean War

A Korean War veteran, Chiles later returned to Florida for law school and eventually opened his own private practice in 1955. Three years later, Chiles entered politics with a successful bid for the Florida House of Representatives in 1958.

By 1966, Chiles left the Florida House to run for the Florida Senate. Despite 12 years in the Florida Legislature, Chiles was relatively unknown when he decided to bid for United States Senate in 1970. He embarked on a 1,003-mile walk from Pensacola to Key West for his campaign, earning him the nickname "Walkin' Lawton". It was successful and Chiles defeated his opponent William C. Cramer by a 53.9%–46.1% margin. Chiles was re-elected with relative ease in 1976 and 1982. He retired from the United States Senate in 1989.

Not long after his retirement, supporters convinced him to run for governor of Florida in 1990 against the unpopular incumbent Bob Martinez, and Chiles defeated Martinez by a 13-point margin (56.5% to 43.5%). During his first term as Governor, Chiles reformed health care and oversaw recovery efforts from Hurricane Andrew in 1992. Chiles faced a tough re-election bid in 1994 against Jeb Bush, a businessman and son of former President George H. W. Bush. Chiles prevailed over Bush by fewer than 64,000 votes. During his second term, Chiles reformed education in Florida. On December 12, 1998, he suffered a heart attack and died at the Florida Governor's Mansion, leaving Lieutenant Governor Buddy MacKay to serve the remaining 24 days of Chiles' unexpired term. Jeb Bush succeeded MacKay. As of to date, Chiles's reelection in 1994 is the last time a Democrat was elected Governor of Florida, with McKay being the most recent Democratic governor.

Early life Edit

Chiles was born in Polk County, Florida near Lakeland, the son of Margaret Kate (née Patterson) and Lawton Mainor Chiles. He attended public school at Lakeland High School, then the University of Florida at Gainesville. At the University of Florida, he was active in student politics. Chiles was a member of Phi Delta Phi International Legal Honor Society Cockrell Inn and was inducted into both the university Hall of Fame (the most prestigious honor a student can receive at UF) and Florida Blue Key.

He was a member of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. He graduated in 1952. Following his college years, Chiles entered the Korean War, commissioned as an artillery officer in the United States Army. After the war, Chiles returned to the University of Florida for law school, from which he graduated in 1955; he passed the state bar exam that year and went into private practice in Lakeland. He married Rhea Grafton.

Early career Edit

In 1958, Chiles, a Democrat, was elected to the Florida House of Representatives.[2] It was essentially still a one-party state, as most African Americans were disfranchised by a constitution and laws passed since the turn of the century.[3] Chiles served in the House until 1966, when he was elected to a seat in the Florida Senate, which he held until 1970.[2] While in the state senate, Chiles served on the 1968 Florida Law Revision Commission. During his time in the state legislature, Chiles continued to work as a lawyer and developer in Lakeland. He was one of the initial investors in the Red Lobster restaurant chain.[4] He was a member of the Florida Society of the Sons of the American Revolution.[5]

The 1,003-mile walk Edit

 
Pair of Lawton Chiles' walking shoes on display at the Florida State Capitol.

In 1970, Chiles decided to run for a seat in the United States Senate. At the time, despite his 12 years in the state legislature, he was largely unknown outside his Lakeland-based district. To generate some media coverage and meet people across the state, Chiles embarked upon a 1,003-mile, 91-day walk across Florida from Pensacola to Key West. The walk earned him the recognition he sought, as well as the nickname that would follow him throughout his political career– "Walkin' Lawton". In his journal Chiles wrote that sometimes he walked alone, while other times he met ordinary Floridians along the way. In later years, Chiles would recall the walk allowed him to see Florida's natural beauty, as well as the state's problems, with fresh eyes. Some Florida reporters said that Chiles enjoyed campaigning much more than governing.[6]

Chiles v. Cramer Edit

In the general election campaign, Chiles faced U.S. Representative William C. Cramer of St. Petersburg, the first Republican to have served in Congress from Florida since Reconstruction. Cramer, a graduate of Harvard Law School, questioned Chiles's votes as a state senator on several matters regarding insurance. One law increased automobile liability rates by 50 percent over two years, and another raised premiums for school bus insurance, at a time that Chiles's insurance agency in Lakeland held the policy on the Polk County School Board, but such "conflict-of-interest" accusations seemed to have little political effect.[7]

The self-made Cramer depicted Chiles as coming from a "silver spoon" background with a then net worth of $300,000, but the media ignored questions about the candidates' personal wealth.[8] Instead, reporters focused on the walk, often termed a "public relations stroke of genius." Prior to the walk, Chiles was identified by only 5 percent of voters; afterwards, he had widespread positive recognition.[9]

The Tallahassee Democrat forecast correctly that Chiles's "weary feet and comfortable hiking boots" would carry the 40-year-old "slow-country country lawyer" with "boyish amiability", and "back-country common sense and methodical urbane political savvy" to victory.[10] Chiles's "Huck Finn" image was contrasted one night in Miami when he held a fried chicken picnic while the Republicans showcased a black-tie $1,000-a-plate dinner.[11]

Cramer could not match Chiles's public appeal. An observer described Cramer's "charisma" as "a speech in the Congressional Record." A Cramer aide said it was difficult "selling experience. It's not a sexy thing."[12] A Chiles advertisement urged that voters "Vote for yourself. Chiles walked our streets and highways to hear what you have to say. That's why a vote for Chiles is like a vote for yourself."[11] With "shoe leather and a shoestring budget", Chiles presented himself as a "problem solver who doesn't automatically vote 'No' on every issue."[13]

Cramer said that he should have demanded more debates and rebuffed the walking tactic: "I never could get that turned around. He was walking, and I was running. But the press was enamored with the walk ... Every time he was asked a question about where he stood, he would quote somebody that he met on the campaign trail to state what he was to do when he got to the Senate consistent with what that constituent had said. The basic approach gave him more credibility to his walk, which had nothing to do with his qualifications for the Senate but gave him free publicity and appealed to the 'little man.'"[14]

With ecology a national concern by 1970, Chiles announced his opposition to the Cross Florida Barge Canal, which had originally been supported by every member of the Florida congressional delegation. The project, one-third completed, was cancelled early in 1971 and is now a protected green belt corridor. Chiles endorsed federal funding to remove waste from the bass-teeming Lake Apopka in central Florida. By contrast, Cramer received little credit from environmentalists although he had drafted the Water Pollution Control Act of 1956 and had sponsored legislation to protect alligators, stop beach erosion, dredge harbors, and remove oil spills. Instead, Cramer's critics accused him of having weakened anti-pollution laws. Cramer questioned Chiles's opposition to a proposed severance tax on phosphate mining, which particularly impacted Tampa Bay. Cramer declared that "Liberal Lawton has protected the phosphate industry -- the state's single largest polluter."[15]

By 1974, a survey showed Floridians favored limits on development, and 60 percent urged more government funding for conservation.[16]

Only three newspapers—in Orlando, Fort Myers, and Pasco County—supported Cramer in the race against Chiles.[17] In the face of media opposition, Cramer failed to pin the "liberal" label on Chiles, who called himself by the rare hybrid term "progressive conservative."[18] Explaining Cramer's inability to make "liberalism" an issue in 1970, The New York Times observed that Chiles and the gubernatorial candidate, Reubin Askew of Pensacola, "convey amiable good ol' boy qualities with moderate-to-liberal aspirations that do not strike fear into the hearts of conservatives."[19]

