Hundreds in Idaho mourn
former Rep. Helen Chenoweth-Hage
By JESSE HARLAN ALDERMAN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
MERIDIAN, Idaho -- A roster of Idaho's top
politicians joined ranchers in blue jeans and bolo ties and mourners
in black suits to remember steely former Republican U.S. Rep. Helen
Chenoweth-Hage at a memorial service Monday.
"I say now to the almighty God - and I'm not
quite sure why you called her - but she's there now: stand back and
give her rein," U.S. Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho, said in an eulogy
before hundreds gathered in a suburban Boise chapel.
Chenoweth-Hage died Oct. 2 after a car driven by her
daughter-in-law flipped on a rural road near Tonopah, Nev. She was 68.
She represented Idaho's 1st Congressional District
for three terms - from 1994 to 2000. On the national stage she often
stood out, roiling opponents with her disdain for "big
government," while gaining a homegrown reputation as a Western
rights crusader.
As a congresswoman, she famously held
"endangered salmon bakes," serving canned salmon to protest
the fish's endangered species status. She once accused federal agents
of using black helicopter gunships to harass ranchers, but later
backed off the claim.
U.S. Rep. C.L. "Butch" Otter, R-Idaho, who
succeeded Chenoweth-Hage, said she built a Republican dynasty in
Idaho, starting with her speeches in small homes and grange halls as
the state GOP's executive director in the 1970s and ending with her
speeches as a congresswoman in the 1990s.
Otter said that during votes where he refused to
budge from unpopular conservative positions, House members would say
"Helen would be proud."
"It wasn't quite meant as a compliment,"
Otter said in a tearful speech. "It was meant to say, 'you'll
never be as conservative as Helen, so quit trying.' Well, I didn't
quit trying and I'll never quit trying."
Craig said Chenoweth-Hage's unwavering stances,
particularly on the management of the nation's 193 million aces of
national forests, continue to influence policy makers six years after
she left Washington, D.C.
He said her push to allow more logging near towns
like Orofino - where she started a rural health clinic - is reflected
in the so-called Healthy Forest Initiative, signed by President Bush
in 2003.
"The Healthy Forest Initiative today, the first
major piece of forest legislation passed in two decades, was in part
the result of a conspiracy between Helen Chenoweth and Larry Craig
about how we get communities like Orofino back on their feet and
working again," Craig said.
Dozens of current and former Idaho politicians,
including Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne, Gov. Jim Risch, U.S.
Sen. Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, and U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson, R-Idaho,
attended the service.
Chenoweth-Hage was also remembered by her two
children and her large extended family from a second marriage to
Nevada rancher Wayne Hage.
Hage, who wrangled with the federal government for
decades over private property rights and came to be the public face of
the Sagebrush Rebellion, died of cancer in June.
Family members remembered Chenoweth-Hage for the
bountiful meals she cooked for ranch hands in Nevada, her little-known
talent as a classical bass violinist and her enthusiasm for "The
Law," by 19th century French economist Frederic Bastiat, a
linchpin of libertarian literature.
"She treated the dusty cowboy sitting at her
dining room table, and probably getting dirt all over the floor with
his dirty boots, with the same respect she had for a colleague in
Congress," said grandson Dominick Keenan. "There was no
front. Only Helen."