Steadfast, principled, quietly powerful — built for the long haul.
When Walter Mondale accepted the 1984 Democratic nomination and told the American public plainly, "Mr. Reagan will raise taxes, and so will I — he won't tell you, I just did," he demonstrated something rare in politics: the thunderous, unhurried honesty of an animal that has nothing to prove. Like the bison, Mondale embodied patient, principled endurance — spending decades as Hubert Humphrey's loyal protégé, Jimmy Carter's steady vice president, and ultimately a dignified loser who never abandoned his convictions despite a historic electoral defeat. The bison doesn't chase trends or perform strength; it simply holds its ground, absorbing pressure with quiet resolve, and Mondale's decades of public service — culminating in his 2002 Senate campaign at age 74 — reflect exactly that immovable, herd-minded commitment to collective good over personal glory.
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