Chiles relied heavily on his support from the retiring senator and former governor Spessard Holland. He noted that Cramer had expected to face former governor Farris Bryant, who like LeRoy Collins, Gurney's foe in 1968, had ties to the administration of President Lyndon B. Johnson. Bryant lost the senatorial primary to Chiles. "I'm not anything Cramer thought he would be running against. So he's reduced to telling lies about me," Chiles quipped.[17] Chiles said that Cramer can bring Nixon, Agnew, Reagan, and anybody else he wants. ... I'll take Holland on my side against all of them."[20]

Cramer said a Republican-majority Senate would lead to the removal of controversial Senator J. William Fulbright of Arkansas, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee who had long opposed the Vietnam War. Chiles, however, retorted that if Republicans controlled the Senate other southern Democrats would also forfeit committee chairmanships earned through their seniority.[21]

U.S. Senator Edit

Chiles was twice re-elected to the U.S. Senate -- 1976 and 1982, both heavily Democratic years. Chiles, never flashy, was considered a moderate lawmaker who rarely made waves. He served as the chairman of the Special Committee on Aging of the 96th Congress (1979–1981), and in the 100th Congress (1987–1989) served as chairman of the influential Senate Budget Committee. While heading the Budget Committee, he played a key role in the 1987 revision of the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act.[22][23]

In 1985, Chiles underwent quadruple-bypass heart surgery. After his recovery, he became increasingly frustrated with the slow pace of work in the Senate, complaining that it was too difficult to get anything done. Accordingly, he announced in December 1987 that he would not seek re-election the next year.[24] Chiles was succeeded by Republican Connie Mack.

Governor of Florida Edit

 
Chiles' official portrait as Governor

After the surgery, Chiles developed clinical depression,[25] and was treated with Prozac.[26] He retired from the Senate in 1989 and intended to retire from politics entirely. However, several supporters convinced him to enter the 1990 Florida governor's race against Republican incumbent Bob Martinez. During the Democratic Party primary, his opponent Bill Nelson attempted to make an issue of Chiles' age and health, a strategy that backfired badly in a state with a large population of retirees.[27][28]

Chiles ran a campaign to "reinvent" the state's government, and defeated Martinez to take office in 1991.[28] During his first term as governor, Chiles managed to accomplish very little. Although he developed ambitious health-care and tax reform packages, neither passed in the hostile state legislature. The early years of his term were troubled by a national economic recession that severely damaged Florida's tourism-based economy, and by Hurricane Andrew, which struck near Homestead in August 1992.

Chiles ran for re-election in the 1994 election against Republican Jeb Bush.[29] During the campaign season, Bush ran a television advertisement which featured the mother of a teenage girl who had been abducted and murdered many years before. The mother stated that "Her killer is still on death row, and we're still waiting for justice. We won't get it from Lawton Chiles because he's too liberal on crime. . . Lawton Chiles has let us down. . . I know Jeb Bush. He'll make criminals serve their sentences and enforce the death penalty. Lawton Chiles won't," referring to Chiles not signing the convicted killer's death warrant.[30] Chiles responded that he did not sign a death warrant because the case was still on appeal.[31] The Democratic governor further claimed a record of support for the death penalty, having presided over 18 executions during his two terms (among them Judy Buenoano, the first Floridian woman executed since 1848). Moreover, after the botched electrocution of Pedro Medina in 1997, and despite significant public criticism, Chiles refused to endorse the use of lethal injection as a lawful form of execution.[32] The new method was introduced under Bush's administration in 1999 after the execution of Allen Lee Davis.

The 1994 election was memorable for its series of debates between Bush and Chiles. During the last debate on November 1, Chiles said to Bush, "My momma told me, sticks and stones may break my bones, but names will never hurt me. But let me tell you something about the old liberal. The old he-coon walks just before the light of day."[33] Bush and many others did not understand the reference, but the quote gained significant media attention. After the debate, Chiles remained oblique, saying "It's sort of like saying, "Don't mess with the Lone Ranger.'" The next day, Lt. Governor Buddy MacKay explained that the he-coon was the oldest and wiliest raccoon in the pack, according to Florida cracker folklore. Raccoons were hunted by the light of the moon, and the he-coon would wait all night while the young raccoons ran from the dogs, tiring them out. Then, just before the light of day, the he-coon would leave his lair and walk in the open, safe from the dogs. Chiles was implying that he was the he-coon, and just as the he-coon walked before dawn, he would score a comeback victory against Bush.[34] The quip was a direct appeal to older, rural, ancestral Floridians, whose loyalty to Democratic candidates had waned over the past several decades.[35] Seven days later, as Republicans swept the 1994 Florida elections in almost every respect, Chiles bucked the trend, winning reelection in an upset by about 64,000 votes, 1.52% of the total vote. He is the last Democrat to win a gubernatorial election in Florida.[36] Chiles' "he-coon" quote has become a well-known moment in Florida politics, often recalled and referenced in headlines and Florida political debate.[37]

Chiles' second term as governor was notable as the first time in state history that a Democratic governor had a legislature controlled by the Republican Party. Despite this, he had some successes, including a successful lawsuit he and state attorney general Bob Butterworth filed against the tobacco industry, which resulted in an $11.3 billion settlement for the state. He also won approval for a $2.7 billion statewide school construction program.

In 1995, Chiles sought treatment for a neurological problem that was later diagnosed as a mild stroke after he awoke with nausea, slurred speech and loss of coordination; and it would be determined dehydration might have caused the episode.[38] He recovered fully, which was credited to prompt treatment.[39][40]

Death Edit

 
Rhea Chiles embracing her son Bud during the funeral of Lawton Chiles, on December 15, 1998

Ineligible to run a third time, Chiles supported the lieutenant governor, his personal friend Buddy MacKay, in the 1998 Florida governor's race against Jeb Bush. Bush, however, scored an easy victory over MacKay. On December 12 that year, just three weeks before his long-awaited retirement was to begin, Chiles suffered from an abnormal heart rhythm while exercising on a cycling machine in the Governor's Mansion gymnasium. He died suddenly shortly afterwards, at the age of 68.[41]

 
Chiles' funeral procession stops in front of the Florida State Capitol in Tallahassee, Florida

Funeral services were held at Faith Presbyterian Church in Tallahassee on December 16, 1998, following a funeral procession that traced part of his walk from the 1970 Senate campaign from the panhandle town of Century to Tallahassee. Chiles was initially buried in a church cemetery in Tallahassee; however, within a year his wife had the body moved to a 200-acre (81 ha) tract 15 miles (24 km) east of Tallahassee, a place they named Jubilee.[42] He was succeeded in office by MacKay, who served until Bush's term began on January 5, 1999.

