First campaigns Rockefeller resigned his position with the Arkansas Industrial Development Commission and conducted his first campaign for governor in 1964 against
Orval Faubus. His campaign was ultimately unsuccessful, but Rockefeller energized and reformed the tiny
Republican Party of Arkansas to set the stage for the future. In 1964,
Osro Cobb, a Republican former state chairman who had also served as
United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas, refused to endorse Rockefeller but openly endorsed Faubus, who subsequently gave Cobb a temporary appointment to the
Arkansas Supreme Court. In his memoirs, Cobb recalls that Rockefeller had used ruthless tactics to convert the fine Republican state organization into a one-man Rockefeller machine, loyal not to party but to Rockefeller personally. In rapid succession, Mr. Rockefeller captiously took over most of the functions of the state chairman and in a matter of months succeeded in taking over and exercising absolute right of dictation as to each and every important party function at the state level. Such one-man dictatorship is clearly the deadly enemy of any semblance of two-party government. ... Faithful Republican leaders who have worked tirelessly over the years have been pushed aside or replaced. ... A stranger passing through Arkansas at this time and seeing Mr. Rockefeller's advertising on billboards would not know whether Mr. Rockefeller belonged to any political party. Certainly the fact that he is the Republican nominee has not been included. The evidence simply is unanswerable that Mr. Rockefeller is working for his own personal interest to the exclusion of all other considerations, which leaves the Republican Party in Arkansas hanging precariously at the whims of one individual ... .
1966 gubernatorial election When Rockefeller made his second run in the
1966 election, only 11 percent of Arkansans considered themselves
Republicans. But Arkansans had tired of Faubus after six terms as governor and as head of the Democratic "
machine". Democrats themselves seemed to be more interested in the reforms that Rockefeller offered in his campaign than "winning another one for the party". An odd coalition of Republicans and Democratic reform voters catapulted Rockefeller into the governor's office, as he defeated a
segregationist Democratic former Justice of the Arkansas Supreme Court,
James D. Johnson of
Conway in
Faulkner County, who preferred the appellation "Justice Jim". Former state Republican chairman
Osro Cobb reversed himself in 1966 and endorsed Rockefeller. He explains: Arkansas Republicans were eager to work with Winthrop Rockefeller on another race for governor if he could be led to run as a true Republican to help build the party in the state. I liked him personally. He showed me many courtesies, and I still thought [despite feelings in 1964] that he would make a good governor and could be elected on the Republican ticket. ... He had learned a lesson. And he won his next two races for governor. ... His service contributed greatly to the enormous benefits of two-party government in Arkansas. At the time Winthrop became governor, his brother
Nelson Rockefeller had been the
governor of New York since 1959, and remained so throughout Winthrop's four years in office. They are often erroneously cited as the first two brothers to be
governors at the same time, but they were actually the third case; the previous instances were
Levi and
Enoch Lincoln from 1827 to 1829, and
John and
William Bigler from 1852 to 1855. More recently,
George W. and
Jeb Bush were both governors from 1999 to 2000. At the
1968 Republican National Convention, Winthrop Rockefeller received backing from members of the Arkansas
delegation as a "
favorite son"
presidential candidate. He received all of his state's 18 votes; his brother Nelson, then concluding a major presidential bid against
Richard M. Nixon, received 277. This was the only time in the 20th century that the names of two brothers were placed into nomination at the same time.
