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Jake Garn
Jake Garn
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Edwin Jacob "Jake" Garn (born October 12, 1932) is an American politician from the U.S. state of Utah. A member of the Republican Party, he served as a member of the United States Senate from 1974 to 1993. Garn became the first sitting member of the United States Congress to fly in space when he flew aboard the Space Shuttle Discovery during STS-51-D in April 1985. Prior to his time in the U.S. Senate, he served as the mayor of Salt Lake City from 1972 to 1974.

Key Information

Early life and education

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Garn was born in Richfield, Utah and the son of World War I pilot Ed Garn and the former Agnes Fern Christensen. He is of Danish, English, German, and Norwegian descent.[1] He attended East High School, Roosevelt Junior High School, and Uintah Elementary School. He earned a Bachelor of Science degree in business and finance from the University of Utah in 1955, where he was a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity.

Career

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Senator Garn is a former insurance executive. He served in the United States Navy as a Martin P5M Marlin pilot. He also served as a pilot of the 151st Air Refueling Group of the Utah Air National Guard, where he flew the Boeing KC-97L and KC-135A. He retired as a colonel in April 1979.[2] He was promoted to brigadier general after his Space Shuttle mission.[3] He had flown 17,000 hours in military aircraft when he flew in space.[4]

Before his election to the Senate, Garn served on the Salt Lake City commission for four years and was elected as the mayor of Salt Lake City in 1971, entering office in 1972. He was the last Republican to hold that office to date. Garn was active in the Utah League of Cities and Towns and served as its president in 1972. In 1974, Garn was the first vice-president of the National League of Cities.[5] The organization, in order to honor Garn, made him its president for the first two months of 1975.[6]

Garn was first elected to the Senate in 1974, succeeding retiring Republican Wallace F. Bennett, father of later U.S. Senate member (and his eventual successor) Bob Bennett. Garn was re-elected to a second term in November 1980 with 74 percent of the vote, the largest victory in a statewide race in Utah history. Garn was re-elected a second time in 1986.

Though strongly anti-abortion, Garn joined United States House of Representatives member Henry Hyde of Illinois in resigning from the board of the National Pro-Life Political Action Committee when the executive director of the organization, Peter Gemma, issued a "hit list" to target certain lawmakers who supported abortion rights. Garn and Hyde, the author of the Hyde Amendment, which limited abortions financed by Medicaid, said that "hit lists" are counterproductive because they create irrevocable discord among legislators, any of whom can be subject to a "single issue" attack of this kind by one advocacy group or another. Gemma said that he was surprised by the withdrawal of Garn and Hyde from the PAC committee but continued with plans to spend $650,000 for the 1982 elections on behalf of anti-abortion candidates.[7]

Garn was chairman of the United States Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs and served on three subcommittees: Housing and Urban Affairs, Financial Institutions, and International Finance and Monetary Policy. He also was a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee and served as chairman of the HUD-Independent Agencies Subcommittee. He served on four other Appropriations subcommittees: Energy and Water Resources, Defense, Military Construction, and Interior. Garn served as a member of the Republican leadership from 1979 to 1984 as secretary of the Republican Conference.

His Institute of Finance has been called a "hot tub of influence peddling".[8]

Garn retired from the Senate in 1992.[9] He is a supporter of the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact.[10]

Savings and loan

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As chairman of the Senate Banking Committee, Garn was co-author with U.S. House of Representatives member Fernand St Germain from Rhode Island of the Garn–St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982, the law that partially deregulated the savings and loan industry and attempted to forestall the looming Savings and loan crisis.

