Everything about Birch Bayh totally explained
Birch Evans Bayh II (born
January 22,
1928) was a
U.S. Senator from
Indiana between
1963 and
1981. He was a candidate for the
Democratic nomination for
president in the
1976 election but lost to
Jimmy Carter. He is the father of former
Indiana governor and current U.S. Senator
Evan Bayh.
Bayh was born in
Terre Haute, Indiana, to Leah Ward Hollingsworth and Birch Evans Bayh, Sr. After serving in the
United States Army, he attended the
Purdue University School of Agriculture, where he was a member of
Alpha Tau Omega, and graduated in
1951. Among his Purdue classmates was
Wayne Townsend, who served in both houses of the Indiana legislature and was the Democratic choice for
governor in
1984. Bayh later attended
Indiana State University and
Indiana University School of Law - Bloomington.
He served in the
Indiana House of Representatives from
1954 to
1962. In the House, he rose to the position of Speaker and, in
1961, was admitted to the Indiana bar. He won the
1962 US Senate race in Indiana.
On
June 19,
1964, Bayh, his wife, Senator
Ted Kennedy and legislative aide Edward Moss were on board a small plane that crashed in heavy fog near
Springfield, Massachusetts. Senator Bayh pulled a badly injured Senator Kennedy from the wreckage. Senator and Mrs. Bayh were relatively unhurt, while the pilot and Moss were both killed in the crash.
Bayh was influential in the passing of
Title IX, the clause that gave women equal opportunities in sports and activities in public education.
As Chairman of the
Senate subcommittee on Constitutional Amendments, Bayh was the principal architect of two constitutional amendments:
- The 25th Amendment, which established the rules for presidential succession and disability.
- The 26th Amendment, which lowered the minimum voting age to 18.
Bayh was also the principal architect of the
Equal Rights Amendment, which wasn't adopted. But the proposed constitutional change with which he was most closely associated in his final years in the Senate was his attempt to eliminate the
Electoral College (the method of electing the
President of the United States and replace it with a popular vote in the 1960s and 70s. One of Bayh's proposals passed the House easily but was filibustered in the Senate. In 1977 he introduced reform legislation into the Senate
(External Link
), but it never achieved the
required two-thirds vote in either house of Congress. In
2006, he joined the
National Popular Vote Inc. coalition, which aims to effect Electoral College reform through an
interstate compact, and wrote a foreword to the book
Every Vote Equal.
Additionally, he served for many years on the Senate judiciary committee and was involved in two nominations in which the nominee was declined.
Bayh intended to run for the 1972 Democratic nomination for president, but his wife was diagnosed with cancer and he put his plans on hold. Before her death in 1979, Marvella Bayh became a leading cancer activist. In October 1975 Bayh announced his candidacy for the 1976 Democratic nomination. Bayh was considered a leading choice out of 12 candidates, and he was popular with organized labor and other liberal groups. However, his late start put him at a fundraising and organizational disadvantage. In January/February, Bayh finished third in Iowa behind Uncommitted delegates and
Jimmy Carter and third in New Hampshire behind Carter and
Morris K. Udall. A week later, Bayh finished a weak seventh place in the Massachusetts primary and ended his candidacy.
He ran for reelection for a fourth term in the
1980 election. Bayh and his opponent, Congressman and future
vice president Dan Quayle, engaged in seven debates. In those debates, Quayle attacked Bayh's liberal voting record, which hurt Bayh, and he was defeated for reelection in the
Republican landslide year, 46% to Quayle's 54%. Bayh has since resumed his law practice.
He is currently resides in
Easton, MD, is a fellow at
Washington College in
Chestertown, MD, and is a partner at the
Washington, DC, law firm
Venable LLP.
(External Link
)
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