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Ernest Lundeen

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Ernest Lundeen
Lundeen in April 1940
United States Senator
from Minnesota
In office
January 3, 1937 – August 31, 1940
Preceded byGuy V. Howard
Succeeded byJoseph H. Ball
Member of the
U.S. House of Representatives
from Minnesota
In office
March 4, 1933 – January 3, 1937
Preceded byGeneral Ticket Adopted
Succeeded byHenry Teigan
ConstituencyGeneral Ticket seat 8
(1933-1935)
3rd district
(1935-1937)
In office
March 4, 1917 – March 3, 1919
Preceded byGeorge Ross Smith
Succeeded byWalter Newton
Constituency5th district
Member of the Minnesota House of Representatives
from the 42nd district
In office
January 3, 1911 – January 4, 1915
Preceded byWilliam Campbell and John Godspeed
Succeeded byJohn Sanborn Jr. and George Sudheimer
Personal details
Born(1878-08-04)August 4, 1878
Beresford, Dakota Territory, U.S.
DiedAugust 31, 1940(1940-08-31) (aged 62)
Lovettsville, Virginia, U.S.
Cause of deathPlane crash
Political partyRepublican (?-1925)
Minnesota Farmer-Labor Party (1925-1940)
SpouseNorma Lundeen
Alma materCarleton College
University of Minnesota Law School
Military service
Branch/serviceUnited States Army
UnitCompany B-12th Minnesota Volunteer Regiment
Battles/warsSpanish–American War

Ernest Lundeen (August 4, 1878 – August 31, 1940) was an American lawyer and politician who represented Minnesota in the United States House of Representatives from 1917 to 1919 and 1933 to 1937, and in the United States Senate from 1937 until his death in 1940. He was a member of the Republican Party before joining the Minnesota Farmer–Labor Party. He opposed American involvement in both World War I and World War II. At the end of his life, he became controversial for his close ties with George Sylvester Viereck, a Nazi agent in the U.S.[1]

A veteran of the Spanish–American War, Lundeen got his start in politics when he served in the Minnesota House of Representatives between 1911 and 1914. He was elected to the U.S. Congress in 1916 as the representative from Minnesota's 5th congressional district. However, when seeking reelection in 1918, he was defeated in the Republican primary due to his unpopular opposition to American entry into World War I.

On August 31, 1940, Senator Lundeen and 24 other passengers died in a plane crash near Lovettsville, Virginia. At the time, he was the subject of a probe by the Federal Bureau of Investigation for his alleged links to Nazi Germany. Investigations into the cause of the crash turned up nothing conclusive.

Early life and education

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Ernest Lundeen was born on August 4, 1878, on his father's homestead in Brooklyn Township near Beresford, Lincoln County, Dakota Territory. His father, C. H. Lundeen, was an early pioneer who was credited with the naming of Brooklyn Township and the establishment of the school and other local institutions.[citation needed]

Most of Ernest Lundeen's siblings died during a diphtheria epidemic during the 1880s. In 1896, Lundeen and his family moved from their Brooklyn homestead to Harcourt, Iowa, and then to Minnesota. Lundeen served in the United States Army in the 12th Minnesota Volunteer Regiment during the Spanish–American War.[2]

In 1901, Lundeen graduated from Carleton College and studied law at the University of Minnesota Law School. In May 1906, he was admitted to the Minnesota bar.[2]

Early political career (1911–36)

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Lundeen served in the Minnesota House of Representatives from 1911 to 1914. He represented the 42nd district, which served Hennepin County.[2]

United States House of Representatives (1917–19)

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Lundeen first ran for United States Congress in 1914 but was unsuccessful. Then, in 1916, he was elected to the 65th U.S. Congress, representing Minnesota's 5th congressional district based in Minneapolis. On April 6, 1917, he was one of 50 congressmen to vote against the American declaration of war against Germany.[3] He continued to oppose the war while it was being fought.[4] Owing to the unpopularity of his isolationist, anti-war stance, he lost renomination in the 1918 Republican primary to the eventual election winner, Walter Newton. Once, while Lundeen was making a speech in 1918 about foreign policy, an angry crowd in Ortonville, Minnesota carried him off the speaker's platform and forced him into the refrigerated rail car of a departing train.[5]

Unsuccessful bids for office

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In the 1920s, Lundeen was repeatedly unsuccessful in his runs for political office:[6]

  • Lundeen ran for the same seat again in 1920 but failed to win the Republican nomination. He ran in the general election as an independent candidate but finished third with 10.0% of the total vote.
  • In 1922, Lundeen challenged incumbent United States Senator Frank B. Kellogg for the Republican nomination for Senate. He received 123,765 votes in the Republican primary (33.54% of the total).
  • In 1923, Lundeen ran in the special election for United States Senate but finished seventh out of nine candidates in the Republican primary, winning only 5,851 votes (3.40% of the total).
  • In 1924, Lundeen ran unsuccessfully for Chief Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court.
  • By 1926, Lundeen had switched his affiliation to the Minnesota Farmer–Labor Party and ran in that year's election for Minnesota's 10th congressional district. As the Farmer–Labor nominee in this more rural and exurban district, he finished a distant second to incumbent Republican Godfrey G. Goodwin with 34.5% of the total vote.
  • In 1930, Lundeen was the Farmer–Labor nominee for United States Senate, challenging incumbent Republican Thomas D. Schall. He finished third behind Schall and Democratic nominee Einar Hoidale with 22.89% of the vote.

