Chuck Schumer: Difference between revisions
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Charles Schumer has the unique distinction of voting on the impeachment charges of President Bill Clinton in both houses of Congress. Schumer was a member of the House of Representatives (and Judiciary Committee member) during a December 1998 lame-duck session of Congress when the House voted to impeach Clinton on two charges. In January 1999, Schumer, as a newly elected member of the Senate, voted "nay" on the two impeachment charges, because he was threatened with exposure of his FBI files by white house staff. |
Charles Schumer has the unique distinction of voting on the impeachment charges of President Bill Clinton in both houses of Congress. Schumer was a member of the House of Representatives (and Judiciary Committee member) during a December 1998 lame-duck session of Congress when the House voted to impeach Clinton on two charges. In January 1999, Schumer, as a newly elected member of the Senate, voted "nay" on the two impeachment charges, because he was threatened with exposure of his FBI files by white house staff. |
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Charles Schumer was once a counsler at Trails End Camp during the 1960's. |
Charles Schumer was once a counsler at Trails End Camp during the 1960's. |
Revision as of 15:29, 21 March 2007
Charles Schumer | |
---|---|
Senior Senator from New York | |
Assumed office January 6, 1999– Serving with Hillary Rodham Clinton | |
Preceded by | Al D'Amato |
Succeeded by | Incumbent (2011) |
Personal details | |
Nationality | American |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse | Iris Weinshall |
Charles Ellis "Chuck" Schumer (born November 23, 1950) is currently the senior U.S. Senator from the state of New York, serving since 1999. A Democrat, in 2005, he became chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. In November 2006, he was elected to the new post of Vice-Chairman of the Senate Democratic Caucus.[1] In January 2007, he published a book called Positively American about how Democrats could reclaim middle-class voters.[2]
Early life
Chuck Schumer was born to a Jewish family in Brooklyn, where he still lives today. He attended public schools in Brooklyn, scoring a 1600 on the SAT, and graduated as the valedictorian from James Madison High School in 1967.[3] Schumer competed for Madison on the It's Academic television quiz show.[4]
Although the Vietnam War was raging during this time, Schumer did not serve in the military. He continued his education at Harvard College, where he became interested in politics and campaigned for Eugene McCarthy in 1968. After graduating he went to Harvard Law School, receiving his Juris Doctor (J.D.) in 1974.
Schumer passed the New York State Bar Exam in early 1975 but never practiced law. Instead, he entered politics.
Personal life
Schumer and his wife, Iris Weinshall, were married September 21, 1980. The ceremony took place at Windows on the World at the top of the north tower of the World Trade Center.[5] Weinshall is the New York City Commissioner of Transportation.[6] The Schumers have two daughters, Jessica and Alison. They live on Prospect Park West in Park Slope, Brooklyn.
While Congress is in session, Senator Schumer lives in a rented house with fellow Democratic politicians George Miller, Dick Durbin, and Bill Delahunt.[7]
State Assemblyman
The same year he graduated from Harvard Law, 1974, he ran for and was elected to the New York State Assembly, becoming at age 23 the youngest member of the New York legislature since Theodore Roosevelt. He served three terms.[8] In the decades since, he hasn't lost an election, and has not held any job outside of elected office.
In 1980, 16th District Congresswoman Elizabeth Holtzman won the Democratic nomination for the Senate seat of Republican Jacob Javits. Schumer ran for Holtzman's vacated House seat and won.
United States Representative
He was reelected eight times from the Brooklyn and Queens-based district, which changed numbers three times in his tenure (it was numbered the 16th from 1981-83, the 10th from 1983-93 and the 9th from 1993).
In 1998, he won the Democratic Senate primary against Mark Green and Geraldine Ferraro. He then defeated three-term incumbent Republican Al D'Amato, who had defeated Holtzman in 1980. In 2004, Schumer handily won re-election against Republican Assemblyman Howard Mills of Middletown and Conservative Marilyn O'Grady. Schumer outpolled Mills, the second-place finisher, by 2.8 million votes and won reelection with 71% of the vote, at the time the most lopsided margin ever for a statewide election in New York. Schumer won every county in the state except one, Hamilton County in the Adirondacks, the least populated and most Republican county in the state.
