meets with members of Congress. Left to right: Representative
Phil M. Landrum (Georgia); Representative
James William Trimble (Arkansas); Representative
Harris B. McDowell, Jr. (Delaware); President Kennedy; Representative
Carl Elliott (Alabama); Representative Stanley R. Tupper (Maine). Oval Office, White House, Washington, D.C. Tupper was elected as a
Republican to the Eighty-seventh and the two succeeding Congresses (January 3, 1961 – January 3, 1967). Tupper voted in favor of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the
Voting Rights Act of 1965, and along with fellow Republican congressman
John Lindsay co-sponsored
Medicare. In 1964, Tupper served as manager for Nelson Rockefeller's 1964 presidential campaign in
New England and refused to support Arizona conservative senator
Barry Goldwater for the
1964 United States presidential election. In 1966, along with three Republican Senators and four other Republican Representatives, Tupper signed a telegram sent to Georgia Governor
Carl E. Sanders regarding the Georgia legislature's refusal to seat the recently elected
Julian Bond in the
Georgia House of Representatives. This refusal, said the telegram, was "a dangerous attack on representative government. None of us agree with Mr. Bond's views on the
Vietnam War; in fact we strongly repudiate these views. But unless otherwise determined by a court of law, which the Georgia Legislature is not, he is entitled to express them." ==Later career==