
Jesse Alexander Helms, Jr.
October 18, 1921 - July 4, 2008


www.wikipedia.org
Jesse Helms was a former five-term Republican
U.S. Senator from North Carolina, and a former
chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee.
Helms was born in Monroe, North Carolina, where
his father, called "Big Jesse," served
as chief of police. Jesse and Dot Helms are the
parents of three children: Jane, Nancy of
Raleigh, and Charles Helms of Winston-Salem,
North Carolina. They have seven grandchildren.
Helms never obtained a university degree. He
attended Wingate Junior College (now Wingate
University) and Wake Forest University but did
not graduate. He holds honorary degrees from some
universities including Bob Jones University,
Grove City College, Campbell University, and
Wingate University.
During World War II, Helms served stateside as a
recruiter in the United States Navy. After the
war, he pursued his twin interests, journalism
and politics (at this time, within the Democratic
Party).
Helms began his career in politics as an
unofficial researcher for Willis Smith, a
conservative Democratic lawyer and former
president of the American Bar Association, who
successfully ran for the U.S. Senate in 1950.
Smith ran as a supporter of racial segregation.
After the election, Senator Smith hired Helms to
be his administrative assistant in Washington,
D.C. In 1952, Helms worked on the presidential
campaign of Senator Richard B. Russell, Jr., of
Georgia, who was seeking the Democratic
nomination. When Smith suddenly died in 1953,
Helms left Washington and returned to Raleigh.
From 1953 through 1960, Helms was executive
director of the North Carolina Bankers
Association. He went on to become the executive
vice-president, vice chairman of the board, and
assistant chief executive officer of the
Raleigh-based Capitol Broadcasting Company, from
1960 until his election to the Senate. During his
time at CBC, he gained fame as a conservative
commentator through his daily editorials on
WRAL-TV in Raleigh. The editorials, which he gave
at the end of each night's local news broadcast,
made Helms famous throughout eastern North
Carolina. The editorials featured folksy
anecdotes interwoven with vivid right-wing
viewpoints. He referred to The News and Observer,
his former employer, as the "Nuisance and
Disturber" for its promotion of liberal
views.
The University of North Carolina, which had a
reputation as a bastion of liberalism in the
state, was a frequent target of Helms' criticism:
in one memorable editorial he suggested that a
wall be erected around the campus to prevent the
university's liberal views from
"infecting" the rest of the state.
Although his editorials created controversy, they
also made him popular with conservative voters,
and Helms won a seat on the Raleigh City Council
in 1957. He served for four years.
Helms worked on the unsuccessful 1960 Democratic
primary gubernatorial campaign of I. Beverly
Lake, Sr., who ran as a supporter of racial
segregation. Lake was defeated by Terry Sanford,
who ran as a racial moderate willing to implement
the federal government's policy of school
integration.
In 1972, Helms announced his candidacy for a seat
in the United States Senate. He won the
Republican primary with 60.1 percent of the vote
and eliminated two intraparty opponents.
Meanwhile, the Democrats retired the ailing
Senator B. Everett Jordan, who lost his primary,
55.3 percent to 44.6 percent, to Congressman Nick
Galifianakis of Durham. Helms played upon
Galifianakis' ethnicity during the campaign,
running under the slogan "Vote for HelmsHe's
One of Us!". Benefiting from Richard Nixon's
landslide re-election, Helms became the first
Republican elected to the Senate from North
Carolina in the 20th century. Helms polled
795,248 (54 percent) to Galifianakis' 677,293 (46
percent).
In 1978, Helms successfully defended his seat
against state Insurance Commissioner John Ingram
in a low-turnout, off-year election. Helms
received 619,151 votes (54.5 percent) to Ingram's
516,663 (45.5 percent). Ingram carried the strong
support of President Jimmy Carter. The 1978
election would give Helms his largest margin of
victory in his five Senate campaigns.
In 1984, in the most expensive Senate campaign up
to that time, Helms narrowly defeated powerful
two-term Governor Jim Hunt, thanks in part to
then-President Ronald Reagan's support and
popularity in North Carolina. Helms polled
1,156,768 (51.7 percent) to Hunt's 1,070,488
(47.8 percent). Although this was a solid victory
against a formidable opponent, it should be noted
that President Reagan carried the state with 62
percent of the vote, and GOP gubernatorial
candidate James G. Martin won with 54 percent.
In both 1990 and 1996, Helms won against Harvey
Gantt, the former mayor of Charlotte. Both
campaigns attracted major national attention not
only because of Helms' national prominence and
controversial positions on many issues, but also
because Gantt was an African-American whose
liberal political views provided a stark contrast
to Helms. Helms' 1990 victory has been partially
credited to a late-running television commercial
that urged white voters to reject Gantt because
of the Democratic candidate's support for
affirmative action programs. The ad showed a
white man's hands ripping up a rejection notice
from a company that had not hired him due to
affirmative action policies that had given the
job to "less qualified minority". It
was criticized for its perceived subliminal
content; As the hands crumple it up, for a
fraction of a second the letter fades to a
picture of Mr.Gant and the hands appear to be
crushing his head. The advert was produced by
Alex Castellanos, who would in 2000 again come
under fire for making a Bush campagin advert
criticizing Al Gore's healthcare policies and
flashing the word 'RATS' over the top of it.
