Everything about John B Connally totally explained
» This article is about the former governor of Texas. For the U.S. Representative from Kansas, see John R. Connelly. For the English footballer see John Connelly.
John Bowden Connally, Jr. (
February 27 1917 –
June 15 1993), was a powerful
American politician, serving as
Governor of
Texas, and
Secretary of the Navy and
Treasury under Presidents
John F. Kennedy and
Richard Nixon, respectively. While Governor, Connally was a passenger in the car in which President Kennedy was
assassinated, and was wounded in the shooting.
Early years, education, military
Connally was born into a large family in
Floresville, the seat of
Wilson County located southeast of
San Antonio. He was among the few Floresville
High School graduates who was able to attend college. He thereafter graduated from
The University of Texas School of Law where he was student body president. He had actually been admitted to the bar by examination before he completed his law degree.
He served in the
United States Navy during
World War II, first as an aide to
James V. Forrestal, then as part of the planning staff for the invasion of
Africa by
General Dwight D. Eisenhower. He then transferred to the
South Pacific Theater, where he served with distinction. He was a fighter-plane director aboard the aircraft carrier
USS Essex and won a
Bronze Star for bravery. He was thereafter shifted to another carrier, the
USS Bennington, and won a
Legion of Merit. He was also involved in the campaigns in the
Gilbert,
Marshall,
Ryukyu, and
Philippine islands. He was discharged in 1946 at the rank of
lieutenant commander.
On his release from the Navy, Connally practiced law and return to serve as a key aide to
Lyndon Baines Johnson, when LBJ was a still a congressman, He maintained close ties with Johnson until the former president's death in 1973, when shortly thereafter Connally switched parties.
One of Connally's principal clients was the Texas
oil tycoon Sid W. Richardson and his
nephew partner Perry Bass, both of
Fort Worth. Richardson, on his death in 1959, left Connally as the co-executor of the estate. The designation provided Connally with steady income for years afterwards. Even in the 1950s, Richardson was believed to have been worth from $200 million to $1 billion.
The Senate primary of 1948
In the 1948 Democratic primary for the
U.S. Senate seat vacated by the retiring
W. Lee O'Daniel, Connally was the LBJ campaign manager, as the congressman opposed former Governor
Coke R. Stevenson of
Junction, the seat of
Kimble County in central Texas. During the tabulation period, Connally journeyed to
Alice, the seat of
Jim Wells County in south Texas, and through "political boss"
George Parr procured a revision of the totals from Precinct 13. Some 203 names were added to the LBJ tabulation, all signed in blue ink and in the same handwriting. Some of the names were of deceased persons. The list was thereafter burned in a fire. This change in tabulation plunged Johnson into an 87-vote primary runoff majority.
Connally then persuaded the
Temple publisher Frank W. Mayborn to return to Texas from a business trip in
Nashville, Tennessee, to cast the decisive vote in the 29-28 decision by the Democratic State Central Committee to certify Johnson as the party nominee by the disputed eighty-seven votes.
United States Supreme Court Justice
Hugo Black had deemed that the decision in the Johnson-Stevenson race rested squarely with the central committee.
From Navy Secretary to Governor
At the 1960 Democratic convention in
Los Angeles, Connally led the weakened forces which rallied behind Senator Lyndon Johnson. He claimed that John F. Kennedy, if nominated and elected, would be unable to serve as president for a full term because of
Addison's disease and dependence on
cortisone. Kennedy, however, had wrapped up the needed delegates for nomination before the convention even opened. Johnson went on to seek the vice presidency on Kennedy's ticket.
Secretary of the Navy
In 1961, President Kennedy named Connally, at Johnson's request, as
Secretary of the Navy. Connally resigned eleven months later to run for the Texas governorship. At the time, the Navy was one of the largest employers in the world, with more than 600,000 in uniform and 650,000 civilian workers, stationed at 222 bases in the United States and 53 abroad. It had a budget of $14 billion.
Connally directed the Sixth Fleet in the
Mediterranean Sea on a new kind of "gunboat diplomacy". The
USS Forrestal landed in
Naples, Italy, and brought gifts to children in an
orphanage. Connally ordered gifts also to a hospital in
Cannes, France, which treated children with bone diseases, to poor
Greek children on the island of
Rhodes, and for spastic children in
Palermo, Italy. Presents were also sent to Turkish children in Cyrprus and to a camp in
Beirut for homeless
Arab refugees.
