William Emerson "Bill" Brock
III (born November 23, 1930) is a former Republican United States
senator from
Tennessee
, having served from 1971 to 1977. He was the
grandson of
William Emerson Brock
I, who was a
Democratic U.S. senator
from Tennessee from 1929 to 1931.
Early life and career
Brock was
a native of Chattanooga
, where his family owned a well-known candy
company. He is a 1949 graduate of McCallie School and a 1953 graduate of
Washington and
Lee University
in Lexington, Virginia
, in 1953 and subsequently served in the U.S. Navy until 1956. He then worked in his
family's candy business. Brock had been reared as a Democrat, but
became a Republican in the 1950s. In 1962, he was elected to
Congress from
Tennessee's 3rd
congressional district, based in Chattanooga. The 3rd had long
been the only Democratic outpost in traditionally heavily
Republican
East Tennessee.
United States Senator
Brock served four terms in the House and then won the Republican
nomination to face three-term incumbent U.S. Sen.
Albert A. Gore
Sr. in 1970, defeating
country
singer Tex Ritter
in the
primary. Brock's campaign
was able successfully to make an issue of Gore's friendship with
the
Kennedy family and
Gore's voting record, which was somewhat
liberal by
Southern standards, and defeated
him.
While in the Senate, Brock was a darling of the
conservative movement but was less than
overwhelmingly popular at home; his personality was somewhat
distant by the standards of most
politicians. He was considered vulnerable in the
1976 election and several prominent Democrats ran in the 1976
Democratic Senate
primary for the
right to challenge him. The most prominent and best-known name, at
least initially, was probably 1970
gubernatorial nominee
John Jay Hooker; somewhat surprisingly to
most observers, the winner of the primary was
Jim Sasser, who had managed Gore's 1970
reelection campaign.
Sasser was able to exploit lingering resentment of the
Watergate scandal, which had concluded
only about two years earlier, but his most effective campaign
strategy was to emphasize how the affluent Brock, through skillful
use of the
tax code by his accountants, had been
able to pay less than $2,000 in
income
taxes the previous year, an amount considerably less than that
paid by many Tennesseans of far more modest means. Sasser was also
aided by the popularity of
Democratic
Presidential candidate Jimmy Carter
in Tennessee as he would win the state by a double-digit margin.
Although he started with a 30-point lead in polls over Sasser,
Brock would lose his re-election bid by a 47%-52% margin.
Prior to his Senate re-election run, Brock was among those
considered to replace
Nelson
Rockefeller as President
Gerald
Ford's running mate in the
1976
election.
Post Senate career

The official portrait of William
E.
Brock hangs in the Department of Labor
After leaving the Senate, Brock became the new chairman of the
Republican National
Committee, a position he held from 1977 to 1981. Upon the
election of
Ronald Reagan as
U.S. president, Brock was
appointed
U.S. Trade Representative, a position
he maintained until 1985 when he was made
secretary of labor.
Brock resigned his cabinet post in late 1987 to become the campaign
manager for Senator
Bob Dole's presidential
campaign. Dole, the runner up to Vice president
George Bush, was seen as a micro manager
who needed a strong personality like Brock to steer his campaign.
However, many viewed Brock as a lazy manager who badly misspent
campaign funds, leaving Dole without adequate money for a Super
Tuesday media buy. Dole and Brock had a falling out, and Brock
publicly fired two of Dole's favorite consultants. Dole dropped out
of the race in late March 1988 after losing key primaries in New
Hampshire, the South and Illinois.
Brock became a consultant in the Washington,
D.C.
, area. By this point, he had become a legal resident
of Maryland
. In
1994 he won the Republican U.S. Senate primary in Maryland over
future convict
Ruthann Aron, but was
soundly defeated (41%-59%) in the general election by Democratic
incumbent
Paul Sarbanes.
Brock is currently a
resident of Annapolis,
Maryland
.
See also
References