Service Features
  • 275 words per page
  • Font: 12 point Courier New
  • Double line spacing
  • Free unlimited paper revisions
  • Free bibliography
  • Any citation style
  • No delivery charges
  • SMS alert on paper done
  • No plagiarism
  • Direct paper download
  • Original and creative work
  • Researched any subject
  • 24/7 customer support

Biography of Jesse Helms

Name: Jesse Helms
Bith Date: 1921
Death Date:
Place of Birth: Monroe, North Carolina, United States
Nationality:
Gender: Male
Occupations: senator
Jesse Helms

Jesse Helms (born 1921), a conservative Senator from North Carolina, was well liked by the religious right for his position on abortion rights, school prayer, and school busing.

Born in Monroe, North Carolina, Jesse Helms studied at Wingate Junior College and Wake Forest University before serving in the navy during World War II. He became active in politics while working as a journalist in Raleigh, North Carolina, and served as an adviser to Willis Smith during his campaign for the U.S. Senate in 1950. After Smith's victory in what is regarded as the most virulently racist election in North Carolina history, Helms worked in Washington as an administrative assistant for Smith (1951-1953) and then briefly for Sen. Alton Lennon (1953). Returning to North Carolina in 1953, he worked as a television commentator and as a lobbyist for the banking industry before his election to the Senate as a Republican in 1972. He has been reelected by close margins in 1978, 1984, 1990, and 1996. In 1972 and 1984, presidential election years, he ran behind the Republican presidential nominee.

Ideological Purity

Helms developed a reputation as an ideological purist. His record in the Senate was consistently anti-United Nations, anti-Communist, anti-government spending, anti-welfare, anti-arms control, anti-foreign aid, and pro-military. His only major political about-face was his 1985 switch from an anti-Israeli position to one that is pro-Israel--one said to have been prompted in part by the narrowness of his 1984 victory over an opponent who received substantial contributions from pro-Israel individuals and groups outside North Carolina.

Support from the Religious Right

Helms was known for his derisive treatment of those he opposed--from Martin Luther King to the Soviet Union to homosexuals--and he had an old-time southern politician's visceral appeal for conservative, mostly rural, white North Carolinians. Said to have an Old Testament sense of good and evil, he had close ties to the religious right throughout his career, and during his campaigns he made frequent appearances on the shows of the televangelists Jim Bakker and Pat Robertson. Leaders of Jerry Falwell's Moral Majority spoke on his behalf at political rallies.

Pushing Conservative Causes

Helms was often unsuccessful in getting his own legislation passed. In 1982 he failed to implement measures that would have stripped the Supreme Court of jurisdiction over cases involving abortion, school prayer, and school busing. He cast dozens of votes to outlaw or restrict abortion, to eliminate busing for school integration, and to do away with food stamps. In 1989--after he became enraged over the inclusion of homoerotic photographs by Robert Mapplethorpe and Andres Serrano's photograph of a crucifix in a glass of urine in exhibits funded by the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA)--he tried unsuccessfully to convince the Senate to pass a bill that banned the funding of "obscene" art by the NEA or any other federal agency.

Blocking Nominations

Helms also used his position on the committee to block or hold up nominations regardless of which party controlled the White House. He opposed Republican Gerald Ford's nominations of Nelson Rockefeller for vice president and Donald Rumsfeld for secretary of defense. Many of Democrat Jimmy Carter's nominees faced the same treatment, as did Caspar Weinberger, whom Republican Ronald Reagan nominated for secretary of defense. In 1981 Helms stalled Senate approval of several Reagan appointees as undersecretaries of state, including Lawrence Eagleburger, Chester Crocker, Robert Hormats, and Thomas Enders. In 1985 Helms held up the confirmation of Thomas Pickering as ambassador to Israel at a time of crucial discussions over possible exchanges of western hostages in Beirut for Arabs in Israeli prisons.

Right-Wing Ties

The animosity between Helms and Pickering stemmed from Pickering's service as ambassador to El Salvador, where he was actively trying to work with the Duarte government while Helms had close ties to Duarte's ultraright-wing opponent, Roberto D'Aubuisson. Helms was closely tied to various right-wing governments, including the regime of Augusto Pinochet in Chile. Beginning in 1986 Helms served as chairman of the editorial advisory board of the International Freedom Foundation, a front organization for the South African Defense Fund, which set up and funded the foundation to conduct political warfare against opponents of apartheid in the United States. Other prominent conservative Republicans connected to the foundation included representatives Dan Burton and Robert Dornan of California and African American political activist Alan Keyes. In 1988 Helms led the fight to pass legislation that required the United States to maintain two embassies in Israel, one in Tel Aviv, the secular capital, and one in Jerusalem, in the contested West Bank region.