Legacy Edit

Legislative and executive programs Edit

Chiles was known as a health care and children's advocate throughout his career. He emphasized health coverage for the uninsured and led a campaign to create the National Commission for Prevention of Infant Mortality in the late 1980s. In 1994, he fought for the creation of regional health care alliances throughout the state, which allow small businesses to pool their health care dollars and broaden coverage while saving money. He also created the Florida Department of Elder Affairs.[43]

In 1992, Chiles created the Florida Healthy Start program to provide a comprehensive prenatal and infant care program available to all pregnant women and infants across the state; since the program's inception the state's infant mortality rate has dropped 18%. In 1996, Chiles appointed a Governor's Commission on Education to examine the state's school system. One of the significant recommendations that came from that commission eventually led to the highly controversial 2002 state constitutional amendment restricting Florida's school class sizes.[citation needed]

In 1997, anti-abortion advocacy group Choose Life collected 10,000 signatures and filed the $30,000 fee required under Florida law at the time to submit an application for a new specialty plate. State Senator Tom Lee sponsored a bill in support of the tag's creation. The bill passed both houses of the Florida State Legislature in early 1998, but was vetoed by Chiles, who stated that license plates are not the "proper forum for debate" on political issues.[44][45]

Judicial appointments Edit

Perhaps his greatest legacy was his impact on the Florida Supreme Court, where his appointments continued to have a major impact on state and national events long after Chiles' death. Chiles appointed Justice Major B. Harding in 1991, Justice Charles T. Wells in 1994, Justice Harry Lee Anstead in 1994, Justice Barbara J. Pariente in 1997, and Justice R. Fred Lewis in 1998.[citation needed] Chiles and incoming Governor Jeb Bush jointly appointed Justice Peggy A. Quince in 1998 just a few days before Chiles' death. Quince was jointly appointed because her term as Justice would begin the exact moment that Bush's first term as governor began, so there was a legal question which governor had the authority to appoint her. Bush and Chiles agreed to make a joint appointment to avoid a lawsuit over the question.[46]

Thus, at one point, Chiles had appointed five of the seven Justices and had jointly appointed the sixth. Chiles' appointments formed the Supreme Court majorities that decided the following major cases:

  • In 2006, the Court struck down a law passed by the Florida State Legislature that had created the United States' first statewide education voucher program. The majority in this case consisted of Wells, Anstead, Pariente, Lewis, and Quince. Bush appointees Raoul G. Cantero and Kenneth B. Bell dissented.[citation needed]
  • In 2004, the court struck down another piece of legislation from the Florida legislature designed to reverse a lower court decision in the Terri Schiavo case. This decision was unanimous and included Bush appointees Cantero and Bell.[47] By this time, Harding had retired.
  • In the 2000 presidential election controversy, the Florida Supreme Court ordered a statewide recount in the disputed election pitting George W. Bush against Al Gore. The United States Supreme Court later reversed that ruling. The Florida Supreme Court majority in this case consisted of Anstead, Pariente, Lewis, and Quince. Dissenting Justices were Wells, Harding, and Leander J. Shaw Jr.,[48] an appointee of Governor Bob Graham. Shaw retired in early 2003 and was replaced by Bell.

Relatives Edit

Chiles' niece was former U.S. Senator Kay Hagan of North Carolina, a Democrat elected in 2008. Hagan was the daughter of Chiles' sister Jeannette. Chiles' son, "Bud" Chiles, ran for the position of Governor of Florida without party affiliation in a grassroots campaign. Like his father, Bud embarked on a walking tour of the state, listening and visiting with local communities in Florida.[49] On September 2, 2010, Chiles dropped out of the race citing "continuing down this road could have unintended consequences, dividing those who hold common goals..." Chiles threw his support behind Alex Sink.[50]

Electoral history Edit

Democratic primary for United States Senator from Florida, 1970

  • C. Farris Bryant – 240,222 (32.90%)
  • Lawton Chiles – 188,300 (25.79%)
  • Fred Schultz – 175,745 (24.07%)
  • Alcee Hastings – 91,948 (12.59%)
  • Joel Daves – 33,939 (4.65%)

Democratic runoff for United States Senator from Florida, 1970

1970 United States Senate election in Florida

1976 United States Senate election in Florida

  • Lawton Chiles (D, Inc.) – 1,799,518 (62.98%)
  • John Grady (R) – 1,057,886 (37.02%)

1982 United States Senate election in Florida

  • Lawton Chiles (D, Inc.) – 1,637,667 (61.72%)
  • Van B. Poole (R) – 1,015,330 (38.27%)

Democratic primary for Governor of Florida, 1990

  • Lawton Chiles – 746,325 (69.49%)
  • Bill Nelson – 327,731 (30.51%)

1990 Florida gubernatorial election

Democratic primary for Governor of Florida, 1994

  • Lawton Chiles (Inc.) – 603,657 (72.17%)
  • Jack Gargan – 232,757 (27.83%)

1994 Florida gubernatorial election

See also Edit

Videos Edit

(1) Funeral Services for Governor Chiles at Christ Presbyterian Church on December 16, 1998 [2]

(2) Chiles' 8th & final State of the State Address from March 3, 1998 [3]

(3) Opening Plenary of the Winter Meeting of the National Governors Association from February 22, 1998 [4]

(4) Tobacco Settlement and Medicaid Funds from December 8, 1997 [5]

(5) Health Care Fraud Prevention from March 25, 1997 [6]

(6) Chiles' 7th State of the State Address from March 4, 1997 [7]

(7) Chiles' 6th State of the State Address from March 5, 1996 [8]

(8) Prescription for Disaster from May 11, 1995 [9]

(9) Inauguration Address from January 3, 1995 [10]

(10) Governor Chiles' victory speech after getting re-elected from November 8, 1994 [11]

(11) Florida Gubernatorial Debate from November 1, 1994 [12]

(12) Florida Gubernatorial Debate from October 18, 1994 [13]

(13) Florida Gubernatorial Debate from October 4, 1994 [14]

(14) Chiles' 4th State of the State Address from February 10, 1994 [15]

(15) Chiles' 2nd State of the State Address from January 14, 1992 [16]

(16) Chiles' 1st State of the State Address from March 5, 1991 [17]

(17) Inauguration Address on January 8, 1991 [18]