United States House of Representatives (1933–37)

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Lundeen was elected to the U.S. House again in 1932 and served in the 73rd and 74th Congresses.

In 1934, during the 73rd Congress, Lundeen sponsored the Workers' Unemployment Insurance Bill. The bill embodied a far-reaching unemployment insurance and social insurance program formulated by the Communist Party in 1930 and openly and vigorously advocated by the Party for the next several years.[7] Despite the bill's Communist origins, the Party mustered considerable support for it, including from union locals, international unions, and state labor federations.[8] The bill attracted support from liberals dissatisfied with the less generous and much less radical Wagner-Lewis Bill (which became the Social Security Act). With Lundeen's help, a subcommittee of the Labor Committee heard testimony from 80 witnesses on the benefits of the bill and the suffering of the unemployed. Many were Communists, including Party chairman Earl Browder. The bill was narrowly voted out of the Labor Committee, but it was killed by House leadership, which wanted no competition for Wagner-Lewis.[9]

U.S. Senator (1937–40)

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1936 election

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In 1936, the Farmer–Labor Party nominated Floyd B. Olson, the popular incumbent Governor of Minnesota, for the open United States Senate seat vacated by Schall's death. However, Olson died of stomach cancer at the age of 44 on August 22. The state central committee of the Farmer–Labor Party selected Lundeen to run in his place, and he won a landslide election over Republican former Governor Theodore Christianson.

Term in office

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Senator Lundeen served in the 75th U.S. Congress starting on January 3, 1937, and then in the 76th Congress until his death. Initially, he displayed sympathies with the Communist Party. For example, in late 1936, Senator-elect Lundeen addressed a meeting of the "Friends of the Soviet Union" at Madison Square Garden as Tovarishchi ("Comrades"). But he remained strongly isolationist and was later denounced by Earl Browder as a reactionary.[10]

It was Lundeen's "passionate embrace of isolationism" that began to align him more with Americans who backed Nazi Germany.[5] He had frequent contact with George Sylvester Viereck, a leading Nazi agent in the U.S. During his first term in the House of Representatives, Lundeen had contributed to Viereck's American Weekly.[11] After giving Sen. Lundeen millions of dollars in bribes, Viereck often used the Senator's office and "sometimes dictated speeches for Lundeen, openly using the Senator's telephones to obtain material from Hans Thomsen at the [German] embassy."[12] Some of these speeches were markedly pro-German and pro-isolationist. Viereck would have Lundeen's staff print thousands, and in certain cases, millions of copies of the speeches, which would then be distributed to the public.[5][13]

Lundeen was the chair and founder of the Make Europe Pay War Debts Committee (later dubbed the Islands for War Debts Committee), which urged the seizure of British territories in the West Indies as a means of settling Britain's debts to the United States from WWI.[14] It was likely an isolationist public relations tactic, reminding Americans that the U.S. should not lend more assistance to a country that was already in debt to them.[11]

On June 14, 1939, Lundeen joined a civilian and press delegation aboard USS Hammann for its sea trials off Fire Island. The ship reached a maximum speed of 40 knots, came to a complete stop in 58 seconds, and then travelled in reverse at 20 knots.[15] He said the experience was "astounding" and it showed that American ship designers "need bow to none."

While in office, Lundeen required his aides to pay him a portion of their paychecks, threatening to fire them if they did not comply.[16]

He vehemently opposed the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940.[17]

Death and investigation

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On the afternoon of August 31, 1940, Lundeen was a passenger on Flight 19 of Pennsylvania Central Airlines, flying from Washington, D.C. to Detroit. The plane crashed near Lovettsville, Virginia, and all 25 persons on board were killed.[18] Lundeen was buried in Little Arlington National Cemetery in Minneapolis, Minnesota.[2]

Also on board Flight 19 were "a Special Agent of the FBI, a second FBI employee, and a prosecutor from the Criminal Division of the U.S. Department of Justice."[19] Director J. Edgar Hoover denied that the FBI agents on the plane had Lundeen under surveillance.[20]

The Civil Aeronautics Board launched a week-long investigation regarding the cause of the crash, but found no definitive answers.[21] A coroner's inquest in the Virginia county where the crash occurred concluded it was probably weather-related. There was a violent thunderstorm in progress, and the crash may have resulted from a lightning strike on the plane, possibly combined with pilot error while flying into wind shear.[18][20]

Minnesota Governor Harold Stassen appointed Joseph H. Ball to fill Lundeen's Senate seat. Although Ball continued his predecessor's anti-New Deal stance, he took a different foreign policy position by voting for FDR's Lend-Lease program as "a barrier between us and whatever designs Hitler and his allies may have on this continent."[20]

