john
kerry
The junior senator from Massachusetts, John Forbes Kerry, was born
on Dec. 11, 1943. Kerry's father was a career foreign service officer
for the U.S. State Department. His mother was a member of an aristocratic
American family, the Forbes.
Kerry spent much of his childhood abroad, attending boarding
school in Switzerland and New Hampshire before entering Yale University.
At Yale, Kerry was a top debater, president of the political
union, and, like both President Bushes, a member of the Skull
& Bones secret society. In 1965 Kerry committed to join the
Navy after graduating from college, essentially volunteering for
service in Vietnam. At the end of his senior year in 1966, he
was selected to give the class oration. Kerry delivered what political
reporter Joe Klein called "a broad, passionate criticism
of American foreign policy, including the war he would soon be
fighting."
In Vietnam Kerry served as a "swift boat" captain,
and was in charge of ferrying soldiers and supplies up the Mekong
River. The small boats were easy targets for ambush from enemy
soldiers on the banks of the river, and often took fire as they
sped through hostile territory.
Tiring of the attacks, Kerry proposed to his men that they launch
a counterattack against ambushers by quickly turning the boats
directly toward the point of gunfire and rushing the enemy position.
On Feb. 28, 1969, Kerry and his crew successfully executed his
counterattack plan, capturing and killing enemy soldiers. Kerry
himself chased down and killed a soldier carrying a rocket launcher.
"When the firing began I gave the order to turn and -- phoom!
-- we just went in and beached and took them by complete surprise,
and we routed them and we didn't take a wound," Kerry said
in a 2002 New Yorker profile by Klein.
For his service in Vietnam, Kerry would be awarded a Silver Star,
a Bronze Star with Combat V (for valor), and three Purple Hearts
for being wounded in battle three times.
After his tour of duty, Kerry again spoke out against the U.S.
involvement in the war and became a leading activist. The senator's
official Web site says, "he felt compelled to question decisions
he believed were being made to protect those in positions of authority
in Washington at the expense of the soldiers carrying on the fighting
in Vietnam."
Kerry helped found Vietnam Veterans of America and served as
the spokesperson for Vietnam Veterans Against the War.
"How do you ask a man to be the last man to die in Vietnam?
How do you ask a man to be the last man to die for a mistake?"
he once famously asked the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
During a 1971 antiwar protest, Kerry threw some of his military
decorations onto the steps of the U.S. Capitol.
Kerry's involvement in the antiwar movement marked the opening
steps in his political career. Some analysts and writers thought
him precociously ambitious. In a 60 Minutes television interview
during this period, Morley Safer asked Kerry point blank, "Do
you want to be president?" Kerry replied with a "no"
and a laugh.
In 1972, after what political analyst Michael Barone called "some
widely observed district shopping," Kerry ran for a Massachusetts
congressional seat and lost. After the campaign he entered law
school at Boston College, and after graduating in 1976 went to
work as an assistant district attorney for Middlesex County, Massachusetts.
Kerry first won statewide political office in 1982, when he ran
for lieutenant governor on the same ticket as Michael Dukakis.
In 1984 Kerry won his current U.S. Senate seat, defeating Republican
Raymond Shamie 55 to 45 percent. Kerry was reelected in 1990,
defeating GOP challenger Jim Rappaport 57 percent to 43 percent.
In the Senate, Kerry has built a reputation as a left-of-center
legislator. Klein reported that Kerry votes with senior Massachusetts
Sen. Ted Kennedy, a well-known liberal, "about 96 percent
of the time."
"But it's important to look at the other 4 percent,"
David McKean, Kerry's chief of staff told Klein.
Barone writes that there are differences of "nuance and
interest" between Kennedy and Kerry, citing the junior senator's
support for free trade and his inclination to support "an
expansive U.S. foreign and military policy."
Kerry has also been critical of the bureaucracy of public education
and teacher tenure in opposition to teacher's unions, which traditionally
support Democratic candidates.
In the Senate, Kerry has also become an influential member of
a bipartisan fraternity -- Vietnam veterans. Republican Sen. John
McCain of Arizona is one of his closest friends in the body. Kerry
led a Senate committee that concluded no U.S. soldiers were still
being held as prisoners in Vietnam, and Kerry and McCain worked
with the Clinton administration to normalize relations with Vietnam
in 1995.
In 1996 popular Massachusetts GOP Gov. William Weld challenged
Kerry for his Senate seat. The campaign "was the rarest of
events in latter-day American politics: a civil, closely contested,
intelligent and wildly entertaining brawl," wrote Klein.
Kerry narrowly defeated Weld 52 percent to 45 percent.
In 2002 Kerry cruised to reelection, defeating Libertarian candidate
Michael Cloud 80 percent to 18 percent.
Kerry has been a critic of President Bush's domestic and foreign
policy. Kerry voted against the tax cuts the administration advocated,
against the proposal to drill for oil in Alaska's Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge coastal area, and against approving the nomination
of Attorney General John Ashcroft.
Kerry has staked his claim to the presidency, however, on criticism
of the administration's foreign policy, especially its handling
of the Iraq war. He has argued that Democrats must take the foreign
policy debate back from their GOP rivals.
Fellow candidate and former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean has criticized
Kerry for voting to give the president broad authority to wage
war in Iraq and later criticizing the administration's policies
there. Kerry voted against the $87 billion aid package President
Bush requested for Iraq in October.
Kerry's response is that the president has misused the trust
that Congress placed in him.
"The president made promises to us -- that he would build
a coalition, that he would respect the U.N. and go through the
international inspection process, and that he would only go to
war as a last resort," Kerry has said, according to The New
York Times.
Kerry has stood by his early vote on authorization while continually
criticizing the president's handling of foreign policy.
"Overseas, George Bush has led and misled us on a course
at odds with 200 years of our history," Kerry said on Sept.
2, the day he officially launched his campaign in Mt. Pleasant,
S.C. "He has squandered the goodwill of the world after Sept.
11 and he has lost the respect and influence needed to make our
country safe."
In 1995 Kerry, who was divorced at the time, married the widow
of former fellow senator John Heinz of Pennsylvania. Teresa Heinz,
a former Republican, is heir to the Heinz fortune.
Kerry has said in the past that if other candidates launch media
attacks against him during the campaign, he might use some of
his wife's money to respond, but it is unclear how much would
be available. Teresa Heinz controls a reported $550 million to
$600 million, but much of that may not be available for Kerry's
political use.
"A big chunk of Mrs. Kerry's fortune could be off-limits,"
Business Week reported in the summer of 2003. "Campaign finance
analysts say candidates are allowed to use unlimited amounts of
their own cash, but they cannot spend assets that belong to a
family member."
In February 2003 Kerry left the campaign trail to undergo surgery
for prostate cancer. He has reportedly made a full recovery.
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