This belongs elsewhere on conservativecave, but is being posted here so that lurking primitives may see it. As we all know, lurking primitives, when coming here, restrict their excursions solely to the DUmpster and the DUmping Ground, carefully avoiding all the illumination of the other forums here.
Who was the best U.S. Senator from Massachusetts the past 70 years, say, since circa 1940?
Henry Cabot Lodge (1902-1985) was first elected to the U.S. Senate in 1936, not an especially good year for Republicans, defeating the Massachusetts machine. He was handily re-elected in 1942, after having joined the Army Reserve. When Franklin Roosevelt ordered all those in Congress who were then in the military, to resign one of their two positions (Congress or the military), Lodge resigned from the Senate.
In 1946, after the second world war ended, Lodge re-entered politics, defeating the corrupt decadent old senescent David Walsh. Lodge was an eastern establishment Republican, and was the national campaign manager for Dwight Eisenhower in 1952.
It was in 1952, however, that angry Robert Taft Republicans in Massachusetts united with the Democrats, and Congressman John Kennedy narrowly unseated Lodge.
Lodge became American ambassador to the United Nations, and diligently pursued the cold war policies necessary for the preservation of liberty and freedom throughout the world. In 1960, Lodge became the Republican vice-presidential candidate, running with Richard Nixon, who lost in a narrow race that year.
His old foe Kennedy named Lodge U.S. ambassador to South Vietnam, for reasons one might easily imagine. In 1964, in an attempt to derail the candidacy of Barry Goldwater, Lodge ran as a write-in candidate in the New Hampshire Republican primary, and won. The attempts of his supporters (Lodge did not actively pursue the nomination himself) ultimately failed.
Lodge remained U.S. ambassador to South Vietnam, and later, to West Germany.
Charles Sinclar Weeks (1893-1972) was appointed to the seat vacated by Lodge in 1944, and served until 1946, declining to run for election.
He was a veteran of the National Guard and of the first world war, a prominent businessman, and treasurer of the national Republican party during the early 1940s.
Leverett Saltonstall (1892-1979), at the time governor of Massachusetts, was elected in a special election (to succeed Weeks, who had succeeded Lodge) in 1944; as he had been a successful governor, lowering state taxes and paying off 90% of the state debt, he was handily elected and re-elected in 1944, 1948, 1954, and 1960, despite the best efforts of the Massachusetts machine to depose him.
Edward Brooke (1919- ) was first elected in 1966, to take the place of the retiring Saltonstall; a veteran of the second world war, he was also the first U.S. Senator of African derivation since Reconstruction, and the last until 1992. In his first two of his three campaigns, he was heavily opposed by the Massachusetts machine, but won both times by substantial margins.
However, running for a third term in 1978, Brooke was defeated by the racist Massachusetts machine. George Bush awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2004.
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Okay, I selected Saltonstall, known for his good breeding, elegant manners, and utter honesty. Despite his blue-blooded background, Saltonstall was famous for getting along--in both politics and social encounters--with the common man, the blue-collar man, the working man.
The Massachusetts Democrats really loathed him for that touch; it's all good.