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Jack Kemp Jr.
File:Jack Kemp.jpg
1996 Republican Vice Presidential nominee
In office
August 16, 1996 – November 5, 1996
Running mateBob Dole
OpponentBill Clinton/Al Gore
Preceded byDan Quayle
Succeeded byDick Cheney
9 United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
In office
February 13, 1989 – January 19, 1993
PresidentGeorge H. W. Bush
Preceded bySamuel Pierce
Succeeded byHenry Cisneros
Congressman New York's 31st congressional district
In office
1983–1989
Preceded byDonald J. Mitchell
Succeeded byBill Paxon
Congressman New York's 38th congressional district
In office
1973–1983
Preceded byJames F. Hastings
Succeeded byDistrict 38 eliminated
Congressman New York's 39th congressional district
In office
1971–1973
Preceded byRichard D. McCarthy
Succeeded byJames F. Hastings
Personal details
Born (1935-07-13) July 13, 1935 (age 89)
Template:City-state
Political partyRepublican
SpouseJoanne Kemp
ChildrenJeff, Jimmy, Jennifer and Judith
Alma materOccidental College
ProfessionProfessional American football player; Politician
Websitehttp://www.kemppartners.com/principals-jk1.htm

Jack French Kemp, Jr. (born July 13, 1935) is an American politician and former professional American football player. He was the Republican candidate for the vice presidency in the 1996 presidential election as running mate for Bob Dole and was (along with Dole and eventual winner George H. W. Bush) one of the Republican Party's main candidates in the 1988 presidential election. Despite his longstanding opposition to abortion, Kemp is considered a social moderate because of his advocacy for minorities and immigration reform. He supports low taxes and free market economic policy.

After time as a student-athlete at Occidental College, Kemp played as a professional quarterback for 13 years in the National Football League (NFL), Canadian Football League (CFL) and American Football League (AFL). He co-founded the American Football League Players Association, which he served as president for five terms. He served as captain of both the San Diego Chargers and Buffalo Bills and earned the American Football League MVP award in 1965 after leading the Bills to their second consecutive AFL championship. He was in the AFL for all ten years of its existence, was named to play in seven of the nine AFL All-star game times, played in five of the league's ten championship games, and holds most AFL career passing statistical records.

He served nine terms in the United States House of Representatives as a representative of Western New York. As a proponent of both Chicago school and supply-side economics, he is notable for his role as both the molder of the Reagan agenda and the architect of the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 (known as the Kemp-Roth tax cut). After stepping away from his congressional position for a failed Presidential run, he joined George H. W. Bush's Cabinet as United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development. He then traveled the speaker's circuit before becoming a Vice Presidential nominee. As a progressive conservative politician, Kemp served as the Republican Party spokesperson on minority and inner-city issues for most of his political career.

He has continued a career of public service since returning to public life. He has been active as a political advocate and commentator. He has served on corporate and non-profit organization boards, served in official capacities to promote American football and has been a political advocate for both the Republican Party and for veteran professional football players. Kemp is also a veteran of the United States Army who has authored, co-authored, and edited several books.

Early life

Youth

Kemp is the third of Paul and Frances Kemp's four sons.[1][2] Paul Kemp turned his motorcycle messenger service into a trucking company that grew from one to fourteen trucks.[3][4] Frances Kemp was a well-educated social worker as well as a Spanish teacher.[4][1] Jack grew up in the Wilshire district of Los Angeles,[5] which was a heavily Jewish section of West Los Angeles,[2] but his tight-knit middle class family practiced in the Church of Christ, Scientist.[2][1] Although his mother attempted to influence him with the culture of piano lessons trips to the Hollywood Bowl, sports consumed Jack Kemp in his youth and he once chose the forward pass as the subject of a school essay on important inventions.[1]

Kemp, who was born, raised and educated in Template:City-state, attended Fairfax High School, which is known both for its historically high concentration of Jewish students and for producing celebrities. Although by the end of the century, Fairfax had become a majority Hispanic high school,[6] over 95 percent of Kemp's classmates were Jewish and he became a supporter of Jewish causes.[7] Boasting an alumni of notable actors, athletes, and musicians, Fairfax is noted by celebrity-seeking guides.[8] The school is located on Melrose Avenue, and its alumni include Herb Alpert, David Arquette, Lenny Kravitz, Ricardo Montalban, David Janssen, Timothy Hutton and Mickey Rooney.[9][6] Despite his proximity to the trappings of celebrity and entitlement, Kemp learned to embrace diversity and hard work during his experience working with his brothers at his father's trucking company in downtown Los Angeles. In addition to developing his respect for hard work, Kemp's habit of rigorous reading showed in high school where he read history and philosophy books.[7]

College

After high school, he attended Occidental College, where he and close friend Jim Mora were members of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity,[10] but Kemp declined to become involved in student government.[10] At Occidental, a founding member of the Division III Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference,[11] Kemp was a record-setting javelin hurler and played several positions on the football team: quarterback, defensive back, place kicker and punter.[10] At Occidental, which posted 6–2 and 3–6 records in his years with him as the starting quarterback, Kemp was named a Little All-American one year and threw for over 1,100 yards in a season.[10] Kemp selected Occidental because its football team used professional formations and plays, which would help him achieve his aspiration to become professional quarterback.[2] At 5 feet 10 inches (1.78 m) and 175 pounds (79 kg; 12.5 st), he considered himself to be too small to play for the major Southern California college football programs (USC Trojans and UCLA Bruins).[10]

Kemp was very near-sighted and quite tenacious on the field. In a game against Pomona College, his team trailed by a large margin before he led them to three scoring drives. After kicking an extra point following the final scoring drive, he turned to his teammate and said, I guess we won. However, he could not see the scoreboard and did not realize that they hadn't.[10] Kemp was also self-motivated: he performed post-graduate study at Long Beach State University, California Western University and served in the military from 1958–1962.[2] Kemp, who earned a degree in physical education from Occidental, took graduate economics classes at the two schools in an effort to improve himself.[10]

Marriage and family

Kemp married Joanne Main, his college sweetheart,[4] after she graduated from Occidental College in 1958, which was a year after Kemp graduated.[2] Joanne had grown up in Template:City-state and attended Fillmore High School in Ventura County.[12] Kemp's Biblical Literature professor, Keith Beebe, presided over the wedding,[10] but after the marriage, Kemp became a Presbyterian.[2]

In 1989, the Kemps switched their official residence from Template:City-state to Template:City-state,[13] where they now reside.[5] Kemp and his wife, Joanne, have two sons, both of whom played professional football as a quarterback: Jeff Kemp played in the NFL from 1981 to 1991,[14] and Jimmy Kemp played in the CFL from 1994 to 2002. They also have two daughters named Jennifer and Judith.[15] Jeff, Jennifer and Judith are each two years apart and Jimmy is eight years younger than Judith.[1] As of June 2006, the Kemps had 16 grandchildren.[16] Kemp's opposition to abortion is partially affected by his own wife's miscarriage.[17]

Football career

Jack Kemp
No. 15
Position:QB
Career information
College:Occidental
Career history
Career highlights and awards
  • 7x AFL All Star (1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1969)
  • 5x TSN All-AFL (1960, 1961, 1963, 1965, 1966)
  • AFL Champion (1964, 1965)
  • Buffalo Bills Wall of Fame
  • AFL MVP (AP, 1965)
  • AFL Championship Game MVP (1965)

Records and Leaderships

  • AFL career regular season passing attempts
  • AFL career regular season passing completions
  • AFL career regular season passing yards
  • AFL career championship game passing attempts
  • AFL career championship game passing completions
  • AFL career championship game passing yards
  • AFL yards per attempt (1960, 1964)

Kemp began his professional football career in 1957 when he was selected by the Detroit Lions in the 17th round of the 1957 NFL Draft, but he was cut before the 1957 NFL season began.[18][10] Kemp spent one NFL season with the Pittsburgh Steelers and another being on the taxi squad of the New York Giants and San Francisco 49ers. During his taxi squad tenure, he served as a third-string quarterback, who never got to play,[1] on the 1958 New York Giants when they lost in overtime of the 1958 NFL Championship Game to the Baltimore Colts at Yankee Stadium in the first NFL Playoff overtime game.[19]

After his experience with the NFL, Kemp spent a year serving as a private in the United States Army Reserve,[2] (as well as playing one game for the Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian Football League, which made him ineligible for the NFL in 1959). Kemp had been cut by five professional teams (Lions, Steelers, Giants, 49ers and Stampeders).[10] According to his older brother Tom, the family attempted to encourage him to get on with his life after he bounced around the NFL and his parents drove him from California to Template:City-state only to see him get cut.[1] On February 9 and February 11 1960 the AFL agreed to a "no tampering" policy with the NFL and CFL respectively to keep from stealing star players. Thus, players like Kemp with modest NFL experience were common AFL signees at the time.[20] Kemp signed as a free agent with the Los Angeles Chargers of the AFL.