In 2022, Rachel Maddow released a podcast series titled Ultra, which explored Lundeen's complicity in Nazi Germany's intelligence and propaganda operations in the U.S. during the 12 to 18 months immediately preceding America's entry into World War II. At the time of his death, the FBI was investigating Lundeen's ties to George Sylvester Viereck, who was working in the U.S. to spread pro-Hitler and anti-Semitic propaganda.[19][22]

After the plane crash, Lundeen's wife Norma tried to clear his name by covering up his involvement with the Nazi regime. Within two days after the crash, she travelled to his office in the Capitol to retrieve the "Viereck files". Within a year after the tragedy, several journalists started reporting that Lundeen's speeches had been ghostwritten by Viereck.[23] Norma Lundeen sought to block that narrative by claiming that "no one wrote [her] husband's speeches" and by threatening to sue one of the journalists reporting it. When she was called as a defense witness during Viereck's trial for violating the Foreign Agents Registration Act, she falsely testified that while she indeed took the Viereck files, the files had now disappeared due to a burglary at their residence.[24] It was later discovered that the files were actually stored in the Lundeen family archives.[24]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Duchschere, Kevin (February 17, 2023). "Did a Nazi sympathizer once represent Minnesota in the U.S. Senate?" (PDF). Minnesota Star Tribune.
  2. ^ a b c d "Lundeen, Ernest - Legislator Record". Minnesota Legislators Past & Present. Minnesota Legislative Reference Library. Retrieved March 5, 2025.
  3. ^ Current Biography 1940. Bronx, N.Y.: H.W. Wilson Co. 1968. p. 527. ISBN 978-0824204778. OCLC 999510827.
  4. ^ Maddow, Rachel (2023). Prequel: An American Fight Against Fascism. New York: Crown. p. 195. ISBN 978-0-593-44451-1.
  5. ^ a b c Radelat, Ana (January 11, 2023). "How a U.S. Senator from Minnesota became a key player in a Nazi plot". MinnPost. Retrieved February 14, 2023.
  6. ^ University of Minnesota Libraries, University of Minnesota. "1930 Minnesota U.S. Senate Farmer-Labor Primary". Minnesota Historical Election Archive. Archived from the original on August 24, 2021. Retrieved August 24, 2021.
  7. ^ Collins, Sheila D.; Goldberg, Gertrude Schaffner, eds. (2013). When Government Helped: Learning from the Successes and Failures of the New Deal. Oxford University Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-0199990696.
  8. ^ Collins & Goldberg 2013, p. 92.
  9. ^ Klehr, Harvey (1984). The Heyday of American Communism: The Depression Decade. New York: Basic Books. pp. 283–284. ISBN 978-0465029457.
  10. ^ Klehr 1984, p. 289.
  11. ^ a b Maddow 2023, p. 195.
  12. ^ Frye, Alton (1967). Nazi Germany and the American Hemisphere 1933–1941. New Haven, CT.: Yale University Press. p. 161.
  13. ^ Frye 1967, p. 161.
  14. ^ Maddow 2023, pp. 194–195, 231.
  15. ^ "Latest in Destroyers" (PDF). The Evening Star. June 14, 1939. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 27, 2022. Retrieved December 27, 2022.
  16. ^ Maddow 2023, p. 201.
  17. ^ Maddow 2023, pp. 196–197.
  18. ^ a b "Accident Details". Retrieved June 23, 2007.
  19. ^ a b "Rachel Maddow Presents: Ultra | an MSNBC original podcast". MSNBC.
  20. ^ a b c Eisele, Albert (September 3, 2009). "Death of senator from Minnesota still shrouded in mystery". MinnPost.
  21. ^ Maddow 2023, pp. 192–199.
  22. ^ Specktor, Mordecai (November 13, 2022). "Editorial: Minnesota's pro-Hitler senator". The American Jewish World.
  23. ^ "Rachel Maddow Presents: Ultra - Episode 4: A Bad Angle". MSNBC. October 24, 2022.
  24. ^ a b "Rachel Maddow Presents: Ultra - Episode 5: Shut It Down". MSNBC. October 31, 2022.
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Party political offices
Preceded by Farmer–Labor nominee for Governor of Minnesota
1928
Succeeded by
Farmer–Labor nominee for U.S. Senator from Minnesota
(Class 2)

1930
Preceded by
Floyd B. Olson
Farmer–Labor nominee for U.S. Senator from Minnesota
(Class 2)

1936
Succeeded by
Al Hansen
U.S. House of Representatives
Preceded by U.S. Representative from Minnesota's 5th congressional district
1917–1919
Succeeded by
Preceded by U.S. Representative from Minnesota
General Ticket Eighth Seat

1933–1935
Succeeded by
General Ticket Abolished
Preceded by
General Ticket Abolished
U.S. Representative from Minnesota's 3rd congressional district
1935–1937
Succeeded by
U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. senator (Class 2) from Minnesota
1937–1940
Served alongside: Henrik Shipstead
Succeeded by