May 23, 2012

Vilsack: the state Senate years

Tom Vilsack was elected to the state Senate in 1992 and tackled complicated issues, like tinkering with the formula used to calculate how much businesses pay into the state’s unemployment compensation fund. Vilsack tried to find some middle ground in the brewing controversy over large-scale livestock operations. This how then-Senator Vilsack framed the issue during a speech on the Senate floor.

“If we are not interested in providing some degree of local control or joint control, then we have to give some safety valve to the pressure that builds up in the countryside when property’s being use and offensive odors occur to the point that someone’s enjoyment of their property or health is affected,” Vilsack said during that speech, saved in the Radio Iowa archives. Former state Senator Elaine Szymoniak of Des Moines sat next to Vilsack in the Senate.

“After he gave his first floor speech, I wrote him a note saying ‘There’ll be a time when I say I knew you when you began.’” Szymoniak said during an interview with Radio Iowa. “I didn’t really look ahead to a national scene, but I was pretty sure then that he’d be governor.”

Szymoniak says Vilsack quickly became a trusted ally who could broker deals on complicated issues. “And I went to him frequently when I knew things were going to have to be worked out and could talk it over with him,” Szymoniak said.

“He had a good way of bringing people together.” Thomas Fogarty, an editor at U-S-A Today who no longer writes about politics, was covering the Iowa Senate for the Des Moines Register during the years Vilsack was a senator. Fogarty, too, remembers Vilsack as a key negotiator.

“He was incredibly bright. He was incredibly talented on zeroing in on the points of potential compromise. He was extremely dilligent and he was extremely persuasive,” Fogarty said during a Radio Iowa interview. But Fogarty says it was apparent Vilsack did not suffer fools gladly.

“He has no patience for small talk and I always thought that in the long run he would be inhibited from advancement in politics because of his personality. And I see now I was wrong on that. You don’t get elected governor of Iowa twice and have a complete inability to deal with people,” Fogarty said. A review of Vilsack’s 1998 campaign for governor is next in Radio Iowa’s review of Tom Vilsack career.

Tom Vilsack, the accidental politician?

If you look at Tom Vilsack’s resume, it looks like a flow chart that a college professor would use to illustrate how to move up the political ranks. Vilsack was elected his town’s mayor three times, then he won a seat in the state legislature which he held for five years. Vilsack followed that with two successful campaigns for governor and now in his fifth year as governor he’s on the list of folks democrat presidential candidate John Kerry’s considering as a running mate. While we don’t yet know how this latest chapter in Vilsack’s political story will end, we do know how Vilsack’s life began.

He was orphaned, then adopted by Bud and Dolly Vilsack. Vilsack grew up in Pennsylvania, got his college degree from Hamilton College and his law degree from Albany Law School. Vilsack describes Mount Pleasant, Iowa as his adopted hometown. It’s where his wife, Christie Bell, grew up, and Vilsack often describes his first visit. Vilsack’s friend Lenis Moore of Mount Pleasant tells a condensed version of the story.

“The first experience he had in this small town of Mount Pleasant was a potluck family dinner,” Moore said during an interview with Radio Iowa. “(Vilsack) was so impressed by and struck by the sense of family that existed that he wanted very much to have that not only for himself but for his family and I think that played a great part in their decision to move back to Mount Pleasant.”

So, Tom Vilsack married Christie and began practicing law with his father-in-law in his wife’s hometown. After the town’s mayor was shot to death during a city council meeting in 1987, Vilsack won the job of mayor in a write-in campaign. Then, he ran for the state Senate in 1992. Vilsack’s political career could have ended shortly afterwards, though, as Vilsack thought seriously about quitting politics. Senator Mike Gronstal of Council Bluffs says Tom Vilsack’s father-in-law pointed him in a different direction.

“He had one of those, you know, kind of heart-to-heart (conversations) with a man he had a lot of respect for, and love and admiration for. He had a heart to heart with him, and what I remember is Tom says that’s when he decided he could stay in the legislature for a while and do some o-k stuff, or he could go and really try and make a fundamental difference, and he decided I’m going to run for governor and try to make a fundamental difference in Iowa,” Gronstal said during a Radio Iowa interview.

But first, a review of Vilsack’s time in the State Senate is next in this Radio Iowa series examining Tom Vilsack’s career.