Everything about Michael Dukakis totally explained
Michael Stanley Dukakis (born
November 3,
1933) is an American
Democratic politician, former
Governor of Massachusetts, and was the
Democratic presidential nominee in 1988. He was born to
Greek and
Vlach immigrants in
Brookline,
Massachusetts and was the longest serving governor in Massachusetts' history. He was the second
Greek-American governor in U.S. history after
Spiro Agnew.
Early career and family
Dukakis's father Panos (1896–1979) was a Greek from Asia Minor who settled in
Lowell, Massachusetts in 1912 and graduated from
Harvard Medical School twelve years later, subsequently working as an
obstetrician. His mother Euterpe (
née Boukis) (1903–2003) was a Greek immigrant from
Larissa; she and her family emigrated to
Haverhill, Massachusetts in 1913. She was a graduate of
Bates College.
Dukakis attended
Brookline High School in his hometown. He graduated from
Swarthmore College in 1955, served in the
U.S. Army 1955–1957, stationed in
Korea, and then received his
law degree from
Harvard Law School in 1960. Dukakis is also an
Eagle Scout and recipient of the
Distinguished Eagle Scout Award from the
Boy Scouts of America.
Massachusetts Governor
After winning four terms to the
Massachusetts House of Representatives between 1962 and 1970, Dukakis was elected
governor in 1974, defeating the incumbent Republican
Francis W. Sargent during a period of fiscal crisis. Dukakis won in part by promising to be a 'reformer' and pledging not to increase the state's sales tax to balance the state budget. He broke that pledge soon after taking office. He also had pledged to dismantle the powerful Metropolitan District Commission, a bureaucratic enclave that served as home to hundreds of political patronage employees. The MDC managed (some would say mismanaged) Massachusetts' parks, reservoirs, and waterways, as well as the highways and roads abutting those waterways. The MDC not only had its own police force, but its own navy as well, and an enormous budget from the State, for which it provided the most minimal accounting. The Dukakis pledge to dismantle MDC failed in the Legislature where MDC had many powerful supporters and ultimately came back to haunt Dukakis when the MDC withheld its critical backing in the 1978 gubernatorial primary (see below).
Governor Dukakis was an amiable host to President
Ford and
Queen Elizabeth II during their visits to Boston in 1976 to commemorate the bicentennial of the United States. He gained some notoriety as the only person in the state government who went to work during the great
Blizzard of 1978. During the storm, he went into local TV studios in a sweater to announce emergency bulletins. Dukakis is also remembered for his 1977 exoneration of
Nicola Sacco and
Bartolomeo Vanzetti, two Italian anarchists whose trial sparked protests around the world, and who were electrocuted by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts fifty years earlier in 1927.
During his first term in office, Dukakis
commuted the sentences of 21 first-degree murderers and those of 23 second-degree murderers. Due to controversy engendered by some of these individuals having re-offended, Dukakis curtailed the practice later, issuing no commutations in his last three years as governor.
However, this performance didn't prove enough to offset a backlash against the state's high sales and property tax rates, which turned out to be the predominant issue in the 1978 gubernatorial campaign. Dukakis, despite being the incumbent Democratic governor, was refused re-nomination by his own party. The state Democratic Party machine supported
Edward J. King in the
primary partly because King rode the wave against high property taxes (along with the passing of a binding petition on the state ballot that limited property tax rates to 2 1/2% of the property valuation -- known as Proposition 2 1/2), but more significantly because State Democratic Party leaders lost confidence in Dukakis's ability to govern effectively. King also enjoyed the support of the powerbrokers at the MDC, who were unhappy with Dukakis's attempts to disempower and dismantle the powerful bureaucracy. King also had support from state police and public employee unions. Dukakis suffered a scathing defeat in the primary. It was "a public death," according to his wife Kitty.
Yet, four years later ('after wandering in the wilderness' some said), having made peace with the state Democratic Party machine powerbrokers, MDC, the state police and public employee unions, Dukakis defeated King in a 're-match' in the 1982 Democratic primary. He went on to defeat his Republican opponent John Winthrop Sears, who was MDC Commissioner under Sargent, in the November election. Future Democratic Presidential nominee
John Kerry was elected
lieutenant governor on the same ballot with Dukakis, and served in the Dukakis administration from 1983-85.
Dukakis served as governor again from 1983-91 (winning re-election in 1986 with more than 60 percent of the vote) during which time he presided over a high-tech boom and a period of prosperity in Massachusetts and simultaneously getting the reputation for being a 'technocrat'. The National Governors Association voted Dukakis the most effective governor in 1986. Residents of the city of
Boston and its surrounding areas remember him for the improvements he made to Boston's
mass transit system, especially major renovations to the
city's trains and buses. He was known as the only governor who rode the
subway to work every day.