Chargers era (1960–1962)

In 1960, Kemp led the Los Angeles Chargers to a Western Division championship with a 10–4 record.[21] Kemp finished second to Frank Tripucka in the major passing statistics (attempts, completions, and yards), led the AFL in yards per completion and times sacked, and finished one rushing touchdown short of the league lead in the eight-team AFL.[22] Kemp became, with Tripucka, one of the first 3,000-yard passers in the American Football League by surpassing 3000 yards in the inaugural 14-game schedule 1960 season.[23] Kemp led an offense that averaged 46 points over its last four games and scored over 41 points in five of their last nine games.[24] In the AFL Championship game on January 11961, Kemp led the team to field goals on their first two possessions, but when the Houston Oilers posted a touchdown in the second quarter for a 7–6 lead, the Chargers would never regain the lead.[25]

In 1961, San Diego Union editor, Jack Murphy, started a movement to convince Barron Hilton to move the Chargers from the Los Angeles Coliseum to Balboa Stadium in Template:City-state.[26] Kemp led the relocated San Diego Chargers to a 12–2 record and a repeat Western Division championship.[27] Kemp again finished second in passing yards (this time to George Blanda).[28] The team earned an AFL championship game rematch against the Oilers. However, this time the Chargers were unable to muster any scoring until a fourth quarter field goal in a 10–3 loss.[27][29]

Kemp was in the United States Army Reserves when his unit, the San Diego-based 977th Transportation Company, was activated for duty on October 151961 by President John F. Kennedy after the Berlin Wall was erected in August of that year. A month before he was activated for duty, the right-handed Kemp injured his left shoulder while playing football. Medical examiners found swelling and muscle spasms in his left shoulder and described his voluntary range of motion at 80 percent. The Surgeon General of the United States Army reviewed recommendation by Army doctors that Kemp be excused from service. Kemp underwent a second physical at an Army hospital in Template:City-state. Kemp's 1961 Chargers roommate and Pro Football Hall of Famer, Ron Mix was denied a deferment. Kemp went on to lead the Chargers to a division title that year, passing for 2,686 yards and 15 touchdowns. He cited lingering effects from a later knee injury as the reason he had to fly first class at Government expense as the Housing Secretary from 1989 to 1992.[30]

In 1962, the Chargers drafted Lance Alworth and John Hadl in the 1962 American Football League Draft.[31] Kemp won two American Football League Western Division championships with the Los Angeles/San Diego Chargers, but in a rare blunder by Chargers' coach Sid Gillman, Kemp was put on waivers to try to "hide" him when he was unable to play due to a broken middle finger after two games for the Chargers in 1962.[32]

Lou Saban era (1962–1965)

This ploy did not get by Buffalo Bill coach Lou Saban, and the Bills picked up Kemp for the $100 waiver fee on September 25,[33] one of the biggest bargains in Pro Football history.[18] The AFL commissioner, Joe Foss, awarded Kemp to the Bills, who along with the Dallas Texans and Denver Broncos attempted to claim Kemp.[34] The signing solved the Bills' quarterback problem according to Billy Shaw.[18] According to Van Miller, Kemp was not so excited about coming to Buffalo: "Jack's a skier, and he wanted to go to Denver and play for the Broncos. He hated the thought of coming to Buffalo. He was in the pits when he joined the Bills in Houston. But he came to Buffalo and made some good stock investments, made millions and then got into politics."[35] During his football career at Buffalo, he would become known for his love of reading a broad range of books including the likes of Henry David Thoreau, which led to chidings from Saban.[7]

File:Kemp.jpg
Kemp and Wray Carlton as AFL Champion Buffalo Bills

Injuries, including a broken finger,[33] kept Kemp from performing for most of the 1962 season. That season, Kemp received a military draft notice for service in the Vietnam War and received a draft waiver because of a knee problem. The injuries healed, and Kemp debuted for Buffalo on November 181962 by directing the only touchdown drive in a 10–6 win over the Oakland Raiders.[33] He played only four games for Buffalo in 1962, but he still made the AFL Eastern Division All-Star team.[33] The Bills won three of their last four games to finish 7–6–1.[36] On December 14, the Bills outbid the Green Bay Packers for Notre Dame quarterback Daryle Lamonica.[33]

In 1963, Kemp found himself in a battle for the quarterback position with Daryle Lamonica that would last four seasons until Lamonica left for the Oakland Raiders. Lamonica felt he "... learned a lot from Jack about quarterbacking. And I truly believe that we were a great one-two punch at the position for the Bills."[18] An interesting event occurred when Lou Saban suspected Al Davis of spying on the 0–3–1 Bills and made his team practice using false numbers. That week, the Bills went on to win their first game of the season over the Raiders.[37] In 1963, Kemp led the Bills from a slow start to a tie for the AFL Eastern Division lead with a 7–6–1 record.[38] Kemp again placed second in passing attempts, completions and yards, and he also finished second to teammate Cookie Gilchrist in rushing touchdowns.[39] The Bills played the Boston Patriots in an Eastern Division playoff game to determine the division title on December 28 1963 at War Memorial Stadium in Template:City-state in 10 °F (−12 °C) weather. While bulldozers removed the snow from the frozen field, fans threw snowballs at the Pinkerton guards. During the game, the Bills replaced Kemp with rookie Lamonica after falling behind 16–0 in the third quarter.[40] The Bills lost 26–8. After the game, Kemp said, "I remember telling coach Lou Saban as we walked off the field at War Memorial Stadium that those same fans who were booing us then would be cheering us next year. I really felt that we had the makings of a championship club and we were just a year away from winning it all."[18]

Kemp was said to be the "clubhouse lawyer" for the Bills, and he kept the peace. During the 1964 American Football League season, he managed personalities such as Gilchrist, who walked off the field when plays were not being called for him, and Saban, who Kemp kept from cutting Gilchrist the following week. The negotiated apology was an early sign of his political abilities.[18] Kemp also managed the politics of the quarterback battle with Lamonica, who engineered four winning touchdown drives in the Bills' first seven games.[41] The 1964 team relied on a running game of 250-pound (110 kg; 18 st) Cookie Gilchrist and 220-pound (100 kg; 16 st) Wray Carlton as well as a defense that set records for rushing yards, rushing TD's and quarterback sacks. The team won its first nine games and went 12–2 for the regular season. The team won the Eastern division with a final game victory over the Patriots at Fenway Park on December 201964. Kemp led the league in yards per attempt and finished one rushing touchdown short of the league lead, which was shared by Gilchrist and Sid Blanks.[42] In the 1964 championship game, Kemp scored the final clinching touchdown with just over nine minutes left in the 20–7 victory.[43]

According to Lamonica, the 1965 team had a different emphasis: "We really changed our offensive game that year. In '64 we had depended a lot on Cookie Gilchrist and our running attack to carry us. That was our bread and butter that year. But that all changed in '65. The Bills had traded Gilchrist in the off season to the Denver Broncos. So we went to a pass-oriented game more that season than we ever had before. We not only went to our receivers, but we threw a lot to our running backs. And I really think it brought out the best in Jack that year. Jack was a great quarterback and leader."[18] The Bills finished the 1965 AFL season with a 10–3–1 record.[44] Kemp finished the season second in the league in pass completions.[45] Kemp felt the 1965 AFL Championship game victory was special because it came against his former team, the San Diego Chargers.[46]

