Mark Kennedy

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Mark Kennedy
Mark Kennedy

In office
2001 - (term ends 2007)
Preceded by Bill Luther
Succeeded by Incumbent1

Born April 11, 1957
Benson, Minnesota
Political party Republican
Spouse Debbie Kennedy
Religion Roman Catholic
1Michele Bachmann will replace Kennedy in the House on January 3, 2007.

Mark Raymond Kennedy (born April 11, 1957 in Benson, Minnesota), is an American politician. Kennedy has been a Republican member of the United States House of Representatives since 2001. He represented Minnesota's 2nd congressional district during the 107th Congress (2001 – 2003). The reapportionment following the 2000 Census resulted in Kennedy running for and winning the 6th district seat in 2003; the district is one of eight congressional districts in Minnesota. Kennedy will vacate his congressional seat in January, 2007 because he unsuccessfully ran for the United States Senate in Minnesota to replace retiring Senator Mark Dayton.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Kennedy graduated from Pequot Lakes High School in 1974, and went on to receive his B.A. at St. John's University in 1978 and his M.B.A. from the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business in 1983.

Kennedy and his wife Debbie, a former public school educator, met as State 4-H Ambassadors and recently celebrated their 25th anniversary. They reside in Watertown, Minnesota and have four children: one college graduate, two children in college, and one in high school.[1] Kennedy has prominently featured his family in his campaign advertisements. As a Republican congressman, Mark Kennedy has a 96% voting record in support of Republican legislation. As of July 2004, Kennedy also had two nephews serving in the military, with one serving in Afghanistan. Kennedy accused Michael Moore of deliberately excluding this information from the film Fahrenheit 9/11 after asking Kennedy if he had a family link to the War in Iraq, a claim that Moore contests.[2]

[edit] Political Views

Kennedy has been a strong supporter of American policy in Iraq and President George W. Bush.[3] Kennedy voted for President George W. Bush's position more often than any other Minnesota representative in 2001, 2002, and 2004.[citation needed] Kennedy's voted with the Bush Administration's policy 98% of the time in 2004 and 87% in 2005.[4] He has introduced legislation to amend the U.S. Constitution to allow the President of the United States a line-item veto.[5] He supports keeping American troops in Iraq until the war on terrorism is over.[6] He declined to provide any responses to the 2004 National Political Awareness Test run by Project Vote Smart. Kennedy is considered to be the second most conservative member of the Minnesota delegation in the 109th Congress, scoring 96% conservative by a conservative group[7] and 6% progressive by a liberal group.[8] Minnesota Congressional Districts shows the scores for the entire delegation.

[edit] Abortion

Mark Kennedy refers to himself as "One hundred percent pro-life."[9] He voted in favor of the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, the Unborn Victims of Violence Act, and the Child Interstate Abortion Notification Act. He voted against the Overseas Military Facilities Abortion Amendment, and both opposed and voted to sustain President Bush's veto on the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act of 2005.[10]

[edit] 2006 U.S. Senate campaign

See also: Minnesota U.S. Senate election, 2006

Kennedy ran for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Democrat-Farm-Labor Senator Mark Dayton. Kennedy won the Republican primary on 12 September 2006 and faced-off against Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party candidate and Hennepin County Attorney Amy Klobuchar. All public polling right before the election showed Kennedy trailing Klobuchar in their Election Day match-up, usually by double-digit margins. Also in the race were Independence Party candidate Robert Fitzgerald and Green Party candidate Michael Cavlan. Kennedy eventually lost to Klobuchar in the election by a double-digit margin, losing all but 8 of Minnesota's 87 counties.

[edit] CPA Controversy

One of Kennedy's recurring campaign themes was that if elected, he'd be the only Certified Public Accountant serving in the United States Senate.[11] On 18 August 2006 the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party released copies of an affidavit Kennedy signed annually while serving in Congress stating that he would not use the designation of CPA that could "lead a person to believe" that he holds and active certificate in Minnesota, and agreed to use the word "inactive" adjacent to his CPA title.[12] No legal charges have been filed against Kennedy, but the title "CPA" is regulated by the Minnesota Board of Accountancy when used within the state. Kennedy began working as a CPA in 1979 but became inactive shortly thereafter.[13]

[edit] Senate Television Ads

Kennedy hired media consultant Scott Howell to produce television advertisements for his campaigns. Howell was consulting to three Midwestern U.S. Senate races where his clients are conservative Republican men opposing Democratic women endorsed by EMILY's List (Minnesota, Michigan and Missouri).[14] [15]

As of 25 September, 2006, Kennedy has aired 12 television ads in Minnesota media markets since 26 July 2006. Their subjects have ranged from his support for the line-item veto, his votes in Congress on pension plans, his opposition to No Child Left Behind, gas prices, being a CPA, his "political independence", and his family. Most of his early ads were positive in nature, heavily featured his family, and used some self-deprecating humor.[16] On 16 September 2006, Kennedy "began running one of the first major negative television advertising campaigns of the season", launching a second attack ad on 25 September 2006. [17][18][19][20] The Kennedy campaign has spent significant energy "working the referee" during the election campaign, frequently accusing the Star Tribune newspaper of bias toward Klobuchar, who is the daughter of a former staff member of the "Strib." StarTribune staff have consistently denied any such bias, and point to similar reporting regarding Kennedy from the crosstown rival St. Paul Pioneer Press newspaper.

[edit] Controversy and criticism

[edit] Accuracy of Congressional Testimony

On October 15, 2003, he read from a circulating Internet hoax while giving testimony on the floor of the House of Representatives in support of an Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Bill.[21] The hoax article, a comparison between Germany after World War II and the then-current situation in Iraq, had been disproven weeks before the date of testimony by snopes.com. [22][23] The theme of Mr. Kennedy's speech was that the situation in Iraq in 2003 was the same as Germany in 1945.

[edit] Electoral history

Kennedy (left) with President George W. Bush (right) and Congressman Gil Gutknecht looking on (center).
Enlarge
Kennedy (left) with President George W. Bush (right) and Congressman Gil Gutknecht looking on (center).
  • 2004 Race for U.S. House of Representatives - 6th District
  • 2002 Race for U.S. House of Representatives - 6th District
    • Mark Kennedy (R) (inc.), 57%
    • Janet Robert (DFL), 35%
    • Dan Becker (I), 7%
  • 2000 Race for U.S. House of Representatives - 2nd District

[edit] References

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ [2]
  3. ^ [3]
  4. ^ [4]
  5. ^ [5]
  6. ^ [6]
  7. ^ Congressional Voting Scorecard 2005 (pdf). SBE Council’s Congressional Voting Scorecard 2005. Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council (June, 2006). Retrieved on 2006-11-02.
  8. ^ Leading with the Left. Progressive Punch. Retrieved on 2006-11-02.
  9. ^ [7]
  10. ^ [8]
  11. ^ [9]
  12. ^ [10]
  13. ^ [11]
  14. ^ [12]
  15. ^ [13]
  16. ^ [14]
  17. ^ [15]
  18. ^ http://www.twincities.com/mld/twincities/news/politics/capitol/15531736.htm]
  19. ^ Kennedy's News Release about first attack ad
  20. ^ Kennedy's TV ads as of 11 October, 2006
  21. ^ [16]
  22. ^ [17]
  23. ^ [18]

[edit] External links


Preceded by
David Minge
United States Representative for the 2nd Congressional District of Minnesota
2001 – 2003
Succeeded by
John Kline
Preceded by
Bill Luther
United States Representative for the 6th Congressional District of Minnesota
2003 – 2007
Succeeded by
Michele Bachmann