Background
Harold Hughes was born on February 10, 1922, in Ida Grove, Iowa, United States. From an early age, he and his older brother Jesse trapped wild animals and sold their hides to supplement the family’s meager income.
Harold Hughes was born on February 10, 1922, in Ida Grove, Iowa, United States. From an early age, he and his older brother Jesse trapped wild animals and sold their hides to supplement the family’s meager income.
An indifferent student, Harold attended the State University of Iowa for one year on a football scholarship before leaving to marry Eva Mercer.
Harold Everett served in the army in World War II, fought in Sicily and Italy, won several decorations, and was court-martialed for assaulting an officer. Back home in the fall of 1945, Hughes worked at various temporary jobs and continued to drink heavily. Finally, in 1952 he seriously contemplated suicide by gunshot but experienced a moment of spiritual enlightenment and dedicated himself to spiritual growth and to aid alcoholics. Becoming manager of a trucking firm, he battled with the state Commerce Commission and organized several independent truckers into the Iowa Better Trucking Bureau. His election to the Commerce Commission in 1958 convinced him that he could best fulfill his mission by holding public office. Backed by urban insurgent Democrats and organized labor, Hughes captured the party’s gubernatorial nomination, in 1962.
Hughes burst upon the scene when traditional ethnocultural, partisan politics were being supplanted by a new issue-oriented, candidate-centered version. In the four statewide elections in which he was the Democratic candidate, he ran well ahead of everyone else on the party ticket, both in its triumph of 1964 and its disasters in 1966 and 1968. During his three terms as governor, Hughes shepherded through four constitutional amendments: one providing for legislative reapportionment, one providing for Iowa Supreme Court review of reapportionment, one providing for annual sessions of the General Assembly, and another giving the governor the line-item veto. He also successfully championed more state aid to schools, increases in both worker's and unemployment compensation, the abolition of capital punishment, enactment of a state withholding tax, higher income and inheritance taxes for the affluent, four new vocational-technical schools, allowing counties to establish the office of the public defender, penal reforms, and stronger guidelines for secondary education. Ironically, his most popular reform was the legalization of liquor by the drink.
Originally a staunch supporter of the Vietnam War, Hughes became one of its most outspoken opponents, a switch that severed his ties to President Lyndon Johnson. The final straw was when Hughes gave the nomination speech for Eugene McCarthy at the 1968 Democratic Party National Convention. As a U.S. senator, from 1969 to 1974, Hughes was generally a strong proponent of retaining and strengthening former President Johnson’s Great Society programs and an outspoken critic of the Nixon administration. His greatest achievement as a senator was the enactment of the Comprehensive Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism Prevention, Treatment and Rehabilitation Act of 1970, which established the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. In 1975 Harold resigned from the Senate. He died in Glendale, Arizona, at the age of 74.
Raised in a devoutly Methodist family, he renounced his religion when his brother was killed in a car accident. That and his inability to find steady work plunged Hughes into deep despair and heavy drinking.
Raised as a staunch Republican, Hughes was a key figure in the revitalization of the Democratic Party in Iowa. A charismatic personality and spellbinding speaker, he built political coalitions across partisan, ethnic, geographical, and ideological lines. As a three-term governor, he enacted an unprecedented amount of progressive legislation that had been bottled up for years by rural- dominated legislatures and “led Iowa into the 20th century.” As a U.S. senator, he sponsored the first federal programs for the prevention of alcoholism and the rehabilitation of alcoholics and was one of the first members of Congress to call for an end to the Vietnam War. At the height of his national reputation, Hughes resigned from the Senate to become a lay preacher and a leading light in the battle against addiction.
Quotations: “I can move more people through a spiritual approach more effectively than I have been able to achieve through the political approach.”
In August 1941, Harold married Eva Mercer, with whom he had three daughters. Later, he divorced Eva and remarried Julianne Holm.