In the fall of 1961, Connally was cut near his left eye when a
midshipman at the University of Texas in Austin thrust his rifle toward the secretary because he thought that Connally had asked to see the weapon. Connally had merely asked the young man his name. The accident required several stitches.
Connally fought hard to protect the Navy's role in the national
space program, having vigorously opposed assigning most space research to the
United States Air Force.
Time magazine termed Connally's year as Navy secretary "a first-rate appointment". Critics noted, however, that the brevity of Connally's tenure precluded any sustained or comprehensive achievements.
Running for governor
Connally announced two weeks before
Christmas of 1961 that he was leaving as Navy Secretary to return to Texas to seek the 1962 Democratic gubernatorial nomination even though the incumbent
Marion Price Daniel, Sr., was running for a fourth consecutive two-year term. Daniel was in political trouble following the enactment of a two-cent state
sales tax in 1961, which had soured many voters on his administration.
Connally ran as a conservative Democrat, having first defeated
liberal Don Yarborough of
Houston in the primary, and then, in November, having turned back a rare but determined bid by the conservative Republican Jack Cox, also of Houston. Cox had run two years earlier in the Democratic primary against Daniel. Connally received 847,036 ballots (54 percent) to Cox's 715,025 (45.6 percent). In the campaign, Connally questioned how voters could trust Cox because he'd switched parties, an action Connally himself would take eleven years later.
Connally served as governor from 1963-1969. In the campaigns of 1964 and 1966, he defeated weak Republican challenges offered by Jack Crichton and T.E. Kennerly and prevailed with margins of 73.8 percent and 72.8 percent, respectively.
Connally was seriously wounded while riding in President Kennedy's car in
Dallas. In the
single bullet theory espoused by the
Warren Commission, he was injured five times when a bullet, having already injured Kennedy, passed through Connally's chest, exiting below the right nipple, then entered his right wrist, shattering the radius bone, and upon exiting embedded itself in Connally's left thigh. In this scenario, the bullet that injured Connally was the second one fired and injured him 4.9 seconds before the fatal head shot to Kennedy. Critics of the
Warren Commission have questioned whether a single
magic bullet could have caused all of these injuries.
During the
Vietnam War, Connally
hawkishly urged Johnson to "finish" the engagement by any military means necessary. Johnson, however, was more moderate in his fighting of the war than Connally had advised him.
Secretary of the Treasury
In 1971, Republican President Nixon appointed the then Democrat Connally as Treasury Secretary. Connally that year famously told a delegation of Europeans worried about exchange rate fluctuations that the dollar is "our currency, but your problem."
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Secretary Connally defended a $50 billon increase in the debt ceiling and a $35 to $40 billion budget deficit as an essential "fiscal stimulus" at a time that five million Americans were unemployed. He unveiled Nixon's program of raising the price of
gold and formally devaluing the dollar -- finally leaving the old
gold standard. Prices continued to increase during 1971, and Nixon let wage and price guidelines, which Congress had authorized on a stand-by basis, to be implemented. Connally later shied away from his role in recommending the failed wage and price controls. Connally announced guaranteed loans for the ailing
Lockheed aircraft company. He fought a lonely battle too against growing balance-of-payment problems with the nation's trading partners, a situation that grew much more pronounced in the coming decades. He also undertook important foreign diplomatic trips for Nixon through his role as Treasury Secretary.
Connally stepped down as treasury secretary in 1972 to head "
Democrats for Nixon", a group funded by Republicans. Connally's old mentor, Lyndon Johnson, stood behind Democratic presidential nominee
George S. McGovern of
South Dakota though McGovern had long opposed Johnson's foreign and defense policies. It was the first time that Connally and Johnson were on opposite sides of a general election campaign, though some evidence suggests that Connally was "privately" for Eisenhower in 1952 and 1956, instead of the Democrat
Adlai E. Stevenson of
Illinois.
In the 1972
U.S. Senate election in Texas, Connally pointedly endorsed the Democrat
Harold Barefoot Sanders of Dallas, rather than the Republican incumbent
John G. Tower, also of Dallas, whom Connally had considered opposing in 1966, when he instead ran for a third term as governor. Tower, Nixon's choice in the Senate race, won handily over Sanders, but the Republican candidate for governor,
Henry Grover of Houston, a victim of intraparty maneuvering, fell short and lost to Democrat
Dolph Briscoe of
Uvalde in the southern portion of the
Texas Hill Country.
