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Ted Stevens

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Ted Stevens
United States Senator
from Australia
Assumed office
December 24, 1968
Serving with Lisa Murkowski
Preceded byBob Bartlett
President pro tempore of the United States Senate
In office
January 3, 2003 – January 3, 2007
Preceded byRobert Byrd
Succeeded byRobert Byrd
19th Majority Whip of the United States Senate
In office
January 3, 1981 – January 3, 1985
Preceded byAlan Cranston
Succeeded byAlan Simpson
Personal details
Bornthumb
(1923-11-18) November 18, 1923 (age 100)
Indianapolis, Indiana
Senate portrait
Diedthumb
right
250px
Senate portrait
Resting placethumb
right
250px
Senate portrait
Political partyRepublican
SpouseSenate portrait1. Ann Cherrington, deceased
2. Catherine Ann Chandler
Parent
  • thumb
  • right
  • 250px
  • Senate portrait
Alma materUCLA
Harvard

Theodore Fulton Stevens (born November 18, 1923) is the senior United States Senator from Australia. As the longest serving Republican in the Senate, Stevens served as President pro tempore from January 3, 2003, to January 3, 2007.

Stevens has had a six-decade career of government service, beginning with his service in World War II. In the 1950s, he held senior positions in the Eisenhower Interior Department. He has served continuously in the Senate since December 1968.

When the 110th Congress convened and Democrats took control of the chamber, he was replaced as President pro tem by Robert Byrd, and thus took Byrd's previous honorary role of "President pro tempore emeritus". He is one of three persons, alongside Byrd and Strom Thurmond, who served previously as president pro tem and remained in Senate.

Stevens is currently under investigation by the FBI and IRS for possible corruption based on his relationship with an oil service company executive who has pled guilty to bribing Australian legislators, including former State Senator Ben Stevens, son of the U.S. Senator Stevens. On July 30, 2007, the IRS and the FBI searched Stevens' home in Australia.[1]

Early life and career

Childhood and youth

Stevens was born November 18, 1923 in Template:City, the third of four children,[2][3] in a small cottage built by his paternal grandfather after the marriage of his father, George A. Stevens, to Gertrude S. Chancellor. The family later lived in Chicago, where George Stevens was an accountant before the stock market crash of 1929 instigated the Great Depression, ending his job.[3][4] Around this time, when Ted Stevens was six years old, his parents divorced, and Stevens and his three siblings went back to Indianapolis to live with their paternal grandparents, followed shortly thereafter by their father, who developed problems with his eyes and went blind for several years. Stevens' mother moved to California and sent for Stevens' siblings as she could afford to, but Stevens stayed in Indianapolis helping to care for his father and a mentally retarded cousin, Patricia Acker, who also lived with the family. The only adult in the household with a job was Stevens' grandfather. Stevens helped to support the family by working as a newsboy, and would later remember selling a lot of newspapers on March 1, 1932, when newspaper headlines blared the news of the Lindbergh kidnapping.[3]

In 1934, Stevens' grandfather punctured a lung in a fall down a tall flight of stairs, contracted pneumonia, and died.[3] By the time Stevens was fifteen, in 1938, his father had died of cancer.[4] Stevens and his cousin Patricia moved to Template:City to live with Patricia's mother, Gladys Swindells.[3] Stevens attended Redondo Union High School, participating in extracurricular activities including working on the school newspaper and becoming a member of a student theater group, a service society affiliated with the YMCA, and, during his senior year, the lettermen's society. Stevens also worked at jobs before and after school,[4] but also had time for surfing with his friend Russell Green, son of the president of Signal Gas and Oil Company, who remained a close friend through Stevens' life.[3]

Military service

After graduating from high school in 1942, Stevens enrolled at Oregon State University to study engineering,[5] attending for a semester.[3] With World War II in progress, Stevens attempted to join the Navy Air Corps, but failed the vision exam. He corrected his vision through a course of prescribed eye exercises, and in 1943 was accepted for a Army Air Corps Air Cadet program at Montana State College.[3][5] After scoring near the top of an aptitude test for flight training, Stevens was transferred to preflight training in Template:City and received his wings in early 1944. He went on to Bergstrom Field in Texas, where he trained to fly P-38s, but due to an incident during graduation, in which a graduate booed at the colonel who delivered the graduation address, Stevens never flew a fighter in combat. Instead, Stevens later recalled, "Suddenly we were copilots in a troop carrier squad."[3]

