David L. Boren
|
credited to the United States Senate Historical Office |
David Lyle Boren (born
April 21,
1941) was
Governor of Oklahoma from
1975 until
1979 and a
Democratic United States Senator from 1979 until
1994. He is currently president of the
University of Oklahoma.
Boren is a 1963 graduate of
Yale University, where he was elected Speaker of the
Yale Political Union and was a member of the
college fraternity (and so-called
secret society) known as
Skull and Bones. He was selected as a
Rhodes Scholar and earned a
master degree in
Philosophy, Politics and Economics from
Oxford University (1965), serving later as a member of the Rhodes Scholarship selection committee. In 1968, he received a
law degree from the
University of Oklahoma College of Law.
Boren had several strong mentors:Boren's father
Lyle Boren was a
United States Representative, and close personal friend and political associate of former
U.S. House Speaker Sam Rayburn (
Democrat from
Texas) and former U.S. House Speaker
Carl Albert. His son is U.S. Representative
Dan Boren, first elected to
Congress in
2004. His daughter, Carrie, is a
Los Angeles Episcopal
minister and a former
actress. He has been married twice, to the late Janna Little and currently to Molly Shi.
In the
U.S. Senate, Boren was known as a political
centrist and
fiscally conservative Democrat, often aligning with other Democratic moderates like
Georgia Senator
Sam Nunn and
Alabama Senator
Howell Heflin. Sen.
Barry Goldwater (R-AZ), who served with Sen. Boren, publicly stated that Boren should be elected
President. Boren's Chief of Staff was a respected
Capitol Hill insider, Charles Ward, a former longtime Administrative Assistant to Speaker Albert.
Boren served on the
Finance and
Agriculture Committees and was also the longest-serving chairman of the
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. Boren authored the
National Security Education Act of 1991, which established the National Security Education Program.
Boren decided in 1990 to vote against the
Persian Gulf War, surprising most political observers.
In a controversial public
mea culpa in a
New York Times Op/Ed piece, Boren expressed regret over his vote
to confirm Supreme Court Justice
Clarence Thomas. Somewhat as a result,
The Daily Oklahoman, the largest newspaper in Oklahoma, which had encouraged and endorsed Boren's entire career, began calling for his retirement from the U.S. Senate.
Mr. Boren currently serves as President of the University of Oklahoma, and sits on
Board of Directors of
Texas Instruments.
{{Persondata
NAME=Boren, David L. | ALTERNATIVE NAMES= | SHORT DESCRIPTION=Former U.S. Senator; University President | DATE OF BIRTH=April 21, 1941 | PLACE OF BIRTH= | DATE OF DEATH= | PLACE OF DEATH=
|