Spaceflight

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Garn asked to fly on the Space Shuttle because he was head of the Senate appropriations subcommittee that dealt with NASA, and had extensive aviation experience. He had previously flown a Northrop Grumman B-2 Spirit prototype and driven a new Army tank.[11][12] He began publicly asking NASA about flying on the Shuttle in 1981, and the agency had long planned to fly "citizen passengers" such as artists, journalists, entertainers, and the Teacher in Space Project, but the November 1984 announcement that a member of Congress would go to space surprised most observers. Garn said that flying on the Shuttle would be a fact-finding trip: "I do really think that it is a necessity that Congressmen check things out that they vote for and make certain that funds are being spent adequately. It might be necessary to have a Senator kick the tire".[13]

Garn in 1985

STS-51-D was launched from and returned to land at the Kennedy Space Center in the U.S. state Florida in April 1985. Its primary objective was to deploy two communications satellites, and to perform electrophoresis and echocardiograph operations in space in addition to a number of other experiments. As a payload specialist, Garn's role on the mission was as a congressional observer[14] and as a subject for medical experiments on space adaptation syndrome.[1] At the conclusion of the mission, Garn had traveled over 2.5 million miles (4.0 million kilometers) in 108 Earth orbits, logging over 167 hours in space.

The space sickness Garn experienced during the journey was so severe that a scale for space sickness was jokingly based on him, where "one Garn" is the highest possible level of sickness.[15] Some NASA astronauts who opposed the payload specialist program, such as Mike Mullane, believed that Garn's space sickness was evidence of the inappropriateness of flying people with little training.[12] Garn was in excellent physical condition, however, and began flying at the age of 16.[1] Astronaut Charles Bolden described Garn as "the ideal candidate to do it, because he was a veteran Navy combat pilot who had more flight hours than anyone in the Astronaut Office".[4] Fellow 51-D payload specialist Charles Walker—who also suffered from space sickness on the flight despite having flown before—stated that:

He worked out extraordinarily well, and quite frankly, I think the U.S. space program, NASA, has benefited a lot from both his experience and his firsthand relation of NASA and the program back on Capitol Hill. As a firsthand participant in the program, he brought tremendous credibility back to Capitol Hill, and that's helped a lot. He's always been a friend of the agency and its programs.[11]

The Jake Garn Mission Simulator and Training Facility, NASA's prime training facility for astronauts in the Shuttle and Space Station programs,[16] is named after him.

Upon his return, he co-wrote the 1989 novel Night Launch. The book centers around terrorists taking control of the Space Shuttle Discovery during the first NASA–USSR Space Shuttle flight.

Personal life

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Garn first married Hazel Rhae Thompson on February 2, 1957 in the town of Biloxi, Mississippi.[17] Together, they had four children: Jacob, Susan, Ellen, and Jeffrey.[17] Hazel was killed in a car crash in Cheyenne County, Nebraska, on August 17, 1976.[17][18] On April 8, 1977, he then married Kathleen Brewerton, who had a son, Brook, from a previous marriage at Salt Lake Temple.[17] Jake and Kathleen had two children together, Matthew and Jennifer.[17] Kathleen died on May 31, 2018. He is a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.[19]

In 1986, Garn donated a kidney to his 27-year-old daughter, Susan, who was experiencing progressive kidney failure as a result of diabetes.[20]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Edwin Jacob "Jake" Garn (born October 12, 1932) is an American politician, military pilot, and astronaut who served as a Republican Senator from from 1974 to 1993.
Garn's career encompassed as of from 1971 to 1974 and a strong emphasis on fiscal restraint in federal policy, including chairmanship of the on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs from 1981 to 1987.
He gained international prominence as the first sitting member of the U.S. Congress to venture into space, flying as a on the Space Shuttle Discovery during mission from April 12 to 19, 1985, where he contributed to experiments on space adaptation, including physiological responses to microgravity.
Before entering politics, Garn trained as a pilot, serving in the U.S. Navy from 1956 to 1960 and later in the until retiring as a in 1979, accumulating over 10,000 flight hours in military and civilian aircraft.