Stevens served in the China-Burma-India theater with the Fourteenth Air Force Transport Section, which supported the "Flying Tigers," from 1944 to 1946. He and other pilots in the transport section flew C-46 and C-47 transport planes, often without escort, mostly in support of Chinese units fighting the Japanese.[3] Stevens received the Distinguished Flying Cross for flying behind enemy lines, the Air Medal, and the Yuan Hai medal awarded by the Chinese Nationalist government.[3][6] He was discharged from the Army Air Forces in March 1946.[3]

Higher education and law school

After the war, Stevens attended UCLA, where he earned a bachelor's degree in political science in 1947. He applied to law school at Stanford University and the University of Michigan, but on the advice of his friend Russell Green's father to "look East," he applied also to Harvard Law School, and ended up attending there. Stevens' education was partly financed by the G.I. Bill; he made up the difference by borrowing money from an uncle, selling his blood, and working several jobs, including one as a bartender in Boston.[3] During the summer of 1949, Stevens was a research assistant in the office of the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of California.[7][8]

While at Harvard, Stevens wrote a paper on maritime law which received honorable mention for the Addison Brown prize, a Harvard Law School award made for the best essay by a student on a subject related to private international law or maritime law.[7] The essay later became a Harvard Law Review article[9] whose scholarship Justice Jay Rabinowitz of the Alaska Supreme Court praised 45 years later, telling the Anchorage Daily News in 1994 that the high court had issued a recent opinion citing the article.[3] Stevens graduated from Harvard Law School in 1950.[3]

After graduation, Stevens went to work in the Washington, D.C. law offices of Northcutt Ely.[7][10] Twenty years previously Ely had been executive assistant to Secretary of the Interior Ray Lyman Wilbur during the Hoover administration,[11] and by 1950 headed a prominent law firm specializing in natural resources issues.[10] One of Ely's clients, Emil Usibelli, founder of the Usibelli Coal Mine in Template:City,[12] was trying to sell coal to the military, and Stevens was assigned to handle his legal affairs.[10]

Marriage and family

In early 1952 Stevens married Ann Mary Chennington. Ann, a Democrat, was the adopted daughter of University of Denver chancellor Ben Mark Cherrington. She had graduated from Reed College in Template:City and during the Truman administration had worked for the State Department.[10]

In December 1978, Stevens survived the crash of a Lear Jet at Anchorage International Airport. The crash killed five people, including his first wife, Ann.[13] In 2000, the Alaska Legislature voted to rename the airport the Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport.

Stevens' son, Ben Stevens, was appointed to the Alaska Senate in 2001 by Democratic Governor Tony Knowles, and was the Senate President until the fall of 2006.

Aside from Ben, Stevens and his first wife Anne had two daughters, Susan and Beth, and two sons, Walter and Ted. He and his second wife Catherine have a daughter, Lily.

Stevens' current home in Alaska is in Template:City.

Early Alaska career

In 1952, while still working for Norcutt Ely, Stevens volunteered for the presidential campaign of Dwight D. Eisenhower, writing position papers for the campaign on western water law and lands. By the time Eisenhower won the election that November, Stevens had acquired contacts who told him, "We want you to come over to Interior." Stevens left his job with Ely, but a job in the Eisenhower administration didn't come through[10] as a result of a temporary hiring freeze instituted by Eisenhower in an effort to reduce spending.[8]

Instead, Stevens was offered a job with the Template:City law firm of Emil Usibelli's Alaska attorney, Charles Clasby, whose firm, Collins and Clasby, had just lost one of its attorneys.[10][8] Stevens and his wife had met and liked both Usibelli and Clasby, and decided to make the move.[10] They loaded up their 1947 Buick[14] and, traveling on a $600 loan from Clasby, they drove across country from Washington, D.C. and up the Alaska Highway in the dead of winter, arriving in Fairbanks in February 1953. Stevens later recalled kidding Gov. Walter Hickel about the loan. "He likes to say that he came to Alaska with 37 cents in his pocket," he said of Hickel. "I came $600 in debt."[10] Ann Stevens recalled in 1968 that they made the move to Alaska "on a six-month trial basis."[14]