References Edit

  1. ^ "Lawton M. Chiles Jr". June 26, 2014.
  2. ^ a b "Bioguide Search".
  3. ^ Richard M. Valelly, The Two Reconstructions: The Struggle for Black Enfranchisement University of Chicago Press, 2009, pp. 146-147
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on April 22, 2016. Retrieved March 29, 2016.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on November 13, 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. ^ Pearson, Richard (December 13, 1998). "Florida Gov. Lawton Chiles Dies". Washington Post. Retrieved October 9, 2014.
  7. ^ Miami Herald, October 10, 1970; Tallahassee Democrat, October 10, 18, 1970
  8. ^ Miami Herald, October 23, 1970; Tallahassee Democrat, November 1, 1970
  9. ^ Alexander P Lamis, The Two-Party South, p. 185; Miami Herald, September 9, 1970; Tallahassee Democrat, September 6 and November 1, 1970.
  10. ^ Tallahassee Democrat, November 1, 1970
  11. ^ a b Miami Herald, September 27, 1970
  12. ^ Tallahassee Democrat, November 1, 1970; Miami Herald, September 4, 1970
  13. ^ Miami Herald, September 9 and October 29, 1970
  14. ^ Billy Hathorn, "Cramer v. Kirk: The Florida Republican Schism of 1970", Florida Historical Quarterly (April 1990), p. 418
  15. ^ "Cramer v. Kirk" p. 418; "Bill Cramer ... Who Else?", campaign brochure of Cramer senatorial campaign, 1970
  16. ^ Jack Bass and Walter DeVries, The Transformation of Southern Politics: Social Change and Political Consequence Since 1945 (New York, 1976), p. 116
  17. ^ a b "Cramer v. Kirk", p. 419
  18. ^ Numan V. Bartley and Hugh D. Graham, Southern Politics and the Second Reconstruction (Baltimore, Maryland, 1975), pp. 146-147; Miami Herald, October 27, 1970
  19. ^ The New York Times, October 11, 1970
  20. ^ Tallahassee Democrat, September 30, 1970
  21. ^ "Cramer v. Kirk", p. 420
  22. ^ "Opinion | Bye-Bye, Gramm-Rudman-Hollings". The New York Times. February 26, 1987. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved October 18, 2019.
  23. ^ Bureau, KEN CUMMINS, Washington. "BUDGET IMPASSE MAY LEAD TO DELAY OF BENEFIT CHECKS". Sun-Sentinel.com. Retrieved October 18, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  24. ^ [1], New York Times, December 25, 1987; retrieved on May 5, 2009.
  25. ^ Associated Press (April 14, 1990). Sulzberger Sr., Arthur Ochs (ed.). . Main section (national news). The New York Times. Vol. CLXX, no. 29. New York City, New York, United States of America. Associated Press. p. A10. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522. Archived from the original on August 15, 2018. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
  26. ^ Van Gieson, John C. (August 8, 1990). Lifvendahl, Harold "Tip" (ed.). . Orlando Sentinel. Tampa, Florida, United States of America: Orlando Sentinel Media Group (Tribune Publishing/Digital First Media/Alden Global Capital). ISSN 0744-6055. Archived from the original on March 23, 2021. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
  27. ^ MacPherson, Myra (September 2, 1990). Ryan, Fred; Buzbee, Sally (eds.). . The Washington Post. Washington, D.C., United States of America: Nash Holdings. ISSN 0190-8286. OCLC 2269358. Archived from the original on June 21, 2018. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
  28. ^ a b Lemoyne, James (April 25, 1990). Sulzberger Sr., Arthur Ochs (ed.). . Main section (national news). The New York Times. Vol. CLXX, no. 83. New York City, New York, United States of America. p. A16. ISSN 0362-4331. OCLC 1645522. Archived from the original on May 25, 2015. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
  29. ^ Kellman, Laurie (September 12, 2000). Swartz, Steven R.; Pruitt, Gary (eds.). "Bush Fighting for Survival in Fla". The Associated Press (AP). West Palm Beach, Florida, United States of America: Associated Press, Inc./The Associated Press Television News Limited. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
  30. ^ Kurtz, Howard (November 2, 1994). Ryan, Fred; Buzbee, Sally (eds.). "Ads use crimes' pain for candidates' gain". The Washington Post. Washington, D.C., United States of America: Nash Holdings. ISSN 0190-8286. OCLC 2269358. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
  31. ^ Corn, David (June 10, 2015). Jeffery, Clara (ed.). . Mother Jones. San Francisco, California, United States of America: Foundation for National Progress. ISSN 0362-8841. Archived from the original on June 11, 2015. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
  32. ^ Word, Ron (March 26, 1997). Meyer, Peter; Sullivan, Lynne (eds.). . South Coast Today. New Bedford, Massachusetts, United States of America: South Coast Media Group (Gannett). ISSN 0745-3574. Archived from the original on December 2, 2014. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
  33. ^ "User Clip: Lawton Chiles - The Old He-Coon", C-SPAN, retrieved November 22, 2022
  34. ^ Debenport, Ellen (November 3, 1994). "Shedding daylight on Chiles' "he-coon'". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved December 23, 2022.
  35. ^ Mulcahy, Sean (December 14, 2018). "'The Ole He-Coon': Remembering Lawton Chiles 20 Years Later". WFSU Public Media. Retrieved December 23, 2022.
  36. ^ Sabato, Larry J. (June 1, 1996). Alter, Jonathan (ed.). "When Push Comes to Poll". Washington Monthly. Washington, D.C., United States of America: Washington Monthly Publishing LLC. (Washington Monthly Corporation). 28 (6): 26–31. ISSN 0043-0633 – via Dr. Deborah L. Guber personal website (hosted at the University of Vermont server).
  37. ^ Mulcahy, Sean (December 14, 2018). "'The Ole He-Coon': Remembering Lawton Chiles 20 Years Later". WFSU Public Media. Retrieved December 23, 2022.
  38. ^ Kennedy, John (July 7, 1995). Lifvendahl, Harold "Tip" (ed.). "Dehydration may have prompted episode". Orlando Sentinel. Tampa, Florida, United States of America: Orlando Sentinel Media Group (Tribune Publishing/Digital First Media/Alden Global Capital). ISSN 0744-6055. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
  39. ^ McVicar, Nancy (July 6, 1995). Pham, Paul; Anderson, Julie (eds.). . Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel. Deerfield Beach, Florida, United States of America: Orlando Sentinel Media Group (Tribune Publishing/Digital First Media/Alden Global Capital). ISSN 0744-8139. Archived from the original on July 1, 2021. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
  40. ^ "Chiles was right to seek prompt medical attention". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved February 14, 2023.
  41. ^ "Lawton Chiles 1930-1998". Sun Sentinel. December 13, 1998.
  42. ^ "Grave Site Has Feel of State's Bygone Days". Orlando Sentinel. December 14, 2003.
  43. ^ Buccellato, Robert (February 2, 2015). Florida Governors: Lasting Legacies. Arcadia Publishing. p. 112. ISBN 9781439649534.
  44. ^ Gielow-Jacobs, Leslie: "Free Speech and the Limits of Legislative Discretion: The Example of Specialty License Plates" September 12, 2006, at the Wayback Machine Florida Law Review, 53(3) pages 419–432
  45. ^ Lithwick, Dahlia: "Poetic Licenses", Slate.com, February 6, 2003; retrieved June 23, 2007.
  46. ^ "Justice Quince Appointed 20 Years Ago". Supreme Court. Retrieved October 18, 2019.
  47. ^ Charatan, Fred (October 2, 2004). "Court strikes down "Terri's law"". BMJ: British Medical Journal. 329 (7469): 761. doi:10.1136/bmj.329.7469.761-b. ISSN 0959-8138. PMC 521030.
  48. ^ "FindLaw's Supreme Court of Florida case and opinions". Findlaw. Retrieved October 18, 2019.
  49. ^ Bud's campaign website
  50. ^ "Chiles throws support to Sink in Fla. gov's race"[permanent dead link], miamiherald.com, September 2, 2010.

External links Edit

  • Official Governor's portrait and biography from the State of Florida
  • St. Petersburg Times article on the death of Gov. Chiles
  • Biographical Directory of the US Congress
  • Chiles' electoral results
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • Lawton Chiles at Find a Grave
Florida House of Representatives
Preceded by
Roy Surles
Member of the Florida House of Representatives
from Polk County, Group 1

1958–1966
Succeeded by
John R. Clark
Florida Senate
Preceded by
B. C. Pearce
Member of the Florida Senate
from the 26th district

1966–1967
Succeeded by
Louis De la Parte
Preceded by
E. William Gautier
Member of the Florida Senate
from the 28th district