Early Life and Military Service

Childhood and Education

Edwin Jacob "Jake" Garn was born on October 12, 1932, in , amid the economic hardships of the . His father, Jacob Edwin "Ed" Garn, a veteran and pilot, and mother, Fern Garn, provided a family background rooted in and aviation enthusiasm, which early influenced Garn's interests in flight and self-reliance during times of scarcity. The Garn family relocated to , where Garn attended local public schools, including East High School, navigating the lingering effects of the Depression that emphasized practical resourcefulness and family-driven education. His formative years in this environment fostered a focus on and personal initiative, shaped by parental examples of perseverance without reliance on extensive formal structures beyond public schooling. Garn pursued higher education at the , earning a degree in business and finance in 1955. This program equipped him with foundational knowledge in practical economic principles, aligning with his early experiences of fiscal caution amid national recovery efforts post-Depression. Garn was commissioned as a naval aviator through the Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps upon graduating from the University of Utah and entered active duty in the United States Navy in 1956. By 1957, he qualified as a pilot and was stationed at Whidbey Island Naval Air Station in Washington state, later deploying to Iwakuni, Japan, for reconnaissance operations. From this base, he flew low-altitude coastal reconnaissance missions along the entirety of China's shoreline, often exceeding 10 hours per flight to monitor military activities including submarine patrols and coastal defenses; these sorties relied heavily on visual observation supplemented by radar, fostering detailed familiarity with the terrain. During a seven-month deployment, Garn's missions encountered Chinese MiG-15 fighters, demonstrating the high-risk nature of Cold War-era naval aviation patrols in the region. He completed his active-duty obligation in 1960, transitioning briefly to the Naval Reserve. In 1963, Garn joined the Air National Guard, where he continued as a pilot in multi-engine aircraft, performing air-to-air refueling and logistical support roles. Early in U.S. involvement in , he conducted supply missions using the C-124 Globemaster II, the largest at the time, nicknamed "Old Shaky" for its reliability under demanding conditions. Over his Guard tenure, which lasted until 1979, Garn logged more than 10,000 total flight hours across military platforms, accumulating command experience in reserve aviation operations without recorded incidents tied to operational policy shortcomings. He retired from the Guard as a full in 1979 and received a to in 1985, recognizing his sustained contributions to air reserve readiness. This progression underscored his expertise in disciplined, long-duration flight operations and strategic , honed from naval patrols to Guard .

Entry into Politics and Local Service

Business Ventures

Following his military service, Edwin Jacob "Jake" Garn entered the by establishing his own business in , operating it from 1961 to 1968. This venture exemplified entrepreneurial initiative in a competitive field requiring precise and client-focused service, sectors central to . Garn's agency grew amid the economic challenges of the early-to-mid , including accelerating rates that reached 5.7% annually by 1969, demonstrating effective fiscal management and adaptability without reliance on public subsidies. Garn's experience honed skills in private-sector problem-solving, emphasizing individual responsibility and market-driven efficiency over governmental intervention, principles that shaped his approach to economic issues in Utah's growing urban environment. By building a viable enterprise from personal acumen post-graduation from the University of Utah's business program in 1955, he illustrated causal links between disciplined and during an era of monetary expansion.

Mayoral Tenure in Salt Lake City

Edwin Jacob "Jake" Garn was elected mayor of in 1971, assuming office in early 1972 and serving until his resignation in 1974 to pursue a U.S. campaign. As a Republican emphasizing , Garn prioritized urban revitalization through targeted infrastructure improvements rather than broad welfare expansions, aligning with his prior experience on the Commission from 1968 to 1971. His administration focused on downtown redevelopment to counter amid national in the early 1970s, promoting private-sector involvement to stimulate commercial growth without relying on significant tax increases or federal subsidies. Key efforts included initiatives to modernize the city's core, such as enhancing pedestrian-friendly spaces and supporting commercial projects that leveraged existing private investments, which helped lay groundwork for long-term economic resilience in . Garn also oversaw expansions at the , improving transportation infrastructure to bolster regional connectivity and trade during a period of and energy crises. These measures maintained balanced municipal operations by emphasizing efficient resource allocation and partnerships with businesses, avoiding the expansive public spending seen in some contemporaneous cities facing similar fiscal pressures. Garn's tenure, though brief, demonstrated pragmatic governance that resonated with voters in a predominantly conservative state, culminating in his decision not to seek re-election but instead challenge incumbent Senator in 1974. His focus on tangible urban improvements without ideological overreach built a foundation for his subsequent national political ascent, reflecting a commitment to causal economic drivers like over redistributive policies.