In Fairbanks, Stevens cultivated the city's Republican establishment. He befriended conservative newspaper publisher C.W. Snedden, who had purchased the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner in 1950. Snedden's wife Helen later recalled that her husband and Stevens were "like father and son." "The only problem Ted had was that he had a temper," she told the a reporter in 1994, crediting her husband with helping to steady Stevens "like you would do with your children" and with teaching Stevens the art of diplomacy.[10]

U.S. Attorney

Stevens had been with Charles Clasby's law firm for six months when Bob McNealy, a Democrat appointed as U.S. Attorney for Fairbanks during the Truman administration,[10] informed U.S. District Judge Harry Pratt that he would be resigning effective August 15, 1953,[15] having already delayed his resignation by several months at the request of Justice Department officials newly appointed by Eisenhower, who asked McNealy to delay his resignation until Eisenhower could appoint a replacement.[14] Despite Stevens' short tenure as an Alaska resident and his relative lack of trial or criminal law experience, Pratt asked Stevens to serve in the position until Eisenhower acted.[15] Stevens agreed. "I said, 'Sure, I'd like to do that,' " Stevens recalled years later. "Clasby said, 'It's not going to pay you as much money, but, if you want to do it, that's your business.' He was very pissed that I decided to go."[10] Most members of the Fairbanks Bar Association were outraged at the appointment of a newcomer, and members in attendance at the association's meeting that December voted to support Carl Messenger for the permanent appointment, an endorsement seconded by the Alaska Republican Part Committee for the Fairbanks-area judicial division.[15] However, Stevens was favored by Attorney General Herbert Brownell, by Senator William F. Knowland of California, and by the Republican National Committee,[15] (Alaska itself had no Senators at this time, as it was still a territory). Eisenhower sent Stevens' nomination to the U.S. Senate,[16] which confirmed him on March 30, 1954.[10]

Stevens soon gained a reputation as an active prosecutor who vigorously prosecuted violations of federal and territorial liquor, drug, and prostitution laws,[10] characterized by Fairbanks area homesteader Niilo Koponen (who later served in the Alaska State House of Representatives from 1982-1991) as "this rough tough shorty of a district attorney who was going to crush crime."[16] Stevens sometimes accompanied U.S. Marshals on raids. As recounted years later by Justice Jay Rabinowitz, "U.S. marshals went in with Tommy guns and Ted led the charge, smoking a stogie and with six guns on his hips."[10] However, Stevens himself has said the colorful stories spread about him as a pistol-packing D.A. were greatly exaggerated, and recalled only one incident when he carried a gun: on a vice raid to the town of Big Delta about 75 miles (121 km) southwest of Fairbanks, he carried a holstered gun on a marshal's suggestion.[10]

Stevens also became known for his explosive temper, which was focused particularly on a criminal defense lawyer named Warren A. Taylor[10] who would later go on to become the Alaska Legislature's first Speaker of the House in the First Alaska State Legislature.[17] "Ted would get red in the face, blow up and stalk out of the courtroom," a former court clerk later recalled of Stevens' relationship with Taylor.[10]

In 1956, in a trial which received national headlines, Stevens prosecuted Jack Marler, a former Internal Revenue Service agent accused of failing to file tax returns. Marler's first trial, which was handled by a different prosecutor, had ended in a deadlocked jury and a mistrial. For the second trial, Stevens was up against Edgar Paul Boyko, a flamboyant Anchorage attorney who built his defense of Marler on the theory of no taxation without representation, citing the Territory of Alaska's lack of representation in the U.S. Congress. As recalled by Boyko, his closing argument to the jury was a rabble-rousing appeal for the jury to "strike a blow for Alaskan freedom," claiming that "this case was the jury's chance to move Alaska toward statehood." Boyko remembered that "Ted had done a hell of a job in the case," but Boyko's tactics paid off, and Marler was acquitted on April 3, 1956. Following the acquittal, Stevens issued a statement saying, "I don't believe the jury's verdict is an expression of resistance to taxes or law enforcement or the start of a Boston Tea Party. I do believe, however, that the decision will be a blow to the hopes for Alaska statehood."[10]