The ad was the brainchild of Dick Morris, who in
the 1990s would become a key political adviser to
President Bill Clinton. Helms won the 1990
election by 1,087,331 votes (52.5 percent) to
Gantt's 981,573 (47.4 percent). In his 1990
victory statement, Helms mocked the major North
Carolina newspapers for their unhappiness over
his victory, quoting a line from "Casey at
the Bat": "There's no joy in Mudville
tonight."
In 1996, Helms drew 1,345,833 (52.6 percent) to
Gantt's 1,173,875 (45.9 percent). Helms supported
his former Senate colleague Bob Dole for
president, while Gantt endorsed Bill Clinton.
Although Helms is generally credited with being
the most successful Republican politician in
North Carolina history, his largest proportion of
the vote in any of his five elections was 54.5
percent.
In North Carolina Helms was a polarizing figure,
and he freely admitted that many people in the
state strongly disliked him: "They (the
Democrats) could nominate Mortimer Snerd and he'd
automatically get 45 percent of the vote."
Helms was particularly popular among older,
conservative constituents and was considered one
of the last "Old South" politicians to
have served in the Senate. However, he also
considered himself a voice of conservative youth,
whom he hailed in the dedication of his
autobiography. He is widely credited with helping
to move North Carolina from a one-party state
dominated by the Democratic Party into a
competitive two-party state that usually votes
Republican in presidential elections. Under
Helms' banner, many conservative Democrats in
eastern North Carolina switched parties and began
to vote increasingly Republican.
During the 1976 Republican National Convention,
Helms encouraged a movement to draft Senator
James L. Buckley, as an effort to stop the
nomination of Ronald Reagan for President,
despite his earlier support during the North
Carolina presidential primary. Reagan had
announced that Pennsylvania Senator Richard
Schweiker would be his running mate if picked;
Helms believed that Schweiker was far too
liberal. The "Draft Buckley" movement
was mooted when President Gerald Ford very
narrowly won the party's nomination on the first
ballot
As a senator, Helms became one of the leaders of
the increasingly influential conservative
movement within the Republican Party, giving
Ronald Reagan crucial support in 1976 in the
pivotal North Carolina GOP primary that paved the
way for Reagan's presidential election in 1980.
Helms became chairman of the Senate Agriculture
Committee in the 1980s. He was also an advocate
of the tobacco industry in Congress, since much
of North Carolina's rural economy relies on
tobacco. (Hubert Humphrey once said that,
"I'll trade Jesse Helms his tobacco vote for
my wheat support any day.") Tobacco
companies such as R. J. Reynolds and Philip
Morris have supported him, both directly and
through donations to the Jesse Helms Center at
Wingate University.
Helms led the Senatorial opposition to the Martin
Luther King Jr. holiday in 1983
When Republicans regained control of Congress
after the 1994 elections, Helms became chairman
of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. In
that role, he pushed for reform of the United
Nations and blocked payment of UN dues by the
United States. As he gained seniority and clout,
Helms became known as "Senator No"
because he would obstruct a variety of Democratic
bills and presidential appointments. Helms
reportedly delighted in the nickname. But Helms
passed few laws of his own in part because of his
bridge-burning style. Hedrik Smith's The Power
Game depicts several senators specifically
blocking Helms' goals as result of his
intransigence.
Helms vehemently opposed granting MFN to China,
citing human rights concerns.
Though a chairman of a major Senate committee, he
regularly eschewed invitations to go on Sunday
interview programs, claiming his constituents did
not watch them. He also advised a young press
aide not to write a letter to the New York Times
after one of its editorials condemned Helms:
again, since most of the constituency did not
subscribe to the paper, there was no need for him
to engage the paper in a dispute.
Senator Helms was instrumental in obtaining the
previously withheld black box to KAL 007 by
writing to Russian president Boris Yeltsin. He
also condemned the forced labour camps
established by the USSR.
Because of recurring health problems, including
bone disorders, prostate cancer and heart
disease, Helms did not seek re-election in 2002.
His Senate seat was won by Elizabeth Dole, wife
of long-time colleague and former Senator Bob
Dole. Helms remains to date the longest-serving
popularly-elected U.S. senator in North Carolina
history.
Since retiring from the Senate in 2003, Helms has
been in poor health. In September 2005, Random
House published his memoir Here's Where I Stand.
Helms has also been recruited by pop star Bono
for charity work. In 2004, he spoke out for the
election of Republican U.S. Representative
Richard Burr, who, like Elizabeth Dole two years
earlier, defeated the Democrat Erskine Bowles to
win the other North Carolina Senate seat. Helms
has designated Wingate University as the
repository of the official papers and historical
items from his Senate career.
Jerry Falwell's Liberty University opened the
Jesse Helms School of Government in 2005. Helms
was present at the dedication ceremony.
In April 2006, news reports disclosed Helms has
multi-infarct dementia, which leads to failing
memory and cognitive function, as well as a
number of physical difficulties. He has since
been moved into a convalescent center near his
home. His wife was quoted to have said that
"he has his good days and his bad days. He
still sees friends. Company is good for him. He
is still signing books. But he is not able to
conduct any business or make any speeches."
For more information and details about funeral
arrangements, visit www.jessehelmscenter.org
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