U.S. Senate Career

Election and Initial Terms

Jake Garn was elected to the from in the November 5, 1974, election, succeeding retiring Republican incumbent whose term ended January 3, 1975. Running as the Republican nominee and mayor, Garn defeated Democratic Representative Wayne Owens in a contest marked by national post-Watergate sentiments favoring reduced federal government influence. Garn's campaign aligned with voters' preferences for fiscal restraint, emphasizing anti-inflation measures and policies amid high and rising prices under the Nixon-Ford administrations. Sworn in on December 21, 1974, Garn began his Senate service representing 's predominantly conservative constituency, which prioritized intervention and strong national defense spending. He secured re-election in 1980 against Democrat Dan Berman, capturing 74% of the vote—the largest margin in any Utah statewide race to that point—reflecting robust support for his platforms of and military readiness during the early . Garn won another full term in 1986, again with overwhelming margins that underscored his alignment with the state's Republican base skeptical of expansive federal programs. These victories demonstrated a clear voter mandate for Garn's focus on curbing through monetary discipline and bolstering defense budgets against Soviet threats, contrasting with Democratic emphases on social spending.

Committee Roles and Legislative Priorities

Garn served on the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, chairing it from 1981 to 1987, during which he influenced policies on financial institutions and economic regulation. He also held seats on the Appropriations Committee and the Select Committee on Intelligence, focusing on defense-related subcommittees that oversaw military funding and national security expenditures. These roles positioned him to advocate for verifiable enhancements in U.S. military capabilities, emphasizing empirical assessments of Soviet military advantages in the 1980s, such as disparities in intercontinental ballistic missile deployments and naval forces. In Appropriations, Garn prioritized military modernization, supporting Reagan administration requests for defense budget increases from $134 billion in fiscal year 1981 to $244 billion by 1985, justified by data on lagging U.S. readiness metrics like tank production rates and strategic bomber inventories. He endorsed the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), arguing it would shift reliance from offensive deterrence to active defenses against ballistic missiles, countering critics' claims of infeasibility with evidence from emerging laser and kinetic intercept technologies tested in the early 1980s. Garn's legislative efforts included measures to streamline export controls on defense technologies, aiming to bolster domestic production without compromising security, as seen in his sponsorship of amendments leveling financial market access for U.S. defense firms against foreign competitors. On , Garn championed intervention, backing the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981, which reduced the top marginal rate from 70% to 50% and indexed brackets to inflation, based on supply-side analyses showing historical correlations between lower rates and GDP growth accelerations, such as the post-World War II period. He advocated in banking and sectors to reduce compliance costs—estimated at billions annually by 1980s regulatory impact studies—freeing capital for private investment rather than bureaucratic overhead, while cautioning against overreach that could inflate systemic risks. These priorities reflected Garn's commitment to fiscal restraint, opposing expansions in social welfare programs that he viewed as empirically linked to persistent budget deficits exceeding $200 billion by the mid-1980s.