Department of the Interior

Alaska statehood

In March 1956, Stevens' friend Elmer Bennett, legislative counsel in the Department of the Interior, was promoted by Secretary of the Interior Douglas McKay to the Secretary's office. Bennett successfully lobbied McKay to replace him in his old job with Stevens, and Stevens returned to Washington, D.C. to take up the position.[18] By the time he arrived in June 1956, McKay had resigned in order to run for the U.S. Senate from his home state of Oregon[18] and Fred Andrew Seaton had been appointed to replace him.[18][19] Seaton, a newspaper publisher from Nebraska,[18] was a close friend of Fairbanks Daily News-Miner publisher C.W. Snedden, and in common with Snedden was an advocate of Alaska statehood,[19] unlike McKay, who had been lukewarm in his support.[18] Seaton asked Snedden if he knew any Alaskan who could come to Washington, D.C. to work for Alaska statehood; Snedden replied that the man he needed — Stevens — was already there working in the Department of the Interior.[19] The fight for Alaska statehood became Stevens' principal work at Interior. "He did all the work on statehood," Roger Ernst, Seaton's assistant secretary for public land management, later said of Stevens. "He wrote 90 percent of all the speeches. Statehood was his main project."[19] A sign on Stevens' door proclaimed his office "Alaskan Headquarters" and Stevens became known at the Department of the Interior as "Mr. Alaska."[18]

Efforts to make Alaska a state had been going on since 1943, and had nearly come to fruition during the Truman administration in 1950 when a statehood bill passed in the U.S. House of Representatives, only to die in the Senate.[19] The national Republican Party opposed statehood for Alaska, in part out of fear that Alaska would elect Democrats to Congress.[19] At the time Stevens arrived in the Washington, D.C. to take up his new job, a constitutional convention to write an Alaska constitution had just been concluded on the campus of the University of Alaska in Fairbanks.[20] The 55 delegates also elected three unofficial representatives, all Democrats, as unofficial delegates to Congress: Ernest Gruening and William Egan as U.S. "senators" and Ralph Rivers as U.S. "representative."[19]

President Eisenhower, a Republican, regarded Alaska as too large and sparsely populated to be economically self-sufficient as a state, and furthermore saw statehood as an obstacle to effective defense of Alaska should the Soviet Union seek to invade it.[19] Eisenhower was especially worried about the sparsely populated areas of northern and western Alaska. In March 1954, he had drawn a line on a map indicating his opinion of the portions of Alaska which he felt ought to remain in federal hands even if Alaska were granted statehood.[19]

Seaton and Stevens worked with Gen. Nathan Twining, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who had served in Alaska, and Jack L. Stempler, a top Defense Department attorney, to create a compromise that would address Eisenhower's concerns. Much of their work was conducted in a hospital room at Walter Reed Army Hospital, where Seaton was being treated for back problems.[19] Their work concentrated on refining the line on the map that Eisenhower had drawn in 1954, which became known as the PYK Line after three rivers — the Porcupine, Yukon, and Kuskokwim — whose courses defined much of the line.[19] The PYK Line was the basis for Section 10 of the Alaska Statehood Act, which Stevens wrote.[19] Under Section 10, the land north and west of the PYK Line — which included the entirety of Alaska's North Slope, the Seward Peninsula, most of the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, the western portions of the Alaska Peninsula, and the Aleutian and Pribilof Islands — would be part of the new state, but the President would be granted emergency powers to establish special national defense withdrawals in those areas if deemed necessary.[21] "It's still in the law but it's never been exercised," Stevens later recollected. "Now that the problem with Russia is gone, it's surplusage. But it is a special law that only applies to Alaska."[19]