Kemp led the Bills to a repeat league championship in 1965 without the 1964 AFL leader in rushing attempts, yards and touchdowns, Gilchrist, (who had been traded to the Denver Broncos)[18] and with the 1964 yards per reception leader, Elbert Dubenion, only playing three games.[42][47] This earned him a share of the AFL MVP awards that he split with former Charger teammate, halfback Paul Lowe. Kemp earned the Associated Press award,[48] while Lowe won The Sporting News and United Press International awards. Kemp also earned the AFL Championship Game MVP.[49]

Joe Collier era (1966–1968)

Lou Saban resigned to take the head coaching job for the Maryland Terrapins football team and defensive coordinator Joe Collier was promoted to head coach for the 1966 AFL season.[50] In 1966, the Kemp led the Bills to their third consecutive division title with a 9–4–1 record. However, in the January 11967 1966 AFL Championship Game, which was played for the right to play in Super Bowl I, the Bills lost to the Kansas City Chiefs 31–7.[51] Kemp was named as an American Football League All-Star for the sixth consecutive year in 1966.[52] The 1967 Bills endured a 4–10 1967 AFL season.[53] Kemp was not named to the All-star game for the first time in his AFL career (there was no 1960 All-star game).[54]

The Bills suffered a bad pre-season loss to the Houston Oilers on August 231968. On August 26, head coach Joe Collier put the Bills through a 40-play scrimmage. During the scrimmage, Ron McDole fell on Jack Kemp's right knee and Kemp suffered an injury which forced him to sit out the entire season.[55] The Bills went 1–12–1 without Kemp for the 1968 AFL season.[56]

John Rausch era (1969)

The Bills drafted and signed O.J. Simpson, and although Jack Kemp returned from a year of injury, they only compiled a 4–10 record during the 1969 AFL season.[57] Kemp was named as an American Football League All-Star in 1969 for the seventh of the league's ten years.[52] He advocated recognition of the league, and in its last year, 1969, lobbied Pete Rozelle to have AFL teams wear an AFL patch to honor it. In 1969, Kemp had a four-year no-cut contract, but the Republican Party of Erie County approached him about running for the United States Congress.[18] After the January 171970 AFL All-star game, Kemp returned home and talked to his wife before deciding to run for Congress.[58] Kemp said "I had a four-year no-cut contract with the Bills at the time. ... I figured that if I lost I could always come back and play. But the fans had their say and I was elected to Congress."[18]

Career summary

He led Buffalo to three straight Eastern Division titles including the 1964 and 1965 American Football League championships throwing to receivers Dubenion and Ernie Warlick.[5] Kemp had the most career passes attempted, most completions and most yards gained passing in the history of the American Football League.[23] Kemp played in five of the ten AFL Championship games. He holds these same career passing attempts, yards and completion records for the AFL Championship Game and is listed second for many other championship game statistics including career and single game passer rating.[23] A Sporting News All-League selection at quarterback in 1960 and 1965, he was the only AFL quarterback to be listed as a starter all ten years. Kemp co-founded the American Football League Players Association with Tom Addison of the Boston Patriots, and was elected its president five times. His founding of and involvement in the player's union contributed to his frequent siding with the Democrats on labor issues later in his career.[7] He was one of only twenty players who were in the American Football League for its entire ten-year existence.

Kemp twice led the AFL in yards per attempt and played all fourteen games in his final six AFL seasons (excluding 1968).[52] However, despite his success and important AFL records, he is most prominently listed in the NFL record book for less flattering accomplishments, including his place as a former record holder for most quarterback sacks in a game.[59][60] Despite Kemp's AFL records, Joe Namath and Len Dawson were selected as the first and second team quarterbacks for the All-time AFL team.[23] His number 15 was retired by the Buffalo Bills in 1984.[61]

Political career

File:Jack Kemp - Library of Congress, Congressional Portrait Collection.gif
Congressional Portrait Collection image (1975)

Kemp stated football prepared him for politics:

Pro football gave me a good perspective. When I entered the political arena, I had already been booed, cheered, cut, sold, traded, and hung in effigy.[62]

Kemp's political career began long before his first electoral campaign in 1970. In 1960 and 1961, Kemp was an editorial assistant to future Richard Nixon aide, Herb Klein, who was then editor of the San Diego Union.[7] Subsequently, Kemp became a volunteer in Barry Goldwater's 1964 Presidential campaign and Ronald Reagan's 1966 successful California Gubernatorial campaign. In the 1967 football off-season, Mr. Kemp worked on Governor Reagan's staff in Template:City-state. In 1969, he served as special assistant to the Republican National Committee chairman.[2] Kemp is a voracious reader, and his foundation came from early readings of Barry Goldwater's The Conscience of a Conservative, Ayn Rand libertarian novels, such as The Fountainhead, and Friedrich von Hayek's The Constitution of Liberty.[63] Kemp's ability to work with blacks and his stands on racial equality are traced back to the time that he played football with black teammates: Kemp said "I wasn't there with Rosa Parks or Dr. King or John Lewis. But I am here now, and I am going to yell from the rooftops about what we need to do."[2]

Congress (1971–1989)

Kemp, who describes himself as a "bleeding-heart conservative",[4] represented a part of the Template:City-state region that is known as the southtowns and that traditionally voted Democratic in the United States House of Representatives from 1971 to 1989.[64] The Template:City-state Republicans had drafted Kemp after incumbent congressman, Richard D. McCarthy, decided to run for the United States Senate.[2] At the time of his political birth, the region he represented was in an economic malaise, and he was considered a JFK throwback who ran on the basis of family values, patriotism, sports and defense.[3] Upon his election to the congress in a class of sixty-two freshman, he was one of six (along with Ronald Dellums, Bella Abzug, Louise Day Hicks, Robert Drinan, and Pierre S. du Pont IV) written about by Time magazine as among the more interesting newcomers. In the article, he was described as a football fan like United States President Richard Nixon, who White House Adviser Robert Finch, and former Kemp boss Herb Klein, who had now become Nixon's Director of Communications, advised. The Nixon aides helped Kemp firm up his military support by encouraging Kemp to endorse the Cambodian invasion and to oppose criticism of Nixon's war policies.[65]

During his career, he would at times sound like a liberal democrat:[3] he championed several Chicago school and supply side economics issues: economic growth, free markets, free trade, tax simplification and lower tax rates on both work and investment.[66] Kemp was a long-time proponent of the flat tax.[67] At times, Kemp supported affirmative action,[68][69] and he has supported rights for illegal immigrants.[70] Kemp also defended of the use anti-Communist forces in Central America, supported the gold standard, spoke for civil rights legislation, opposed abortion, and was the first lawmaker to popularize the notion of enterprise zones,[2] which he supported as a way to foster entrepreneurship and job creation and expand homeownership among public housing tenants.[66][71] Although he is liberal on many social issues, he is not on gay rights.[17] Kemp is described as the most proactive combatant in the war on poverty since Robert Kennedy,[72] but Kemp's view on a war on poverty was quite different than earlier combatants such as Lyndon Johnson, for example, since Kemp believed in incentive-based systems instead of more traditional government social programs.[3]

Time magazine quickly identified second-term congressman Kemp as a leader of the future when it presented its 1974 "Faces for the Future" and included the then 38 year-old Kemp.[73] As a younger congressman, one of his more notable magazine appearances was in the October 241978 issue of Esquire.[10][74] The article explained allegations of 1967 Sacramento office Reagan staffer homosexual activity that Kemp has been cleared of.[1] By 1978, the press was mentioning him as a contender to unseat United States President Jimmy Carter in the 1980 presidential election.[75] Many considered Kemp a front runner for the vice presidency at the 1980 Republican National Convention,[2][76] and he received 43 votes from conservatives who were opposed to George H. W. Bush. After being reelected for a sixth term in 1980, his Republican peers elected him to a party leadership position,[77] and he served seven years as chairman of the House Republican Conference.[7] This promotion occurred immediately after Kemp and David Stockman urged Reagan by memorandum to dedicate his first 100 days to working with Congress an economic package.[78][79] By 1984, many viewed Kemp as Reagan's heir apparent.[1] He is as fondly remembered for his good hair and handsome looks as for his athletic prowess and political savvy,[80] and he is described as having the charisma of the earlier J.F.K.[4] Kemp is known as an independent politician who often legislated outside the jurisdictions of the committees upon which he served and often spoke in favor of ideals and principles over political platforms of his party.[2] As a supply sider generally, he was not a proponent of balanced budgets, but instead viewed growth as the solution.[2]

