"We can confirm that Robert Strauss passed away peacefully on
March 19," the law firm he helped found, Akin Gump Strauss Hauer and
Feld, said in a statement.
Strauss died of natural causes at his home in Washington, the Dallas
Morning News reported.
Considered one of Washington's master power brokers, the colorful
Texas-born Strauss was known as "Mr. Democrat." But in an era when
Washington was less polarized, Strauss easily crossed partisan lines
and wielded influence in law, government and politics under a
succession of presidential administrations.
"Bob was one of the greatest leaders the Democratic Party ever had,
yet presidents of both parties relied on his advice, his instincts,
and his passion for public service — not to mention his well-honed
sense of humor," President Barack Obama said in a statement.
"As President Carter's trade representative, he helped open new
markets for American exports," Obama said. "As President Bush's last
ambassador to the Soviet Union and first ambassador to the Russian
Federation, he stood up for our interests and values at a moment of
immense change."
Born on October 19, 1918 in Lockhart, Texas, the son of a dry-goods
merchant, Strauss went to the University of Texas where he
befriended future Texas Governor John Connally and worked on Lyndon
Johnson's first run for Congress in 1937.
After graduation, he joined the FBI in 1941, where his job was
"watching out for Communists," he told the New York Times in a 1991
interview.
Strauss left the FBI several years later, becoming a successful
Dallas lawyer and businessman.
After helping Connally win the Texas governorship in 1962, Strauss
became involved in the national Democratic Party organization and
served as its treasurer from 1970 to 1972.
Looking to recover from George McGovern's landslide presidential
defeat in 1972 at the hands of Republican President Richard Nixon,
the Democrats turned to Strauss, a centrist with close ties to the
party establishment, as national chairman, a post he held until
1977.
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During Strauss' tenure, Democrat Jimmy Carter won the White House in
1976. He named Strauss as U.S. trade representative and later a
special Middle East envoy.
"He is absolutely the most amazing politician," former first lady
Barbara Bush wrote of Strauss. "He is everybody's friend and, if he
chooses, could sell you the paper off your own wall."
MOVER AND SHAKER
Strauss returned to his law practice after helping run Carter's
unsuccessful bid for re-election in 1980. But even under the
Republican presidencies of Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush,
Strauss remained a key player in Washington, moving freely in
Democratic and Republican circles and forming close friendships on
both sides of the political aisle.
He held advisory posts under Reagan and was named U.S. ambassador to
Moscow by Bush in 1991, months before the Soviet Union's collapse.
Strauss remained in Moscow through 1992 as ambassador to Russia.
"He was a statesman and public servant in every sense of the word,"
DNC Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz said in a statement. "He was
a proud Texan and legendary Democrat who always put his country
ahead of all else."
Strauss told the Dallas Morning News in 1993 he had no regrets after
his decades as a political mover and shaker.
"I like the whole damn deal," he said.
(Reporting by Peter Cooney; additional reporting by Sharon Bernstein
in Sacramento; editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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