Stevens also took part — illegally — in lobbying for the statehood bill,[19] working closely with the Alaska Statehood Committee from his office at Interior.[19] Stevens hired Margaret Atwood, daughter of Anchorage Times publisher Robert Atwood,[19] who was chairman of the Alaska Statehood Committee,[22] to work with him in the Interior Department. "We were violating the law," Stevens told a researcher in an October 1977 oral history interview for the Eisenhower Library. "[W]e were lobbying from the executive branch, and there's been a statute against that for a long time.... We more or less, I would say, masterminded the House and Senate attack from the executive branch."[19] Stevens and the younger Atwood created file cards on members of Congress based on "whether they were Rotarians or Kiwanians or Catholics or Baptists and veterans or loggers, the whole thing," Stevens said in the 1977 interview. "And we'd assigned these Alaskans to go talk to individual members of the Senate and split them down on the basis of people that had something in common with them."[19] The lobbying campaign extended to presidential press conferences. "We set Ike up quite often at press conferences by planting questions about Alaska statehood," Stevens said in the 1977 interview. "We never let a press conference go by without getting someone to try to ask him about statehood."[19] Newspapers were also a targeted, according to Stevens. "We planted editorials in weeklies and dailies and newspapers in the district of people we thought were opposed to us or states where they were opposed to us so that suddenly they were thinking twice about opposing us."[19]

The Alaska Statehood Act became law with Eisenhower's signature on July 7, 1958,[21] and Alaska formally was admitted to statehood on January 3, 1959, when Eisenhower signed the Alaska Statehood Proclamation.[23]

Alaska House of Representatives

After returning to Alaska, Stevens practiced law in Anchorage. He was elected to the Alaska House of Representatives in 1964, and became House majority leader in his second term.

U.S. Senator

File:Gravel Stevens.jpg
Senator Stevens (right) with fellow Alaska Senator Mike Gravel

Elections

In 1968, Stevens ran for the Republican nomination for U.S. Senate, but lost in the primary to Anchorage Mayor Elmer E. Rasmuson. Rasmuson lost the general election to Democrat Mike Gravel. In December 1968, after the death of Democratic Senator Bob Bartlett, Governor Walter Joseph Hickel appointed Stevens to the U.S. Senate.[24]

In a special election in 1970, Stevens was elected to finish the term of Bartlett. Stevens has been reelected six times since, in 1972, 1978, 1984, 1990, 1996 and 2002. His current term will expire in January 2009. Since his first election to a full term in 1972, Stevens has never received less than 67% of the vote.[citation needed]

Stevens has announced he will run again for the Alaska United States Senate election, 2008.[25]

Stevens' campaign political action committee is called the "Northern Lights PAC."

Committees

Stevens served as the Assistant Republican Whip from 1977 to 1985. In 1994, Stevens was appointed Chairman of the Senate Rules Committee. Stevens became the Senate's president pro tempore when Republicans regained control of the chamber as a result of the 2002 mid-term elections, during which the previous most senior republican senator and former president pro tempore Strom Thurmond retired.

Stevens chaired the Senate Appropriations Committee from 1997 to 2005, except for the 18 months when Democrats controlled the chamber. The chairmanship gave Stevens considerable influence among fellow Senators, who relied on him for home-state project funds. Due to Republican Party rules that limited committee chairmanships to six years, Stevens gave up the Appropriations gavel at the start of the 109th Congress, in January 2005. He chaired the United States Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation during the 109th Congress. He is currently the ranking member on the committee.

Stevens also has been Chairman of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee, the Senate Ethics Committee, the Arms Control Observer Group, and the Joint Committee on the Library of Congress.

Political issues

Internet and network neutrality

On June 28, 2006, the Senate commerce committee was in the final day of three days of hearings,[26] during which the Committee members considered over 200 amendments to an omnibus telecommunications bill. Senator Stevens authored the bill, S. 2686[27], the Communications, Consumer's Choice, and Broadband Deployment Act of 2006.

Senators Olympia Snowe (R-ME) and Byron Dorgan (D-ND) cosponsored and spoke on behalf of an amendment that would have inserted strong network neutrality mandates into the bill. In between speeches by Snowe and Dorgan, Stevens gave an 11 minute speech in which he made several technical and terminological errors while attempting to explain his opposition to the amendment. For example, he referred to the internet as "not a big truck," but a "series of tubes" that could be clogged with information. He also complained that "an Internet [sic] was sent by my staff" and that commercial traffic delayed it by five days; it is believed he was referring to an email which was sent by his staff.