The Foreign Relations Committee

Throughout the 1980s Helms was consistently a thorn in the sides of Democratic and Republican administrations as he tried to promote his own ultraconservative foreign-policy agenda. But as chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee he had the power to do so. His staff included former intelligence personnel who retained ties within their agencies, and he promoted the hiring of his staffers and aides for key positions in the various national security agencies. After the GOP took control of both houses of Congress, Helms attempted to dismantle U.S. foreign policy. In March of 1995 he introduced a bill to get rid of USAID, the United States Information Agency, and the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency. The Democrats filibustered the bill, but to get even Helms shut down the Foreign Relations Committee for four months. Even though foreign aid makes up only one percent of the federal budget, Helms thought that foreign aid was "the greatest racket of all time" and "the ripoff of the American taxpayers." Informational holds can be placed on projects to temporarily delay funding. The last time the GOP controlled the Senate, there were five holds placed in four years; Helms placed eighty-four holds in 1995. He maintained his presence in the Senate after the 1996 election, defeating former Charlotte mayor Harvey Gantt with a 52.6% share of the vote.

In March 1996 the Helms-Burton Act was signed into law, sponsored by Helms and Republican Representative Dan Burton of Indiana. The law was designed to pressure Cuba to adopt democratic reforms and was approved a month after Cuban warplanes shot down two civilian aircraft, killing four Cuban-Americans on board. It was bitterly criticized by Canada and the European Union.

On April 18, 1997, Clinton approved a plan to reorganize the State Department, a decision that responded to a long-standing demand by Helms. The plan aimed to consolidate the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency and the U.S. Information Agency into the State Department by 1999. Helms remained feisty, as in the fall of 1997, he refused to hold a hearing on President Clinton's nomination of moderate Republican William Weld to be ambassador to Mexico, noting that the former Massachusetts governor was soft on drugs. Although he began to face mounting criticism, "Senator No" wasn't budging. Helms won the battle, as Weld asked the White House to withdraw his nomination in mid-September.

His next battle was federal arts funding, as Helms was among politicians who wanted to eliminate the National Endowment for the Arts. He stated in a speech to his colleagues, "It is self-evident that many of the beneficiaries of NEA grants are contemptuous of traditional moral standards."

In January 2002, Helms announced his decision to retire at the end of his current Senate term, i.e., that December. In April 2002, the 80-year-old Helms underwent open-heart surgery to replace a worn-out heart valve. The conservative senator had been in failing health in recent years, having fought off prostate cancer, a rare bone disease called Paget's disease and peripheral neuropathy. In 1998, he had a knee replaced, and subsequently got around the Senate on a motorized chair.

Helms ended his tenure in the Senate, where he had arrived 30 years earlier determined to reverse the federal government's leftward tilt and stop Soviet expansionism in the Western hemisphere, with his reputation for opposing communism in Latin America, taxpayer funding for abortions and increased funding to fight the AIDS epidemic in this country (on the grounds that federally supported programs encouraged homosexual behavior) fully in tact. His controversial stances had not unexpectedly made him a pariah among liberal groups in this country.

Even so, when he wanted to, Helms could achieve compromise with his opponents. In 1999, for example, he was the co-author with Democrat Joseph Biden of legislation to pay more than $1 billion in U.S. arrears to the United Nations in exchange for reforms in the international body. In 2002, Helms had surprised critics with his decision to attempt to push through Congress legislation intended to increase funding for overseas AIDS programs. His $500 million proposal, however, was aimed only at mother-to-child transmission in Africa, and did not apply to AIDS among American homosexuals, whom he continued to disparage.

At the time of his retirement, Helms was planning on writing a book within the coming year about lessons that he had learned from his father.

Further Reading

  • Furgurson, Ernest B., Hard Right: The Rise of Jesse Helms, Norton, 1986.
  • Mother Jones, May 1995.
  • New Republic, November 12, 1990.
  • New York Times, April 18, 1997.
  • New York Times Magazine, October 28, 1990.
  • Middle East International, pp. 7-8, November 11, 1994.
  • The Nation, pp. 11-15, February, 5, 1996.
  • Reuters Limited, July 16, 1997, <http://...Helms&sv=NZ&ud3=2A596C7621E0A61157F990FDCB77AD28&kt=A&ak=allnews>.

Need a custom written paper?