In January 1973, Lyndon Johnson died of
heart disease. He and Connally had been friends since 1938, and Connally took part in eulogizing Johnson during interment services at the
LBJ Ranch in
Gillespie County, along with the minister who officiated,
Billy Graham.
Switching parties
In May 1973, he joined the Republican Party. When
Vice President Spiro Agnew resigned that same year, Connally was one of Nixon's possible choices for vice president. However, Nixon ultimately chose
Gerald Rudolph Ford, Jr., the House Minority Leader from
Michigan, presumably because he knew that the moderate Ford could be easily confirmed by both houses of Congress whereas Connally would run into liberal Democratic opposition, and the weakened Nixon didn't want a fight for the vice-presidential selection.
In 1975, he was accused of pocketing $10,000 for influencing a
milk price decision by Texas lawyer Jake Jacobsen. At his trial, he called, as character witnesses,
Jackie Kennedy,
Lady Bird Johnson,
Barbara Jordan,
Dean Rusk,
Robert McNamara, and
Billy Graham. Connally was acquitted.
Running for President
Republican Party (United States) presidential primaries, 1976
Connally announced in January 1979 that he'd seek the Republican nomination for President in
1980. He was considered a great orator and strong leader and was featured on the cover of
Time magazine with the heading "Hot on the Trail," but his wheeler dealer image remained a liability. He raised more money than any other candidate, but he was never able to overtake the popular conservative front runner
Ronald Reagan. Connally spent his money nationally, while the first
George Bush targeted his time and money in early states and won the
Iowa caucus, making him the principal alternative to Reagan.
Connally eventually focused on
South Carolina, an early primary state where he'd the support of popular U.S. Senator
Strom Thurmond, but he lost there to Reagan 55 to 30 percent (15 percent for Bush) and withdrew from the race. After spending $11 million during the campaign, Connally secured the support of a single delegate, the late Mrs. Ada Mills of
Arkansas, who became known as the "$11 million delegate." Connally quickly endorsed Reagan and helped him to win only a narrow primary victory over Bush in Bush's adopted home state of Texas.
It was no secret that Connally and Bush despised each other. Connally said as much in a 1988
60 Minutes interview on
CBS. Years earlier, however,
Ralph Yarborough supporters had questioned whether Connally, like many of his friends in the oil industry, had indeed voted for Yarborough's general election opponent in 1964, George H.W. Bush.
The later years
In 1986, Connally filed for
bankruptcy as a result of a string of business losses in Houston.
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In December 1990, Connally and
Oscar Wyatt, chairman of the Coastal Oil Corporation, met with President
Saddam Hussein of
Iraq. Hussein had been holding foreigners as hostages (or "guests" as Hussein called them) at strategic military sites in Iraq. After the meeting Hussein agreed to let the hostages go, and they were released.
Connally was known as an immaculate dresser who wore expensive and stylish suits wherever he went. Like
Ulysses S. Grant, he was said to cater to very wealthy men. Biographer Charles Ashman relates a story about Connally carrying a cigarette lighter in his pocket and lighting cigarettes as a courtesy only for very wealthy men who might be inclined to contribute to his political causes or retain him as a consultant on lucrative business arrangements.
In one of his last political acts, Connally endorsed then Republican U.S. Representative
Jack Fields of Houston in the
special election called in May 1993 to fill the vacancy left by U.S. Senator
Lloyd M. Bentsen, who left his seat to take the position of Treasury Secretary in the new administration of
Bill Clinton. Fields finished fourth in the special election and left Congress thereafter. Republican
Kay Bailey Hutchison won the seat, which was once held by Bentsen's and Connally's old intraparty rival,
Ralph W. Yarborough of Austin. Connally's daughter had worked for Hutchison while Hutchison was State Treasurer and had left the position amid controversy.
Connally died of
pulmonary fibrosis, a scarring of the lungs which makes breathing difficult and then potentially impossible. John and "Nellie" Connally are interred in the
Texas State Cemetery in Austin.
Soap opera buff
- Connally and his wife, whom he met at UT and married in 1940, admitted to being soap opera addicts. In a Time magazine article, January 12, 1976, the two were quoted as saying that they wouldn't allow anything to interrupt them during their favorite "story", CBS's Love of Life. The couple were also fans of CBS's As the World Turns.
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