By
Amelia Knapp, USCHS Intern
Congressional
Pictoral Directory, January 1975
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Mo
Udall (D-AZ) led a successful 30-year career in the
U.S.
House of Representatives with his dedication
to the "three
E's - environment, economy and energy." Although he represented
a conservative Arizona district, he became a leading
liberal voice calling for reforms to campaign practices
and the seniority system in Congress. His peers and constituents
found him to be "highly intelligent and immensely witty"
and his resume reflected his diverse background, including
time spent as a county attorney, University of Arizona
law professor and a stint with the American Basketball
Association's Denver Nuggets. But it was Udall's environmental
activism that distinguished his service in Congress.
Morris
King Udall was born on June 12, 1922, in St. Johns, Arizona,
into a large Mormon family. Growing up, Udall was surrounded
by public servants. His parents were involved in public
and civic service activities. His father, Levi S. Udall,
was the Chief Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court, and
his mother, Louise "Lee" Udall, was deeply involved with
issues concerning Native Americans. She later published
Me and Mine, a book about the life of a Hopi Indian woman.
Udall
and his brother, Stewart, developed a close bond in childhood
that lasted throughout their lives. The two attended
the University of Arizona and were members of the varsity
basketball team. World War II interrupted Mo's academic
pursuits and he left school to serve as a Captain in
the Army Air Corps. Upon his return to Arizona, he entered
the ABA and played for the Denver Nuggets in the 1948-49
season.
In
1949, Udall earned his law degree from the University
of Arizona and joined his brother's Tucson practice,
which became Udall and Udall. Both brothers had political
ambitions. After being elected president of the senior
class at the University of Arizona, Mo had dreamed of
a career in politics, possibly serving in Congress. However,
when Stewart decided to run for a Congressional seat,
Mo refused to stand in his brother's way. Mo later cited
family harmony as a important factor in deciding not
to run against his brother. After Stewart's election
to the House of Representatives, Mo Udall left the family
practice and became the Pima County attorney. He also
taught labor law at his alma mater in 1955-56.
In
1961, after President John F. Kennedy appointed Stewart
to become Secretary of the Department of the Interior,
a special election was held and Mo Udall won his brother's
seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. He served
for 30 years, with over half of the time spent as Chairman
of the House Interior and Insular Affairs Committee.
While he served in the House, he sponsored several landmark
bills for the environment, including the Alaska National
Interests Lands Conservation Act, passed in 1980.
That
conservation bill involved the protection of more than
150 million acres of land; it doubled the size of the
national parks holdings and tripled the size of the national
wilderness system. He later recalled, "My aim was to
protect what are sometimes called the 'Crown Jewels'
- the most spectacular of the many large tracts of pristine
wilderness in Alaska - from despoilment by natural -
resource developers and exploiters of the native Eskimo."
Udall also fought to preserve
Manassas
Battlefield National Park and in 1982 he was an advocate
for a nuclear waste act.
Udall
set his political sights on higher office--without much
success. In 1976, he announced his candidacy for the
Democratic presidential nomination. He finished second
to Jimmy Carter and returned to the House. Also in the
1970s he twice sought the Speakership of the House and
the position of the majority leader.
Udall
authored several books, including
Education of a Congressman:
The Newsletters of Morris K. Udall,
The Job of
a Congressman and
Too Funny to be President.
The latter is a chronicle of some of his achievements
and his comedic flair. Udall believed in the mediating
power of humor, once remarking, "Self-effacing humor
can also be the best way for a politician to deal with
any delicate subject."
Udall's
environmental action earned him recognition. In 1986,
he was awarded the National Wildlife Federation's Conservationist
of the Year after receiving a similar award from the
National Park and Conservation Association in 1980. In
1992, after his resignation, Congress established the
Morris
K. Udall Scholarship and Excellence in National Environmental
Policy Foundation Award, which is annually bestowed
upon 55 college sophomores and juniors who intend to
pursue careers related to environmental policy. In 1996,
President Bill Clinton presented Udall with the Presidential
Medal of Freedom.
Udall
was diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease in the late 1970s.
After suffering a fall in which he broke a shoulder,
several ribs and suffered a concussion, he resigned in
January 1991, citing an inability to conduct a reelection
campaign. Mo Udall died on December 11, 1998, in the
Veterans Medical Center in Washington, D.C. of complications
from Parkinson's disease.His third wife Norma, four brothers
and sisters, six children (Mark, Judith, Randolph, Anne,
Bradley and Katherine), one stepson and seven grandchildren
survive him.
Udall's
legacy in Congress can be measured by more than the environmental
programs he sponsored. His son,
Mark,
was elected to represent Colorado in the 106th Congress.
Mo's nephew (Stewart's son),
Tom,
also won election in the fall of 1998 to the House as
a Congressman from New Mexico. Mo served as a pioneer
in his commitment to the environment at a time when there
was little knowledge or concern about its condition.
He paved the way for Members of Congress today who share
his concerns.