When Senator Jon Kyl of Arizona learned on the Sunday after Thanksgiving that Senate Republican whip Trent Lott would announce his retirement the next day, he moved swiftly. It was mid-afternoon. By the end of the evening, he had 20 of the 25 votes needed to succeed Lott as the number two Republican in the Senate. And that was just by making phone calls from his home in Phoenix.
By midday Monday, Kyl had locked up a solid majority of Republican senators. Twenty-four hours later, his chief rival for the whip post, Senator Lamar Alexander of Tennessee, backed out of the race. Alexander had to settle for succeeding Kyl as chairman of the Senate Republican conference. And last week, Kyl was formally elected whip. The media labeled him the “consensus” choice.
But calling Kyl the winner by consensus doesn’t quite capture what happened. By acting unobtrusively but decisively, Kyl created a consensus rather than waiting for the possibility that it might form on its own. This is the way Kyl, 65, has worked since he was elected to the House in 1986, then the Senate in 1994, and he has done so with remarkable effectiveness.
Last year, Time picked Kyl as one of the 10 best senators and called him “The Operator.” True enough. But Kyl is not an operator in the Lyndon Johnson or Bill Clinton sense. He is not a pragmatist in search of compromise or popular applause. Kyl is a conservative–probably the smartest one in the Senate–in search of conservative victories.
The contrast between Kyl and his Arizona colleague, John McCain, is instructive. McCain is a public senator. His influence comes from taking on issues with maximum media attention and building public support for his position. Kyl is a private senator. He maneuvers skillfully out of public view to build Senate support for his positions. As Time said, he succeeds by “subterfuge.”
“You can do so much by following that practice,” Kyl told me. “I have never had the need to get a lot of publicity. I’ve found I can be a lot more effective if I’m not in the limelight.” His style fits with the whip’s job, McCain’s with running for president.
Kyl’s father, John Kyl, was a Republican congressman from Iowa who was squeezed out of office in 1972 when the state lost a House seat in a reapportionment. The younger Kyl never pursued a political career in Iowa. After high school, he became ill with pneumonia and moved to Arizona for the climate. He stayed for college and law school.
Oddly enough, his model in Congress is not his father. But his father, Kyl says, gave him one great piece of advice. When getting ready to vote, pick out a Republican you trust who’s voting the other way and ask him why. “It didn’t take me long to pick Dick Cheney.” Vice President Cheney was then the House Republican whip.
Cheney was a “thoughtful, responsible, moderate sort of person” who worked behind the scenes and rarely with great fanfare, Kyl says. Today, he and Cheney, more conservative now, are close friends and political allies, agreeing particularly on national security.
What Kyl calls “my greatest legislative achievement” was the result of his no-press-conferences style. It was the defeat in 1999 of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). When President Clinton submitted the treaty to the Senate in 1997, Kyl says he “could see the handwriting on the wall.” The treaty was going to be ratified.
While Jesse Helms, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, kept the measure from reaching the floor, Kyl studied the details of the treaty, assembled a group of experts opposed to it, and took them to meet with individual senators. This went on for months.
When he had the 34 votes required to defeat ratification, he asked Helms to allow a floor vote. Helms told Kyl to line up more votes, which he did. Meanwhile, Clinton and Democrats were clamoring for a vote. Democratic senator Byron Dorgan finally threatened “to plant myself on the floor like a potted plant” until a vote was scheduled. Lott, then Senate majority leader, said yes. We’ll vote next week.
To their surprise, Democrats discovered they lacked the votes for passage. Kyl, operating inconspicuously, had outfoxed them. Desperate, Clinton called Lott and begged him to call off the vote. Lott was reluctant to dismiss Clinton’s plea out of hand. He summoned Kyl and the late Senator Paul Coverdell of Georgia, one of Lott’s chief advisers, to his office. Kyl made the case for killing the CTBT. “Jon’s right,” Coverdell said. The Senate shot down the treaty, 51-48. Kyl had single-handedly put together a majority against it.
Kyl has become a major force on three issues of particular concern to conservatives: foreign policy, defense, and the judiciary. As the leading expert on missile defense in Congress, he has impeded efforts by Democrats to slash spending and thus limit or prevent tests of anti-missile systems.
In the Senate, Kyl’s reputation has been as a policy wonk perfect for running the Republican conference. That job involves turning policy ideas into appealing political messages. Kyl has never been known for playing hardball politics. Nonetheless, he won reelection last year, 53 percent to 44 percent, against a strong Democratic tide and against a candidate who spent more than $10.9 million of his own money on his campaign.
One more thing: the kinder, gentler (and smarter) side of Jon Kyl. Though a leading conservative, Kyl has never become a lightning rod for attacks by liberals and leftists. This is not an accident. “I have made an effort not to be partisan in an in-your-face sense,” he says. “Ordinarily I don’t talk about Republicans and Democrats. I talk about ideas.” Smart.
Fred Barnes is executive editor of THE WEEKLY STANDARD.