He made a cameo appearance in the medical drama
St. Elsewhere (Season 3, Episode 15, "Bye, George,"
January 9,
1985). He limps to the hospital desk and says that he's suffered a jogging injury, but Dr. Fiscus (played by
Howie Mandel) refuses to believe that he's the governor.
Soon after his loss in the 1988 Presidential election to George H.W. Bush, the so-called 'Massachusetts Miracle' of prosperity also went bust, and Dukakis was little more than a 'lame duck' governor for his final two years in office. At the close of his tenure, Massachusetts was mired deeply in debt facing a budget shortfall of more than $1.5 billion.
Presidential candidate
Using the phenomenon termed the "
Massachusetts Miracle" to promote his campaign, Dukakis sought the
Democratic Party nomination for
President of the United States in the
1988 elections, prevailing over a primary field which included
Jesse Jackson,
Richard Gephardt,
Gary Hart and
Al Gore, among others. Dukakis's success at the primary level has been largely attributed to
John Sasso, his campaign manager. Sasso, however, was among two aides dismissed (Paul Tully was the other one) when a video showing plagiarism by rival candidate
Joseph Biden (D-
Delaware) was made public and an embarrassed Biden was forced to withdraw from the race. This situation got uglier when Tully implied that it was Dick Gephardt's campaign (as opposed to Dukakis's campaign) that actually passed along the damaging information on Biden.
Despite the claims that Dukakis always "turned the other cheek," he did run a particularly effective commercial against rival Dick Gephardt that featured a tumbler doing somersaults while the announcer said, "Dick Gephardt has been flip-flopping over the issues." Dukakis finished third in the
Iowa caucuses and then became the first candidate to ever win a contested
New Hampshire primary by more than ten points with Gephardt finishing second. Dukakis finished first in Minnesota and second in South Dakota before winning five states on
March 8,
1988, the "
Super Tuesday" primaries. As his competition continued to fade, Dukakis wound up with a seven-week stretch of one-on-one elections between himself and civil rights leader
Jesse Jackson. Dukakis lost the
Michigan caucus to Jackson but then prevailed by margins of two to one in
Wisconsin,
New York,
Pennsylvania,
Ohio,
California, and
New Jersey, clinching the nomination on June 7, 1988.
Touching on his immigrant roots, Dukakis used
Neil Diamond's ode to immigrants "
America" as the theme song for his campaign. Famed composer
John Williams wrote "Fanfare for Michael Dukakis" in 1988 at the request of Dukakis's father-in-law Harry Ellis Dickson. The piece was premiered under the baton of Dickson (then the Associated Conductor of the Boston Pops) at that year's
Democratic National Convention in
Atlanta.
During the general election campaign, Vice President
George H. W. Bush, the Republican nominee, criticized Dukakis for his traditionally liberal positions on many issues. These included Dukakis's statement during the primary season that he was "a card-carrying member of" the
American Civil Liberties Union, his
veto of legislation requiring public school teachers to lead pupils in the
Pledge of Allegiance, and his opposition to the resumption of
capital punishment in the United States.
Dukakis had trouble with the personality that he projected to the voting public. His reserved and stoic nature was easily interpreted to be a lack of passion (which went against the ethnic stereotype of his
Greek-American heritage). Dukakis was often referred to as "Zorba the Clerk." Nevertheless, Dukakis is considered to have done well in the first presidential debate with George Bush. In the second debate, Dukakis had been suffering from the flu and spent quite a bit of the day in bed. His performance was poor and played to his reputation as being cold.
During the campaign, Dukakis's mental health became an issue when he refused to release his full medical history and there were, according to
The New York Times, "persistent suggestions" that he'd undergone psychiatric treatment in the past. The issue even caused then President Ronald Reagan, when asked whether the Democratic Presidential nominee should make his medical records public, to quip with a grin: "Look, I'm not going to pick on an invalid." Twenty minutes later, Reagan stated that he "attempted to make a joke in response to a question" and that "I think I was kidding, but I don't think I should have said what I said." Reagan continued, "I do believe that the medical history of a President is something that people have a right to know, and I speak from personal experience." Dr. Gerald R. Plotkin, Dukakis' physician since 1970, stated that "[Dukakis] has had no psychological symptoms, complaints or treatment."
Views on capital punishment
The issue of capital punishment came up in the
October 13,
1988 debate between the two presidential nominees.
