The death of Ted Kennedy last summer brought a flow of tears from liberals and progressives and prompted what amounted to national days of mourning as the old liberal lion was eulogized and laid to rest.
Reaction to the passing of Sen. Robert C. Byrd, by contrast, is likely to be more subdued — perhaps amounting to a collective, if respectful, shrug of the shoulders.
Alhough Byrd has often been described as a conservative, he spent recent decades promoting solid Democratic values and earned a place as a friend to liberals and progressives. Moreover, Americans across the political spectrum owe a debt to the man who grew up poor in a small coal-mining town.
“Senator Byrd came from humble beginnings in the southern coalfields, was raised by hard-working West Virginians, and triumphantly rose to the heights of power in America. But he never forgot where he came from nor who he represented, and he never abused that power for his own gain,” said Byrd's home-state colleague, Sen. Jay Rockefeller.
The Left probably holds the nine-term veteran in highest regard for taking on the Bush administration. Byrd vigorously opposed not only the Iraq war, but the entire concept of preemptive war.
But his devotion to Democratic Party ideals went beyond merely serving as a nemesis to the 43rd president. Even as it went out of fashion nationally, Byrd never wavered in his belief that federal spending could help improve the conditions and economy for working-class Americans, particularly back home in the Mountain State.
And his deep scholarship and lofty oratory made Byrd a formidable defender of Democratic ideals, even in the face of growing conservative partisanship.
I recall watching the Senate one day shortly after the 1994 Republican takeover of Congress. One of the new GOP senators elected that year had come to the floor and began ranting on about the provisions in the Republican "Contract With America."
The freshman's mistake was yielding time to Senator Byrd, who began holding forth on Plutarch and the Roman Senate. The Republican was caught as a deer in the headlights and beat a hasty retreat as he had no defense against Byrd's use of history to take apart his sloganeering.
More than fealty to any partisan position, however, Robert Byrd held tight to the Constitution — literally. He would carry our nation's charter in his breast pocket, and would not hesitate to pull it out on the Senate floor whenever necessary in order to defend the liberty so many fought and died to preserve.








Article comments
1 - Glenn Contrarian
The Republicans love to say how Sen. Byrd used to be a member of the Klan and certainly was a segregationist. Then they say that his metamorphosis to a strong supporter of civil rights was not a matter of conscience, but a matter of keeping his seat in the Senate.
But I disagree. I've walked that path too, from being a racist to being a far-left supporter of civil rights. The real hypocrisy is by the Republicans who point out Byrd's bygone days...but absolutely refuse to call out the racists among themselves like Sessions and Shelby, and they dare not acknowledge the race-baiting that occurs weekly, even daily on right-wing talk shows.
2 - pablo
I guess Byrd left his pocket constitution at home the day that he voted for the Patriot act.
3 - dan
Glenn, some would say there is no difference between racism and the far-left version of civil rights. At least conservatives say that.
4 - Arch Conservative
Welfare and other idiotic liberal social welfare programs have done more harm to minorities than Byrd and his KKK pals could ever dream of doing.
5 - Dave Nalle
Glenn, I think Byrd was just smart enough to see that keeping blacks in serfdom to the Demcoratic party was a natural extension of Jim Crow.
Dave
6 - John Wilson
dan, Arch and Dave reply with the tortured rightist inversion we've come to expect from them. Tortured? Torture and rightists? I guess they feel as free to torture words and ideas as they do to torture foreigners (and even Americans!) that they don't like. I suppose that represents some kind of consistency, or at least predictability.
7 - Arch Conservative
Funny that you find the truth to be torturous John.