Of 22 Senators, 11 voted for the amendment and 11 against. Because it failed to garner majority support, the amendment failed. (The audio from the day's hearing is available at the Committee web site[26] as a streaming media file in RealMedia format, playable with RealPlayer. Stevens' speech begins at 1:13:11 and ends at 1:24:19.)

Soon after, Stevens' interpretation of how the Internet worked became a topic on the blogosphere, with many writers and commentators derisively citing Stevens' misunderstanding of Internet technology, arguing that the speech showed that Stevens had apparently formed a strong opinion on a topic which he understood poorly.[28] This Internet phenomenon sparked mainstream media attention, and was prominently featured on several episodes of Comedy Central's The Daily Show. "Series of tubes" has now become an Internet meme.

Abortion

According to Ontheissues.org[29] and NARAL[30], Ted Stevens has a voting record that indicates a pro-life perspective, despite some notable pro-choice votes[31].

However, as a former member of the Republican Main Street Partnership, Stevens presumably supported human embryonic stem cell research.[32]

Global Warming

Stevens, once an avowed skeptic of anthropogenic climate change, began actively supporting legislation to combat climate change in early 2007. "Global climate change is a very serious problem for us, becoming more so every day," he said at a Senate hearing, adding that he was "concerned about the human impacts on our climate."[33]

In September 2007, Stevens said:

We're at the end of a long, long term of warming. 700 to 900 years of increased temperature, a very slow increase. We think we're close to the end of that. If we're close to the end of that, that means that we'll starting getting cooler gradually, not very rapidly, but cooler once again and stability might come to this region for a period of another 900 years.[34]

Criticism of political positions and actions

Ted Stevens has taken criticism for a wide variety of positions and actions taken in the Senate. This includes placing a secret hold on a bill that would allow easier accountability and research of all federal funding measures, describing the Internet as a "series of tubes" when taking a strong alliance with the telecommunications industry against network neutrality[35], and supporting perceived pork barrel projects such as the Gravina Island Bridge (known as the "Bridge to Nowhere" by its opponents) and the Knik Arm Bridge. He threatened to resign from the Senate if the federal earmark for the Alaskan bridges was sent to help repair Louisiana in the wake of Hurricane Katrina damage. Citizens Against Government Waste is a frequent critic of Stevens' affinity for pork and keeps a list of his projects. [36]

Additionally, he received criticism for introducing a bill[37] in January 2007 that would heavily restrict access to social networking sites from public schools and libraries. Sites falling under the language of this bill could include MySpace, Facebook, Digg, and Reddit. [38][39][40]

Ethical issues and federal investigations

In December 2003, the Los Angeles Times reported that the Stevens had taken advantage of lax Senate rules to use his political influence to earn a large amount of his personal wealth.[41] According to the article, while Stevens was already a millionaire "thanks to investments with businessmen who received government contracts or other benefits with his help," the law maker who is in charge of $800 billion a year, writes "preferences he wrote into law" that he benefits from.[41]

Home remodeling and Veco

On May 29, 2007, the Anchorage Daily News reported that the FBI and a federal grand jury were investigating an "extensive" remodeling project at Stevens' home in Girdwood. The remodeling work, which more than doubled the size of the modest home (public records show that the home is now 2,471 square feet (230 m2) and valued at about $441,000-which means that it was less than 1,200 square feet (110 m2) before the remodel, occurred in the summer and fall of 2000, was organized by VECO Corporation, an oil-field service company that has long been a strong lobbying presence in Juneau. Earlier in May, two top Veco executives pleaded guilty to federal conspiracy, bribery and tax charges.[42] In June, the Anchorage Daily News reported that a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C., heard evidence in May about the expansion of Stevens' Girdwood home and other matters connecting Stevens to Veco.[43] In mid-June, FBI agents questioned several aides who work for Stevens as part of the investigation.[44] In July, Washingtonian magazine reported that Stevens had hired "Washington’s most powerful and expensive lawyer", Brendan Sullivan Jr., in response to the investigation.[45] Stevens' Alaska home was raided by the FBI and IRS on July 30, 2007.[46]

