Sonny Montgomery Term Paper

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Autobiography of Sonny Montgomery

Montgomery, Sonny. Sonny Montgomery: The Veteran's Champion. With Michael B. Ballard and Craig S. Piper. University Press of Mississippi.

In an election year, it is common to become cynical about the motivations and the limited ability of the political process to enact real and serious changes to the nation's ideological and social infrastructure. However, the story of Sonny Montgomery: The Veteran's Champion is a powerful reminder of how politicians, specifically congressman Sonny Montgomery, a veteran of World War II and a beneficiary of the first GI bill, can indeed use the memory of powerful past personal experiences to motivate them to create positive political changes for the present and future generations. In Montgomery's case, as the title of the book implies, the source of the congressman's passion was his commitment to the nation's veterans, young and old.

Even before he came to congress and to public, political service, Montgomery was considered to be an American hero. In 1945, Sonny Montgomery was instrumental in capturing a nest of German machine guns in a critical tactical move, and he earned the Bronze Star Medal for Valor as a result of his service. He also served during the Korean War. Montgomery says that military service is an important reminder that no heroics are purely individual.
One must always work as part of a core, a unit, and a team. This lesson served him well not just in the United States army but also in the United States congress, where compromise and negotiation are just as important as contention when passing crucial legislation.

As this autobiography, constructed with the help of historians and biographers Michael Ballard and Craig Piper makes clear, Montgomery's early experiences were formative in creating a strong sense of values regarding serving his country. He was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1966 as a Democrat. From then on, Sonny Montgomery represented Mississippi's Third District in Congress for fifteen terms. Although he served in congress for many continuous years, sometimes contentiously, he always served loyally as an America as well as a partisan Southern conservative Democrat.

During his congressional experiences, Montgomery saw seven presidents come and go. Over the course of his autobiographical work, Montgomery comments on the Presidents he knew. He calls Richard Nixon unpredictable and emotional, but Nixon's vice-president and subsequent successor, Gerald Ford, kind and easy to know. This marks Ford in direct contrast to fellow Southern Democrat Jimmy Carter, whom Montgomery never seemed to really 'bond' with, unlike the senior Republican Texan George W. 'Pappy'….....

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