Kemp's original encounter with supply side economics came in 1976 when Jude Wanniski, then an editorial writer for The Wall Street Journal, interviewed at Kemp's Congressional office. Mr. Kemp picked Wanniski's brain all day and night (all the way to Mr. Kemp's home in Template:City-state, at midnight) until Kemp had been completely converted to being a supply-side disciple of University of Southern California professor Arthur Laffer.[2][81] Thereafter, Kemp began espousing supply side economics far and wide, and in 1978 he, along with William V. Roth, Jr., proposed tax cutting legislation. Kemp was chiefly responsible for supply side economics' inclusion in President Reagan's economic plan.[82] Although large tax cuts in the early 1980s are attributed to Reagan, Kemp and Senator William Roth from Delaware, through their Kemp-Roth Tax Cut legislation, actually initiated these cuts in 1981.[2] These tax cuts have been credited for the economic growth from 1983 to 1990,[83] the then largest peacetime expansion of the United States GDP.[84][85]

In 1980, he considered opposing Republican Jacob Javitz for the United States Senate and was considered a potential Reagan running mate that year.[2] One of Kemp's early attempts at tax reform was an unsuccessful 1979 attempt to index tax brackets for cost of living fluctuations.[86] However, the indexing idea became part of the Reagan economic package that he campaigned on in 1980 as did the tax cuts in the form of three consecutive ten-percent annual reductions.[81] Kemp co-sponsored a legislative attempt at enterprise zones in 1980.[87] In 1981, over the objection of United States House Committee on Ways and Means Chairman Dan Rostenkowski, Reagan's budget based on the Kemp-Roth tax reforms passed.[88][89] One of Kemp's more trying times as a congressman came during 1982 when Reagan decided to reverse the tax-cuts and promote tax increases. The reversal was very controversial and stimulated rigorous opposition by Kemp. Nonetheless, the revised taxes passed.[90][91] In 1983, Kemp expended effort voicing opposition to the policies of Chairman of the Federal Reserve Paul Volcker on multiple occasions. These debates included domestic monetary involvement and roles in funding the International Monetary Fund.[92][93]

Kemp twice delivered speeches at the Republican National Convention: he addressed the convention on July 151980 at the 1980 Republican National Convention in Template:City-state and on August 211984 at the 1984 Republican National Convention in Template:City-state.[94] During the 1984 Convention, with Trent Lott as Republican Party Platform Committee Chairman, Congressmen Kemp and Newt Gingrich claimed control of the party platform to the consternation of G.O.P. senators Bob Dole and Howard Baker.[64] Kemp's official role was as the chairman of the platform subcommittee on foreign policy. However, the three planks that he proposed for the platform involved tax hikes, the gold standard and the role of the Federal Reserve.[95] Despite Kemp's official role, his real influence as a draftsman was on the grammatical structure of the plank on tax hikes.[96][97] By 1985, people saw Kemp as a leading contender for the 1988 Presidential nomination.[98] He also delivered remarks on free enterprise zones at the 1992 Republican National Convention in Template:City-state.[99] Despite efforts and considerations of expanding his political domain, Kemp never held a fundraiser outside of his suburban Western New York district until well into his eighth term in congress.[100]

In the early 21st century, Kemp continued to be considered along with Reagan the politician most responsible for the implementation supply side tax cuts and along with Steve Forbes the political figure most responsible for their continued place in the marketplace of political ideas.[101] Kemp was considered the leader of the progressive conservatives who adhere to the hard right on social issues, but avoid protectionist fiscal and trade policy.[102] In addition to Roth, he has had numerous political allies. At various times he collaborated with Newt Gingrich and Trent Lott on deregulation and tax cuts,[103][2] collaborated with John McCain and Phil Gramm on tax cuts and spending restraints,[104] legislated with and campaigned for Joseph Lieberman,[105] and waged the war on poverty in the cabinet with James Pinkerton.[72] Pete du Pont was another progressive conservative .[102] Even after retiring from congress and after serving in the Cabinet, Kemp remained close to Gingrich, Lott, Vin Weber and Connie Mack.[4] Kemp can also be credited as being a member of the Federal committee to promote Martin Luther King Day as a national holiday.[106] In fact, with his very progressive voting record he has several civil rights leaders such as Benjamin Hooks, Andrew Young and Coretta Scott King and conservative Black intellectuals like Glenn C. Loury and Robert L. Woodson as supporters and friends.[107] At times he boasted of having Democratic friends such as William H. Gray III, Charles B. Rangel and Robert Garcia.[3] Ken Blackwell was one of Kemp's Deputy Secretaries while serving in Bush's cabinet.[108] During the Reagan Presidency, when Kemp was able to effect tax cutting, one of the leading proponents of tax-cutting in the United States Senate was Democrat Bill Bradley, a former star athlete.[109] Several American football players have followed Kemp to congress: Steve Largent, JC Watts, and Heath Shuler.

Kemp has been an outspoken opponent of the other version of football, known in the United States as soccer.[110] In 1986 on the House floor during a debate concerning whether the United States should host the 1994 World Cup, Kemp famously proclaimed "I think it is important for all those young out there — who someday hope to play real football, where you throw it and kick it and run with it and put it in your hands — [that] a distinction should be made that football is democratic capitalism, whereas soccer is a European socialist sport."[111][112] Kemp has compared his speech to George Carlin's 1984 comedy routine on the differences between baseball and American football and has written that his "tongue was firmly planted in cheek" when making the speech.[16] Despite the jocular nature of the speech, it continues to garner negative backlash to this day.[112][111] However, he continues to insist that the main problem with soccer is "it doesn't have a quarterback".[16] Kemp notes that about half of his grandchildren play or have played organized soccer and claims to have since 'changed' his position on soccer and even attended the 1994 FIFA World Cup with long time soccer fan Henry Kissinger, although he wrote during the 2006 World Cup that soccer can be interesting to watch but it is still a "boring game".[16]

Presidential bid (1988)

File:Jackkemp1988brochure.gif
1988 Presidential campaign brochure

In 1988, if Kemp had succeeded when he surrendered his congressional seat to run for President of the United States,[2] it would have made him the first person to move from the United States House of Representatives to the White House since James Garfield.[113] When he formed his exploratory committee, he signed Ed Rollins, the political director of Ronald Reagan's 1984 re-election, as an advisor.[114] From the outset, Kemp clearly had failed to position himself as the primary alternative to Vice President Bush.[63] Except for a select few cognoscenti,[115] the general public did not recognize Kemp's leadership ability, although he was a successful man of ideas.[63][116] In fact, most of the Republican electorate found themselves entirely unfamiliar with Kemp at the beginning of his campaign.[115] In addition, he was quickly perceived as a verbose speaker, who sometimes lost contact with his audience.[63] Although Kemp tried to appeal to the conservatives, his libertarian philosophies of tolerance and individual rights got in the way of social and religious values, and he committed to attending to minorities, women, blue-collar workers and organized labor.[63]