Governor of Arkansas 1967–1971 The Rockefeller administration enthusiastically embarked on a series of reforms but faced a hostile Democratic legislature. Rockefeller endured a number of personal attacks and a concerted
whispering campaign regarding his personal life. Scholars
Diane Blair and Jay L. Barth continue: "As long as Rockefeller led the Arkansas Republicans, the party had a progressive, reformist cast, and those whom Rockefeller had brought into the party continued to dominate party offices and shape presidential preferences until 1980," when the nomination and election of
Ronald Reagan of
California as president and
Frank D. White as governor moved power within the state GOP "sharply to the right." Ultimately the growth of the Republican Party was slower in Arkansas than in the other southern states in the post-segregation era. Blair and Barth attribute sluggish GOP development to "tradition, [which] is important to rural people. They are looking for ways to stay with the Democratic Party; they have to be run off." According to his biographer, Cathy Kunzinger Urwin, Rockefeller's "good-government" reform proposals included: revision of the Arkansas State Constitution, governmental administrative reorganization, election law reform (a "little
Hatch Act" to prohibit state employees from engaging in political activities on the job), teacher tenure, taxpayer-funded kindergarten under Amendment 53, adult and continuing education programs, rehabilitation and vocational training in the corrections system, and the recurring attempts at industrial recruitment. One of Rockefeller's most publicized "good-government" reforms was the ending of illegal gambling in the resort city of
Hot Springs. He also made headway in streamlining state government and secured passage of a state minimum-wage law. Urwin determined that Rockefeller's negatives created public perceptions of "his personal flaws, rather than his accomplishments or lack of them, as governor." Considered a weak administrator, he depended too heavily on staff, so improperly managed that the employees often failed to answer mail. He was habitually tardy to meetings. A special legislative session in May 1968 was particularly disastrous. An Oliver Quayle poll in 1968 declared that Rockefeller seemed "strange, alien, and foreign" to many voters. The poll maintained that many thought Rockefeller sought too much power, that he drank too much, and that he spent too little time in his office. A majority said that the wealthy Rockefeller, despite his interest in "good government," could not understand the problems of common people on restricted incomes or those in the middle class with limited investment opportunities. Rockefeller had a particular interest in the reform of the
Arkansas prison system. Soon after his election he had received a shocking report from the
Arkansas State Police on the brutal conditions within the prison system. He decried the "lack of righteous indignation" about the situation and created a new Department of Corrections. He appointed a new warden, academic
Tom Murton, the first professional
penologist that the state had ever retained in that capacity. However, he fired Murton less than a year later, when Murton's aggressive attempts to expose decades of corruption in the system subjected Arkansas to nationwide contempt. Rockefeller also focused on the state's lackluster educational system and proposed funding increases for new buildings and teacher salaries when the legislature allowed. Much of Rockefeller's second term was spent in conflict with the opposition legislature. In 1969, he told the lawmakers that his reelection the previous November had meant that a slim majority of voters had approved of tax increases. He proposed to spend half of the new revenues sought on education, 12 percent on health and welfare, 10 percent on local government, and the remainder on state employee salaries and streamlined services. "There are no frills in what I am proposing ... . no luxuries ... . no monuments to me as an individual ... . I implore every member of the General Assembly as I have myself: Listen to the voice of the people ... . not to the selfish interests." Ernest Dumas, then with the since defunct
Arkansas Gazette in Little Rock noted that the Rockefeller revenue package was essentially dead-on-arrival in both houses of the legislature though parts of the program were enacted piecemeal in the subsequent administration of the Democrat
Dale Bumpers. Dumas describes Rockefeller as the "most liberal governor in Arkansas history" in light of his attempts to increase taxes to augment the size and scope of state government as well as steadfast support for civil rights and opposition to capital punishment. During this term Rockefeller quietly and successfully completed the
integration of Arkansas schools that had been such a political bombshell only a few years before. He established the Council on Human Relations despite opposition from the legislature. Draft boards in the state boasted the highest level of racial integration of any U.S. state by the time that Rockefeller left office. He was also the only governor from a Southern state to hold a public memorial for
Martin Luther King Jr. In 1970, the Arkansas GOP under Rockefeller hired its first paid executive director, Neal Sox Johnson of
Nashville in
Howard County. Johnson left the position in 1973 to take a high position with the former
Farmers Home Administration in
Washington, D.C., and was replaced by Ken Coon, who carried the party's gubernatorial banner in 1974 against
David Pryor.
1970 gubernatorial election In the 1970 campaign, Rockefeller expected to face Orval Faubus, who led the old-guard Democrats, but the previously unknown
Dale Bumpers of
Charleston in
Franklin County rose to the top of the Democratic heap by promising reforms. Bumpers' charisma and "fresh face" were too much for an incumbent Republican to overcome. Rockefeller lost his third-term bid, but he had inadvertently propelled the Democrats to reform their own party. With the 1970 elections, the Republicans were reduced to a single member of each legislative chamber,
Preston Bynum of
Siloam Springs in the House and Jim Caldwell in the Senate. Danny Patrick, elected with Rockefeller in 1966 and 1968, went down to defeat in Madison and Carroll counties at the hands of Stephen A. Smith, who at twenty-one became Arkansas' youngest-ever state legislator, a designation that Patrick himself had taken only four years earlier. Smith later became a top aide to
Bill Clinton in his first term as Governor. As a dramatic last act, Governor Rockefeller, a longtime
death penalty opponent, commuted the sentences of every prisoner on Arkansas's
death row and urged the governors of other states to do likewise. Thirty-three years later, in January 2003, Illinois'
lame duck governor,
George Ryan, would do the same, granting blanket commutations to the 167 inmates then sentenced to death in the state. ==Personal life==