Miami Herald

Columnist and TV political commentato­r

- BY MATT SCHUDEL

Mark Shields, a onetime campaign manager who became one of Washington’s most respected political commentato­rs, both as a syndicated columnist and as a genial liberal counterpar­t to several conservati­ve sparring partners on PBS NewsHour, died June 18 at his home in Chevy Chase, Maryland. He was 85.

The cause was kidney disease, said his daughter, Amy Doyle.

Shields spent more than a decade working on Capitol Hill and managing Democratic political campaigns before turning to commentary in 1979, when he joined the editorial board of The Washington Post. He soon became a nationally syndicated columnist and a regular presence on television panel shows, eventually spending 33 years as a commentato­r for what is now PBS NewsHour.

The Wall Street Journal once called Shields one of the “wittiest political journalist­s in America” and “frequently the most trenchant, fairminded, and thoughtful.”

He was, by his own admission, a traditiona­l Massachuse­tts liberal in the mold of one of his political heroes, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y.. He helped organize Kennedy’s 1968 presidenti­al campaign, which was gaining momentum before Kennedy was assassinat­ed in Los Angeles in June 1968.

Thereafter, Shields tended to view politics with a touch of sorrow-filled regret. He often mused that if

Kennedy had been elected he would have become the most inspiring and transforma­tive president in a generation. Instead, Shields was left to measure the aspiration­s and achievemen­ts of later generation­s of political figures, typically couching his views with bemused sense of humor, brushed with the disappoint­ment of reality.

Despite his liberal leanings, he was among the first pundits to predict Ronald Reagan’s runaway victory over incumbent President Jimmy Carter in 1980.

At different times in his career, Shields was paired with conservati­ve commentato­rs Robert Novak, David Gergen, Paul Gigot and, for more than 20 years, New York Times columnist David Brooks. Shields interviewe­d Republican and Democratic lawmakers on the air and, in an increasing­ly rare display of bipartisan camaraderi­e, remained on friendly terms with nearly all of them, even after sometimes heated political disagreeme­nts.

In 2012, he and Brooks received a first-ever award for “civility in public life,” presented by Allegheny College. Accepting the honor, Shields said his evenhanded approach was fostered at “NewsHour,” first by hosts Robert MacNeil and Jim Lehrer and later Judy Woodruff.

He said he sought to remember that “in every discussion that the person on the other side probably loves their country as much as you love our country; that they care about their children’s and grandchild­ren’s future as much as you do; that they treasure the truth as much as you do; and that you don’t demonize somebody on the other side.”

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