WASHINGTON - Former Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum, an Ohio Democrat who was a feisty
self-made millionaire before he began a long career
fighting big business in the Senate, died Wednesday
night. He was 90.
Metzenbaum died at his home near
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., said Joel Johnson, his
former chief of staff. No cause was given.
During 18 years on Capitol Hill, until his
retirement in 1995, Metzenbaum came to be known as
"Senator No" and "Headline Howard" for his abilities
to block legislation and get publicity for himself.
He was a cantankerous firebrand who didn't need a
microphone to hold a full auditorium spellbound
while dropping rhetorical bombs on big oil
companies, the insurance industry, savings and
loans, and the National Rifle Association, to name
just a few favorite targets.
Unabashedly liberal, the former labor lawyer and
union lobbyist considered himself a champion of
workers and was a driving force behind the law
requiring 60-day notice of plant closings.
When other liberals shied away from that label,
Metzenbaum embraced it, winning re-election in 1988
from Ohio voters who chose Republicans for governor
and president, and by wider margins than either
George Voinovich or
George H.W. Bush.
That victory produced his third, final and most
productive term in the Senate. When it was over, in
1995, he started a new career as consumer advocate,
heading the
Consumer Federation of America.
Born June 4, 1917, Metzenbaum grew up a child of
poverty and prejudice on
Cleveland's east side.
He was 10 years old when he got his first job,
delivering groceries in exchange for tips.
He worked his way through Ohio State University
selling flowers, playing trombone in a National
Youth Administration band, selling magazines,
renting bicycles and peddling razor blades.
He made extra money by charging classmates for
weekend rides home. That stopped when his father had
to sell Metzenbaum's 1926 Essex to make mortgage
payments.
Metzenbaum made his first big money when he and a
partner got the idea for a well-lighted,
24-hour-staffed parking lot at
Cleveland Hopkins Airport.
The enterprise expanded to
Cincinnati and
San Juan, Puerto Rico, and eventually became
APCOA, the world's largest parking lot company.
His former partner, Ted Bonda, maintained that
Metzenbaum would have ended up among the world's
richest men if he'd stayed in business. Bonda and
Metzenbaum started one of the country's first
car-rental agencies, now
Avis.
Metzenbaum once described himself as "born
knowing how to make money."
He bragged about his ability to take advantage of
tax loopholes, but as senator said he sought to
erase loopholes favoring the wealthy.
Metzenbaum got into politics right out of law
school, and spent eight years in the Ohio
Legislature. At one point, he thought he was in line
to become the state Senate's majority leader, but
his reputation as an extreme liberal, or
anti-Semitism, or both, changed five crucial votes.
Describing the episode decades later, he said the
five vote-changers were subsequently defeated, and
"I had something to do with it."
A Cleveland bank once refused to put him on its
board. So Metzenbaum and a partner became the
largest shareholders.
He also was proud of leading the fight to open
two
Cleveland country clubs to minorities.
A political miscalculation led to his defeat by
John Glenn in a ferocious 1974 Senate primary.
Metzenbaum had been contrasting his business
background with Glenn's military and astronaut
credentials, saying his opponent had "never worked
for a living."
Glenn's reply came to be known as the "Gold Star
Mothers" speech. He told Metzenbaum to go to a
veterans' hospital and "look those men with mangled
bodies in the eyes and tell them they didn't hold a
job. You go with me to any Gold Star mother and you
look her in the eye and tell her that her son did
not hold a job."
Metzenbaum won
Ohio's other Senate seat in 1976, but he and
Glenn didn't speak for years.
The two senators made peace when Glenn needed
help with his presidential campaign in 1984. In
1988, Glenn returned the favor by piloting
Metzenbaum throughout Ohio to announce the beginning
of his re-election campaign and later recorded a
commercial rebuttal to a
GOP allegation that Metzenbaum was soft on
child pornography.
In the Senate, Metzenbaum was a master of the
rules and a constant presence in the often-empty
chamber, where he posted an aide to scout for
unexpected amendments or hastily scheduled floor
action on single-interest bills.
Former Sen. David Pryor, D-Ark., once compared
Metzenbaum to an airport security guard: "You know
he's going to X-ray your baggage, so you have to be
clean."
His filibusters and stall tactics were so
successful that the mere threat of Metzenbaum
opposition was often enough to win concessions.
Once, when a two-week filibuster was cut off and
Metzenbaum was still determined to block action on
lifting natural gas price controls, he and a partner
sent the Senate into round-the-clock sessions by
demanding roll call votes on 500 amendments.
Another year, he held up 80 judicial appointments
until his colleagues agreed to schedule
consideration of a bill he considered vital.
Metzenbaum claimed to have single-handedly saved
billions of tax dollars by blocking special tax
breaks and pork-barrel programs. In 1982,
The Washington Post tallied the price tag of
legislation he blocked that year and came up with a
minimum of $10 billion.
In time, Metzenbaum evolved from minority-party
commando to majority-party subcommittee chairman and
became known as much for the legislation he moved as
for the bills he blocked.
He headed panels with jurisdiction over labor and
antitrust, and took on such issues as pension
protection, workplace safety, the right to strike,
age discrimination, food labeling, baby formula
pricing, retail price-fixing, insurance antitrust
and cable television monopolies.
He was the Senate's prime sponsor of the Brady
Act, seeking a waiting period for handgun purchases.
Metzenbaum is survived by his wife, Shirley, and
four daughters.