U.S. Senate
First term (1967–1973) In the
1966 Massachusetts Senate election, Brooke defeated former
Governor Endicott Peabody with 1,213,473 votes to Peabody's 744,761, and served as a
United States senator for two terms, from January 3, 1967, to January 3, 1979. The black vote had,
Time wrote, "no measurable bearing" on the election as less than 3% of the state's population was black, and Peabody also supported civil rights for blacks. Brooke said, "I do not intend to be a national leader of the Negro people", and the magazine said that he "condemned both
Stokely Carmichael and Georgia's
Lester Maddox" as extremists; his historic election nonetheless gave Brooke "a 50-state constituency", the magazine wrote, "a power base that no other Senator can claim". Brooke said "In all my years in the Senate, I never encountered an overt act of hostility". He recalled visiting the swimming pool at the
Russell Senate Office Building, where segregationists
John C. Stennis,
John Little McClellan, and
Strom Thurmond invited the new senator to join them in the water. "There was no hesitation or ill will that I could see. Yet these were men who consistently voted against legislation that would have provided equal opportunity to others of my race ... it was increasingly evident that some members of the Senate played on bigotry purely for political gain".
Tenure A member of the moderate-to-liberal Northeastern wing of the Republican Party, Brooke organized the Senate's "Wednesday Club" of progressive Republicans who met for Wednesday lunches and strategy discussions. Brooke, who supported
Michigan Governor George W. Romney and New York Governor
Nelson Rockefeller's bids for the 1968 GOP presidential nomination against
Richard Nixon's, often differed with President Nixon on matters of social policy and civil rights. In 1967, Brooke went to
Vietnam on a three-week trip as a fact-finding mission. During his first formal speech in the Senate following the trip, he reversed his previous position on the
Vietnam War that increased negotiations with the North Vietnamese rather than an escalation of the fighting were needed. He began to favor President Johnson's "patient" approach to Vietnam as he had been convinced that "the enemy is not disposed to participate in any meaningful negotiations". By his second year in the Senate, Brooke had taken his place as a leading advocate against discrimination in housing and on behalf of affordable housing.|left During the Nixon presidency, Brooke opposed repeated Administration attempts to close down the
Job Corps and the
Office of Economic Opportunity and to weaken the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission—all foundational elements of President
Lyndon B. Johnson's
Great Society. In 1969, Brooke spoke at
Wellesley College's commencement against "coercive protest" and was understood by some students as calling protesters "elite
ne'er-do-wells" Then student government president
Hillary Rodham departed from her planned speech to rebut Brooke's words, affirming the "indispensable task of criticizing and constructive protest," for which she was featured in
Life magazine. On June 9, 1969, Brooke voted in favor of President Nixon's nomination of
Warren E. Burger as
Chief Justice of the United States following the retirement of
Earl Warren. Brooke was a leader of the bipartisan coalition that defeated the Senate confirmation of
Clement Haynsworth, President Nixon's nominee to the
Supreme Court on November 21, 1969. A few months later, he again organized sufficient Republican support to defeat Nixon's third Supreme Court nominee
Harrold Carswell on April 8, 1970. The following month, Nixon nominee
Harry Blackmun (who later wrote the
Roe v. Wade opinion) was confirmed on May 12, 1970, with Brooke voting in favor. On December 6, 1971, Brooke voted in favor of Nixon's nomination of
Lewis F. Powell Jr., while on December 10, Brooke voted against Nixon's nomination of
William Rehnquist as Associate Justice.
Second term (1973–1979) Relations with the White House and 1972 election Despite Brooke's disagreements with Nixon, the president reportedly respected the senator's abilities; after
Nixon's election he had offered to make Brooke a member of his cabinet, or appoint him as
ambassador to the UN. While Nixon retained Agnew, Brooke was
re-elected in 1972, defeating Democrat
John J. Droney by a vote of 64%–35%. Edward Brooke was the first African American ever to have been re-elected to the United States Senate.
Tenure Before the first year of his second term ended, Brooke became the first Republican to call on President Nixon to resign, He had risen to become the ranking Republican on the Senate Banking Committee and on two powerful Appropriations subcommittees, Labor,
Health and Human Services (HHS) and Foreign Operations. From these positions, Brooke defended and strengthened the programs he supported; for example, he was a leader in enactment of the
Equal Credit Opportunity Act, which ensured married women the right to establish credit in their own name. In 1974, with Indiana senator
Birch Bayh, Brooke led the fight to retain
Title IX, a 1972 amendment to the
Higher Education Act of 1965, which guarantees equal educational opportunity (including athletic participation) to girls and women. in the
Oval Office shortly after taking office in the Senate in 1967. In 1975, with the extension and expansion of the
Voting Rights Act at stake, Brooke faced Stennis in "extended debate" and won the Senate's support for the extension. On December 17, 1975, Brooke voted in favor of President
Gerald Ford's nomination of
John Paul Stevens to the Supreme Court. In 1976, he also took on the role of supporter of
wide-scale, legalized abortion. The Appropriations bill for HHS became the battleground over this issue because it funds
Medicaid. The
Anti-abortion movement fought, eventually successfully, to prohibit funding for abortions of low-income women insured by Medicaid. Brooke led the fight against restrictions in the
Senate Appropriations Committee and in the House–Senate Conference until his defeat. The press again speculated on his possible candidacy for the Vice Presidency as Gerald Ford's running mate in
1976, with
Time calling him an "able legislator and a staunch party loyalist". In Massachusetts, Brooke's support among Catholics weakened due to his stance on abortion. During the
1978 re-election campaign, the state's bishops spoke in opposition to his leading role.
Electoral history {{Election box gain with party link no swing ==Post-Senate life==