U.S. Senator
In the
United States Senate, Boren was known as a
centrist or
conservative Democrat, was a protégé of Texas Senator
Lloyd Bentsen, and was often aligned with southern Democrats
Sam Nunn of
Georgia and
Howell Heflin of
Alabama. A strong advocate of tax cuts across the board as the cornerstone of economic policy, Boren opposed the
windfall profit tax on the
domestic oil industry, which was repealed in 1988. At one point, the tax was generating no revenue, yet still required oil companies to comply with reporting requirements and the IRS to spend $15 million to collect the tax. Of the tax, Boren said: "As long as the tax is not being collected, the accounting requirements are needless. They result in heavy burdens for the private sector and unnecessary cost to the taxpayer." He was reelected in
1984 and
1990 by landslide margins. Boren's chief of staff was a respected
Capitol Hill insider, Charles Ward, a former longtime administrative assistant to Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (and fellow Oklahoman)
Carl Albert. Boren served on the
Senate Committee on Finance and the
Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry. He also served as chairman of the
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence from 1987 to 1993. His six years is the longest tenure for a Senate Intelligence Committee chairman, tied with
Dianne Feinstein. Boren sponsored the National Security Education Act of 1991, which established the
National Security Education Program. Boren also decided in 1991 to vote against the
Persian Gulf War. Boren was one of President
Bill Clinton's top choices to replace
Les Aspin as
U.S. Secretary of Defense in 1994. However, Clinton selected
William J. Perry instead. In a controversial public
mea culpa in a
New York Times Op/Ed piece, Boren expressed regret over his vote to
confirm Supreme Court Associate Justice
Clarence Thomas. Partly as a result of that statement,
The Daily Oklahoman, the largest newspaper in Oklahoma, which had encouraged and endorsed Boren's entire career, began intensely criticizing him. In 1992 he co-sponsored the
JFK Records Act. In 1994, he resigned his Senate seat to accept the presidency of the University of Oklahoma.
Praise from Nelson Mandela As chairman of the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Boren was instrumental in building consensus and bipartisan support for the
U.S. State Department initiatives to promote democracy abroad, which helped lead to the release of
Nelson Mandela. Boren was praised and received a standing ovation led by Mandela at a special broadcast of
ABC News Nightline with
Ted Koppel, which commemorated Mandela's historic release from prison in South Africa. == University of Oklahoma presidency ==