Doug Harlan

Douglas Sloan Harlan
Born 1943
Place of birth missing
Died November 7, 2008
San Antonio, Texas, USA
Residence San Antonio, Texas
Alma mater

Rice University
Duke University
University of Texas at Austin

University of Texas School of Law
Occupation Lawyer, political consultant; Political pundit, Journalist, Educator
Political party Republican

Douglas Sloan Harlan, known as Doug Harlan (1943 November 8, 2008), was a lawyer, Republican political consultant, journalist, scholar, educator, and local official from San Antonio, Texas.

Education

Harlan graduated in 1964 from Rice University in Houston and received a master's degree from Duke University in Durham, North Carolina.[1] He then procured a Ph.D. in political science in 1968 from the University of Texas at Austin.[2] UT published his dissertation Party and Campaign in a Congressional Election: A Case Study of Reciprocal Dependency.[3] In 1974, he received a law degree from the University of Texas School of Law in Austin.[1]

Career

Harlan was an early supporter of U.S. Senator John Tower, whom he worked successfully to reelect in 1966. That same year, Harlan campaigned for Republican D. C. Norwood of Wichita Falls in Texas's 13th congressional district,[4] but the incumbent Democrat Graham B. Purcell, Jr., won once more. In 1970, he worked in the unsuccessful gubernatorial campaign waged by Tower's preferred candidate, Republican Paul Eggers of Dallas against the incumbent Democrat Preston Smith of Lubbock. In 1972 and 1974, he waged his own unsuccessful races for Texas's 21st congressional district seat in the United States House of Representatives. He polled 43 percent in the race against Democrat O. C. Fisher of Junction, Texas.[5] Paul Burka of Texas Monthly said Harlan's race against Fisher was "one of the first indications that the dominance of the rural conservative Democrats in Texas politics could not be sustained."[6]

After he underwent heart surgery, Fisher retired after fifteen terms in 1974. The Democrats nominated Bob Krueger as the successor candidate. Coincidentally, Krueger had also obtained a master's degree from Duke and had been on the English language faculty there before he returned to New Braunfels to run for Congress. Krueger set a record for spending in a congressional race, but Harlan polled just over 45 percent of the ballots cast. As in 1972, Harlan could not raise the funds required for the campaign; so he placed volunteers who waved placards at passing motorists in order to publicize his candidacy. Harlan is considered a transitional figure in the political move of Texas from the Democrats to the Republicans, a process which had taken place by the beginning of the 21st century.[6]

From 1980 to 2006, Harlan was a principal with his brother, Wendell Price Harlan (born 1940), subsequently of Mena, Arkansas, in the firm Harlan & Harlan.[7] He was a long-time political contributor to such publications as Texas Monthly, the Texas Observer, The American Journal of Criminal Law, The Texas Bar Journal, The Ripon Forum, a voice of Moderate Republicans, and several newspapers, including a Sunday column for the former San Antonio Light.[1] Harlan's writing focused on divisions within the Texas Republican Party, such as those between Governor Bill Clements and State Representative Ray Hutchison in their 1978 primary competition and between George Herbert Walker Bush and the more conservative party members who supported Ronald W. Reagan in 1976 and 1980.[6]

Harlan was a chancellor of the Alamo Community College District and a justice of the peace for Precinct 3 in Bexar County.[1] He was an avid outdoorsman.[8] He established an informal networking group with an unusual name, "Camp Wannameetagop",[9] which beginning in 1979 met at Camp Allen near Brenham, Texas. Among those who participated in the group were Cyndi Taylor Krier, a former state senator and county judge of Bexar County; Chase Untermeyer, a former state representative and aide to the first George Bush, both as vice president and as president; Kay Bailey Hutchison, the former U.S. senator; Jeff Wentworth, former representative and state senator and current justice of the peace, and Ed Emmett, the county judge of Harris County.[6]

Legacy

Harlan died in San Antonio at the age of sixty-five after a lengthy struggle against multiple system atrophy, an incurable and untreatable ailment.[6] His passing came three days after the 2008 presidential election. His burial site is unknown.[7]

Harlan donated $1.1 million to establish at Rice University the Douglas S. Harlan Program in State Elections, Campaigns and Politics. The program coordinates scholars from various disciplines. Its components include an archives collection, research, and outreach.[1][6] Another source claims that the Harlan contribution to the program was $2.2 million.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Guide to the Douglas Harlan Texas & National Politics Collection, 1970-1999". lib.utexas.edu. Retrieved February 19, 2015.
  2. "Around Texas". The Alcalde of the University of Texas. p. 65. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
  3. "Party and Campaign in a Congressional Election: A Case Study of Reciprocal Dependency". Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press. 1968. ASIN B0012BLTX8. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
  4. "Dillard Carlisle "Bunny" Norwood (1913-1993)". The Political Graveyard. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
  5. Ben R. Guttery. Representing Texas: Ovie Clark Fisher. p. 62. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Paul Burka (November 11, 2008). "Douglas Harlan, RIP". Retrieved February 20, 2015.
  7. 1 2 "Douglas S. Harlan". findagrave.com. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
  8. 1 2 "The Harlan Record: Douglas Sloan Harlan". harlanfamily.org. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
  9. Douglas Harlan, "A Summer Camp for Some Youngish Republicans", San Antonio Express-News, August 1, 1982
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