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George McGovern, Democratic idealist and presidential candidate, dies at 90

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George McGovern, pictured in this 1996 file photo, died Sunday, October 21, 2012. He was 90. McGovern campaigned for the White House against President Richard M. Nixon and the Vietnam War but lost in a landslide. (Photo by Clarence Williams/Los Angeles Times/MCT)

(MCT) — George S. McGovern, an icon of American liberalism who campaigned for the White House with moral fervor against President Richard M. Nixon and the Vietnam War but lost in a landslide, died Sunday. He was 90.

McGovern died early Sunday morning while under hospice care in Sioux Falls, S.D., said Steve Hildebrand, a family spokesman. He had been hospitalized for various illnesses and injuries since taking a serious fall last December.

McGovern, a three-term U.S. senator from South Dakota, won the Democratic presidential nomination in 1972. His campaign against Nixon and the war in Southeast Asia attracted millions of angry, anti-Establishment voters, including women and minorities, students and idealists.

He chose Sen. Thomas Eagleton of Missouri to be his running mate without knowing that Eagleton had a history of depression. When the revelation caused criticism, McGovern dumped him, only to end up looking fickle. He finally settled on Sargent Shriver as his running mate.

He also fell victim to some of the transgressions of Watergate, the scandal that ultimately forced Nixon to resign. But public outrage came too late, and McGovern suffered one of the biggest defeats in U.S. history.

His campaign left a significant legacy, including his proposals, since fulfilled, that women be appointed to the Supreme Court and nominated for the vice presidency. He inspired scores of budding politicians: Bill Clinton was his Texas coordinator before becoming governor of Arkansas, then president. Gary Hart was his campaign manager before becoming a senator from Colorado, then a candidate for the White House.

McGovern was a die-hard idealist. His electoral loss embittered him, but not for long. He never abandoned his optimism or his faith in humanity. Neither did he give up his devotion to liberalism or what colleagues called his extraordinary sense of decency.

George McGovern was born July 19, 1922, in a parsonage in Avon, S.D., and grew up in Mitchell. His father was a fundamentalist Methodist minister and a political conservative.

McGovern enrolled at Dakota Wesleyan University and married classmate Eleanor Stegeberg on Oct. 21, 1943. But within months, he left to fly a B-24 in World War II. On his bunk, he read philosophy and history. The books broadened him, and he came home, he said, wanting to know more about “the nature and destiny of man, about the adequacy of our contemporary value system and the capacity of our institutions to nurture those values.”

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