At about the time of the Gary Hart/Donna Rice scandal in May 1987, personal privacy became an issue because of a New York Times questionaire requesting things such as psychiatric records and access to FBI files from all 14 presidential candidates. Candidates from each party expressed opinions on both sides of the issue, and Kemp rejected the Times inquiry as "beneath the dignity of a presidential candidate".[117][118] His campaign was on an early positive course with many early key endorsements in New Hampshire, but Vice President Bush held the support of much of the Republican establishment in New York.[1] Although he had an eclectic mix of supporters, Kemp's campaign began borrowing against anticipated Federal matching funds because it was quickly in the red,[1] which may have been due to the use of expensive direct mail fundraising technique.[119] To offset his socially moderate stances, Kemp clarified his opposition to abortion, his support of the Strategic Defense Initiative and his support for a stronger military than that favored by Secretary of State George Shultz.[1][63] In attempt to position himself as the successor to Reagan, Kemp at one point called for Shultz's resignation based on Kemp's claims that Shultz had neglected freedom fighters in Afghanistan and Nicaragua and had waffled on the Strategic Defense Initiative.[120] Despite a platform covering the full range of political subjects, Kemp's primary campaign weapon was a fiscal policy based on tax cuts. As part of his fiscal policy, he opposed a social security benefits freeze and endorsed a freeze on government spending.[121] Some viewed Kemp's supply-side stance as an attempt to ignore the national budget deficit. In the fall of 1987, political pundits clearly saw that Kemp needed to gain support from the far right on non-social issues.[122] Kemp was among the majority of Republican candidates in opposition to Reagan's INF Treaty agreement with the Soviet Union's Mikhail Gorbachev despite general Republican voter approval of the treaty. With aspirations of support from the right-wing voters, all candidates with low levels of poll support for the nomination took this same "sabre-rattling" stand.[123][124] By early 1988, the moderates (Bush and Dole) were clearly the front-runners and Kemp was battling with Pat Robertson as the conservative alternative to the moderates.[125]

He used a somewhat negative advertising campaign that seemed to have the intended initial effect of boosting him to serious contention.[126] His 1988 campaign was based on the platform of supply-side economics and inner-city enterprise zones.[4] In Bare Knuckles and Back Rooms: My Life in American Politics (ISBN 0553067311, Broadway, 1997) by Kemp campaign chairman, Ed Rollins, Rollins described Kemp as a candidate with foibles.[127] Kemp's campaign managers say he was unmanageable: He ignored timers on his speeches, refused to call contributors, and refused to practice for debates. A humbling Super Tuesday in which his 39 delegate total was fewer than eventual nominee and President George H. W. Bush, Bob Dole and Pat Robertson ended his campaign.[4][2] After withdrawing from the race, he was still considered a contender for the Vice-President nomination.[128] In 1994, Kemp's 1988 campaign reached a settlement with the Federal Election Commission by agreeing to pay $120,000 in civil penalties for 1988 campaign election law violations for, among other things, excessive contributions, improper direct corporate donations, press overbilling, exceeded spending limits in Iowa and in New Hampshire, and for failure to reimburse corporations for providing air transportation.[129]

Cabinet (1989–1993)

As a bleeding-heart conservative, Kemp was a logical choice for George H. W. Bush as the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development,[130] whose job would be to foster public sector and private sector methods to meet the demands of public housing.[131] However, the scandals of Samuel Pierce and the neglect of the president were obstacles from the start, and Kemp was unsuccessful at either of his major initiatives: enacting enterprise zones and promoting public housing tenant ownership.[132] The goal of these two plans was to transition public housing into tenant owned residence and to lure both industry and business into inner cities with federal incentives.[133] Kemp was partly at fault for not achieving either of his primary goals because he did not get along with the rest of the Cabinet.[72] Although Kemp did not affect much policy as director of HUD, he did clean up its reputation,[132][134] and he developed a plan to salvage the troubled Federal Housing Administration.[135] He halted corrupt programs and changed their procedures as well as developed an antidrug offensive,[136][137] which enabled him to collaborate with Bill Bennett.[138] He was also a supporter of "Operation Clean Sweep" and similar movements to prohibit firearm possession in public housing.[139][137]

Despite the fact that Kemp was able to push Bush to support a $4 billion housing program that encouraged public housing tenants to buy their own apartments, the Democratic Congress only allocated $361 million toward the plan. In addition to opposition in Congress, Kemp was constantly at odds with Director of the Office of Management and Budget (aka White House budget director), Richard Darman who opposed Kemp's proposed welfare reform to correct government offsets and his pet project HOPE (Homeownership and Opportunity for People Everywhere), which was intended to sell public housing units to their tenants.[72] HOPE was first proposed to John Sununu, the White House chief of staff in June 1989 for the purpose of not only creating enterprise zones, but also expanding subsidies for low-income renters, social services for the homeless and elderly, and enacting tax changes to help first-time home buyers.[72] Sununu shot it down at first and most of the cabinet voted it down, but Sununu, at the urging of United States Attorney General Dick Thornburgh, decided to encourage president Bush to sign on in August 1990 for Kemp's Economic Empowerment Task Force. However, the Persian Gulf War and the budget negotiations overshadowed Kemp's new project.[72] Darman found himself battling Kemp and his allies such as Newt Gingrich, James Pinkerton, and Vin Weber.[72] The budget left him with $256 million for his plan, which Kemp was able to increase during some appropriations battles.[72] Soon after Clayton Yeutter was appointed chief White House domestic policy advisor, Kemp's Economic Empowerment Task Force was abolished.[72] President Bush generally avoided the issue of federal antipoverty programs,[140] and he instead used Kemp as a mouthpiece to deliver oratory on a conservative activist agenda that was given a low priority by the administration.[141] By the time of the Los Angeles riots of 1992, Bush was a bit late in supporting enterprise zones, tenant ownership and welfare reform.[4] Nonetheless, the riots made Kemp a focal point of the administration.[142] However, Charles E. Schumer had probably summarized the prospects of Kemp's success in advance best when he said in 1989 "Good ideas with money can do a whole lot. Good ideas without money aren't probably going to do a whole lot," and the issue here was the decision not to fund Kemp's ideas.[107]

Kemp was a bit of a surprise to stay as a member of the Bush Cabinet for the duration of his presidency,[143] and he was described as one of the few Bush Administration members who would take any tough stands.[144] By most measures, his time as Housing Secretary was considered unsuccessful.[2] However, even though he could not get empowerment zones passed during his tenure, in 1994 $3.5 billion was approved for them.[145] In 1992, with H. Ross Perot mounting a formidable campaign, Kemp was again considered a Vice Presidential candidate.[146]

Post-HUD years (1993–1996)

As a public speaker between his time as Housing Secretary and his time as a Vice Presidential nominee, Kemp gave public speeches for $35,000 apiece. By 1994, Kemp had embarked on 241 fund-raising dinners to raise $35 million for a 1996 Presidential run and to pay of his 1988 campaign debts.[4] Kemp personally earned $6.9 million in the first three years after stepping down from his $189,000 job as Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, and the primary source of this income was for public speaking.[147] He spoke mostly on behalf of local Republican candidates.[70] In 1994, Kemp and William Bennett made waves by opposing California ballot Proposition 187, a measure to bar illegal immigrants from obtaining public services, in direct opposition to Pete Wilson, one of its endorsers.[148][149] In January 1995, Kemp's stated reason for not entering the 1996 Republican Party presidential primaries was that his personal beliefs were out of balance with the contemporary Republican political landscape: Kemp opposed term limits, he always preferred tax cuts to anything resembling a balanced budget amendment and, unlike the most Republicans, favored federal incentives to combat urban poverty.[150][151] He also noted a distaste for the extreme levels of fundraising necessary for a Presidential campaign.[152] In 1995, while the world awaited the campaign decision announcement by Colin Powell, Kemp had positive thoughts on the prospect of such a campaign.[153]

Kemp championed many issues including the flat tax,[67] which he formally proposed after he was appointed to head a tax reform commission.[154][155][156] Among the 1996 Republican Party candidates, both Steve Forbes and Phil Gramm proposed the flat tax.[157][156] During the campaign, Kemp's endorsement was highly coveted.[158][159] Forbes tried to get Kemp to run in 1996, but Kemp declined and in fact endorsed Forbes just as Dole was closing in on the nomination and just after Dole gained the endorsements of former contenders Lamar Alexander and Richard Lugar.[4][160] Some feel the primary reason for the endorsement was to keep the idea of the flat tax alive.[161] Many thought Kemp had destroyed his own political future with the endorsement, and Kemp profusely apologized to the Dole campaign offices.[4]