Financial Policy and the Savings and Loan Crisis

Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act

The Garn–St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982, named after its primary sponsors Senator Jake Garn (R-Utah), chairman of the Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee, and Representative Fernand St. Germain (D-R.I.), was signed into law by President on October 15, 1982. The legislation represented a significant effort for savings and associations (S&Ls, or thrifts) and commercial banks, expanding their operational flexibility in response to the economic dislocations of the late and early . Garn, drawing from his committee oversight of financial institutions facing insolvency risks, advocated for measures that prioritized competitive adaptation over continued regulatory constraints, enabling thrifts to offer products aligned with prevailing market interest rates. Central provisions included authorization for federally chartered thrifts to issue adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs), which allowed lenders to adjust loan rates in line with short-term market fluctuations, thereby mitigating the mismatch between long-term fixed-rate assets and volatile deposit costs. The act also permitted thrifts to accept demand deposits (checking accounts), previously a commercial banking , and to diversify investments beyond traditional home mortgages—up to 10% in consumer loans, 10% in , and other non-residential assets—to generate higher yields. Additionally, it introduced deposit accounts (MMDAs) exempt from interest rate ceilings, which rapidly attracted over $340 billion in deposits within months of implementation, and raised federal limits from $40,000 to $100,000 per account for both FDIC-insured banks and FSLIC-insured thrifts. These changes empowered regulators to facilitate mergers of failing institutions across state lines under expedited approvals, aiming to consolidate weaker entities without immediate taxpayer-funded interventions. The act's rationale stemmed from the thrift industry's structural vulnerabilities exposed during the , when double-digit —peaking at 13.5% in —drove interest rates to over 20% on short-term funds, while thrifts held portfolios dominated by low-yield, fixed-rate mortgages originated in prior low-rate eras. This effect caused massive deposit outflows from S&Ls, with net withdrawals exceeding $40 billion annually by the late as savers shifted to unregulated mutual funds offering competitive yields unbound by federal caps like . By dismantling these ceilings and broadening asset powers, the sought to restore thrift viability through market-driven competition, allowing institutions to price deposits and loans dynamically rather than relying on subsidized funding or administrative . Garn emphasized this competitive realignment in congressional debates, arguing that empirical evidence of thrift losses—over 500 institutions unprofitable by 1981—necessitated empowerment for self-sustaining operations amid persistent high rates, deferring direct bailouts in favor of regulatory .

Role in Bailouts and Regulatory Debates

As chairman of the Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee until 1987 and ranking member thereafter, Garn played a pivotal role in advancing legislation to address the escalating Savings and Loan (S&L) crisis through orderly resolutions of failed institutions. In April 1989, he initiated Senate floor debate on the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act (FIRREA), which abolished the insolvent Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC) and established the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) to manage asset dispositions and depositor protections. This framework enabled the recapitalization of the federal deposit insurance system, with empirical estimates placing the ultimate taxpayer burden at approximately $124 billion to cover insured deposits up to $100,000 per account, stemming from over 1,000 institutional failures driven by asset devaluations and operational insolvencies. Garn argued that such interventions were essential to avert a broader systemic collapse, emphasizing phased resolutions over immediate liquidations that could trigger depositor panics and credit contractions. In regulatory debates, Garn defended a balanced approach prioritizing institutional stability over pure market discipline, contending that abrupt reversals risked stifling economic recovery amid high interest rates and slumps. He countered proposals for stringent reregulation by highlighting the FSLIC's pre-crisis undercapitalization, which incentivized risky lending under federal guarantees—a dynamic where deposit protection decoupled owner accountability from investment outcomes, empirically contributing to losses exceeding $150 billion in total resolutions. During 1990 hearings, Garn expressed toward claims of regulatory overreach causing crunches, noting scant beyond isolated cases and advocating examiner only for viable institutions to facilitate mergers without accelerating failures. This stance aligned with his earlier 1986 push for $15 billion in industry-funded FSLIC recapitalization, aimed at bridging funding gaps without full taxpayer reliance, though ultimate costs escalated due to delayed closures of insolvent thrifts. Garn's positions drew praise from FDIC officials for proactive but faced scrutiny over perceived industry influence, which he rebutted by citing FIRREA's broad bipartisan backing—passing the 91-3—and its focus on enforcement enhancements like independent audits and capital requirements to restore discipline. In congressional testimony and public statements, he underscored that federal insurance's design flaws, not , underlay the debacle, urging reforms to impose prompt corrective actions and limit through risk-based premiums rather than wholesale abandonment of guarantees. These efforts contributed to stabilizing the sector by , though critics attributed persistent costs to policies that prolonged zombie institutions, amplifying losses via interest accruals on underwater assets.

