Charlie Berg was proud of his philosophically consistent voting record and his inconsistent party affiliation, having hopped from one to another during more than a quarter century in the state Senate.
Berg, a grain farmer and cattleman from the Chokio area whose roots from birth remained in west-central Minnesota, died Jan. 22 at a Minneapolis hospital following a heart attack and stroke. He was 86.
In a farewell ceremony for him and several other senators during the waning moments of the chamber's 2002 session, Berg said, "I never thought I'd be here this long. And sometimes I wondered if I should have stayed this long."
His closing line further validated his reputation for candor and a caustic wit: "I'm going to miss some of you."
While his political affiliations ran the gamut, he considered himself solidly conservative. He opposed abortion, spoke in defense of schoolchildren being required to say the Pledge of Allegiance and favored the death penalty. Berg said he felt most proud of his work shaping environmental and agricultural policy.
Just as Berg was leaving elective office, one of his sons, Colin, announced he was running for the state House from Olivia. Colin Berg assured voters that he too was "an independent thinker" but a little softer around the edges.
"As far as curmudgeon, no," said Colin Berg, who fell short in two races. "I'm a lot easier to get along with."
The elder Berg's sharp tongue at times got him in hot water, such as in 1993, when he contended that some of his fellow senators "were bought off" by special interests representing American Indians as they voted against a bill he co-sponsored that would have allowed video gambling machines in bars. Colleagues signed a short-lived ethics complaint against Berg.