1967–1970
Succeeded by
Bob Brannen
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. senator (Class 1) from Florida
1971–1989
Served alongside: Edward J. Gurney, Richard Stone, Paula Hawkins, Bob Graham
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Chairman of the Senate Aging Committee
1979–1981
Succeeded by
H. John Heinz III
Pennsylvania
Preceded by
Pete Domenici
New Mexico
Chairman of the Senate Budget Committee
1987–1989
Succeeded by
Jim Sasser
Tennessee
Preceded by Governor of Florida
January 8, 1991 – December 12, 1998
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Democratic Party nominee for United States Senator (Class 1) from Florida
1970, 1976, 1982
Succeeded by
Preceded by Democratic Party Nominee for Governor of Florida
1990, 1994

lawton, chiles, lawton, mainor, chiles, april, 1930, december, 1998, american, politician, military, officer, member, democratic, party, served, united, states, senator, from, florida, from, 1971, 1989, 41st, governor, florida, from, 1991, until, death, 1998, . Lawton Mainor Chiles Jr April 3 1930 December 12 1998 was an American politician and military officer A member of the Democratic Party he served as a United States senator from Florida from 1971 to 1989 and as the 41st governor of Florida from 1991 until his death in 1998 Lawton Chiles41st Governor of FloridaIn office January 8 1991 December 12 1998LieutenantBuddy MacKayPreceded byBob MartinezSucceeded byBuddy MacKayUnited States Senatorfrom FloridaIn office January 3 1971 January 3 1989Preceded bySpessard HollandSucceeded byConnie Mack IIIChair of the Senate Budget CommitteeIn office January 3 1987 January 3 1989Preceded byPete DomeniciSucceeded byJim SasserChair of the Senate Aging CommitteeIn office January 3 1979 January 3 1981Preceded byFrank ChurchSucceeded byJohn HeinzMember of the Florida SenateIn office November 8 1966 November 3 1970Preceded byRedistrictedSucceeded byBob BrannenConstituency26th district 1966 1967 28th district 1967 1970 Member of the Florida House of Representativesfrom Polk County Group 1In office November 4 1958 November 8 1966Preceded byRoy SurlesSucceeded byJohn R ClarkPersonal detailsBornLawton Mainor Chiles Jr 1930 04 03 April 3 1930Lakeland Florida U S DiedDecember 12 1998 1998 12 12 aged 68 Tallahassee Florida U S Resting place Jubilee Chiles family estate Tallahassee FloridaPolitical partyDemocraticSpouseRhea May Grafton m 1951 wbr Children4RelativesKay Hagan niece Alma materUniversity of Florida BA JD 1 Military serviceAllegiance United StatesBranch service United States ArmyYears of service1952 1954RankFirst lieutenantBattles warsKorean WarA Korean War veteran Chiles later returned to Florida for law school and eventually opened his own private practice in 1955 Three years later Chiles entered politics with a successful bid for the Florida House of Representatives in 1958 By 1966 Chiles left the Florida House to run for the Florida Senate Despite 12 years in the Florida Legislature Chiles was relatively unknown when he decided to bid for United States Senate in 1970 He embarked on a 1 003 mile walk from Pensacola to Key West for his campaign earning him the nickname Walkin Lawton It was successful and Chiles defeated his opponent William C Cramer by a 53 9 46 1 margin Chiles was re elected with relative ease in 1976 and 1982 He retired from the United States Senate in 1989 Not long after his retirement supporters convinced him to run for governor of Florida in 1990 against the unpopular incumbent Bob Martinez and Chiles defeated Martinez by a 13 point margin 56 5 to 43 5 During his first term as Governor Chiles reformed health care and oversaw recovery efforts from Hurricane Andrew in 1992 Chiles faced a tough re election bid in 1994 against Jeb Bush a businessman and son of former President George H W Bush Chiles prevailed over Bush by fewer than 64 000 votes During his second term Chiles reformed education in Florida On December 12 1998 he suffered a heart attack and died at the Florida Governor s Mansion leaving Lieutenant Governor Buddy MacKay to serve the remaining 24 days of Chiles unexpired term Jeb Bush succeeded MacKay As of to date Chiles s reelection in 1994 is the last time a Democrat was elected Governor of Florida with McKay being the most recent Democratic governor Contents 1 Early life 2 Early career 3 The 1 003 mile walk 4 Chiles v Cramer 5 U S Senator 6 Governor of Florida 7 Death 8 Legacy 8 1 Legislative and executive programs 8 2 Judicial appointments 9 Relatives 10 Electoral history 11 See also 12 Videos 13 References 14 External linksEarly life EditChiles was born in Polk County Florida near Lakeland the son of Margaret Kate nee Patterson and Lawton Mainor Chiles He attended public school at Lakeland High School then the University of Florida at Gainesville At the University of Florida he was active in student politics Chiles was a member of Phi Delta Phi International Legal Honor Society Cockrell Inn and was inducted into both the university Hall of Fame the most prestigious honor a student can receive at UF and Florida Blue Key He was a member of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity He graduated in 1952 Following his college years Chiles entered the Korean War commissioned as an artillery officer in the United States Army After the war Chiles returned to the University of Florida for law school from which he graduated in 1955 he passed the state bar exam that year and went into private practice in Lakeland He married Rhea Grafton Early career EditIn 1958 Chiles a Democrat was elected to the Florida House of Representatives 2 It was essentially still a one party state as most African Americans were disfranchised by a constitution and laws passed since the turn of the century 3 Chiles served in the House until 1966 when he was elected to a seat in the Florida Senate which he held until 1970 2 While in the state senate Chiles served on the 1968 Florida Law Revision Commission During his time in the state legislature Chiles continued to work as a lawyer and developer in Lakeland He was one of the initial investors in the Red Lobster restaurant chain 4 He was a member of the Florida Society of the Sons of the American Revolution 5 The 1 003 mile walk Edit nbsp Pair of Lawton Chiles walking shoes on display at the Florida State Capitol In 1970 Chiles decided to run for a seat in the United States Senate At the time despite his 12 years in the state legislature he was largely unknown outside his Lakeland based district To generate some media coverage and meet people across the state Chiles embarked upon a 1 003 mile 91 day walk across Florida from Pensacola to Key West The walk earned him the recognition he sought as well as the nickname that would follow him throughout his political career Walkin Lawton In his journal Chiles wrote that sometimes he walked alone while other times he met ordinary Floridians along the way In later years Chiles would recall the walk allowed him to see Florida s natural beauty as well as the state s problems with fresh eyes Some Florida reporters said that Chiles enjoyed campaigning much more than governing 6 Chiles v Cramer EditIn the general election campaign Chiles faced U S Representative William C Cramer of St Petersburg the first Republican to have served in Congress from Florida since Reconstruction Cramer a graduate of Harvard Law School questioned Chiles s votes as a state senator on several matters regarding insurance One law increased automobile liability rates by 50 percent over two years and another raised premiums for school bus insurance at a time that Chiles s insurance agency in Lakeland held the policy on the Polk County School Board but such conflict of interest accusations seemed to have little political effect 7 The self made Cramer depicted Chiles as coming from a silver spoon background with a then net worth of 300 000 but the media ignored questions about the candidates personal wealth 8 Instead reporters focused on the walk often termed a public relations stroke of genius Prior to the walk Chiles was identified by only 5 percent of voters afterwards he had widespread positive recognition 9 The Tallahassee Democrat forecast correctly that Chiles s weary feet and comfortable hiking boots would carry the 40 year old slow country country lawyer with boyish amiability and back country common sense and methodical urbane political savvy to victory 10 Chiles s Huck Finn image was contrasted one night in Miami when he held