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Boston, MA August 25, 2009 (Wire) -- Massachusetts Sen.
Edward Kennedy, the patriarch of the first family of Democratic
politics, died late Tuesday at his home in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts,
after a lengthy battle with brain cancer. He was 77.
"We've lost the irreplaceable center of our family and joyous light in
our lives, but the inspiration of his faith, optimism and perseverance
will live on in our hearts forever," a family statement said. "We thank
everyone who gave him care and support over this last year, and everyone
who stood with him for so many years in his tireless march for progress
toward justice."
President Obama learned about Kennedy's death at 2 a.m. Wednesday,
according to a senior administration official. Obama later called
Kennedy's widow to offer condolences.
In a statement, Obama says: "An important chapter in our history has
come to an end. Our country has lost a great leader, who picked up the
torch of his fallen brothers and became the greatest United States
Senator of our time."
Kennedy, nicknamed "Ted," was the younger brother of slain President
John F. Kennedy and New York Sen. Robert Kennedy, who was gunned down
while seeking the White House in 1968. However, his own presidential
aspirations were hobbled by the controversy around a 1969 auto accident
that left a young woman dead, and a 1980 primary challenge to
then-President Jimmy Carter that ended in defeat.
But while the White House eluded his grasp, the longtime Massachusetts
senator was considered one of the most effective legislators of the past
few decades. Kennedy, who became known as the "Lion of the Senate,"
played major roles in passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the
Voting Rights Act of 1965, the 1990 Americans with Disabilities Act and
the 1993 Family and Medical Leave Act, and was an outspoken liberal
standard-bearer during a conservative-dominated era from the 1980s to
the early 2000s.
"He was probably best known for the ability to work with Republicans,"
said Adam Clymer, Kennedy's biographer. "The Republican Party raised
hundreds of millions of dollars with direct appeal to protect the
country from Ted Kennedy, but there was never a piece of legislation
that he ever got passed without a major Republican ally."
Kennedy recently urged Massachusetts officials to change a law to allow
for an immediate temporary replacement should a vacancy occur for one of
his state's two Senate seats.
Under a 2004 Massachusetts law, a special election must be held 145 to
160 days after a Senate seat becomes vacant. The winner of the election
would serve the remainder of a senator's unexpired term.
Kennedy asked Gov. Deval Patrick and state leaders to "amend the law
through the normal legislative process to provide for a temporary
gubernatorial appointment until the special election occurs," according
to the letter, dated July 2.
Kennedy suffered a seizure in May 2008 at his home on Cape Cod. Shortly
after, doctors diagnosed a brain tumor -- a malignant glioma in his left
parietal lobe.
Surgeons at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, North Carolina,
removed as much of the tumor as possible the following month. Doctors
considered the procedure a success, and Kennedy underwent follow-up
radiation treatments and chemotherapy.
A few weeks later, he participated in a key vote in the Senate. He also
insisted on making a brief but dramatic appearance at the 2008
Democratic convention on August 25, a poignant moment that brought the
crowd to its feet and tears to many eyes.
"I have come here tonight to stand with you to change America, to
restore its future, to rise to our best ideals and to elect Barack Obama
president of the United States," Kennedy told fellow Democrats in a
strong voice.
Kennedy's early support for Obama was considered a boon for the
candidate, then a first-term senator from Illinois locked in a tough
primary battle against former first lady Hillary Clinton. Kennedy
predicted Obama's victory and pledged to be in Washington in January
when Obama assumed office -- and he was, though he was hospitalized
briefly after suffering a seizure during a post-inaugural luncheon.
Kennedy was one of only six senators in U.S. history to serve more than
40 years. He was elected to eight full terms to become the second
most-senior senator after West Virginia Democrat Robert Byrd.
He launched his political career in 1962, when he was elected to finish
the unexpired Senate term of his brother, who became president in 1960.
He won his first full term in 1964.
He seemed to have a bright political future, and many Democratic eyes
turned to him after the killings of his brothers. But a July 18, 1969,
car wreck on Chappaquiddick Island virtually ended his ambitions.
