House of Representatives In 1942, Luce won a seat in the
United States House of Representatives as a Republican comprising the whole of
Fairfield County, Connecticut, the
4th Congressional District. She based her platform on three goals: "One, to win the war. Two, to prosecute that war as loyally and effectively as we can as Republicans. Three, to bring about a better world and a durable peace, with special attention to post-war security and employment here at home." She took up the seat formerly held by her late stepfather,
Dr. Albert Austin. An outspoken critic of Roosevelt's foreign policy, She made a debut in her maiden speech, coining the phrase "globaloney" to disparage Vice President
Henry Wallace's recommendation for airlines of the world to be given free access to US airports. She called for repeal of the
Chinese Exclusion Act, comparing its "doctrine of race theology" to
Adolf Hitler's, advocated aid for war victims abroad, and sided with the administration on issues such as infant-care and maternity appropriations for the wives of enlisted men. Nevertheless, Roosevelt took a dislike to her and campaigned in 1944 to attempt to prevent her re-election, publicly calling her "a sharp-tongued glamor girl of forty." She retaliated by accusing Roosevelt of being "the only American president who ever lied us into a war because he did not have the political courage to lead us into it." During her second term, Luce was instrumental in the creation of the
Atomic Energy Commission and, during the course of two tours of Allied battlefronts in Europe, she campaigned for more support of what she considered to be America's forgotten army in Italy. She was present at the liberation of several Nazi concentration camps in April 1945, and after
V-E Day, she began warning against the rise of international
Communism as another form of totalitarianism, likely to lead to
World War III. In the same year she joined the board of directors of the
American China Policy Association (ACPA), and served as its president in 1947. Luce did not run for re-election in 1946.
Endorsements in the 1952 presidential election Luce returned to politics during the
1952 presidential election. Boothe led a group of women delegates to the
1952 Republican National Convention who sought to nominate
Margaret Chase Smith in the balloting for the
vice presidential nominee. Senator Smith, however, requested not to be considered for vice president. Noting that presidential nominee
Dwight D. Eisenhower's supporters had coalesced around
Richard Nixon for vice president, Luce withdrew her nomination of Smith. During the general election, Boothe campaigned on behalf of the Eisenhower–Nixon ticket, giving more than 100 speeches on its behalf. Her anti-Communist speeches on the
stump, radio, and television were effective in persuading a large number of traditionally Democratic-voting Catholics to switch parties and vote Eisenhower.
Ambassador to Italy Eisenhower rewarded Luce for her contributions to his presidential campaign by appointing her as ambassador to Italy, a post that oversaw 1150 employees, 8 consulates, and 9 information centers. She was confirmed by the Senate in March 1953, the first American woman ever to hold such an important diplomatic post. Italians reacted skeptically at first to the arrival of a female ambassador in Rome, but Luce soon convinced those of moderate and conservative temper that she favored their civilization and religion. "Her admirers in Italy – and she had millions – fondly referred to her as la Signora, 'the lady'." The country's large Communist minority, however, regarded her as a foreign meddler in Italian affairs. Luce was pictured with Monsignor William A. Hemmick, the first American canon of St. Peter's Basilica, in the biography of Hemmick,
Patriot Priest. She was no stranger to
Pope Pius XII, who welcomed her as a friend and faithful acolyte. Over the course of several audiences since 1940, Luce had impressed Pius XII as one of the most effective secular preachers of Catholicism in America. Her principal achievement as ambassador was to play a vital role in negotiating a peaceful solution to the
Trieste Crisis of 1953–1954, a border dispute between Italy and Yugoslavia that she saw as potentially escalating into a war between East and West. Her sympathies throughout were with the Christian Democratic government of
Giuseppe Pella, and she was influential on the Mediterranean policy of Secretary of State
John Foster Dulles, another anticommunist. Although Luce regarded the abatement of the acute phase of the crisis in December 1953 as a triumph for herself, the main work of settlement, finalized in October 1954, was undertaken by professional representatives of the five concerned powers (Britain, France, the United States, Italy, and Yugoslavia) meeting in London. As ambassador, Luce consistently overestimated the possibility that the Italian left would mount a governmental coup and turn the country communist unless the democratic center was buttressed with generous American aid. A United States Defense Department historical study declassified in 2016 revealed that during her time as ambassador, Luce oversaw a covert financial support program for centrist Italian governments aimed at weakening the
