Howell Heflin, U.S. Senator

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Howell Thomas Heflin

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Poulan, Worth County, Georgia, United States
Death: March 29, 2005 (83)
Sheffield, Colbert County, Alabama, United States
Place of Burial: Leighton, Colbert County, Alabama, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Marvin R. Heflin and Louise Douglas Strudwick
Husband of Private
Father of Private and Mary Carmichael Heflin
Brother of Julia Clarke Heflin; Private and Wilson Lumpkin Heflin

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Howell Heflin, U.S. Senator

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howell_Heflin

Howell Thomas Heflin (June 19, 1921 – March 29, 2005) was a United States Senator from Tuscumbia, Alabama, and a member of the Democratic Party.

Biography

Howell Heflin, the nephew of prominent white supremacist politician James Thomas Heflin and greatnephew of Alabama congressman Robert Stell Heflin, was born on June 19, 1921 in Poulan, Georgia. He attended public school in Alabama graduating from Colbert County High School in Leighton, Alabama. He earned his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1942 from Birmingham-Southern College.

During World War II, from 1942 to 1946, he served as an officer in the United States Marine Corps. He was awarded the Silver Star for valor in combat and recipient of two Purple Heart medals, seeing action on Bougainville and Guam.

After World War II, he attended Law School at the University of Alabama, graduating in 1948, after which he became a law professor.

Political Career

From 1971 to 1977 became the Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court.

In 1978, Heflin was elected as a Democrat to the United States Senate to succeed John Sparkman. He remained in the Senate, where he rose to become Chairman of the Select Committee on Ethics, until January 3, 1997. While on the Ethics Committee, he led the prosecution against fellow Senator Howard Cannon (D-NV) for violations of Senate rules.

His stances on cultural issues most often reflected the region he was from. He strongly opposed legal abortion and all gun control laws. Heflin supported prayer in public schools and opposed extending federal laws against discrimination to lesbians and gays. He voted in favor of the Gulf War and against limiting spending on defense. With Fritz Hollings from South Carolina, he was one of only two Democrats in the Senate to vote against the Family and Medical Leave Act. He occasionally voted with Republicans on taxes. On other economic issues he was more in sync with the populist wing of his party. He voted against the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), and attempts to weaken enforcement of consumer protection measures. He strongly supported affirmative action laws. He memorably voted against the nomination of Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court, complaining of his lack of experience and interest.

During his tenure, Heflin was considered to have bipartisan support if he were nominated for a vacancy on the United States Supreme Court by President Ronald Reagan. Nevertheless, Heflin did not wish to serve on the highest court in the United States.

On July 19, 1994, Senator Heflin was dining in the Capitol with some Alabama reporters, and felt like he had to sneeze. The Senator reached into his pocket and pulled out a bit of fabric and began to wipe his nose with a pair of ladies underwear. His office later released the following press release: [This morning] "I mistakenly picked up a pair of my wife's white panties and put them in my pocket while I was rushing out the door to go to work. Rather than take a chance on being embarrassed again, I'm going to start buying colored handkerchiefs."

Upon seeing photos in the National Enquirer showing Senator Ted Kennedy copulating with an unknown woman on the deck of Kennedy's boat, he was said to have commented, "Well, I declare. I do believe the Senator from Massachusetts has changed his position on offshore drillin'!"

Senator Heflin lived at his long-time home of Tuscumbia, Alabama until his death on March 29, 2005 of a heart attack.

Honors

The University of Alabama School of Law has honored Heflin with the "Howell Heflin Conference Room" in the Bounds Law Library. There is also a street named "Howell Heflin Lane" in Tuscumbia, Alabama. The Howell Heflin Lock and Dam in Alabama is named in honor of Senator Heflin. The Howell T. Heflin Seminar room in the Library of Birmingham-Southern College is named in his honor.

Pop Culture

Heflin was portrayed by the late Chris Farley on Saturday Night Live (Season 17).

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Howell Thomas Heflin (1921-2005) was an attorney and elected official who served as Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court from 1971 to 1977 and as a U.S. senator from Alabama from 1979 to 1997. A lifelong Democrat, Heflin was the cousin of noted Alabama educator and reformer Julia Strudwick Tutwiler, grandnephew of Congressman Robert Stell Heflin, and the nephew of J. Thomas "Cotton Tom" Heflin, an outspoken segregationist and anti-Catholic who represented Alabama in the U.S. Senate in the 1920s and 1930s. Heflin himself was known for employing minority staff members and for his strong civil rights record in the Senate.

Heflin was born June 19, 1921, to Marvin Heflin, a Methodist minister, and Louise Strudwick Heflin, a former teacher, in Poulan, Georgia, just east of Albany. Heflin grew up in rural Georgia and Alabama, his family often relocating to accommodate his father's ministerial postings. He graduated from Colbert County High School in Leighton, and enrolled at Birmingham-Southern College in 1938, majoring in history and political science and graduating in 1942. A first lieutenant in the United States Marine Corps from 1942 to 1946 during World War II, Heflin participated in the Bougainville and Guam invasions and was awarded the Silver Star and two Purple Hearts.

