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About Wayne Morse - Political Career
Senator Morse's beliefs and convictions transcended party lines. When President Eisenhower adopted Senator Robert Taft's economic policies favoring big business in the early 1950s, Senator Morse defected from the Republican Party and became an Independent. His reason was succinct: “Principle above politics.” Morse joined the Democrats in 1955, but two years later he voted against Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson's watered-down Civil Rights Bill, calling it an “unconscionable compromise.” When John F. Kennedy supported the Landrum-Griffin Act, which weakened unions' legal protections in the name of rooting out organized crime, Senator Morse became so outraged that he ran against Kennedy in the 1960 presidential primaries. Morse's ardent principled stands earned him the reputation of being a maverick, a man who followed his own ideology and not that of the party.
“If you want to understand my political philosophy, here's the basic tenet: I think the job of a U.S. Senator is to seek to translate into legislation values that promote the welfare of people. Because...the keystone of the Constitution is the general welfare clause, and the wealth of America is its people, not its materialism.”
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