Achievements, Criticisms, and Causal Analysis

Garn's primary legislative achievement in financial policy was co-authoring the Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982, which expanded thrift powers to include adjustable-rate mortgages, consumer lending, and interstate operations, aiming to enable savings and loans to compete amid high and disparities that had eroded their profitability. As chairman of the Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee from 1981 to 1987, he advanced reforms to modernize depository institutions, including phasing out ceilings and increasing federal limits to $100,000, which temporarily stabilized the sector by attracting deposits and averting widespread in the early 1980s. FDIC Chairman William Seidman later commended Garn's foresight in recognizing the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation's (FSLIC) by 1986 and pushing for congressional intervention, crediting him with facilitating the eventual resolution framework. Critics, including thrift industry analysts and congressional opponents, have faulted Garn for the Garn-St. Germain Act's of portfolios, arguing it permitted S&Ls to pursue high-risk commercial and junk bonds without commensurate capital requirements or oversight, exacerbating failures from 1986 onward. Some Democrats and consumer advocates accused him of undue influence from S&L lobbyists, pointing to campaign contributions and his resistance to stricter prosecutions during hearings, which they claimed delayed for insider abuses. Garn himself acknowledged in 1988 interviews that regulators and legislators, including himself, underestimated the scale of portfolio risks post-, though he attributed much blame to prior regulatory under administration. Causally, the S&L crisis stemmed from structural mismatches dating to the , where federally capped deposit rates locked thrifts into low-yield fixed mortgages while market rates soared above 15% due to and Volcker-era tightening, generating $150 billion in unrealized losses by 1980; Garn-St. Germain addressed this by authorizing portfolio diversification on October 15, , but the act's relaxation of rules—reducing minimum capital from 5% to 3% in some cases—interacted destructively with unchanged 100% , incentivizing and speculative lending. and managerial opportunism accounted for 10-20% of losses per General Office estimates, amplified by weak at the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, but the core driver was asset-liability duration gaps persisting despite , with over 1,000 institutions failing by 1995 at a taxpayer cost of $124 billion after FSLIC exhaustion. While the act's intent was remedial—preventing a collapse affecting 80% of thrifts—its causal role lay in enabling risk-taking without phased-in safeguards, underscoring how without parallel supervision converts solvency pressures into systemic insolvency when insured liabilities exceed prudent asset growth.

Space Exploration Involvement

Selection as Payload Specialist

Edwin Jacob "Jake" Garn, as chairman of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on HUD-Independent Agencies responsible for NASA's funding, began advocating for congressional participation in space shuttle missions in 1981 to gain direct insight into program operations for improved legislative oversight. With extensive aviation experience as an Air Force Reserve colonel logging over 10,000 flight hours, Garn met NASA's criteria for payload specialist selection, emphasizing payload operations and experiments rather than full astronaut qualifications. NASA announced Garn's selection in June 1984, designating him for an early 1985 flight as the first sitting U.S. senator to serve as a congressional observer, a role aimed at bridging policy and practical realities amid ongoing U.S.-Soviet competition in . This bipartisan initiative extended consideration to other subcommittee chairs, including eventual House member , to ensure diverse legislative perspectives on shuttle capabilities and risks. Garn underwent more than 100 hours of specialized training at , focusing on mission-specific tasks like medical experiments on , to inform evidence-based funding and policy decisions. His selection underscored a strategic push for lawmakers' firsthand involvement, motivated by the need to verify NASA's operational efficacy and cost-effectiveness in maintaining American space leadership during the shuttle program's maturation phase. As a , Garn's role prioritized observational and experimental contributions over piloting, aligning with congressional goals of enhancing program accountability without supplanting professional astronauts. This approach allowed for targeted evaluation of human factors in , directly applicable to appropriations debates.

