[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 59 (Wednesday, May 4, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2681-S2682]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
REMEMBERING CONGRESSMAN ROBERT DUNCAN
Mr. WYDEN. Mr. President, I rise today to recognize a man who
deserves his own branch on the tree of Oregon politics.
Former Congressman Robert B. Duncan, died Friday in Portland at the
age of 90. He will long be remembered for what he achieved in reviving
the Oregon Democratic Party in the years after World War II and being
elected to represent two of Oregon's congressional districts during the
1960s and 1970s where he championed such great causes as civil rights
and the war on poverty.
He will also be remembered as someone who bravely took on two of
Oregon's iconic figures. Bob Duncan ran unsuccessfully for the U.S.
Senate three times, narrowly losing to names that are familiar to
everyone in this room--Wayne Morse and Mark Hatfield.
On a personal note, I might also add that Bob Duncan was the
incumbent and my opponent in the 1980 primary race for Oregon's 3rd
Congressional District. When I won that race I was afraid that I had
made an enemy for life out of someone who was revered in State
Democratic circles. I couldn't have been more wrong. He reached out to
me and became both a friend and a supporter.
Throughout his life, Bob Duncan was a major force in Oregon politics,
shaping the state through his various roles as speaker of the Oregon
House to influential member of the House appropriations subcommittee on
transportation where he played a key role in bringing light rail to the
streets of Portland. His public life ended in 1987 when he stepped down
as chairman of the Northwest Power Planning Council.
Bob's service in Congress covered a pivotal time in American politics
the war in Vietnam. In 1966, at the urging of President Lyndon Johnson,
Bob gave up his congressional seat from southern Oregon to run for the
Senate against then-Governor Mark Hatfield. It was a nationally watched
race pitting Duncan, a proponent of the war,
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against Hatfield, one of the Nation's earliest opponents of the United
States' Vietnam policy.
Two years later, Bob lost by only about 10,000 votes when he ran
against Wayne Morse in the Democratic primary for Oregon's other Senate
seat. Morse eventually lost to Republican Bob Packwood. In 1972, he
lost again to Morse in a Democratic primary for the U.S. Senate.
Never one to remain idle, Duncan having moved to Portland, won an
open congressional seat in 1974, making him the only person in Oregon
history to represent U.S. House districts in different parts of the
State.
But Bob Duncan's life should not be defined by races won and lost. He
was a tireless advocate for civil liberties, civil rights and
eliminating the scourge of poverty in America. His friends and you can
count me among them remember him as tenacious and hard working with a
brilliant legal mind.
I will always remember him as a larger-than-life figure who loved
telling stories and never let politics getting in the way of doing what
he felt was right. Despite running a hard-fought race against each
other, Duncan and Mark Hatfield became close friends and working
partners. Thanks to Hatfield's efforts, a government building in
downtown Portland now bears Duncan's name.
Please join me in extending my condolences to his wife Kathryn and
his children. All of Oregon shares in their loss.
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