Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Former governor, US senator was political titan in Arkansas

- By Andrew DeMillo

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Former Arkansas governor and U.S. Sen. David Pryor, a Democrat who was one of the state’s most beloved political figures and remained active in public service in the state long after he left office, died Saturday. He was 89.

Pryor, who went undercover to investigat­e nursing homes while a congressma­n, died of natural causes in Little Rock surrounded by family, his son Mark Pryor said.

“I think he was a great model for public service. He was a great role model for politician­s, but just for everyone in how we should treat each other and how we can make Arkansas better,” Mark Pryor, a former two-term Democratic U.S. senator, said.

David Pryor was considered one of the party’s giants in Arkansas, alongside former President Bill Clinton and the late U.S. Sen. Dale Bumpers. He also served in the U.S. House and the Arkansas Legislatur­e, and remained active in public life in recent years, including being appointed to the University of Arkansas’ Board of Trustees in 2009.

“David would be like a fish out of water if he were out of public service,” Bumpers, who served 18 years with Pryor in the Senate, said in 2006. “It’s his whole life.”

In a statement Saturday, Clinton called Pryor “one of Arkansas’ greatest servant leaders and one of the finest people I have ever known,” saying he “fought for progressiv­e policies that helped us put the divided past behind us and move into a brighter future together.”

The founder and publisher of the Ouachita Citizen weekly newspaper, Pryor started his political career in 1960 with his election to the Arkansas House. He served there through 1966, when he was elected to Congress after winning a special election to the U.S. House.

He experience­d his only political defeat in 1972, when he challenged U.S. Sen. John McClellan’s bid for a sixth term in the Democratic primary. Pryor was able to force a runoff with McClellan, but he lost by about 18,000 votes. It was a defeat that stung Pryor decades later.

“Following the McClellan race, I abandoned politics, or politics abandoned me,” he wrote in his 2008 autobiogra­phy, “A Pryor Commitment.” “I didn’t care who was governor or president. I avoided reading the paper for months on end. I just wanted to be left alone and, like General MacArthur, silently fade away.”

Elected governor in 1974, replacing Bumpers, Pryor served four years before being elected to the U.S. Senate, where he won passage of a Taxpayer’s Bill of Rights in 1988. He called the legislatio­n — which expanded citizens’ rights when dealing with the IRS — the “cornerston­e” of his congressio­nal career.

He also focused on helping the elderly and went undercover while serving in the U.S. House from 1966 to 1973 to investigat­e nursing homes. He said they commonly found up to 15 beds in one room.

“Even now, I recall clearly the loneliness, neglect, despair, anxiety and boredom — in particular the boredom — of those cold and sterile homes,” he wrote. “Essentiall­y human warehouses for old people.”

Pryor decided to not seek re-election in 1996, and he retired from elective office at the end of his term in early 1997.

But he remained active in the public eye and in politics. He served two years as the inaugural dean of the University of Arkansas Clinton School of Public Service in downtown Little Rock. He also temporaril­y chaired the state Democratic Party in 2008 after its chairman was fatally shot in his office.

Pryor and his wife, Barbara, had three children.

 ?? DANNY JOHNSTON/AP 2006 ?? Former Arkansas governor and U.S. Sen. David Pryor, right, greets former President Bill Clinton in Little Rock, Ark. Pryor died Saturday at the age of 89.
DANNY JOHNSTON/AP 2006 Former Arkansas governor and U.S. Sen. David Pryor, right, greets former President Bill Clinton in Little Rock, Ark. Pryor died Saturday at the age of 89.

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