Don Fraser, Congressman, Minneapolis Mayor & husband of Arvonne, dies at 95 [View all]
It just broke my heart when he wasn't elected to the Senate. It was his defense of the BWCA that cost him that election.
http://www.startribune.com/former-minneapolis-mayor-don-fraser-leaves-legacy-of-public-service/510782072/
Soft-spoken and low-key, former Minneapolis Mayor Don Fraser didnt fit the stereotype of the fast-talking politician. Yet his quiet strength leaves a legacy of thoughtful, compassionate public service that made a difference at federal, state and local levels of government.
Fraser died Sunday at his Minneapolis home at age 95. He was the citys longest-serving mayor (1980 to 1994) and continued to contribute the public good throughout his 70s and 80s along with his wife, Arvonne.
They were a political power couple. Nationally, she helped found or worked with numerous womens groups, in top leadership with the U.S. Agency for International Development and as U.S. representative to the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women. Arvonne died last August at 92. The pair met during political campaigns and were married in 1950. She helped manage the campaigns that resulted in his elections to the Minnesota Senate and U.S. House. Among his best-known legislative achievements are the states Fair Housing Act of 1961 and the federal Boundary Waters Protection Act of 1978.
During eight years in Congress, he served on the Foreign Affairs committee where he helped shape then-President Jimmy Carters human rights positions. As mayor, he put an end to political favoritism for top jobs in the Police Department and laid the groundwork for the citys expanded Convention Center.
For many years after leaving elected office, Fraser continued to work for the public good. He hosted salon-type gatherings on education issues, with an emphasis on strategies to narrow the stubborn racial achievement gap. Years before others, he was a champion of the concept of expanded, quality preschool education. Throughout his life, he was an advocate for human, civil and womens rights.
He was not your prototypical politician, his son, Tom Fraser, told a reporter. He persuaded people by the power of his argument, not the volume of his speech.