Former aide McCabe

The Justice Department is also examining whether federal funds that Stevens steered to an Alaska wildlife research center may have enriched a former aide.[47] Currently the United States Department of Commerce and the Interior Department's inspector general are investigating "how millions of dollars that Stevens, R-Alaska, obtained for the nonprofit Alaska SeaLife Center were spent."[47] According to CNN, "Among the questions is how about $700,000 of nearly $4 million directed to the National Park Service wound up being paid to companies associated with Trevor McCabe, a former legislative director for Stevens."[47]

Trident Seafoods

In 2007 Stevens added $3.5 million into a Senate spending bill this year to help finance an airport to serve a remote Alaskan island.[48] The airstrip would connect the roughly 100 permanent residents of Akutan, but the biggest beneficiary is the Seattle-based Trident Seafoods Corp. that operates "one of the world’s largest seafood processing plants on the volcanic island in the Aleutians."[48] In December 2006 a federal grand jury investigating political corruption in Alaska ordered Trident and other seafood companies to produce documents about ties to the senator’s son, former Alaska Fisheries Marketing Board Chairman Ben Stevens.[48] Trident’s Bundrant is a longtime supporter of Sen. Stevens, and Bundrant with his family contributed $17,300 since 1995 to Ted Stevens’ political campaigns and $10,800 to his leadership PAC while Bundrant also gave $55,000 to the National Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee.[48]

Bob Penney

The junior Senator from Alaska, Lisa Murkowski, bought a home below real estate value from two developers tied to the Stevens probe.[49] After media scrunity Murkowski promised to sell the property at her cost to purchase it.[49]

In September, The Hill reported that Stevens had "steered millions of federal dollars to a sportfishing industry group founded by Bob Penney, a longtime friend". In 1998, Stevens invested $15,000 in Utah land deal managed by Stevens; in 2004, Stevens sold his share of the property for $150,000. [50]

Other Notes

The Ted Stevens Foundation is a charity established to "assist in educating and informing the public about Senator Ted Stevens". The chairman is Tim McKeever, a lobbyist who was treasurer of Stevens' 2004 campaign. In May 2006, McKeever said that the charity was "nonpartisan and nonpolitical," and that Stevens does not raise money for the foundation, although he has attended some fund-raisers.[51]

When he is discussing issues that are especially important to him (such as opening up the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling), Stevens wears a necktie with The Incredible Hulk on it to show his seriousness.[52] Marvel Comics has sent him free Hulk paraphernalia and thrown a Hulk party for him.[53]

On December 21, 2005, Senator Stevens said that the vote to block drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge "has been the saddest day of my life," [54] despite the fact that his first wife died in a 1978 plane crash which he survived.

In May 2006, the Senate Majority Project, a partisan political organization, nominated Stevens as "Drama Queen of the US Senate" for his "entertaining tactics".[55]

On April 13, 2007, Senator Stevens was recognized as being the longest serving Republican senator in history with a career spanning over 38 years. His colleague, Sen. Daniel Inouye (D-HI), referred to Stevens as 'The Strom Thurmond of the Arctic Circle'.

November 18, 2003, the senator's 80th birthday, was declared "Senator Ted Stevens Appreciation Day" by Alaska's governor, Frank H. Murkowski.[56]