STS-51-D Mission Details

STS-51-D launched from on April 12, 1985, at 8:59:05 a.m. EST, carrying a crew of seven aboard , including payload specialist Senator Jake Garn. The primary objectives involved deploying two communications satellites—TELESAT-I (Anik C-1), which was successfully released and activated, and IV-3 (LEASAT-3), which was deployed but failed to initiate due to a sequencer malfunction. To address the LEASAT-3 issue, mission specialists and S. David Griggs conducted an untethered (EVA) lasting 3 hours and 6 minutes, attaching a makeshift retrieval device for a future mission. The crew conducted a range of experiments during the flight, including operations with the Continuous Flow Electrophoresis System (CFES) III for biological material separation, the Student/School Independent Payloads (SSIP) program, the Astronomy Furnace Experiment (AFE) for , and various Get Away Special canisters testing materials in microgravity. Medical investigations focused on physiological responses to , such as echocardiograph sessions to study cardiovascular effects. Garn, as , assisted in these microgravity tests and medical monitoring protocols, participating in operations and logging personal data on human factors to inform future missions. No significant operational failures occurred beyond the LEASAT-3 payload anomaly, with the mission achieving its core scientific goals. Discovery completed 110 orbits, traveling approximately 2.9 million miles, before landing safely at Kennedy Space Center on April 19, 1985, at 8:54:28 a.m. EST, for a total mission duration of 6 days, 23 hours, 55 minutes, and 23 seconds. The landing experienced minor issues, including brake damage and a blown tire, but posed no risk to the crew or orbiter integrity.

Scientific and Political Outcomes

Garn's involvement in STS-51-D contributed physiological data on microgravity effects, including tests to record bodily changes from launch to orbit and observations confirming reduced drug effectiveness in space. His extreme space adaptation syndrome—deemed the most severe documented—yielded empirical benchmarks for the condition, informing NASA's informal "Garn scale" for quantifying symptoms from mild discomfort (0.1 Garn) to full incapacitation (1 Garn). The mission's political ramifications reinforced Garn's influence as chair of the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on HUD-Independent Agencies, which oversaw budgets, by providing direct exposure to operational realities that enhanced his rationale for sustained funding. This experiential knowledge demonstrably aided advocacy for programs like the , countering with evidence of strategic returns in and innovation. Critiques portrayed the flight as a taxpayer-funded perk, with outlets like The New York Times labeling it the "ultimate junket" amid concerns over added training expenses and perceived favoritism toward a key appropriator. Such claims overlook the mission's oversight utility and Garn's rigorous preparation, encompassing over 100 hours of simulations, altitude chamber runs, and zero-gravity familiarization equivalent to professional astronauts', which equipped him to evaluate program efficacy and defend appropriations empirically.

Post-Senate Life and Legacy

Retirement Activities

Following his voluntary decision not to seek reelection, announced on May 29, 1991, Garn's Senate term concluded on January 3, 1993, after which he transitioned to roles as a self-employed . In this capacity, he provided advisory services drawing on his prior experience in banking, defense, and space policy, while serving on corporate and institutional boards, including those of United Space Alliance in and Care in , the latter appointment occurring in May 1993. Garn also joined the board of the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., leveraging his unique background as a former payload specialist astronaut. By 2006, he held positions on multiple national and international boards, maintaining engagement in sectors aligned with his expertise without reentering partisan politics. Returning to Salt Lake City full-time, Garn prioritized family and personal pursuits, including aviation, where he continued piloting activities rooted in his earlier Navy and Air National Guard service. He adopted a low public profile during the 1990s economic expansion, with no documented involvement in scandals or high-visibility controversies post-retirement.

