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Sen. John Glenn
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Washington being Washington
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and politics being politics, the announcement of Sen. John Glenn's return to
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space was the occasion for much sneering. Republicans mocked the space trip as
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Clinton's payoff for Glenn's hackwork during the campaign fund-raising
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hearings. ("He can go into orbit and stay there," snapped a Republican
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congressional staffer.) NASA skeptics added Glenn's "scientific" mission to the
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long list of . (Remember when NASA gave shuttle rides to congressional
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paymasters Sen. Jake Garn and Rep. Bill Nelson?)
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But if
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it's easy to be cynical about Glenn's trip, it's nearly impossible to be
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cynical about the man himself. Glenn confounds Washington. The armor has no
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chink. His life proves that in politics virtue can triumph over
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expediency. Glenn hasn't sacrificed principle for ambition: That's his blessing
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and his curse.
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Glenn is as much a careerist as any pol. As Tom Wolfe
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chronicled in The Right Stuff , Glenn positioned himself carefully to be
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America's first astronaut. Selected for the Mercury program in 1959, Glenn
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paraded his Marine-pilot heroism (149 missions in World War II and Korea), his
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loving marriage, his religious faith. As it happened, all were genuine. Alan
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Shepard beat Glenn to space. But Glenn, the first American to orbit
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Earth, became the Mercury superstar anyway. His eloquence, his calm in the face
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of danger, his small-town-Ohio decency, his boyish freckles--they canonized
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him. Four million New Yorkers attended his welcome-home parade. He was the Cold
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War's greatest hero. (He was so revered that when Robert Kennedy was
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assassinated, Ethel Kennedy asked Glenn to break the news to her children.) And
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the man is the equal of his image: He is honest, hard-working, faithful,
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religious, patriotic, a devoted father and a loving husband.
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When he
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entered politics, Glenn vowed that he would never mortgage his reputation for
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political gain. This pact was more selfless than it sounds: It ensured that
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America would never be disillusioned about its hero. Thanks to Glenn's
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high-mindedness, he's had a peculiar, worthy, and forgettable political career.
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Elected to the Senate in 1974, he has devoted himself to important, numbing
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issues. He's the Senate's technocrat. He likes reading General Accounting
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Office reports. (He is, by his own admission, "dull.") Glenn helped draft U.S.
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nuclear-nonproliferation policy. He revels in the nitty-gritty of arms
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treaties. He is an expert in the science and policy of nuclear-waste storage.
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He pioneered the idea of reinventing government. Long before Al Gore, Glenn was
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pushing to cut waste and rationalize government procurement. He has been, in
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short, an admirable public servant, a solid, stolid senator.
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But Glenn was supposed to be more. He was to be
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the Democratic Eisenhower. He and Ike share freckles, a shiny skull, war
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heroism. But Glenn never commanded troops. He does not know how to lead.
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Glenn's vision of the Senate is Platonic: a committee of the wise, elevated
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above conflict and partisanship, that does what is right for the nation. But
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bargain and compromise are the fuel of politics. Glenn is a bad horse trader.
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He makes his own decisions on principle and thinks his colleagues should do the
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same. He doesn't do pork-barrel: He delivers goodies to Ohio only when Ohio
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deserves them. He's never risen to the top ranks of the Senate because he's
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never been able to behave like a normal senator.
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Glenn's
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scruples (as well as his dullness) also doomed his quest for the presidency.
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His 1984 campaign is a model of how to blow an election. Glenn entered the
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Democratic race with enormous advantages: He had 100-percent national name
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recognition and a stellar reputation. The movie of The Right Stuff ,
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which lionized Glenn, opened just before primary season. He was a centrist in a
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field of liberals. But he tanked it. He was a terrible fund-raiser, largely
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because he didn't suck up to donors. More importantly, he failed to inspire
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voters. Glenn can't master the glib sound-bite rhetoric that characterizes
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politics. He believes that speeches should explain facts as much as excite
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emotion. (Glenn, notoriously, is a politician who gets more applause when he's
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introduced than when he leaves.) In 1984, he was soporific on the stump, boring
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crowds with endless details of energy policy and SALT negotiations. After
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polling neck and neck with Walter Mondale, Glenn finished sixth in the Iowa
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caucuses, well behind Undecided. He also managed to lose every state in the
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Super Tuesday primary before quitting the race.
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Any 20-year political career has its scars, and Glenn's is
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no exception. But here, too, he may deserve the benefit of the doubt. He still
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carries a $3-million debt from his presidential campaign. His reluctance to
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fund raise partly explains the nonpayment of debt. A normal politician would
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have "invited" corporate allies to a few fund raisers, cleared the debt, and
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reciprocated with a few favors. Glenn is allergic to such politicking. He has
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also taken too much abuse for his membership in the Keating Five. He accepted
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more than $200,000 in campaign contributions from S & L crook Charles
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Keating, and arranged a meeting for Keating with then-House Speaker Jim Wright.
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The Senate Ethics Committee found Glenn guilty of "poor judgment." But Glenn
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seems to have been oblivious rather than sleazy: "He was simply helping a
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constituent. It probably never occurred to him that he was doing anything
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wrong. He was genuinely shocked that people saw venality in his behavior," says
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John Green, a political-science professor at the University of Akron.
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Last Feb. 20, on the
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35 th anniversary of his space shot, Glenn announced that he wouldn't
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seek re-election in 1998. The 76-year-old is increasingly out of place in the
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Senate, which is a more unfriendly place than when he entered it. He's awkward
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in opposition: There is too much sniping for him and not enough legislating.
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Glenn's performance in the campaign fund-raising hearings last fall highlighted
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his unhappiness with his job. It was the low moment of his career. He
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stonewalled and disrupted the Republicans at every turn, contending that the
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investigation was ignoring GOP wrongdoing. He did his party duty obediently,
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but his own partisanship made him uncomfortable. He seems to know that he
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doesn't belong in the increasingly nasty, uncollegial Senate.
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But he does belong on the
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shuttle. Yes, the ostensible reason for the mission--aging research--is
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dubious. And NASA's budgetary whoring is unseemly. And the appeal to public
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sentiment is shameless. So what? Glenn has spent 36 years protecting the five
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hours of his life he spent in space, 36 years living up to an impossibly heroic
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image. He has done it admirably. His first trip into space was work. Doesn't he
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deserve a vacation there?
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