a fried chicken picnic while the Republicans showcased a black tie 1 000 a plate dinner 11 Cramer could not match Chiles s public appeal An observer described Cramer s charisma as a speech in the Congressional Record A Cramer aide said it was difficult selling experience It s not a sexy thing 12 A Chiles advertisement urged that voters Vote for yourself Chiles walked our streets and highways to hear what you have to say That s why a vote for Chiles is like a vote for yourself 11 With shoe leather and a shoestring budget Chiles presented himself as a problem solver who doesn t automatically vote No on every issue 13 Cramer said that he should have demanded more debates and rebuffed the walking tactic I never could get that turned around He was walking and I was running But the press was enamored with the walk Every time he was asked a question about where he stood he would quote somebody that he met on the campaign trail to state what he was to do when he got to the Senate consistent with what that constituent had said The basic approach gave him more credibility to his walk which had nothing to do with his qualifications for the Senate but gave him free publicity and appealed to the little man 14 With ecology a national concern by 1970 Chiles announced his opposition to the Cross Florida Barge Canal which had originally been supported by every member of the Florida congressional delegation The project one third completed was cancelled early in 1971 and is now a protected green belt corridor Chiles endorsed federal funding to remove waste from the bass teeming Lake Apopka in central Florida By contrast Cramer received little credit from environmentalists although he had drafted the Water Pollution Control Act of 1956 and had sponsored legislation to protect alligators stop beach erosion dredge harbors and remove oil spills Instead Cramer s critics accused him of having weakened anti pollution laws Cramer questioned Chiles s opposition to a proposed severance tax on phosphate mining which particularly impacted Tampa Bay Cramer declared that Liberal Lawton has protected the phosphate industry the state s single largest polluter 15 By 1974 a survey showed Floridians favored limits on development and 60 percent urged more government funding for conservation 16 Only three newspapers in Orlando Fort Myers and Pasco County supported Cramer in the race against Chiles 17 In the face of media opposition Cramer failed to pin the liberal label on Chiles who called himself by the rare hybrid term progressive conservative 18 Explaining Cramer s inability to make liberalism an issue in 1970 The New York Times observed that Chiles and the gubernatorial candidate Reubin Askew of Pensacola convey amiable good ol boy qualities with moderate to liberal aspirations that do not strike fear into the hearts of conservatives 19 Chiles relied heavily on his support from the retiring senator and former governor Spessard Holland He noted that Cramer had expected to face former governor Farris Bryant who like LeRoy Collins Gurney s foe in 1968 had ties to the administration of President Lyndon B Johnson Bryant lost the senatorial primary to Chiles I m not anything Cramer thought he would be running against So he s reduced to telling lies about me Chiles quipped 17 Chiles said that Cramer can bring Nixon Agnew Reagan and anybody else he wants I ll take Holland on my side against all of them 20 Cramer said a Republican majority Senate would lead to the removal of controversial Senator J William Fulbright of Arkansas the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee who had long opposed the Vietnam War Chiles however retorted that if Republicans controlled the Senate other southern Democrats would also forfeit committee chairmanships earned through their seniority 21 U S Senator EditChiles was twice re elected to the U S Senate 1976 and 1982 both heavily Democratic years Chiles never flashy was considered a moderate lawmaker who rarely made waves He served as the chairman of the Special Committee on Aging of the 96th Congress 1979 1981 and in the 100th Congress 1987 1989 served as chairman of the influential Senate Budget Committee While heading the Budget Committee he played a key role in the 1987 revision of the Gramm Rudman Hollings Act 22 23 In 1985 Chiles underwent quadruple bypass heart surgery After his recovery he became increasingly frustrated with the slow pace of work in the Senate complaining that it was too difficult to get anything done Accordingly he announced in December 1987 that he would not seek re election the next year 24 Chiles was succeeded by Republican Connie Mack Governor of Florida Edit nbsp Chiles official portrait as GovernorAfter the surgery Chiles developed clinical depression 25 and was treated with Prozac 26 He retired from the Senate in 1989 and intended to retire from politics entirely However several supporters convinced him to enter the 1990 Florida governor s race against Republican incumbent Bob Martinez During the Democratic Party primary his opponent Bill Nelson attempted to make an issue of Chiles age and health a strategy that backfired badly in a state with a large population of retirees 27 28 Chiles ran a campaign to reinvent the state s government and defeated Martinez to take office in 1991 28 During his first term as governor Chiles managed to accomplish very little Although he developed ambitious health care and tax reform packages neither passed in the hostile state legislature The early years of his term were troubled by a national economic recession that severely damaged Florida s tourism based economy and by Hurricane Andrew which struck near Homestead in August 1992 Chiles ran for re election in the 1994 election against Republican Jeb Bush 29 During the campaign season Bush ran a television advertisement which featured the mother of a teenage girl who had been abducted and murdered many years before The mother stated that Her killer is still on death row and we re still waiting for justice We won t get it from Lawton Chiles because he s too liberal on crime Lawton Chiles has let us down I know Jeb Bush He ll make criminals serve their sentences and enforce the death penalty Lawton Chiles won t referring to Chiles not signing the convicted killer s death warrant 30 Chiles responded that he did not sign a death warrant because the case was still on appeal 31 The Democratic governor further claimed a record of support for the death penalty having presided over 18 executions during his two terms among them Judy Buenoano the first Floridian woman executed since 1848 Moreover after the botched electrocution of Pedro Medina in 1997 and despite significant public criticism Chiles refused to endorse the use of lethal injection as a lawful form of execution 32 The new method was introduced under Bush s administration in 1999 after the execution of Allen Lee Davis The 1994 election was memorable for its series of debates between Bush and Chiles During the last debate on November 1 Chiles said to Bush My momma told me sticks and stones may break my bones but names will never hurt me But let me tell you something about the old liberal The old he coon walks just before the light of day 33 Bush and many others did not understand the reference but the quote gained significant media attention After the debate Chiles remained oblique saying It s sort of like saying Don t mess with the Lone Ranger The next day Lt Governor Buddy MacKay explained that the he coon was the oldest and wiliest raccoon in the pack according to Florida cracker folklore Raccoons were hunted by the light of the moon and the he coon would wait all night while the young raccoons ran from the dogs tiring them out Then just before the light of day the he coon would leave his lair and walk in the open safe from the dogs Chiles was implying that he was the he coon and just as the he coon walked before dawn he would score a comeback victory against Bush 34 The quip was a direct appeal to older rural ancestral Floridians whose loyalty to Democratic candidates had waned over the past several decades 35 Seven days later as Republicans swept the 1994 Florida elections in almost every respect Chiles bucked the trend winning reelection in an upset by about 64 000 votes 1 52 of the total vote He is the last Democrat to win a gubernatorial election in Florida 36 Chiles he coon quote has become a well known moment in Florida politics often recalled and referenced in headlines and Florida