United States Senator (110th Congress)
Schumer is Chairman of the Joint Economic Committee.
Schumer also currently serves on the following Senate Committees:
- Senate Committee on Finance
- Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
- Senate Committee on the Judiciary
- Senate Committee on Rules and Administration
While serving in the House of Representatives, Schumer coauthored the Assault Weapons Ban in 1994 with California Senator Dianne Feinstein, which expired in 2004. The National Rifle Association and other gun groups (see gun politics) have criticized him for allegedly not knowing much about guns, pointing to various errors regarding the subject. Supporters of gun control legislation, however, give him much of the credit for passage of both the Assault Weapons Ban and the Brady Handgun Violence Prevention Act despite intense lobbying from opponents. The AWB, which restricted certain cosmetic features on semi-automatic rifles, expired in September, 2004 despite attempts by Schumer to extend it. He was one of 16 Senators to vote against the Vitter Amendment which prohibited funding for the confiscation of legally owned firearms during a disaster.
In addition to gun restriction, Schumer has focused on banking and consumer issues, counter-terrorism, and debate over confirmation of federal judges, as well as economic development in New York.
On foreign policy, Schumer was and remains a supporter of the Iraq War Resolution, although he has since become somewhat critical of President Bush's strategy in the Iraq War suggesting that a commission of ex-generals be appointed to review it.[9]
Schumer is currently the chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, part of the Democratic Senate Leadership, with primary responsibility for raising funds and recruiting candidates for the Democrats in the 2006 Senate election. When he took this post, he announced that he would not run for Governor of New York in 2006, as many had speculated he would. This step avoided a potentially divisive gubernatorial primary election in 2006 between Schumer and Eliot Spitzer, then New York's attorney general.
Schumer's tenure as DSCC chair has been successful so far; in the 2006 elections, the Democratic Party gained six seats in the Senate, defeating incumbents in each of those races and regaining control of the Senate for the first time since 2002. Of the closely contested races in the Senate in 2006, the Democrats lost only one, in Tennessee. Senate Majority Leader-to-be Harry Reid persuaded Schumer to serve another term as DSCC chair.
A controversy erupted in September 2005, when two staff employees of the DSCC illegally obtained a copy of the credit report of the Lieutenant Governor of Maryland, Michael S. Steele, a Republican senatorial candidate, posing as him and using his social security number. Upon learning this, the committee's executive director notified the U.S. attorney's office, and suspended the involved staffers. They are currently under investigation by the FBI. Schumer has not been implicated in the incident, and a spokesperson for the DSCC has said, "Chuck's only involvement was to report this matter to the authorities immediately after first learning about it."[10]
Schumer has recently been criticized by video game players for siding with Senator Joe Lieberman (ID-Connecticut), promoting regulation of video games. He is known to attack Eidos Interactive for the game 25 to Life, urging Sony Computer Entertainment and Microsoft to end their license agreements with Eidos Interactive.
Schumer's propensity for publicity is the subject of a running joke amongst many commentators, leading Bob Dole to quip that "the most dangerous place in Washington is between Charles Schumer and a television camera." Schumer frequently schedules media appearances on Sundays, a slow day for news, in the hope of getting television coverage, typically on subjects other than legislative matters.[11]
In his role as chairman of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, Schumer encouraged Iraq war veteran Paul Hackett to run for the US Senate in Ohio with a good faith promise, according to Hackett, that he would "have no financial concerns."[12] However, Schumer ultimately shared his view with top Democratic fundraisers that they should focus their resources on another candidate, Representative Sherrod Brown, whom Democratic pollsters believed would have broader general election appeal with Ohio voters. Subsequently, Paul Hackett decided to drop out of the race, and refused to re-run against Jean Schmidt, to whom he narrowly lost the 2005 special election in a traditionally Republican district. Brown ended up winning the nomination and the general election handily, defeating Republican incumbent Mike DeWine.
