 Photo by A.J. Sisco The late Dave Treen was one of the few true gentlemen in state
politics. |
It's been said that Louisiana voters will forgive a politician
almost anything except being dull. That maxim came to prominence during
the tenure of former Gov. Dave Treen, but in the end it was Treen who
did most of the forgiving. It was the measure of the man. Treen died
Oct. 29 at the age of 81 after a respiratory illness.
Louisiana's first Republican governor since
Reconstruction, Treen was one of the few true gentlemen in state
politics. An ardent, lifelong conservative, he nonetheless appointed
more African Americans to state offices than any other governor in
history during his single term as Louisiana's chief executive
(1980-84). He often ranked that among his proudest accomplishments.
In his younger days, Treen was a member of the States
Rights Party, which fought racial integration in the late 1950s and
early 1960s. He ran for Congress several times as a Republican against
the late Hale Boggs, starting in 1962, and once nearly unseated the
iconic Southern liberal. In 1972, Treen won election to Congress from
Louisiana's Third District, becoming our state's first Republican
congressman since Reconstruction. He served in Congress until his
election as governor.
Treen defeated a handful of Democrats to win the
governorship in 1979 — the first under Louisiana's then-new "open
primary" electoral system. Ironically, that system was devised by
Treen's longtime political nemesis, Edwin W. Edwards. Four years after
Treen was elected governor, EWE came back for a third term as governor,
routing Treen by a vote of 62 percent to Treen's 36 percent in the
primary.
It was during that 1983 campaign that Edwards uttered
some of his most memorable quotes, many of them as taunts aimed at the
quieter, methodical Treen. Among the most infamous was EWE's quip that
the GOP incumbent was so slow that "it takes him an hour and a half to
watch 60 Minutes."
I remember another one that is less quoted. Noting that
Treen's campaign would make an issue of EWE's alleged dishonesty,
Edwards said: "He keeps talking about me as if I'm going to steal
something. ... If we don't get him outta there soon, there won't be
anything left to steal!" Edwards' words proved to be more prophetic
than he ever intended.
Another irony about Treen and EWE was the fact that,
while Edwards could charm any crowd from a stage, he was cold as ice up
close. Treen, who was stiff as a board in front of a crowd, was the
life of the party in smaller settings — and he had a rapier wit.
I once heard him do a spot-on impersonation of EWE.
Treen clearly had a change of heart about racial issues
after his early days in the States Rights Party. His policies as
governor and his actions after serving as governor likewise paint a
picture of an honest, gentle soul who believed in the Christian ethic
of repentance and forgiveness. An obvious example of the latter was
Treen's tireless efforts to get EWE released from jail via a
presidential pardon. When asked why he would work so hard to free a man
who had caused him so much pain, he confided, "Because every night I
say the Lord's Prayer, and when I say the words, 'Forgive us our
trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us,' I would feel
like a hypocrite if I didn't forgive Edwin."
Dave Treen may have lost his biggest political campaign
to Edwin Edwards, but in the race that really counts, he was much the
better man.
Tags: Dave Treen
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