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Baseball & Politics
An 1889 editorial in the New York Sun advised "all statesmen of any aspirations for the future to
consider that if they have not yet recorded themselves as lovers of our national game or some other
sporting interest, they should do so immediately." No one likes a front runner more than politicians,
so it's certainly no surprise that many of them heeded the Sun's advice and began expressing an
interest in baseball. Indeed, nearly every president from Abraham Lincoln to George W. Bush has
embraced the game in some fashion. Lincoln's successor Andrew Johnson was an avid follower of the
Washington Nationals, one of the nation's top amateur teams during the 1860s. It is said that Johnson
often allowed government clerks and staffers to be excused early to attend games. It is not known
whether this leniency was a factor in Johnson's impeachment. Richard Nixon, a cheater who did get
caught, loved baseball and reportedly was offered the commissioner's job after he lost the 1960
presidential election to Kennedy. While most presidents confined their baseball playing to throwing
out the ceremonial first pitch of the season, some-like Woodrow Wilson and George "Spikes" Bush-enjoyed
reputations as pretty fair players during their college days. Bush played first base on Yale's Eastern
Championship teams in 1947 and 1948 and was, like the notorious Hal Chase, one of those rare players
who threw left-handed and batted right-handed.
Politicians of lesser prominence have also been unabashed fans of the game or have been drawn into the
game in a more official capacity. Albert B. "Happy" Chandler, the junior senator from Kentucky and a
friend to Richard B. Russell, was appointed Commissioner of Baseball following the death of Kenesaw
Mountain Landis in 1944. Although considered by some to be nothing more than a mouthpiece for team
owners, Chandler nonetheless okayed and presided over the breaking of baseball's color line in 1947
and allowed the players to establish a pension plan, much to the dismay of owners. A bit farther south
of Kentucky, Cuban dictator Fidel Castro starred as a schoolboy athlete in the mid-1940s before going
to bat for revolution. Castro's love of baseball is legendary, but his actual pitching talent is the
subject of much speculation. After he came to power, Fidel would pitch an occasional exhibition game
for the "Barbudos" before regularly scheduled games of the Havana Sugar Kings. In these games his
"fat pitches" would be clobbered unmercifully, but he would never be yanked (yes, an intentional
pun)-after all, what manager would dare send Fidel to the showers?
The high name recognition and competitive nature of ballplayers has helped some former players begin a
career in politics after their retirement. Among contemporary player/politicians, Hall of Fame pitcher
Jim Bunning has enjoyed the greatest success, first as a member of the Kentucky legislature and later
as a member of the House of Representatives and U.S. Senate. Former big league star Bill "Spaceman"
Lee ran a tongue-in-cheek presidential campaign as the Rhinoceros Party candidate in 1988; his slogan,
"no guns, no butter."
Several prominent dead-ball era players had careers as elected or appointed officials, or ran for
public office, during and after their playing days. Genial Hall of Fame pitcher Walter Johnson ran
for congress in his home state of Maryland in 1940, but lost to the incumbent. Perhaps character
endorsements from the likes of Ty Cobb hurt "The Big Train" more than they helped. Harry Davis, star
of the Philadelphia Athletics club (1895-1917), was a Philadelphia city councilman during his career.
"Cactus" Gavvy Cravath, the leading home run hitter of the dead-ball era, became a justice of the peace
in Laguna, California after his career ended, only to lose his job for being too easygoing.
Upholding the law and meting out justice and punishment on the baseball
diamond are the jobs of the umpire. Umpires, like politicians, are viewed
by many as a necessary evil. In spite of this perception, dead-ball era
stars "Wahoo" Sam Crawford, Big Ed Walsh and Bill Dineen all worked as
umpires at the conclusion of their playing careers.
"In baseball, when they say you're out, you're out. It's the same way in politics." (Gerald Ford)