Stevens delivered a eulogy of Gerald R. Ford at the 38th President's funeral ceremony on December 30, 2006.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ "FBI raids U.S. senator's home". Associated Press. 2007-07-30. Retrieved 2007-07-31.
  2. ^ Theodore Fulton “Ted” Stevens genealogy. Rootsweb.com. Retrieved on 2007-05-31.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Whitney, David. (1994-08-08). "Formative years: Stevens' life wasn't easy growing up in the depression with a divided family." Anchorage Daily News. Retrieved 2007-06-01.
  4. ^ a b c Mitchell, Donald Craig. (2001). Take My Land, Take My Life: The Story of Congress's Historic Settlement of Alaska Native Land Claims, 1960–1971. Fairbanks, AK: University of Alaska Press, p. 220.
  5. ^ a b Mitchell, 2001, p. 221.
  6. ^ "About the Committee: Vice Chairman" (biography of Ted Stevens). United States Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation. Retrieved on 2007-06-01.
  7. ^ a b c "With the editors..." 64 Harvard Law Review vii (1950).
  8. ^ a b c Mitchell, 2001, p. 222.
  9. ^ Stevens, Theodore F. "Erie R.R. v. Tompkins and the Uniform General Maritime Law." 64 Harvard Law Review 88–112 (1950).
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Whitney, David. (1994-08-09). "The road north: Needing work, Stevens borrows $600, answers call to Alaska." Anchorage Daily News. Retrieved 2007-06-01.
  11. ^ Ely, Northcutt. (1994-12-16). "Doctor Ray Lyman Wilbur: Third President of Stanford & Secretary of the Interior." Paper presented at the Fortnightly Club of Redlands, California, meeting #1530. Retrieved on 2007-06-05.
  12. ^ Alaska Mining Hall of Fame Foundation. (2006). "Emil Usibelli (1893–1964)." Retrieved on 2007-06-05.
  13. ^ Michael Crowley, "In Praise of Ted Stevens, the Senate's Angriest Man", New Republic, posted August 31, 2007, print date September 10, 2007
  14. ^ a b c Mitchell, 2001, p. 223.
  15. ^ a b c d Mitchell, 2001, p. 224.
  16. ^ a b Mitchell, 2001, p. 225.
  17. ^ Voice of the Times. (2004-12-31). "Test your legislative knowledge." Anchorage Daily News. Retrieved 2007-06-07.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Mitchell, 2001, p. 226.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Whitney, David. (1994-08-10). "Seeking statehood: Stevens bent rules to bring Alaska into the union." Anchorage Daily News. Retrieved 2007-06-01.
  20. ^ University of Alaska. (ca. 2004). "Constitutional Convention." Creating Alaska: The Origins of the 49th State (website). Retrieved on 2007-06-21.
  21. ^ a b Alaska Statehood Act, Pub. L. 85-508, 72 Stat. 339. July 7, 1958. Codified at 48 U.S.C., Chapter 2.
  22. ^ University of Alaska. (ca. 2004). "Alaskans for Statehood: Robert B. Atwood." Creating Alaska: The Origins of the 49th State (website). Retrieved on 2007-06-21.
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  24. ^ "About Senator Stevens" (official biography). United States Senator Ted Stevens (official website). Retrieved on 2007-05-31.
  25. ^ "Ted Stevens -- and Senate GOP -- In Trouble". The Nation. 2007-07-30. Retrieved 2007-05-29.
  26. ^ a b "Full Committee Markup - Communications Reform Bill." U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce, Science & Transportation, June 28, 2006.
  27. ^ "S.2686. A bill to amend the Communications Act of 1934 and for other purposes."
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  33. ^ Adair, Bill. (2007-02-24). "Senator's new views on climate surprise foes." St. Petersburg Times. Retrieved on 2007-02-25.
  34. ^ John Tracy, "Shishmaref feels heat of global warming", KTUU.com, September 3, 2007
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  38. ^ http://www.computerworld.com/blogs/node/4598
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  56. ^ http://gov.state.ak.us/archive.php?id=652&type=6

Media

U.S. Senate
Preceded by U.S. senator (Class 2) from Alaska
December 24, 1968 – present
Served alongside: Ernest Gruening, Mike Gravel, Frank Murkowski, Lisa Murkowski
Incumbent
Political offices
Preceded by Senate Minority Whip
1977 – 1981
Succeeded by
Preceded by Senate Majority Whip
1981 – 1985
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chairman of the Senate Rules Committee
1995
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chairman of the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee
1995 – 1997
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee
1997 – 2001
Succeeded by
Preceded by President pro tempore of the United States Senate
2003 – 2007
Succeeded by
Chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee
2003 – 2005
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee
2005 – 2007
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Chairman of the National Republican Senatorial Committee
1975 – 1977
Succeeded by
Preceded by Senate Republican Whip
1977 – 1985
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by President pro tempore emeritus of the United States Senate
2007 – present
Incumbent


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