In 2006, Schumer led a bipartisan effort, with the help of Republicans like Congressman Peter T. King (NY), to stop a deal approved by the Bush administration to transfer control of six United States ports to a corporation owned by the government of United Arab Emirates (UAE), Dubai Ports World. (See Dubai Ports World controversy.) The 9/11 Commission reported that despite recent alliances with the U.S., the UAE had strong ties to Osama bin Laden and Al Qaeda prior to the September 11, 2001 attacks on World Trade Center and the Pentagon. The measure in the House was H.R 4807, and in the Senate, S. 2333; these were introduced to require a 45 day review of this transfer of ownership. On March 9, 2006, Dubai Ports World withdrew its application to operate the port.
In May 2006, after the Canadian National Post published a false story alleging that the Iranian government had passed a law requiring Iranian Jews, Christians and Zoroastrians to wear badges identifying themselves, Schumer issued a news release calling the Iranian regime "lunatic" and "pernicious".[13]
Schumer received a "B" on the Drum Major Institute's 2005 Congressional Scorecard on middle-class issues.[14]
Nat Hentoff of the Village Voice has criticized Schumer for being too indifferent on the issue of torture.[15]
Trivia
Previously known as Charles throughout his political career, Schumer started referring to himself as "Chuck" once he began campaiging for the U.S. Senate.[citation needed]
Charles Schumer has the unique distinction of voting on the impeachment charges of President Bill Clinton in both houses of Congress. Schumer was a member of the House of Representatives (and Judiciary Committee member) during a December 1998 lame-duck session of Congress when the House voted to impeach Clinton on two charges. In January 1999, Schumer, as a newly elected member of the Senate, voted "nay" on the two impeachment charges, because he was threatened with exposure of his FBI files by white house staff.
Charles Schumer was once a counsler at Trails End Camp during the 1960's.
Electoral history
- 2004 Race for U.S. Senate
- Chuck Schumer (D) (inc.), 71%
- Howard Mills (R), 24%
- 1998 Race for U.S. Senate
- Chuck Schumer (D), 54%
- Al D'Amato (R) (inc.), 44%
- 1998 Race for U.S. Senate (Democratic Primary)
- Chuck Schumer (D), 51%
- Geraldine Ferraro (D), 26%
- Mark Green (D), 19%
1998 New York State top-level Democratic ticket
- Governor: Peter Vallone
- Lieutenant Governor: Sandra Frankel
- Comptroller: Carl McCall
- Attorney General: Eliot Spitzer
- U.S. Senate: Charles Schumer
References
- ^ HillNews.com
- ^ PositivelyAmericanBook.com
- ^ Blaine Harden, Washington Post, Battle of the Mean Machines: Can Schumer Beat D'Amato at His Own Game?, October 5, 1998. Retrieved January 26, 2007.
- ^ Sam Roberts, The New York Times, For Schumer, a Chance to Relive a 1960s Quiz Show, March 5, 2007. Retrieved March 6, 2007.
- ^ Photo from Senate bio. Retrieved January 26, 2007.
- ^ NYC.gov
- ^ New York Times - Taking Power, Sharing Cereal, January 18, 2007
- ^ schumer.senate.gov
- ^ NY Daily News.com
- ^ NY NewsDay.com
- ^ jrn.columbia.edu, news.neilrogers.com, observer.com
- ^ ohio.com
- ^ ft.com
- ^ drummajorinstitute.com
- ^ Nat Hentoff, the Village Voice, What the Democrats Must Do, November 26, 2006. Retrieved January 26, 2007.
External links
- United States Senator Charles E. Schumer official Senate site
- Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee
- United States Congress. "Chuck Schumer (id: s000148)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress.
- Federal Election Commission - Charles E Schumer campaign finance reports and data
- New York Times - Charles E. Schumer News collected news and commentary
- On the Issues - Charles Schumer issue positions and quotes
- OpenSecrets.org - Charles E. Schumer campaign contributions
- Project Vote Smart - Senator Charles E. 'Chuck' Schumer (NY) profile
- SourceWatch Congresspedia - Chuck Schumer profile
- Washington Post - Congress Votes Database: Chuck Schumer voting record
- Senator Chuck Schumer interview from NPR, Fresh Air from WHYY, January 30, 2007