Italian Communist Party's hold on labor unions. Nurturing an image of her own country as a haven of social peace and prosperity, she threatened to boycott the 1955
Venice Film Festival if the American juvenile delinquent film
Blackboard Jungle was shown. Around the same time, she fell seriously ill with
arsenic poisoning. Sensational rumors circulated that the ambassador was the target of extermination by agents of the
Soviet Union. Medical analysis eventually determined that the poisoning was caused by arsenate of lead in paint dust falling from the stucco that decorated her bedroom ceiling. The episode debilitated Luce physically and mentally, and she resigned her post in December 1956. Upon her departure, Rome's
Il Tempo concluded "She has given a notable example of how well a woman can discharge a political post of grave responsibility." In 1957, she was awarded the
Laetare Medal by the
University of Notre Dame, considered the most prestigious award for
American Catholics. In the same year, Luce was appointed to a
Rockefeller Foundation panel to formulate a vision of America foreign policy. She was an appreciator of Italian
haute couture and a frequent visitor and client of the
ateliers Gattinoni,
Ferdinandi,
Schuberth, and
Sorelle Fontana in Rome.
Ambassador to Brazil nomination In April 1959, President Eisenhower nominated a recovered Luce to be the
US Ambassador to Brazil. She began to learn enough of the
Portuguese language in preparation for the job, but she was by now so conservative that her appointment met with strong opposition from a small number of Democratic senators. Leading the charge was
Oregon Senator
Wayne Morse. Still, Luce was confirmed by a 79 to 11 vote. Her husband urged her to decline the appointment, noting that it would be difficult for her to work with Morse, who chaired the Senate Subcommittee on Latin American Affairs. Luce eventually sent Eisenhower a letter explaining that she felt that the controversy surrounding her appointment would hinder her abilities to be respected by both her Brazilian and US coworkers. Thus, as she had never left American soil, she never officially took office as ambassador.
Political life after office After
Fidel Castro led a revolution in Cuba in 1959, Luce and her husband began to sponsor anticommunist groups. This support included funding Cuban exiles in commando speedboat raids against Cuba in the early 1960s. In 1963 the
Freedom House-initiated organisation,
Citizens Committee for a Free Cuba, was set up, which Luce was a member of. She called for U.S. government intervention Cuba, declaring in October 1962, just before the
Cuban Missile Crisis, that "What is now at stake in the decision for intervention or non-intervention in Cuba is the question not only of American prestige but of American survival". Luce's continuing anticommunism as well as her advocacy of conservatism led her to support Senator
Barry Goldwater of
Arizona as the Republican candidate for
president in 1964. She also considered but rejected a candidacy for the
United States Senate from New York on the
Conservative party ticket. That same year, which also saw the political emergence of future friend
Ronald Reagan, marked the voluntary end of Henry Luce's tenure as editor-in-chief of
Time. The Luces retired together, establishing a winter home in Arizona and planning a final move to Hawaii. Her husband, Henry, died in 1967 before that dream could be realized, but she went ahead with construction of a luxurious beach house in Honolulu, and, for some years, she led an active life in Hawaii high society. In 1973, President
Richard Nixon named her to the
President's Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board (PFIAB). She remained on the board until President
Jimmy Carter succeeded President
Gerald Ford in 1977. In 1979, she was the first woman to be awarded the
Sylvanus Thayer Award by the
United States Military Academy at West Point. President Reagan reappointed Luce to PFIAB. She served on the board until 1983. Luce sat on the board of the directors of the
Association of Former Intelligence Officers, founded in 1975. She was involved with the
Committee on the Present Danger, founded in 1976. In 1986, Luce was the recipient of the Golden Plate Award of the
American Academy of Achievement.
Presidential Medal of Freedom President Reagan awarded her the
Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1983. She was the first female member of Congress to receive this award. Upon presenting her with the Presidential Medal of Freedom, Reagan said this of Luce: ==Death==