Vice Presidential nomination (1996)

Bob Dole and Kemp on the cover of Time magazine with an inset of Mars

On August 161996,[162] the Republican Party chose Kemp as it's 1996 vice presidential nominee, running alongside former Senator Bob Dole. Kemp was seen as a means to attract conservative and libertarian-minded voters like those of tough nomination-challengers Steve Forbes and Pat Buchanan .[163] In 1996, Bill Bennett declined the offer to be Dole's running mate, but suggested Kemp,[164] a man described as Dole's antagonist.[165] Kemp was chosen over Connie Mack, John McCain, and Carroll Campbell,[166] and it is assumed that this was partly due to the fact that Kemp had several former staffers in influential positions as senior advisors to Bob Dole.[167] In addition, Kemp's tax-cutting fiscal policy track record was seen as the perfect fit for the ticket.[168] When Kemp became the running mate for Bob Dole in 1996, he appeared with Dole on the cover of the August 19 1996 Time Magazine,[169] however the pair barely edged out the story of the discovery of life on Mars,[170] which was so close to being the cover story that it was inset on the cover.

The two politicians had a storied history stemming from alternative perspectives and objectives. Dole was a longstanding conservative deficit-hawk who had even voted against John F. Kennedy's tax cuts, while Kemp was an outspoken supply sider. In the early 1980s, according to David Stockman, Kemp convinced Reagan to make a 30 percent across-the-board tax cut one of the central features of his 1980 presidential campaign. Once Reagan was elected, Dole was the Senate Finance Committee Chairman who Kemp claims resisted the plan every step of the way. Dole concedes he expressed reservations about the 1981 plan. The big confrontation came after the tax plan was approved and after Dole subsequently proposed tax increases (that he referred to as reforms). Kemp was vocal in his opposition to the reforms and even penned a New York Times op-ed piece, which enraged Dole. Dole convinced Reagan to sign on to the reforms causing Kemp to summon allies to meetings to stop the act, which eventually passed in 1982.[171] At the 1984 Republican National Convention, Kemp, along with allies such as Gingrich and Lott, added a plank to the party platform that put President Reagan on record as ruling out tax increases. Gingrich called this action "Dole-proofing" the party platform, and the plank passed over Dole's opposition. Then, in 1985, Dole proposed an austere budget that barely passed in the senate with appendectomy patient Pete Wilson casting the tieing vote and Vice President George H. W. Bush casting the deciding vote. In meetings with the President that excluded Dole, Kemp reworked the budget to exclude crucial social security cutbacks. This is said to have been Dole's most crushing political defeat and to have contributed to the Republican loss of control of the Senate. During the 1988 Presidential election, the two antagonized each other. Their opposition became less relevant after Bush won and Kemp left Congress for the Cabinet. The two did not really cross paths again until 1996 when Kemp endorsed Dole's opponent Forbes on the eve of the New York Primary in March.[171]

Dole despised Kemp's economic theories,[68] but he felt Kemp-like tax cuts offered his best chance at electoral success.[172] For his part, Kemp had to make concessions as well: he had to back expelling the children of illegal immigrants from public schools despite his longstanding opposition to Proposition 187 as well as mute his opposition to abolishing affirmative-action programs in California.[173][162] However, Kemp was able to use the nomination to promote his opposition to Clinton's partial birth abortion ban veto.[174] From the outset of their campaign, Dole-Kemp trailed,[175] and they faced skeptics even from within the party.[176] During the campaign, Kemp and Steve Forbes advocated for a stronger stand on tax cutting than Dole used.[177] However, in general, the opinion was that Kemp was helpful to the ticket's chances of catching Bill Clinton.[106][178][179] When Dole declined an invitation to speak National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, he had suggested Kemp as a substitute even before Kemp had been named as the Vice Presidential nominee because Kemp was the highest-profile progressive Republican.[180] After receiving the nomination, Kemp became the ticket’s spokesman for minorities and the inner-city.[181][182][183] Due to agreement on the self-help policy that Louis Farrakhan has endorsed in many fora including the Million Man March, Kemp in a sense aligned himself with Farrakhan.[184][185] However, Farrakhan is perceived as being anti-Semitic,[185] and Kemp is considered an ally of Republican Jews.[186] This issue necessitated some political sidestepping.[185] As the nominee, Kemp at times overshadowed Dole.[174] In fact, more than once, Kemp was described as if he was the Presidential nominee.[187][174] During the campaign, Kemp expressed the opinion that the Republican party leaders did not stand behind the ticket wholeheartedly.[188]

1996 Dole-Kemp campaign logo

Gore and Kemp were long-time friends unlike Gore and his previous Vice-Presidential opponent Dan Quayle. Thus, as debaters they did not attempt personal attacks.[189] In the final October 9 1996 Vice Presidential Debate against Al Gore (when the Dole-Kemp ticket was already trailing badly in the national polls), Kemp was said to have been soundly beaten.[190][191] The debate ranged broadly in topics from the usual topics such as abortion, foreign policy to a discourse on an incident preceding the then-current baseball playoffs, in which Roberto Alomar, the Baltimore Orioles' second baseman, cursed and spat on an umpire.[192][193] The discussion of the policy on Mexico was one of the more interesting topics for critical review.[194] The Gore victory was not a surprise since Kemp had been outmatched by Gore in previous encounters,[69] and Gore has a reputation as an experienced and vaunted debator.[195]

Post-political life

Kemp, Sue Myrick, Phil English, and Mike Turner (c. May 2004)

His legacy includes the Kemp-Roth Tax Cut of the 1980s, also known as the first of the two "Reagan tax cuts". These served as the foundation of supply side economics known as Reaganomics. Many Republicans have endorsed this Laffer Curve view that the key to cutting the deficit is making the economy grow, which is best done by cutting taxes. Although George H. W. Bush referred to this philosophy as voodoo economics, even George W. Bush and his Treasury Secretary, John Snow, are a believers.[196] In 1993, Kemp co-founded (with Bill Bennett and Jeane Kirkpatrick and with the financial backing of Theodore Forstmann)[66][197] the free market advocacy group Empower America, which later merged with Citizens for a Sound Economy to form Freedom Works. He resigned as Co-Chairman of Freedom Works in March 2005 after he was questioned by the FBI about his ties to Samir Vincent, a Northern Virginia oil trader implicated in the U.N. Oil-for-food scandal who pled guilty to four criminal charges stemming from the scandal, including illegally acting as an unregistered lobbyist of the Iraqi government of Saddam Hussein.[198] Testimony about Kemp became prominent in the trial.[199] Also, Federal Bureau of Investigation informant Richard Fino tied Kemp to James Cosentino just weeks before the 1996 election.[200]

By 1996, Kemp had been named a director of six corporate boards after leaving the government in 1993. He had been a director for Cyrix Corporation, American Bankers Insurance Group.[201] Kemp has served on the board of Oracle Corporation (NasdaqORCL), which is owned by friend Larry Ellison,[202] since 1996 and was named to the board of Six Flags, Inc. (NYSESIX) in December 2005.[203] He has also been a director for Hawk Corporation, IDT Corporation (NYSEIDT), CNL Hotels and Resorts, Inc. and InPhonic, Inc.[204] At IDT, Kemp opted not to stand for re-election in 2006.[205] He also serves on the Habitat for Humanity Board of Directors.[206] Kemp is the founder and chairman of Kemp Partners, a strategic consulting firm helping clients achieve both business and public policy goals.

