In
1958, Young ran for the
U.S. Senate against the Republican
incumbent Senator
John W. Bricker (who had been
Thomas E. Dewey's running mate in the
1944 presidential election). Bricker seemed invincible, but Young capitalized on widespread public opposition to the proposed "
right to work" amendment to Ohio's constitution, which Bricker had endorsed. Few thought that Young, who was 69 at the time, could win; even members of his own party had doubts, particularly Ohio's other senator, Democrat
Frank J. Lausche. In an upset, Young defeated Bricker. Young knew that Lausche had not supported him and, when he took the oath of office, refused to allow Lausche to stand with him. This broke with the Senate custom of a senior senator escorting the junior senator of his state to take the oath. In the U.S. Senate, Young was well known for his biting responses to abusive, offensive, or ignorant letters from constituents. On one occasion, he wrote, "Dear Sir: It appears to me that you have been grossly misinformed, or are exceedingly stupid. Which is it?" On another, he received a hostile letter that ended with the constituent's phone number and the message, "I would welcome the opportunity to have intercourse with you." Young wrote back, "you sir, can have intercourse with yourself." Young was very narrowly re-elected in
1964, defeating the Republican nominee, then-Representative
Robert Taft Jr., who was the son of conservative icon Senator
Robert A. Taft from Ohio and the grandson of
William Howard Taft. He decided not to run for re-election to the Senate in
1970. In the 1970 U.S. Senate primary,
Howard Metzenbaum was selected to replace Young, but Metzenbaum lost the general election to Taft, who was again the Republican nominee. In
1976, Metzenbaum won Young's Senate seat back from Taft and held it for the Democratic Party until his retirement in 1995. Young stood as a
favorite son in the
1968 Ohio presidential primary. He did not enter any other primaries or stand as a candidate in his own right; he ultimately endorsed
Hubert Humphrey. ==Home and death==