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John Jay Hooker


 

John Jay Hooker, Jr. (born 1930) is a Nashville, Tennessee attorney, entrepreneur, perennial candidate and political gadfly.

Political Career

In 1959, Mr. Hooker married the former Eugenia "Tish" Fort, a member of another socially-prominent Nashville family and they had three children Dara, Kendall, and Blount who was named after his ancestor Governor Blount. The Fort family were co-founders along with other families of the former National Life and Accident Insurance Company and its subsidiaries, WSM radio and the Grand Ole Opry country music program. Mr. Hooker also was close friends with Mr. Amon Evans who's family owned and published the Nashville Tennessean, the most prominent newspaper in middle Tennessee. Mr. Hooker's law firm, Hooker, Hooker, and Willis was made general counsel of the Nashville Tennesseean in 1962 which ultimately became known as The Tennessean. Thereafter, Mr. Hooker convinced Mr. Evans to employ John Seigenthaler as the editor of the newspaper. Mr. Seigenthaler likewise had an association with Robert F Kennedy that emanated from the Schoolfield investigation and trial. Thereafter, Mr. Seigentaler was a major political supporter of Mr. Kennedy and Mr. Hooker.

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In January of 1961, Mr. Hooker ,immediately upon the swearing in of Robert F. Kennedy as Attorney General of the United States, was named special assistant to General Kennedy, working on various projects for him during which time Mr. Hooker lived with Robert Kennedy and his family in his home in McLean, Virginia.

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However, with the support and backing of the Amon Evans, the publisher of the Nashville Tennessean and John Siegenthaler, its editor, Hooker decided to enter the 1966 Democratic primary for governor of Tennessee. His opponent was Buford Ellington, a former governor attempting a return to the office who had the strong backing of the incumbent governor, Frank Clement and President Lyndon Johnson and the other Nashville newspaper, the Nashville Banner. Supported by some of the more progressive members of the Nashville business community, Hooker underwent a blistering counterattack which was mounted by Ellington's "Old Guard" supporters. Hooker ran fairly well in the urban and rural areas. Ellington went on to victory in November. There was no Republican opposition. That was the last time such a circumstance was to occur in Tennessee to date.

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During this period, Hooker and Tish made a campaign appearance at a Nashville church attended by the very young Oprah Winfrey and her family. Tish, as Oprah recounted later, took the time to speak to the young girl, and told her she was "pretty as a speckled pup." Many years later, Tish was invited to appear on Oprah's television show and Oprah acknowledged how much those kind words had meant to her.

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During the next four years, Hooker divided his time between two major activities ? investments and planning to run for governor again in 1970. Politically, he kept up his connection with Bobby Kennedy and other members of the Kennedy political family, and was greatly saddened when RFK was assassinated in 1968. By this time Hooker had many diversified investments including Whale Inc. and a chain of fried chicken restarants with country comedienne Minnie Pearl. His rationale for the chicken restaurants was that just as Pepsi had long made a large amount of money as the primary competitor to Coca-Cola, someone else stood to make a comparable fortune as the primary competitor to Kentucky Fried Chicken. Hooker was also intimately involved around the same time with the Frist family and others in the formation of what became the first major for-profit health care chain, the Hospital Corporation of America.

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Hooker won the 1970 Democratic nomination for governor of Tennessee over a host of competitors, most notably the candidate of the "Old Guard", Nashville attorney Stan Snodgrass, who had the endorsement of the Nashville Banner. In the past, the democratic nomination would have assured him victory in November. But many things had changed in Tennessee in the four years since his loss to Ellington. For one, the Republican Party was benefitting greatly from the Southern strategy of then-President Richard M. Nixon to reach out to rural and working-class urban Southern whites who were disturbed by desegregation and other rapid social changes. Tennessee Republicans, only just over two years from failing to field a gubernatorial candidate, had even managed to organize the Tennessee House of Representatives for the first (and only) time in the 20th century in 1969, and were not about to allow what appeared to them to be a golden opportunity to pass them by. In 1966, Howard Baker had beaten Governor Frank Clement for the United States Senate because the democratic party was divided between the Clement/Ellington forces and the anti-Clement/Ellington forces.

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Events as well as people seemed to conspire against Hooker in the fall of 1970. The Republicans had staged a very hard-fought primary race of their own, but had come out of it largely united behind the candidacy of Memphis dentist Dr. Winfield Dunn, former chairman of the Shelby County Republican Party. Many of Snodgrass' erstwhile supporters, including the Nashville Banner, endorsed Dunn. At the same time, the Securities and Exchange Commission in 1969 announced an investigation into Minnie Pearl's Chicken, over time as a consequence of the investigation the price the stock had declined from a high of $40 a share to approximately 50 cents a share.

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Simultaneously, Democratic Senator Albert Gore, Sr. was running an equally hard-fought and ultimately unsuccessful campaign for a fourth term against Chattanooga Congressman William E. Brock. The friendly relationship both Gore and Hooker shared with the Kennedy family became an issue, especially in light of Ted Kennedy's involvement in the Chappaquiddick incident the previous year. Republicans and "Old Guard" detractors alike pilloried the two, leading to a Republican sweep and for the first time in the post-Reconstruction era that the Republicans held the Tennessee governorship and both United States Senate seats (although, curiously, they lost control of the state House of Representatives and to date have never regained it).

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He was never convicted of any criminal wrongdoing in the SEC case. Nonetheless, the SEC investigation which lasted three years caused the company to virtually liquidate. Hooker claims that the SEC investigation was unjustified and politically inspired by the Nixon administration who wanted to defeat Albert Gore Sr. and Hooker because they were anti-war candidates and the Nixon political "machine" challenged Hooker and Gore as part of the Nixon "southern strategy. Furthermore, Hooker Claims that the SEC investigation was a fraud to start with, unjustified, and a disgrace.

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