I am posting this book review on the behalf of Barnie Day. — Jim Bacon
So now comes to the literature of Virginia politics a self-published good look back, “Wading in the Muddy Pool: A Virginia Political Memoir, 1972-1982” ($15.00, Old Favorites Bookshop, PO Box 8347, Richmond, 23226) by Richmond book dealer Gary S. OโNeal.
OโNeal, who began a 10-year sojourn through Virginiaโs political corridors in 1972, when he signed on as an aide to Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates John Warren Cooke, has served up a rare inside look that reads like an oral history, despite wording here and there that seemsโฆwellโฆa touch quaint.
Iโll translate one for you: โrecently passed from the earthly sceneโ means somebody died.
Still, this is a good, snappy read, as much for its candid observations as anything. (The two-page memory of the House Clerkโs Office is worth the purchase price.)
Virginia politics now is a bland vanilla team sport. It used to be a game of individuals. Many of the personalities here have โpassed from the earthly scene,โ and wonโt be recognized by anyone, even inside players, under the age of 60, or so.
A few will stir the dust of memory:
โRobert B. Ball, Sr., a Democrat from Henrico County, was a self educated man and one-time butcher who became a success in the hotel-motel business and real estate. He amassed a fortune in the 1950โs by putting pay TV sets in his motels and used to brag that he took a wheel barrow of quarters a week to the bank.โ
โWilliam Dudley, Democrat, โBullet Bill,โ a former NFL great and football star at UVA. Nice man, but fairly dense, more adept at attending local sports banquets than debating the issues of the day.โ
โGeorge Mason Green, Republican, one of the last Arlington County Republicans before the Democrats became the dominant party in that area. One of the new breed of right-wing ideologues.โ
โFrank Mann, Democrat, Alexndria politician and former mayor of that city. Went back on his word to Delegate Lane (Ed Lane, of Richmond) on a committee vote at the 1973 session, a disagreeable man with little character.โ
โThomas W. Moss, Democrat, Norfolk politician, liked the ladies and the bottle.โ
โStanley Owens, Democrat, Prince William County, at that point growing somewhat senile, later known throughout the Assembly for crashing into a water fountain with his car at an Interstate 95 rest stop and then trying to bill the House of Delegates for the damage to his auto.โ
โAs Speaker, Philpottt (Albert Lee, of Henry County) was more politically assertive than Cooke. He saw the role of the Speaker as that of an active participant in the political process, rather than a nonpartisan referee like Speaker Cooke. I donโt mean that Cooke had no party loyalty, but he exercised it gently while A. L. used a whip.โ
โDorothy McDiarmid, Democrat from Fairfax, whose husband Hugh constantly trailed her around the Capitol.โ
OโNeal has given Virginiaโs political junkies a tasty appetizer (91 pages). I wish it had been an entrรฉe.
You could do worse than buying this book.