Honors, Recognition, and Enduring Impact

In 2024, the Utah State Legislature enacted Senate Bill 236, designating a portion of State Route 40 from Interstate 80 southerly to Route 32 as the Jake Garn Legacy Highway in recognition of his public service as a former U.S. senator, astronaut, and Utah Air National Guard pilot. Earlier honors include the 1992 American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics (AIAA) Public Service Award, bestowed for his advocacy of U.S. aerospace interests during two decades in the Senate. In 2021, the Utah National Guard presented him with the Bronze Minuteman Award for lifetime contributions to the state and military community, including his command roles in the Honorary Colonels Corps. Public tributes extend to a 2022 art installation at Salt Lake City International Airport celebrating his spaceflight, alongside a 2009 Utah Air National Guard exhibit commemorating his military and senatorial service. Garn's NASA involvement earned him distinction as the first sitting U.S. senator to fly in space, serving as on aboard in April 1985, where he logged 108 orbits over 2.8 million miles while participating in microgravity experiments. This flight, selected to foster congressional support for space programs, positioned him as a vocal advocate for funding and exploration initiatives, including post-flight endorsements of the Space Exploration Initiative amid debates on priorities. His prior piloting experience in the U.S. Navy and Air National Guard informed operational contributions, though the mission also led to informal recognition in astronaut lore for physiological data from space adaptation sickness, quantified as a benchmark unit ("1 Garn"). Garn's policy legacy centers on financial deregulation via the Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act of 1982, which phased out deposit interest ceilings and expanded thrift powers to enhance competition amid high inflation, averting immediate liquidity crises for savings institutions. While subsequent analyses dispute its net effect—attributing partial exacerbation of the 1980s savings and loan crisis to loosened oversight enabling riskier investments—the act's provisions addressed disintermediation pressures, with empirical reviews crediting it for stabilizing short-term thrift viability before the crisis peaked. His role in the 1989 Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act further mitigated fallout by restructuring oversight and funding resolutions, preventing broader recessionary spillovers estimated at higher costs without intervention. In space policy, Garn's bipartisan push for verifiable technological advancements over expansive federal programs exemplified a conservative emphasis on market-driven security and fiscal restraint, influencing enduring frameworks for public-private aerospace collaboration. The Garn Institute of Finance at the University of Utah perpetuates this through research on banking stability, underscoring his shift from aviator to policymaker prioritizing empirical risk management.

Personal Life

Family and Relationships

Garn married Hazel Rhae Thompson on February 2, 1957, in , and they had four children: Jacob Wayne, Susan Rhae, Ellen Marie, and Jeffrey Paul. Thompson died in a car accident in 1976. In 1977, Garn married Kathleen Brewerton, who brought a , Brook Bingham, from a previous ; the couple then had two children together, Matthew and Jennifer, resulting in Garn having seven children in total. Brewerton died suddenly in 2018 at age 68. Garn maintained a stable life in while serving in the Senate from 1974 to 1993, prioritizing time with his children and avoiding personal controversies that plagued some contemporaries. By 2022, he had approximately 30 grandchildren and 21 great-grandchildren, reflecting the emphasis on large, close-knit families common in his Latter-day Saint cultural background. His children followed varied professional paths, including Jacob Jr. as a certified public accountant in Kaysville, Utah, and Susan residing in Washington, D.C., which aligned with Garn's promotion of individual self-reliance.

Religious and Philosophical Views

Garn was born into a Mormon family in Richfield, Utah, on October 12, 1932, and has maintained lifelong affiliation with The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, describing himself as a deeply religious member who believes in an afterlife. His faith underscores community self-reliance, personal ethics, and familial obligations, shaping a worldview that prioritizes individual agency and mutual aid among believers over state-imposed welfare structures. Garn's 1985 space shuttle mission aboard Discovery intensified these convictions, which he characterized as a spiritually life-changing vantage point revealing Earth's fragility and humanity's shared essence as "children of God traveling on together," diminishing the weight of artificial divisions like race or . This orbital perspective affirmed his preexisting emphasis on over institutional fixes, reinforcing a that "government and passing laws and appropriating money are not the answer to the problems of society—people are." Philosophically, Garn championed intervention, robust national defense, and free enterprise as foundational to prosperity, viewing excessive reliance on federal programs as counterproductive to self-sufficiency. In post-retirement reflections, he critiqued politicians for prioritizing media optics over substantive truth, advocating instead for unfiltered personal judgment: "if I can't say and do exactly what I think all the time and still get re-elected... what's the big deal?" This approach favors direct empirical encounter—such as his firsthand observations—over narrative conformity, aligning with a causal realism that traces outcomes to individual actions rather than systemic excuses.

References

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