After the war, Heflin taught political science at the University of Alabama, while also earning a degree from its law school in 1948. While in law school, Heflin met Elizabeth Ann Carmichael, whom he married in 1952. After his graduation, Heflin moved to Tuscumbia and during the next two decades ran a successful law practice. During these years, he was active in statewide legal circles—including a term as Alabama State Bar president from 1965 to 1966—and also in the Tuscumbia community. In 1969, Gov. Albert Brewer appointed Heflin to the Alabama Ethics Commission.

Heflin was active in political campaigns but never ran for public office himself until 1970, when he sought the Democratic nomination for Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Alabama. Heflin won the primary, despite being a first-time candidate and being opposed by former Alabama attorney general and governor John Patterson, and easily won the general election. As Chief Justice, Heflin authored notable opinions on the power of the judiciary, workers' rights, criminal procedure, and women's rights. He also won national acclaim for his successful championing of the Judicial Article of 1973, which modernized and streamlined Alabama's fragmented, corrupt, and inefficient judicial system. The Judicial Article created the Unified Judicial System and implemented many other reforms, including requirements that trial and appellate judges be licensed attorneys, that the legislature fund the judicial system, and that stronger standards of judicial professionalism be implemented. Heflin's successful reform effort was the first—and, to date, only—major substantial revision to the Alabama Constitution of 1901.

Heflin decided not to seek reelection as Chief Justice, leaving office in early 1977 to resume his Tuscumbia law practice. The following year, however, Heflin sought the Democratic nomination for the seat of retiring Senator John Sparkman. Challenged at first by Gov. George C. Wallace, who ultimately dropped out, and Alabama congressman Walter J. Flowers Jr., Heflin won the nomination and eventually the election and was sworn in on January 15, 1979.

Known as "Judge" to his Senate colleagues and once called the conscience of the Senate, Heflin displayed an independent streak and a steadfast commitment to the citizens of Alabama. He was very active on the agriculture issues important to Alabama, worked to secure federal funding for the aerospace industry in Huntsville. Although progressive on civil rights issues, Heflin tended to be more conservative on national defense, the Cold War, and some social issues. It was at Heflin's suggestion that Pres. Jimmy Carter nominated the first African American federal judges in Alabama: U. W. Clemon and Myron Thompson. He was largely in tune with the attitudes of his state, and he was reelected in 1984 and 1990 over Republican opponents Albert Lee Smith and William J. Cabaniss Jr. During the 1990 election, Heflin best displayed the wit that was part of his political persona, famously saying that Cabaniss belonged to the "Grey Poupon crowd." Heflin opposed the North American Free Trade Agreement, but voted for the 1993 Clinton Economic Plan.

While in the Senate, Heflin served on the committees on Agriculture, Commerce, and the Judiciary and chaired the Senate Ethics Committee. He was recognized as a leader on the Judiciary Committee, where he voted against the nomination of his eventual Senate successor, Jeff Sessions, to an Alabama federal judgeship in 1986 and against the nominations of conservatives Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas to the U.S. Supreme Court in 1987 and 1991, respectively. He proved to be just as strong a supporter of judicial reform at the federal level as he was in Alabama; among other initiatives, he introduced the bill that created the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit.

Although well-liked by his constituents and Senate colleagues, Heflin did at times arouse criticism. Many Alabama newspapers editorialized against his support for civil rights. He sometimes drew criticism from some fellow Democrats for not supporting his party's majority views by opposing abortion, most gun control bills (although he did support the Assault Weapons Ban), the Family and Medical Leave Act, homosexuals in the military, limits on school prayer, and environmental regulation. Even so, Heflin was known for his bipartisan appeal and was considered for high office by presidents of different parties (by Carter for U.S. Attorney General and by Ronald Reagan for the U.S. Supreme Court). Senate Republicans tried many times to convince Heflin to switch parties, but he always refused, even after fellow Alabama Democratic Senator Richard C. Shelby switched to the Republican Party in 1994.

On March 30, 1995, citing health concerns, Heflin announced that he would not seek reelection in 1996. When his Senate term concluded on January 3, 1997, he returned to Tuscumbia, where his final years were marked by spending time with family and friends, working with his biographers, lobbying, and giving an occasional political speech. On March 29, 2005, Heflin suffered a fatal heart attack at the age of 83. News of his passing was met with valedictory comments from politicians in both parties, inside and outside of Alabama. Heflin was interred at the Oakwood Cemetery in Tuscumbia.

Heflin is remembered as a talented orator with a flair for humor and bipartisanship; for the respect and integrity he inspired from those of all political persuasions; for his shepherding of the Judicial Article; for his strong commitment to African American civil rights; and for his 18 years representing Alabama in the U.S. Senate.

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Howell Heflin, U.S. Senator's Timeline

1921
June 19, 1921
Poulan, Worth County, Georgia, United States
1958
June 7, 1958
2005
March 29, 2005
Age 83
Sheffield, Colbert County, Alabama, United States
????
Glendale Cemetery, Leighton, Colbert County, Alabama, United States