After a party for women who had worked on his brother Robert's
presidential campaign, Kennedy drove his car off a bridge on
Chappaquiddick, off Cape Cod and across a narrow channel from Martha's
Vineyard. While Kennedy managed to escape, his passenger, Mary Jo
Kopechne, drowned.
In a coroner's inquest, he denied having been drunk, and said he made
"seven or eight" attempts to save Kopechne before exhaustion forced him
to shore. Although he sought help from friends at the party, Kennedy did
not report the accident to police until the following morning.
Kennedy eventually pleaded guilty to leaving the scene of an accident.
In a televised address to residents of his home state, Kennedy called
his conduct in the hours following the accident "inexplicable" and
called his failure to report the wreck immediately "indefensible."
Despite the dent in his reputation and career, Kennedy remained in
American politics and went on to win seven more terms in the Senate.
Kennedy championed social causes and was the author of "In Critical
Condition: The Crisis in America's Health Care." He served as chairman
of the Judiciary and Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions committees
and was the ranking Democrat on the Judiciary and Armed Services
committees during periods when Republicans controlled the chamber.
Obama named Kennedy as one of 16 recipients of the 2009 Presidential
Medal of Freedom, America's highest civilian honor. A White House
statement explained that the 2009 honorees "were chosen for their work
as agents of change."
"Senator Kennedy has dedicated his career to fighting for equal
opportunity, fairness and justice for all Americans. He has worked
tirelessly to ensure that every American has access to quality and
affordable health care, and has succeeded in doing so for countless
children, seniors, and Americans with disabilities. He has called health
care reform the "cause of his life."
Born in Boston on February 22, 1932, Edward Moore Kennedy was the last
of nine children of Joseph P. Kennedy, a prominent businessman and
Democrat, and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy. Joseph Kennedy served as
ambassador to Britain before World War II and pushed his sons to strive
for the presidency, a burden "Teddy" bore for much of his life as the
only surviving Kennedy son.
His oldest brother, Joe Jr., died in a plane crash during World War II
when Kennedy was 12. John was assassinated in Dallas, Texas, in 1963,
and Robert was killed the night of the California primary in 1968.
Ted Kennedy delivered Robert's eulogy, urging mourners to remember him
as "a good and decent man who saw wrong and tried to right it; who saw
suffering and tried to heal it; who saw war and tried to stop it."
The family was plagued with other tragedies as well. One sister,
Kathleen, was killed in a plane crash in 1948. Another sister, Rosemary,
was born mildly retarded, but was institutionalized after a botched
lobotomy in 1941. She died in 1986 after more than 50 years in mental
hospitals.
Joseph Kennedy was incapacitated by a stroke in 1961 and died in
November 1969, leaving the youngest son as head of the family. He was
37.
"I can't let go," Kennedy once told an aide. "If I let go, Ethel
(Robert's widow) will let go, and my mother will let go, and all my
sisters."
Kennedy himself survived a 1964 plane crash that killed an aide,
suffering a broken back in the accident. But he recovered to lead the
seemingly ill-starred clan through a series of other tragedies: Robert
Kennedy's son David died of a drug overdose in a Florida hotel in 1984;
another of Robert's sons, Michael, was killed in a skiing accident in
Colorado in 1997; and John's son John Jr., his wife Carolyn and
sister-in-law Lauren Bessette died in a 1999 plane crash off Martha's
Vineyard.
In addition, his son Edward Jr. lost a leg to cancer in the 1970s, and
daughter Kara survived a bout with the disease in the early 2000s.
Kennedy was forced to testify about a bar-hopping weekend that led to
sexual battery charges against his nephew, William Kennedy Smith. Smith
was acquitted in 1991 of charges that he raped a woman he met while at a
Florida nightclub with the senator and his son Patrick, now a Rhode
Island congressman.
Like brothers John and Robert, Edward Kennedy attended Harvard. He
studied in the Netherlands before earning a law degree from the
University of Virginia Law School, and worked in the district attorney's
office in Boston before entering politics.
Kennedy is survived by his second wife, Victoria Ann Reggie Kennedy,
whom he married in 1992; his first wife, Joan Bennett; and five children
-- Patrick, Kara and Edward Jr. from his first marriage, and Curran and
Caroline Raclin from his second.
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