John K. Tabor
John Kaye Tabor was an American lawyer and government official who served as Secretary of [Internal Affairs of Pennsylvania], Pennsylvania Secretary of Labor and Industry, and United States [Under Secretary of Commerce]. He was the Republican nominee in the 1969 [Pittsburgh mayoral election].
Early life
Tabor was born on April 19, 1921 in Uniontown, Pennsylvania. He grew up in Pittsburgh, where his father Edward O. Tabor, was an attorney and political figure. Tabor competed in the 1936 national Soap Box Derby in Akron, Ohio.Tabor attended Taylor Allderdice High School the Shady Side Academy. He graduated Yale University in 1943 and immediately joined the United States Navy. During World War II, he held the rank of lieutenant and commanded a minesweeper in the Pacific theater. He earned his master of arts degree from Cambridge University in 1947 and his law degree from Harvard Law School in 1950.
Career
Tabor worked for the law firm of Winthrop, Stimson, Putnam & Roberts in New York City from 1950 to 1953. He returned to Pittsburgh and worked for Kirkpatrick, Pomeroy, Lockhart & Johnson. In 1960, he campaigned for Republican presidential candidate Nelson Rockefeller. In 1961, he was a Republican candidate for the Pittsburgh City Council.Tabor active in William Scranton's 1962 Pennsylvania gubernatorial campaign and was appointed to serve as his secretary of commerce. In 1966, he was the Republican nominee for Secretary of Internal Affairs. He narrowly defeated Democratic incumbent Genevieve Blatt by less than 2% of the vote. On May 16, 1967, Tabor's office was one of two abolished through a referendum. Governor Raymond P. Shafer, issued an executive order temporarily keeping the department open. Tabor considered challenging Joseph S. Clark Jr. in the 1968 [United States Senate election in Pennsylvania|1968 United States Senate election], but chose to back Richard Schweiker, as he felt a primary election would harm their chances of beating the incumbent. In 1968, he was appointed secretary of labor and industry as part of the phasing out of the department of internal affairs.
Tabor resigned as secretary of labor and industry on March 5, 1969 to enter the Pittsburgh mayoral election. Although Pittsburgh was an heavily Democratic city, Tabor was seen as the strongest Republican candidate in many years. He brought in Albert E. Abrahams, who directed Charles Mathias' upset over Daniel Brewster in the 1968 United States Senate election in Maryland, to manage his campaign. He ran as a "law and order" candidate, offering a 13-point anti-crime program. Tabor was the first Republican candidate in 20 years to be endorsed by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, but the more conservative Pittsburgh Press backed his Democratic opponent, Peter F. Flaherty. Flaherty's surprise victory over the establishment-backed Harry Kramer in the Democratic primary undercut Tabor's anti-machine rhetoric and hurt his chances of winning. Flaherty defeated Tabor by a wide margin – 118,600 to 62,500.
Tabor was the co-chairman of the Western Pennsylvania Committee for the Re-Election of the President during the 1972 United States presidential election. In 1973, President Richard Nixon appointed Tabor United States Under Secretary of Commerce. He resigned in 1975 to allow new United States Secretary of Commerce Rogers Morton to appoint his own undersecretary. President Gerald Ford hoped to move Tabor to another office, but he declined.