political debate 37 Chiles second term as governor was notable as the first time in state history that a Democratic governor had a legislature controlled by the Republican Party Despite this he had some successes including a successful lawsuit he and state attorney general Bob Butterworth filed against the tobacco industry which resulted in an 11 3 billion settlement for the state He also won approval for a 2 7 billion statewide school construction program In 1995 Chiles sought treatment for a neurological problem that was later diagnosed as a mild stroke after he awoke with nausea slurred speech and loss of coordination and it would be determined dehydration might have caused the episode 38 He recovered fully which was credited to prompt treatment 39 40 Death Edit nbsp Rhea Chiles embracing her son Bud during the funeral of Lawton Chiles on December 15 1998Ineligible to run a third time Chiles supported the lieutenant governor his personal friend Buddy MacKay in the 1998 Florida governor s race against Jeb Bush Bush however scored an easy victory over MacKay On December 12 that year just three weeks before his long awaited retirement was to begin Chiles suffered from an abnormal heart rhythm while exercising on a cycling machine in the Governor s Mansion gymnasium He died suddenly shortly afterwards at the age of 68 41 nbsp Chiles funeral procession stops in front of the Florida State Capitol in Tallahassee FloridaFuneral services were held at Faith Presbyterian Church in Tallahassee on December 16 1998 following a funeral procession that traced part of his walk from the 1970 Senate campaign from the panhandle town of Century to Tallahassee Chiles was initially buried in a church cemetery in Tallahassee however within a year his wife had the body moved to a 200 acre 81 ha tract 15 miles 24 km east of Tallahassee a place they named Jubilee 42 He was succeeded in office by MacKay who served until Bush s term began on January 5 1999 Legacy EditLegislative and executive programs Edit Chiles was known as a health care and children s advocate throughout his career He emphasized health coverage for the uninsured and led a campaign to create the National Commission for Prevention of Infant Mortality in the late 1980s In 1994 he fought for the creation of regional health care alliances throughout the state which allow small businesses to pool their health care dollars and broaden coverage while saving money He also created the Florida Department of Elder Affairs 43 In 1992 Chiles created the Florida Healthy Start program to provide a comprehensive prenatal and infant care program available to all pregnant women and infants across the state since the program s inception the state s infant mortality rate has dropped 18 In 1996 Chiles appointed a Governor s Commission on Education to examine the state s school system One of the significant recommendations that came from that commission eventually led to the highly controversial 2002 state constitutional amendment restricting Florida s school class sizes citation needed In 1997 anti abortion advocacy group Choose Life collected 10 000 signatures and filed the 30 000 fee required under Florida law at the time to submit an application for a new specialty plate State Senator Tom Lee sponsored a bill in support of the tag s creation The bill passed both houses of the Florida State Legislature in early 1998 but was vetoed by Chiles who stated that license plates are not the proper forum for debate on political issues 44 45 Judicial appointments Edit Perhaps his greatest legacy was his impact on the Florida Supreme Court where his appointments continued to have a major impact on state and national events long after Chiles death Chiles appointed Justice Major B Harding in 1991 Justice Charles T Wells in 1994 Justice Harry Lee Anstead in 1994 Justice Barbara J Pariente in 1997 and Justice R Fred Lewis in 1998 citation needed Chiles and incoming Governor Jeb Bush jointly appointed Justice Peggy A Quince in 1998 just a few days before Chiles death Quince was jointly appointed because her term as Justice would begin the exact moment that Bush s first term as governor began so there was a legal question which governor had the authority to appoint her Bush and Chiles agreed to make a joint appointment to avoid a lawsuit over the question 46 Thus at one point Chiles had appointed five of the seven Justices and had jointly appointed the sixth Chiles appointments formed the Supreme Court majorities that decided the following major cases In 2006 the Court struck down a law passed by the Florida State Legislature that had created the United States first statewide education voucher program The majority in this case consisted of Wells Anstead Pariente Lewis and Quince Bush appointees Raoul G Cantero and Kenneth B Bell dissented citation needed In 2004 the court struck down another piece of legislation from the Florida legislature designed to reverse a lower court decision in the Terri Schiavo case This decision was unanimous and included Bush appointees Cantero and Bell 47 By this time Harding had retired In the 2000 presidential election controversy the Florida Supreme Court ordered a statewide recount in the disputed election pitting George W Bush against Al Gore The United States Supreme Court later reversed that ruling The Florida Supreme Court majority in this case consisted of Anstead Pariente Lewis and Quince Dissenting Justices were Wells Harding and Leander J Shaw Jr 48 an appointee of Governor Bob Graham Shaw retired in early 2003 and was replaced by Bell Relatives EditChiles niece was former U S Senator Kay Hagan of North Carolina a Democrat elected in 2008 Hagan was the daughter of Chiles sister Jeannette Chiles son Bud Chiles ran for the position of Governor of Florida without party affiliation in a grassroots campaign Like his father Bud embarked on a walking tour of the state listening and visiting with local communities in Florida 49 On September 2 2010 Chiles dropped out of the race citing continuing down this road could have unintended consequences dividing those who hold common goals Chiles threw his support behind Alex Sink 50 Electoral history EditDemocratic primary for United States Senator from Florida 1970 C Farris Bryant 240 222 32 90 Lawton Chiles 188 300 25 79 Fred Schultz 175 745 24 07 Alcee Hastings 91 948 12 59 Joel Daves 33 939 4 65 Democratic runoff for United States Senator from Florida 1970 Lawton Chiles 474 420 65 74 C Farris Bryant 247 211 34 26 1970 United States Senate election in Florida Lawton Chiles D 902 438 53 87 William C Cramer R 772 817 46 13 1976 United States Senate election in Florida Lawton Chiles D Inc 1 799 518 62 98 John Grady R 1 057 886 37 02 1982 United States Senate election in Florida Lawton Chiles D Inc 1 637 667 61 72 Van B Poole R 1 015 330 38 27 Democratic primary for Governor of Florida 1990 Lawton Chiles 746 325 69 49 Bill Nelson 327 731 30 51 1990 Florida gubernatorial election Lawton Chiles Buddy MacKay D 1 995 206 56 51 Bob Martinez Inc J Allison DeFoor R 1 535 068 43 48 Democratic primary for Governor of Florida 1994 Lawton Chiles Inc 603 657 72 17 Jack Gargan 232 757 27 83 1994 Florida gubernatorial election Lawton Chiles Buddy MacKay D Inc 2 135 008 50 75 Jeb Bush Tom Feeney R 2 071 068 49 23 See also EditThe Florida Wildlife Corridor Expedition Lawton Chiles High School Lawton Chiles Legal Information CenterVideos Edit 1 Funeral Services for Governor Chiles at Christ Presbyterian Church on December 16 1998 2 2 Chiles 8th amp final State of the State Address from March 3 1998 3 3 Opening Plenary of the Winter Meeting of the National Governors Association from February 22 1998 4 4 Tobacco Settlement and Medicaid Funds from December 8 1997 5 5 Health Care Fraud Prevention from March 25 1997 6 6 Chiles 7th State of the State Address from March 4 1997 7 7 Chiles 6th State of the State Address from March 5 1996 8 8 Prescription for Disaster from May 11 1995 9 9 Inauguration Address from January 3 1995 10 10 Governor Chiles victory speech after getting re elected from November 8 1994 11 11 Florida Gubernatorial Debate from November 1 1994 12 12 Florida Gubernatorial Debate from October 18 1994 13 13 Florida Gubernatorial Debate from October 4 1994 14 14 Chiles 4th State of the State Address from February 10 1994 15 15 Chiles 2nd State of the State Address from January 14 1992 16 16 Chiles 1st State of the State Address from March 5 1991 17 17 Inauguration Address on January 