Leadership and Adversity: Orrin G. Hatch Story
United States Senator (R-Utah)
By: Howard Edward Haller, Ph.D.
This article offers an insight into groundbreaking proven research
into how to overcome adversity and how to become a successful
leader which is well researched and fully documented in my new
book “Leadership and Adversity: The Shaping of Prominent
Leaders.” This new Leadership book has received extensive
endorsements and enthusiastic reviews from well-known prominent
business, political, and academic leaders, best-selling authors,
and leading scholars who either participated in the study or
reviewed the research findings.
You will discover the proven success habits and leadership secrets
of people who, in spite of adversity, discrimination, abuse, or
difficult or life threatening challenges shaped their own destiny
to become successful, effective leaders.
The full results of this research are presented in the just
published book, “Leadership and Adversity: The Shaping of
Prominent Leaders,” by Howard Edward Haller, Ph.D., which is
available on www.amazon.com,
www.amazon.ca,
www.amazon.de, and
www.amazon.co.uk.
The nine initial prominent successful leaders, who’s stories are
told and shared their secrets about how to overcome adversity
were: Dr. Tony Bonanzino, U.S. Senator Orrin Hatch (UT), Monzer
Hourani, U.S. Senator Daniel Inouye (HI), Dr. John Malone,
Laurence Pino, U.S. Army Major General Sid Shachnow (Ret.), Dr.
Blenda Wilson, and Zig Ziglar.
The data from the above nine research participants was materially
augmented by seven other successful individuals who overcame
adversity including: Jack Canfield, William Draper III, Mark
Victor Hansen, J. Terrence Lanni, Angelo Mozilo, Dr. Nido Qubein,
and Dr. John Sperling.
Additionally, five internationally known, highly respected
Best-Selling authors, and major academic scholars offered their
peer debriefing comments, reviews and their agreement with the
findings of my research findings including:
Dr. Ken Blanchard, Dr. John Kotter, Professor Jim Kouzes, Dr. Paul
Stoltz, and Dr. Meg Wheatley.
This is a short biography of one of the prominent leaders
principal participants for my Leadership and Adversity research
who generously contributed their time and insights into the
phenomenon of how individuals can successfully overcome adversity
and obstacles and even go on to become prominent successful
leaders.
U. S. Senator Hatch very generously contributed his time and
insight for this important research into the phenomenon of how to
overcome adversity and become successful. This Senator Orrin
Hatch’s story:
Orrin Hatch is the surviving son of a lower middle-class Mormon
pioneer family from Utah. During the Depression, his family,
though penniless, moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Orrin’s older
brother was killed in Europe while serving in the Army Air Corps
in World War II. Orrin noted, “I was always someone who was kind
of strange to them, in that sense, but they still liked me,
because I was a good student, and a good athlete. But there were
things I just wouldn’t do.”
Orrin and his family belonged to the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, more commonly known as “Mormons,” which was a
relative rarity in Pittsburgh at that time. “I had to prove
myself, always being kind of a ‘square.’ I had to set certain
things aside, because of my religious beliefs. I never drank, I
never smoked, I never caroused, [and] I never committed sexual
sin.”
Orrin said, “My parents scraped together a little money, bought a
wooded acre of land, and then purchased secondhand materials,
including partially burned lumber . . . and built their home,
board by board with their own two hands.” Orrin's father was a
“union-card carrying” wood lather. He learned his father’s trade
and worked as a wood lather, starting while still in high school.
Later, Orrin worked his way “through Brigham Young University as a
janitor.”
Orrin interrupted his education at BYU to serve a two-year unpaid
mission for the Mormon Church. He then returned to BYU, got
married, graduated, and returned to Pittsburgh to work at his
union construction job and continue his education. Hatch was
accepted, and got a scholarship, to the University of Pittsburgh,
College of Law. Orrin literally worked his way through law school
while providing for his growing family. When Orrin was in law
school, he said that he and his “wife and children literally lived
in a converted chicken coop” behind his parents’ home.
Hatch and his young family returned to his parents’ home state of
Utah so that Orrin could accept a corporate legal position.
Shortly after arriving in Utah, Orrin left that corporate job and
opened a law firm in Salt Lake City, Utah, as the senior partner.
Although he had absolutely no political experience, Hatch decided
to pursue the Republican Party nomination for the United States
Senate race in 1976. He was up against an experienced Republican
politician. Hatch won the Republican nomination for U.S. Senator.
Now the difficult part began, as he “ran a campaign against a
well-entrenched Democratic incumbent, U.S. Senator Moss.” Senator
Hatch shared with me that his “confidence was not improved” by the
fact that in 1976, “Moss was a three-time incumbent who could not
be beaten. U.S. News and World Report that year had said that
Senator Moss’ seat was the ‘most safe’ seat in the Senate.” But
Orrin won the battle against the incumbent Senator, and was
elected to the U.S. Senate in 1976. Senator Hatch has since been
re-elected U. S. Senator by his adopted state of Utah four times.
It is customary for new U.S. Senators not to speak out in their
freshman terms, but Senator Hatch did not follow that custom. In
his first term in the U.S. Senate he led a filibuster to defeat a
major labor bill that was heavily backed by the Democrats.
The proposed labor bill, before the U.S. Congress, was critical to
the union movement of the late 1970s. “Union membership was
starting to decline, and this bill would have legislatively forced
more union membership.” Hatch was very concerned about what some
had referred to as the most important labor union bill in four
decades. The bill was strongly supported by George Meany, head of
the AFL-CIO, and was supported by President Jimmy Carter, as well.
Senator Hatch took on the defeat of this bill as his own “personal
cause.” He said, “I strongly felt that the proposed labor bill was
not in the best interest of the country and would be very
detrimental to the U.S. economy, which was already starting to see
high inflation entering the picture in the late 1970s.” Hatch
added, “I believed that if this labor bill passed that millions of
workers could be forced to join unions and inflation would
skyrocket.”
Since 1976, Orrin has been a key member of the U.S. Senate
Judiciary Committee. He has served on that Committee during his
entire tenure in the United States Senate. Senator Hatch and his
wife Elaine live in Vienna, Virginia, and Salt Lake City, Utah.
The Hatches are active in their Mormon faith; they are happily
married with several children and many grandchildren. Orrin, is a
returned Mormon missionary, also served as a Bishop in the Mormon
Church before being elected to the U.S. Senate. His insightful and
informative autobiography, Square Peg: Confessions of a Citizen
Senator (2002), in which Hatch provides a unique inside
perspective of Capitol Hill over the last twenty-five years.
Copyright 2008 ©Howard Edward Haller, Ph.D.
Howard Edward Haller, Ph.D.
Chief Enlightenment Officer
The Leadership Success Institute
Author: “Leadership and Adversity: The Shaping of Prominent
Leaders”
Publisher: VDM Verlag Dr Müller AG & CoKG ISBN 978-3-639-09841-9
[Now available on www.Amazon.com]
Website:
www.TheLeadershipSuccessInstitute.com
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