Bernard Shaw, the moderator of the debate, asked Dukakis, "Governor, if
Kitty Dukakis [hiswife] were raped and murdered, would you favor an irrevocable death penalty for the killer?" Dukakis replied coolly, "No, I don't, and I think you know that I've opposed the death penalty during all of my life," and explained his stance. During debate preparations, Dukakis's campaign manager
Susan Estrich had prepared an answer highlighting the candidate's empathy for victims of crime, noting the beating of his father in a robbery and the death of his brother in a hit-and-run car accident. Many observers felt Dukakis' answer lacked the passion one would expect of a person discussing a loved one's rape and death. Many — including the candidate himself — believe that this, in part, cost Dukakis the election, as his poll numbers dropped from 49% to 42% nationally that night. Other commentators thought the question itself was unfair, in that it injected an irrelevant emotional element into the discussion of a policy issue.
Prison furlough program issue
The most controversial criticism against Dukakis involved his support for a prison
furlough program. This initiative (begun before he became governor, though didn't yet include convicted murderers serving sentences without parole, and ended by the legislature during his last term) resulted in the release of convicted murderer William Horton (dubbed
Willie Horton by the Bush camp), who committed a rape and assault in
Maryland after being freed.
Al Gore was the first candidate to publicly raise the furlough issue and that a furloughed prisoner had broken into a house, raped a woman and beaten her husband, in a debate held in
New York prior to the Democratic primary in that state, although Gore never mentioned Horton by name.
George H. W. Bush mentioned Horton by name in a speech in June 1988 and his campaign brought up the Horton case. An independent
political action committee not affiliated with the Bush campaign, the National Security Political Action Committee, aired an ad entitled "Weekend Passes" which used a
mug shot image of Horton. The Bush campaign, while not responsible for the ad, refused to repudiate it. That
ad campaign was followed by a separate Bush campaign ad, "
Revolving Door", criticizing Dukakis over the furlough program without mentioning Horton.
The Pledge of Allegiance issue
The Bush campaign also criticized Dukakis for vetoing a bill that would have required recitation of the
pledge of allegiance in Massachusetts classrooms. Dukakis felt the law was unconstitutional. (The
Supreme Court upheld that compulsory recitation of the Pledge was unconstitutional in the 1943 case,
West Virginia v. Barnette.)
Public relations failure
Dukakis has been blamed for allowing "
liberal" to come to be considered a
derogatory term. He was criticized during the campaign for a perceived softness on defense issues, particularly the controversial "Star Wars"
SDI program, which Dukakis promised to scale down (although not cancel). In response to this, Dukakis orchestrated what would become the key image of his campaign, albeit not for the reasons he intended. In September 1988, Dukakis visited the
General Dynamics plant in
Michigan to take part in a
photo op in an
M1 Abrams tank. The
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom,
Margaret Thatcher, had been photographed in a similar situation in 1986, riding in a
Challenger tank while wearing a scarf; although somewhat out of character, the image was effective and helped Thatcher's re-election prospects. Dukakis's "tank moment" was much less successful. Footage of Dukakis was used in television ads by the Bush campaign, as evidence that Dukakis wouldn't make a good
commander-in-chief, and "Dukakis in the tank" remains shorthand for backfired
public relations outings.
Election defeat
Dukakis's
vice-presidential candidate was
Senator Lloyd Bentsen of
Texas. The Dukakis/Bentsen ticket lost the election in an
electoral college landslide, carrying only 10 states and the
District of Columbia. Dukakis himself blames his defeat on the time he spent doing gubernatorial work in Massachusetts during the few weeks following the Democratic Convention. Many believed he should have been campaigning across the country. During this time, his 17-point lead in opinion polls completely disappeared as his lack of visibility allowed Bush to define the issues of the campaign.
Despite Dukakis's loss, his performance was a marked improvement over the previous two Democratic efforts. Dukakis made some strong showings in states that had voted for Republicans Ronald Reagan and Gerald Ford. He also scored victories in states like
Rhode Island,
Hawaii, and Dukakis's home state of Massachusetts;
Walter Mondale had lost all three, and since then, all three states have remained in the Democratic column for each subsequent presidential election. He swept
Iowa, winning it by ten points: an impressive feat in a state that had voted Republican in the last five elections. He got 43% of the vote in
Kansas, a surprising showing in the home state of 1936 Republican Presidential nominee
Alf Landon and future Republican nominee
Bob Dole. In another surprising showing, he received 47% of the vote in
South Dakota. In
Montana, Dukakis racked up a close 46% of the vote in a state that had gone over 60% Republican four years earlier. Dukakis's relative strength in farm states was no doubt due to the serious economic difficulties these states were facing in the 1980s and it was the strongest showing in the Midwest for a Democrat since 1976.