8 1991 18 References Edit Lawton M Chiles Jr June 26 2014 a b Bioguide Search Richard M Valelly The Two Reconstructions The Struggle for Black Enfranchisement University of Chicago Press 2009 pp 146 147 Article 404 the Ledger Lakeland FL Archived from the original on April 22 2016 Retrieved March 29 2016 What SAR Means Connecticut Sons of the American Revolution Archived from the original on November 13 2014 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Pearson Richard December 13 1998 Florida Gov Lawton Chiles Dies Washington Post Retrieved October 9 2014 Miami Herald October 10 1970 Tallahassee Democrat October 10 18 1970 Miami Herald October 23 1970 Tallahassee Democrat November 1 1970 Alexander P Lamis The Two Party South p 185 Miami Herald September 9 1970 Tallahassee Democrat September 6 and November 1 1970 Tallahassee Democrat November 1 1970 a b Miami Herald September 27 1970 Tallahassee Democrat November 1 1970 Miami Herald September 4 1970 Miami Herald September 9 and October 29 1970 Billy Hathorn Cramer v Kirk The Florida Republican Schism of 1970 Florida Historical Quarterly April 1990 p 418 Cramer v Kirk p 418 Bill Cramer Who Else campaign brochure of Cramer senatorial campaign 1970 Jack Bass and Walter DeVries The Transformation of Southern Politics Social Change and Political Consequence Since 1945 New York 1976 p 116 a b Cramer v Kirk p 419 Numan V Bartley and Hugh D Graham Southern Politics and the Second Reconstruction Baltimore Maryland 1975 pp 146 147 Miami Herald October 27 1970 The New York Times October 11 1970 Tallahassee Democrat September 30 1970 Cramer v Kirk p 420 Opinion Bye Bye Gramm Rudman Hollings The New York Times February 26 1987 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 18 2019 Bureau KEN CUMMINS Washington BUDGET IMPASSE MAY LEAD TO DELAY OF BENEFIT CHECKS Sun Sentinel com Retrieved October 18 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link 1 New York Times December 25 1987 retrieved on May 5 2009 Associated Press April 14 1990 Sulzberger Sr Arthur Ochs ed Ex Senator Ends Retirement And Faces an Election Issue Main section national news The New York Times Vol CLXX no 29 New York City New York United States of America Associated Press p A10 ISSN 0362 4331 OCLC 1645522 Archived from the original on August 15 2018 Retrieved August 26 2021 Van Gieson John C August 8 1990 Lifvendahl Harold Tip ed Chiles says slip in pep got him back on Prozac Orlando Sentinel Tampa Florida United States of America Orlando Sentinel Media Group Tribune Publishing Digital First Media Alden Global Capital ISSN 0744 6055 Archived from the original on March 23 2021 Retrieved August 26 2021 MacPherson Myra September 2 1990 Ryan Fred Buzbee Sally eds Prozac prejudice and the politics of depression The Washington Post Washington D C United States of America Nash Holdings ISSN 0190 8286 OCLC 2269358 Archived from the original on June 21 2018 Retrieved August 26 2021 a b Lemoyne James April 25 1990 Sulzberger Sr Arthur Ochs ed Chiles Transforms Florida Campaign Main section national news The New York Times Vol CLXX no 83 New York City New York United States of America p A16 ISSN 0362 4331 OCLC 1645522 Archived from the original on May 25 2015 Retrieved August 26 2021 Kellman Laurie September 12 2000 Swartz Steven R Pruitt Gary eds Bush Fighting for Survival in Fla The Associated Press AP West Palm Beach Florida United States of America Associated Press Inc The Associated Press Television News Limited Retrieved August 26 2021 Kurtz Howard November 2 1994 Ryan Fred Buzbee Sally eds Ads use crimes pain for candidates gain The Washington Post Washington D C United States of America Nash Holdings ISSN 0190 8286 OCLC 2269358 Retrieved August 26 2021 Corn David June 10 2015 Jeffery Clara ed Watch Jeb Bush Defend a Campaign Ad That Exploited the Murder of a 10 Year Old Girl Mother Jones San Francisco California United States of America Foundation for National Progress ISSN 0362 8841 Archived from the original on June 11 2015 Retrieved August 26 2021 Word Ron March 26 1997 Meyer Peter Sullivan Lynne eds Flawed execution prompts Florida to study method South Coast Today New Bedford Massachusetts United States of America South Coast Media Group Gannett ISSN 0745 3574 Archived from the original on December 2 2014 Retrieved August 26 2021 User Clip Lawton Chiles The Old He Coon C SPAN retrieved November 22 2022 Debenport Ellen November 3 1994 Shedding daylight on Chiles he coon Tampa Bay Times Retrieved December 23 2022 Mulcahy Sean December 14 2018 The Ole He Coon Remembering Lawton Chiles 20 Years Later WFSU Public Media Retrieved December 23 2022 Sabato Larry J June 1 1996 Alter Jonathan ed When Push Comes to Poll Washington Monthly Washington D C United States of America Washington Monthly Publishing LLC Washington Monthly Corporation 28 6 26 31 ISSN 0043 0633 via Dr Deborah L Guber personal website hosted at the University of Vermont server Mulcahy Sean December 14 2018 The Ole He Coon Remembering Lawton Chiles 20 Years Later WFSU Public Media Retrieved December 23 2022 Kennedy John July 7 1995 Lifvendahl Harold Tip ed Dehydration may have prompted episode Orlando Sentinel Tampa Florida United States of America Orlando Sentinel Media Group Tribune Publishing Digital First Media Alden Global Capital ISSN 0744 6055 Retrieved August 26 2021 McVicar Nancy July 6 1995 Pham Paul Anderson Julie eds Don t ignore symptoms of TIA neurologists say Fort Lauderdale Sun Sentinel Deerfield Beach Florida United States of America Orlando Sentinel Media Group Tribune Publishing Digital First Media Alden Global Capital ISSN 0744 8139 Archived from the original on July 1 2021 Retrieved August 26 2021 Chiles was right to seek prompt medical attention Tampa Bay Times Retrieved February 14 2023 Lawton Chiles 1930 1998 Sun Sentinel December 13 1998 Grave Site Has Feel of State s Bygone Days Orlando Sentinel December 14 2003 Buccellato Robert February 2 2015 Florida Governors Lasting Legacies Arcadia Publishing p 112 ISBN 9781439649534 Gielow Jacobs Leslie Free Speech and the Limits of Legislative Discretion The Example of Specialty License Plates Archived September 12 2006 at the Wayback Machine Florida Law Review 53 3 pages 419 432 Lithwick Dahlia Poetic Licenses Slate com February 6 2003 retrieved June 23 2007 Justice Quince Appointed 20 Years Ago Supreme Court Retrieved October 18 2019 Charatan Fred October 2 2004 Court strikes down Terri s law BMJ British Medical Journal 329 7469 761 doi 10 1136 bmj 329 7469 761 b ISSN 0959 8138 PMC 521030 FindLaw s Supreme Court of Florida case and opinions Findlaw Retrieved October 18 2019 Bud s campaign website Chiles throws support to Sink in Fla gov s race permanent dead link miamiherald com September 2 2010 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lawton Chiles nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Lawton Chiles Official Governor s portrait and biography from the State of Florida St Petersburg Times article on the death of Gov Chiles Biographical Directory of the US Congress Chiles electoral results Appearances on C SPAN Lawton Chiles at Find a GraveFlorida House of RepresentativesPreceded byRoy Surles Member of the Florida House of Representativesfrom Polk County Group 11958 1966 Succeeded byJohn R ClarkFlorida SenatePreceded byB C Pearce Member of the Florida Senatefrom the 26th district1966 1967 Succeeded byLouis De la PartePreceded byE William Gautier Member of the Florida Senatefrom the 28th district1967 1970 Succeeded byBob BrannenU S SenatePreceded bySpessard Holland U S senator Class 1 from Florida1971 1989 Served alongside Edward J Gurney Richard Stone Paula Hawkins Bob Graham Succeeded byConnie MackPolitical officesPreceded byFrank ChurchIdaho Chairman of the Senate Aging Committee1979 1981 Succeeded byH John Heinz IIIPennsylvaniaPreceded byPete DomeniciNew Mexico Chairman of the Senate Budget Committee1987 1989 Succeeded byJim SasserTennesseePreceded byRobert Martinez Governor of FloridaJanuary 8 1991 December 12 1998 Succeeded byBuddy MacKayParty political officesPreceded bySpessard Holland Democratic Party nominee for United States Senator Class 1 from Florida1970 1976 1982 Succeeded byBuddy MacKayPreceded bySteve Pajcic Democratic Party Nominee for Governor of Florida1990 1994 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lawton Chiles amp oldid 1176832277, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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