Politics Krueger was elected to the 94th and 95th United States Congresses, serving from January 3, 1975, to January 3, 1979. Krueger was initially elected to the
U.S. House of Representatives to represent , then the largest congressional district in Texas, stretching from northern
San Antonio to
Big Bend National Park in far west Texas. In the
general election, Krueger defeated
Republican Doug Harlan of San Antonio, who had run a surprisingly close race against longtime incumbent Democrat
O.C. Fisher in 1972 despite spending almost no money. Krueger won by an even closer margin despite setting a record for spending in a congressional race at the time. Meanwhile, Harlan, as he had two years before, campaigned on a shoestring. Coincidentally, Harlan like Krueger had obtained a master's degree from Duke University. He then received a law degree from the
University of Texas School of Law and became heavily involved in Republican Party consulting work. Krueger was part of the large "Watergate Class" of 1974, many of whom were Democrats who owed their election to the scandal that brought the resignation of President
Richard Nixon three months before the election. Krueger was reelected for a second House term in 1976 along with the election of
Jimmy Carter as president. Krueger challenged incumbent Republican
John Tower in
1978 for a U.S. Senate seat from Texas, but Krueger narrowly lost the contest by 0.3%. In
1984, he ran again for the U.S. Senate. Tower decided to retire but Krueger lost in the Democratic primary, caught in the middle between the more liberal State Senator
Lloyd Doggett and the more conservative U.S. Representative
Kent Hance. In 2010, Krueger's campaign was named by the
Houston Chronicle as the ninth-worst in Texas' modern political history, saying: "Caught in the middle, Krueger seemed like a bland centrist facing a fiery liberal and a folksy conservative. He ended up finishing third, out of the runoff and out of luck." From 1985 to 1989, he also wrote a regular column on a broad range of public affairs issues, which was carried in newspapers in San Antonio, Dallas, Houston, and Corpus Christi, Texas. In 1990, Krueger returned to elective office in Texas, serving on the
Texas Railroad Commission, which regulated oil and gas as well as the rail system in the state. In his candidacy, Krueger received the most votes of any contested candidate on the primary ballot of either major party and defeated his general election opponent by a 16 percent margin. He was appointed by Governor
Ann Richards in 1993 to the U.S. Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of four-term incumbent and
1988 Democratic vice presidential nominee
Lloyd Bentsen, who became
Secretary of the Treasury in President
Clinton's cabinet. He served from January 21, 1993, until June 14, 1993. He lost the
June 1993 special election runoff for the remainder of the term ending January 3, 1995 by a 2-to-1 margin to the popular
Texas State Treasurer, Republican
Kay Bailey Hutchison. In 2010, Krueger's campaign was named by the same
Houston Chronicle article as the single worst in Texas' modern political history. Reasons cited for the defeat included Krueger's flip-flopping over
don't ask, don't tell and also Bill Clinton's proposed
BTU tax, which was unpopular in Texas.
Diplomacy On October 23, 1979, Krueger was appointed by President Carter as Ambassador-at-Large and Coordinator for Mexican Affairs at the
U.S. Department of State and served the remainder of the Carter presidency until February 1, 1981. President Bill Clinton named Krueger as Ambassador to
Burundi, which had been
beset with violence in recent years and whose ethnic make-up was the same as that of adjoining
Rwanda, whose
Hutu and
Tutsi groups had started a bloody civil war only months before Krueger began his service in May 1994. His family was initially not allowed to join him in Burundi due to the threat of violence. He served in Burundi until 1995, when his convoy was ambushed in Cibitoke province. He was traveling on a bare highway in
Cibitoke, when gunmen with
AK-47s attacked the motorcade, before being diverted by
Diplomatic Security Service agents Chris Reilly and Larry Salmon. In 1996, he was appointed U.S. Ambassador to
Botswana and concurrently Special Representative of the Secretary of State to the
Southern African Development Community. He held those posts until 2000, when he became a visiting fellow at Merton College, Oxford, and began to write a memoir of his time in central Africa. It was published as
From Bloodshed to Hope in Burundi: Our Embassy Years during Genocide by the
University of Texas Press in September 2007.
Later work at the Rutgers Council on Public and International Affairs Krueger served in several academic lectureship positions at the
University of North Texas (then known as North Texas State University), the
University of Texas at Austin,
Rice University,
Southern Methodist University,
Texas State University, and
Texas Tech University, following his service in federal government. He delivered the Inaugural Distinguished Lecture of the Rutgers Council on Public and International Affairs on December 9, 2014. ==Personal life==