Joseph McCarthy
(politician) (1908-1957), American politician, who led a campaign against
Communist subversion in the early 1950s. McCarthy’s charges were often not well
substantiated, and the United States Senate voted to censure him for the tactics
he used.
McCarthy was born in Grand Chute, Wisconsin, on November
14, 1908, and educated at Marquette University. He practiced law in Wisconsin
until 1939, when he was elected circuit-court judge. During World War II he
served in the U.S. Marine Corps, attaining the rank of captain during service in
the Pacific theater of operations. In 1946 he was elected on the Republican
ticket to the U.S. Senate and was reelected in 1952.
McCarthy first attracted national attention in February
1950, with the charge that the Department of State had been infiltrated by
Communists. Although his accusation was never substantiated, during the next
three years he repeatedly accused various high-ranking officials of subversive
activities. In 1953, as chairman of the Senate subcommittee on investigations,
McCarthy continued his probe of alleged Communist activities, and in April 1954
he accused the secretary of the army of concealing foreign espionage activities.
In rebuttal the secretary stated that members of the subcommittee staff had
threatened army officials in efforts to obtain preferential treatment for a
former unpaid consultant of the subcommittee who had been drafted.
During the ensuing Senate investigations, which were
widely publicized in the press and given nationwide radio and television
coverage, McCarthy was cleared of the charges against him but was censured by
the Senate for the methods he had used in his investigations and for his abuse
of certain senators and Senate committees. His influence both in the Senate and
on the national political scene diminished steadily thereafter, although he
remained in the Senate until his death in Bethesda, Maryland, May 2, 1957.
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