Although Dukakis cut into the Republican hold in the Midwest, he failed to dent the emerging GOP stronghold in the South that had been forming since 1964 with a temporary reprieve with Jimmy Carter. He lost most of the South in a landslide, with Bush's totals reaching around 60% in most states. He was able to hold Bush to 55% in Texas, though this may have been due to
Lloyd Bentsen's presence on the ticket. He also carried most of the southern-central parishes of
Louisiana, despite losing the state. He held onto the border state of
West Virginia, and he captured 48% of the vote in
Missouri. He also carried 41% in
Oklahoma, a bigger share than any Democrat since Jimmy Carter.
In the
Rust Belt, Dukakis also performed poorly, though he lost some states by close margins. He lost
Pennsylvania,
Michigan,
Ohio, and
New Jersey. He won his home state of Massachusetts by only eight points, perhaps due to the unrelenting criticism of his record as governor. Dukakis's performance in the traditionally Democratic Northeast was also poor: he lost
Maryland,
Delaware,
Vermont,
New Hampshire,
Connecticut and
Maine. The only other
New England state he won was
Rhode Island. Dukakis' biggest prize was winning
New York, the second-largest state in the electoral college. In the Pacific Northwest, Dukakis did much better, capturing both
Washington and
Oregon but losing
California and
Alaska.
Dukakis won 41,809,476 votes in the popular vote. He also received 40% or more in the following states: Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Maryland, Missouri, Montana, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina and Vermont.
Overall, the 1988 election showed a marked improvement in the popular vote for the Democrats. While he lost the popular vote, Dukakis' margin of loss(7.8%) was narrower than Jimmy Carter's in 1980 (9.7%) or Walter Mondale's in 1984(18.2%). If Dukakis had been elected, he'd have been, after
Andrew Jackson and
Chester A. Arthur, the third
President of the United States with immigrant parents.
Subsequent activities
His final two years as governor were marked by increased criticism of his policies and by significant tax increases to cover expanded government and the economic effects of the U.S. economy's "soft landing" at the end of the 1980s and the recession of 1990. He didn't run for a fourth term in 1990;
Boston University President
John Silber won the Democratic nomination, and lost the general election to
William Weld.
After the end of his term, he served on the
board of directors for
Amtrak, and became a professor of
political science at
Northeastern University in Massachusetts, visiting professor of political science at
Loyola Marymount University, and visiting professor in the Department of Public Policy at the School of Public Affairs at
UCLA. He continued to talk in media interviews about the "negative" 1988 Bush campaign, beginning with his press conference on the day after the election, continuing throughout Bush's term, and even subsequent to Bush's defeat in the
1992 election.
Dukakis has recently developed a strong passion for
grassroots campaigning and the appointment of precinct captains to coordinate local campaigning activities, two strategies he feels are essential for the Democratic Party to compete effectively in both local and national elections. In 2006 he and Kitty worked to help Democratic candidate
Deval Patrick in his efforts to become governor of Massachusetts. He also has taken a strong role in advocating for effective public transportation and high speed rail as a solution to automobile congestion and the lack of space at airports. He has recently been an advocate for the extended learning time initiative in public schools.
Family
Dukakis is married to
Katherine D. (Kitty) Dukakis. The couple's children are John, Andrea and Kara. The Dukakises continue to reside in Michael's boyhood home in
Brookline, Massachusetts, but live in
Los Angeles, California during the winter while he teaches at UCLA.
He is the cousin of actress
Olympia Dukakis.
In popular culture
- In the 2001 film Donnie Darko, Dukakis is mentioned several times. Donnie's sister tells her father she'll be voting Dukakis, though her father is a Bush supporter, and the words "Vote Dukakis" appear on the refrigerator messageboard. A television debate between the two politicians is also shown, with Dukakis accusing Bush of making deals with a drug running dictatorship.
In the 1991 film, the pictures displayed in the Loser's Bar include: the Titanic, the Hindenburg, the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, the Ford Edsel, the DeLorean DMC-12, the Hubble Space Telescope (considered a failure at the time), Neville Chamberlain and Michael Dukakis.
In The Simpsons episode, "Two Cars in Every Garage and Three Eyes on Every Fish", one of the photos in a sequence shown during Mr. Burns' election campaign, has him posing in a tank a la Dukakis.
In Futurama episode, "A Taste of Freedom", during the "Freedom Day" celebrations in Washington D.C, a column of tanks take part in the Freedom Day procession, under the banner "The Fighting Dukaki".
Also in Futurama episode, "The Luck of the Fryrish", during a flashback to the main character's "Phillip J. Fry" childhood, there's a Dukakis campaign poster on a fence with the caption "Rock us, Dukakis"Further Information
Get more info on 'Michael Dukakis'.
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