Although mentioned as a possible 2000 presidential candidate, Kemp did not run, instead endorsing eventual winner George W. Bush. Kemp has continued his political advocacy for reform of taxation, Social Security and education.[5] In addition to his fiscal and economic policies, Kemp advocated against abortion at the same time that congress was considering a bill banning partial-birth abortions.[207] He also advocates for retired NFL veterans on issues such as cardiovascular screening, assisted living, disability benefits, and the recently approved joint replacement program.[208] Furthermore, he advocates for reforming immigration laws.[209]

In addition to corporate boards of directors, Kemp has served on several advisory boards. He serves on the UCLA School of Public Policy Advisory Board, and on the Toyota Diversity Advisory Board as well as the Howard University Board of Trustees, which he has served since 1993.[206] On March 252003, Kemp was selected as Chairman of the Board of Directors of USA Football, a national advocacy group for amateur football created by the National Football League and the NFL Players Association. The organization supports Pop Warner, American Youth Football, Boys and Girls Clubs Of America, National Recreation and Park Association, Police Athletic League, YMCA and the AAU.[5] He is also vice president of NFL Charities.

File:Russian Task 101.jpg
Kemp and John Edwards on Council on Foreign Relations

Kemp was among the prominent business and political leaders who pledged to raise money for the defense of Scooter Libby in 2005.[210] In 2006, Kemp, along with another unsuccessful vice-presidential candidate, John Edwards, co-chaired the Council on Foreign Relations task force on Russia,[211] producing a document called "Russia’s Wrong Direction: What the United States Can and Should Do".[212]

As of May 2007, Kemp sat on the board of the Yellowstone Mountain Club, which is located in Template:City-state on 13,600 acres (21.3 sq mi; 55.0 km2) in the Madison Range north of Yellowstone National Park with 60 ski runs. The Club is a private ski and golf resort where people have come from around the world to build vacation homes. Bill Gates and Dan Quayle are members, and Greg LeMond has accused founder, Timothy Blixseth, of borrowing hundreds of millions of dollars from the club without collateral. Membership, once approved, is $300,000 plus $16,000 annual dues for all members who own their land and homes.[213] Blixseth, a close friend of Kemps, describes the club as resort with the a "wow factor" to even the extremely wealthy.[214]

On January 6 2008, he endorsed John McCain in the 2008 Republican presidential primaries shortly before the New Hampshire primary, which was a surprise to many conservative Republican tax-cutters.[215]

Books

In addition to authoring significant legislation as a congressman, Kemp has authored or co-authored several books:

  • An American Idea: Ending Limits to Growth, (ISBN , Goodrich, 1985)
  • An American Renaissance: Strategy for the 1980's, (ISBN 0-06-012283-8, Harper & Row, 1979)
  • The IRS v. The People, (ISBN 089195077X, Heritage Books, 2005) Authored by Ken Blackwell and edited by Kemp
  • Trusting the People : The Dole-Kemp Plan to Free the Economy and Create a Better America, (ISBN 0694518042 audiobook, ASIN B000OEV5RE HarperCollins, 1996) coauthored with Bob Dole, narrated by Christine Todd Whitman
  • Together We Can Meet the Challenge : Winning the Fight Against Drugs, (ISBN 9780788102721, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, 1994)
  • Pro Sports: Should the Government Intervene?, (ISBN 9780844720975, American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 1977)
  • 'U.S. By the Numbers: What's Left, Right & Wrong with America, (ISBN 9781892123145, Capital Books, Incorporated, 2000) with Raymond J. Keating, and Thomas N. Edmonds
  • Our Communities, Our Homes: Pathways to Housing and Homeownership in America's Cities and States, (ISBN 9780976148111, Joint Center for Housing Studies, 2007) with Henry G. Cisneros, Kent W. Colton, and Nicolas P. Retsinas
  • Reaganomics: Supply Side Economics in Action (ISBN 0870005057, 1981) by Bruce R Bartlett with Arthur Laffer

Kemp, who at the time of writing An American Renaissance was a newly converted supply-side economics convert, says the message is best summarized as saying that "A rising tide lifts all boats."[107]

Kemp also wrote the foreword to several books:

