Frank Lautenberg

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Frank Lautenberg
Frank Lautenberg

Senior Senator, New Jersey
In office
19832001
2003–Present
Preceded by Nicholas F. Brady (1983)
Robert Torricelli (2003)
Succeeded by Jon Corzine (2001)
Incumbent (2009)

Born January 23, 1924
Paterson, New Jersey
Political party Democratic
Spouse Bonnie Lautenberg
Religion Judaism

Frank Raleigh Lautenberg (born January 23, 1924) is a businessman and Democratic Party politician. Now the senior United States Senator from New Jersey, he is in his second stint in office, first serving from 1983 to 2001, and again since 2003.

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[edit] Early life, career, and family

Lautenberg was born in Paterson, New Jersey to poor Jewish immigrants from Poland and Russia; his father Sam, who worked in silk mills, sold coal, farmed and once ran a tavern, died of cancer when Frank was 19. Lautenberg served overseas in the United States Army Signal Corps in World War II after graduating high school. Then, financed by the GI Bill, he attended and graduated from Columbia University's business school in 1949 with a degree in economics. He co-founded the successful Automatic Data Processing, Inc. (ADP) and was its president. He was the excutive commissioner of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey from 1978 to 1982.

From his first marriage, which ended in divorce, Lautenberg has four children: Ellen, Nan, Lisa, and Joshua. In 2001, he married his companion of nearly 16 years, Bonnie S. Englebardt.

[edit] U.S. Senator

In 1982 he received the Democratic nomination for a US Senate seat from New Jersey for that year's election. The seat had been occupied by Democrat Harrison Williams who resigned on March 11, 1982 after being implicated in the Abscam scandal.

Sen. Lautenberg (center) is joined by Sen. Harry Reid (right) and outgoing Sen. Jon Corzine (second to left, with red tie) to welcome the new Senator Bob Menendez (between Corzine and Lautenberg) on Capitol Hill.
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Sen. Lautenberg (center) is joined by Sen. Harry Reid (right) and outgoing Sen. Jon Corzine (second to left, with red tie) to welcome the new Senator Bob Menendez (between Corzine and Lautenberg) on Capitol Hill.

Lautenberg won the election, defeating popular Republican congresswoman Millicent Fenwick. Republican senator Nicholas F. Brady, who had been appointed to replace Williams, resigned on December 27, 1982, allowing Lautenberg to take office several days before the traditional swearing-in of senators, which gave him an edge in seniority over the other freshmen senators.

In 1988, Lautenberg was opposed by Republican Wall Street executive and former college football star Pete Dawkins. After trailing in early polls, the Lautenberg campaign, headed by then-little-known Democratic consultant James Carville, ran an aggressive advertising campaign enumerating Lautenberg's legislative accomplishments and questioning whether Dawkins' candidacy was intended solely as a stepping stone to the presidency. Lautenberg ultimately came from behind to win reelection by a 54%-46% margin.

Following reelection, Lautenberg was a member of the President's Commission on Aviation Security and Terrorism (PCAST) which was set up in September 1989 to review and report on aviation security policy in light of the sabotage of Pan Am Flight 103 on December 21, 1988.

Lautenberg was again reelected in the Republican landslide year of 1994, defeating New Jersey State Assembly Speaker Chuck Haytaian. Lautenberg announced his retirement in 2000, and his fellow Democrat and businessman, Jon Corzine, was elected to replace him.

[edit] 2002 election

Lautenberg unexpectedly returned to politics in 2002, when the other New Jersey senator, Democrat Robert Torricelli, withdrew his candidacy for reelection, because of corruption charges. It was rumored, however, that Lautenberg was the second choice to run, the first choice being former Senator Bill Bradley, who turned it down.

The New Jersey Republican Party challenged the replacement of Torricelli's name on the ballot with Lautenberg's, arguing that it came too late according to state election laws. The ballot name change was upheld by the New Jersey Supreme Court, and the U.S. Supreme Court declined to take up the case. Lautenberg won the election, thus becoming one of very few people in recent times to return to the Senate after leaving it.

[edit] Back in the Senate

Sen. Lautenberg meets with Associate Justice Samuel Alito prior to his confirmation hearings. Sen. Lautenberg eventually voted against the nominee.
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Sen. Lautenberg meets with Associate Justice Samuel Alito prior to his confirmation hearings. Sen. Lautenberg eventually voted against the nominee.

Lautenberg is considered to be one of the Senate's most liberal members. He is pro-choice, supports gun control, has introduced many bills increasing penalties for carjacking and car theft, and has criticized the Bush administration on national security issues. He has been very involved in various anti-smoking legislation, anti-alcohol legislation as well as airline safety legislation, and is probably best known for being involved with, and authoring some of, the legislation that banned smoking from most commercial airline flights. He also is known for authoring the Ryan White Care Act which provides services to AIDS patients. His name is also associated with the Domestic Violence Offender Gun Ban (sometimes called the Lautenberg Amendment), which prohibits any persons convicted of misdemeanor or felonious domestic violence from possessing firearms or ammunition.

Upon his return to the Senate, Lautenberg was the first U.S. senator to introduce legislation calling for homeland security funds to be distributed solely on the basis of risk and vulnerability.

In 2005, he became a leading voice within the Senate in calling for an investigation into the Bush administration payment of columnists.[1]

When Jon Corzine resigned from the Senate to become Governor of New Jersey, Lautenberg became the Senior Senator, again, in 2006. This also makes him the only person to have been both the junior and senior senator of a state twice.

Lautenberg received an "A" on the liberal Drum Major Institute's 2005 Congressional Scorecard on middle-class issues.[2]

[edit] 2008 election

In January 2006, a Quinnipiac University poll showed Lautenberg's approval rating at 44% with 34% disapproval. A September 26, 2006, SurveyUSA poll listed him as having a 38% approval rating and a 45% disapproval rating, for a net approval of -7%, ranking Lautenberg at 97th of all 100 Senators, the lowest net approval of any Democratic senator in the nation.[3]

Sen. Lautenberg (center) along with Sen. Barbara Boxer (right) and Sen. Maria Cantwell (left) at a news conference discussing whether oil executives lied during a recent Congressional testimony regarding price gouging.
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Sen. Lautenberg (center) along with Sen. Barbara Boxer (right) and Sen. Maria Cantwell (left) at a news conference discussing whether oil executives lied during a recent Congressional testimony regarding price gouging.

In February 2006, Lautenberg announced that he intends to run for reelection in 2008, saying that deciding not to run for reelection in 2000 "was among the worst decisions of his life". [1] Later that year he sparked some controversy when in wake of the Dubai Ports World controversy he compared the Emirate of Dubai with "the Devil".[2]

[edit] Electoral history

  • 2002 Race for U.S. Senate
  • 1994 Race for U.S. Senate
  • 1988 Race for U.S. Senate

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Political offices
Preceded by:
Nicholas F. Brady
United States Senator (Class 1) from New Jersey
1982–2001
Succeeded by:
Jon Corzine
Preceded by:
Robert Torricelli
United States Senator (Class 2) from New Jersey
2003–
Succeeded by:
Incumbent


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