  • Raoul Wallenberg: Angel of Rescue by Harvey Rosenfeld (ISBN 0879751770, Prometheus Books, 1982)
  • Best Editorial Cartoons of the Year: 1986 Edition by Charles Brooks (ed.) (ISBN 9780882896052, Pelican Publishing Company, Incorporated, 1986)
  • Leadership Is Common Sense by Herman Cain (ISBN 9781930819023, Tapestry Press, 2001)
  • Whole World's Watching: Decarbonizing the Economy and Saving the World by Martyn Turner and Brian O'Connell (ISBN 9780471499817, Wiley, John & Sons, Incorporated, 2001)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Dowd, Maureen (1987-06-28). "Is Jack Kemp Mr. Right?". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-08. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Rosenbaum, David E. (1996-08-11). "A Passion for Ideas: Jack French Kemp". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-02. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ a b c d e May, Clifford D. (1988-12-20). "Man in the News; Theorist With a Heart; Jack French Kemp". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-15. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Stengel, Richard (1996-08-19). "Jack Be Nimble". Time magazine. Time Inc. Retrieved 2008-03-02. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. ^ a b c d e "Jack Kemp To Chair USA Football". Green Bay Packers, Inc. Retrieved 2008-02-23.
  6. ^ a b "Fairfax Facts". Public Broadcasting Service. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Payton, Melissa (1997-05-05). "114th Commencement Speaker and Honorary Degree Recipient Doctor of Laws, Honoris Causa". USC News. University of Southern California. Retrieved 2008-04-01. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  8. ^ "The Ultimate Guide to Celebrities and Hollywood". seeing-stars.com.
  9. ^ Moore, Jim (2008-01-19). "Go 2 Guy: L.A. phenom to test Franklin". SeattlePI.com. Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved 2008-04-01. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Martinez, Michael (1996-09-08). "Kemp Success Began At Oxy". Los Angeles Daily News. Farlex, Inc. Retrieved 2008-03-31. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  11. ^ "About the SCIAC". Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  12. ^ Gonzalez, Virginia (1996-08-11). "Kemp's Wife Prepared For Role, Mom Says". Los Angeles Daily News. Farlex, Inc. Retrieved 2008-03-31. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  13. ^ Firestone, David (1996-08-13). "Of Knishes, Soulfulness and Kemp". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-03. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  14. ^ "All-Time Players: Jeff Kemp". NFL Enterprises LLC. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  15. ^ "Biography Of Jack Kemp". pbs.org. MacNeil/Lehrer Productions. Retrieved 2008-02-24.
  16. ^ a b c d Kemp, Jack (2006-06-19). "What I really think about soccer". Townhall.com. Salem Web Network. Retrieved 2008-02-24. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  17. ^ a b "In His Own Words: Jack Kemp and the Issues". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. 1996-08-11. Retrieved 2008-03-08. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Schultz, Randy (2003). Legends of the Buffalo Bills. Sports Publishing LLC.
  19. ^ Kemp, Jack (2001-01-27). "A Giant in '58". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-06. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  20. ^ Gruver, p. 44.
  21. ^ Gruver, p. 55.
  22. ^ "1960 AFL Leaders and Leaderboards". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference, LLC. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  23. ^ a b c d Rosenthal, Harold (compiled by the Elias Sports Bureau), ed. (1970). Official History American Football League - 1960-1969. The Sporting News. pp. 68–69.
  24. ^ Gruver, p. 56.
  25. ^ Gruver, pp. 58–59.
  26. ^ Gruver, p. 61.
  27. ^ a b Gruver, p. 71.
  28. ^ "1961 AFL Leaders and Leaderboards". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference, LLC. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  29. ^ Gruver, p. 266.
  30. ^ Frantz, Douglas (1996-08-18). "Army Allowed Kemp to Skip Army Call-Up For an Injury". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-03. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  31. ^ Gruver, p. 80.
  32. ^ Gruver, pp. 82–83.
  33. ^ a b c d e Maiorana (1994), p. 86.
  34. ^ Gruver, p. 83.
  35. ^ Gruver, Ed (1997). The American Football League: A Year-by-Year History, 1960-1969. McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers.
  36. ^ Maiorana (1994), p. 93–94.
  37. ^ Maiorana (1994), p. 96.
  38. ^ Maiorana (1994), p. 104.
  39. ^ "1963 AFL Leaders and Leaderboards". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference, LLC. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  40. ^ Gruver, p. 115.
  41. ^ "Any Time, Any Place". Time magazine. Time Inc. 1964-11-06. Retrieved 2008-03-21. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  42. ^ a b "1964 AFL Leaders and Leaderboards". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference, LLC. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  43. ^ Maiorana (1994), p. 116.
  44. ^ Maiorana (1994), p. 125.
  45. ^ "1965 AFL Leaders and Leaderboards". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference, LLC. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  46. ^ "The Game Nobody Saw". Time magazine. Time Inc. 1966-01-07. Retrieved 2008-03-21. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  47. ^ "1965 Buffalo Bills". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference, LLC. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  48. ^ Maiorana (1994), p. 126.
  49. ^ Gruver, p. 151.
  50. ^ Maiorana (1994), p. 127.
  51. ^ Maiorana (1994), pp. 136–37.
  52. ^ a b c "Jack Kemp". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference, LLC. Retrieved 2008-03-31.
  53. ^ Maiorana (1994), p. 147.
  54. ^ "Jack Kemp". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Sports Reference, LLC. Retrieved 2008-04-08.
  55. ^ Maiorana (1994), p. 148.
  56. ^ Maiorana (1994), p. 157.
  57. ^ Maiorana (1994), pp. 158–66.
  58. ^ Maiorana (2000), p. 174.
  59. ^ "Individual Records: Passing". NFL Record & Fact Book. NFL Enterprises LLC. Retrieved 2008-02-23.
  60. ^ "Individual Records: Fumbles". NFL Record & Fact Book. NFL Enterprises LLC. Retrieved 2008-02-23.
  61. ^ Garcia, Guy D. (1984-12-03). "untitled". Time magazine. Time Inc. Retrieved 2008-03-21. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  62. ^ Berkow, Ira (1996-08-11). "A Quarterback Who Doesn't Like Warming the Bench". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-04-01. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  63. ^ a b c d e f Stanley, Alessandra (1987-04-13). "Campaign Portrait". Time magazine. Time Inc. Retrieved 2008-03-17. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  64. ^ a b Thomas, Evan (1984-09-03). "Struggling for a Party's Soul". Time magazine. Time Inc. Retrieved 2008-03-19. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  65. ^ "Newcomers in the House". Time magazine. Time Inc. 1970-11-16. Retrieved 2008-03-21. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  66. ^ a b c "Jack Kemp". kemppartners.com. Retrieved 2008-02-24.
  67. ^ a b "The New 12 Steps to Recovery". Time magazine. Time Inc. 1996-01-17. Retrieved 2008-03-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  68. ^ a b Trillin, Calvin (1996-11-18). "The Endless Campaign". Time magazine. Time Inc. Retrieved 2008-03-01. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  69. ^ a b Kramer, Michael (1996-09-23). "Campaign 2000". Time magazine. Time Inc. Retrieved 2008-03-01. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  70. ^ a b Kramer, Michael (1996-08-19). "In From the Cold". Time magazine. Time Inc. Retrieved 2008-03-02. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
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  72. ^ a b c d e f g h i Deparle, Jason (1993-02-28). "How Jack Kemp Lost the War on Poverty". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-02. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
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  157. ^ "Who's the Flattest of Them All?". Time magazine. Time Inc. 1996-01-16. Retrieved 2008-03-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  158. ^ Berke, Richard L. (1996-01-31). "Politics: The Endorsements;Hopefuls Go a-Courtin' And Kemp Is the Prize". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-08. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
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  163. ^ Ayers, B. Drummond, Jr. (1996-08-15). "In New Role, Kemp Fights With His Past Over Ideology". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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  172. ^ Gibbs, Nancy and Michael Duffy (1996-08-26). "A Spoonful of Sugar Helps the Medicine Go Down". Time magazine. Time Inc. Retrieved 2008-03-02. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
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  174. ^ a b c Nagourney, Adam (1996-08-19). "Kemp Attacks Clinton's Abortion Veto". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  175. ^ "On The Road Again". Time magazine. Time Inc. 1996-08-16. Retrieved 2008-03-02. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
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  179. ^ "The Odd Couple". Time magazine. Time Inc. 1996-08-12. Retrieved 2008-03-02. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
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  181. ^ Bruni, Frank (1996-08-29). "Kemp Stumps For the Votes Of Minorities". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  182. ^ Gray, Jerry (1996-09-07). "Kemp Courts Harlem Voters With Open Arms, Little Hope". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  183. ^ Gray, Jerry (1996-09-04). "In Inner-City Chicago, Kemp Makes Pitch for Black Votes". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  184. ^ Rosenthal, A. M. (1996-10-15). "Kemp and Farrakhan". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  185. ^ a b c Gray, Jerry (1996-09-11). "Kemp Lines Up Solidly Behind Netanyahu". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  186. ^ Dorf, Matthew (1996-08-16). "Can GOP ticket overcome rightist platform? Kemp seen as ally on Jewish causes". J. the Jewish news weekly of Northern California. San Francisco Jewish Community Publications Inc.,. Retrieved 2008-04-01. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
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  188. ^ Gray, Jerry (1996-10-26). "Kemp Hits Back at Republicans Who Despair". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-08. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  189. ^ Gray, Jerry (1996-10-09). "Gore and Kemp Practice Jabs for Tonight's Encounter". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  190. ^ Carlson, Margaret (1996-10-28). "A Case of Mud Lust". Time magazine. Time Inc. Retrieved 2008-03-01. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
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  192. ^ Clines, Francis X. (1996-10-10). "Economy Dominates Kemp-Gore Debate". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-02. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
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  194. ^ DePalma, Anthony (1996-10-11). "Both Kemp and Gore Erred in Debate Over Policy on Mexico". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-04. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  195. ^ Berke, Richard L. (2000-08-27). "The Nation; Surprise! Debates May Matter. And Help Bush". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-15. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
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  198. ^ Hesnball, Mark; Isikoff, Michael (2005-04-25). "Oil-For-Food: How Much Did Boutros-Ghali Hear?". Newsweek, Inc. Retrieved 2008-02-24. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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  201. ^ Norris, Floyd (1996-08-18). "Jack Kemp: A Director With No Shares". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-08. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  202. ^ Ramo, Joshua Cooper; Jackson, David S. (1997-05-12). "The Prince of San Mateo". Time magazine. Time Inc. Retrieved 2008-03-01. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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  209. ^ Greenhouse, Steven (2000-05-16). "Coalition Urges Easing of Immigration Laws". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-08. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  210. ^ Lichtblau, Eric (2005-11-19). "Top Names Aid Fund for Libby". The New York Times. The New York Times Company. Retrieved 2008-03-02. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
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  212. ^ Edwards, John; Kemp, Jack (2006). "Russia's Wrong Direction: What The United States Can And Should Do" (PDF). Council on Foreign Relations, Inc. Retrieved 2008-03-03.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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References

  • Clinton, Bill (2005). My Life. Vintage. ISBN 1-4000-3003-X.
  • Foer, Franklin (2004). How Soccer Explains the World. Harper.
  • Gruver, Ed (1997). The American Football League: A Year-by-Year History, 1960-1969, McFarland & Company, Inc., ISBN 0-7864-0399-3.
  • Lodge, George (2000). "The Reagan Plan". Harvard Business School 9-381-173.
  • Maiorana, Sal (1994). Relentless: The Hard-hitting History of Buffalo Bills Football, Quality Sports Publications, ISBN 1-885758-00-6.
  • Maiorana, Sal (2000). Relentless: The Hard-hitting History of Buffalo Bills Football, Volume II Quality Sports Publications, ISBN 1-885758-17-0.

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Government offices

Template:USRep succession box Template:USRep succession box Template:USRep succession box

Preceded by United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
1989 – 1993
Succeeded by
Preceded by Republican Party Vice Presidential candidate
1996 (lost)
Succeeded by
Preceded by American Football League MVP
1965
with Paul Lowe
Succeeded by
Sporting positions
New title
New team created
San Diego Chargers Starting Quarterback
19601962
Succeeded by
Preceded by Buffalo Bills Starting Quarterbacks
1962–1969
Succeeded by

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