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  1. #1
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    Ted Kennedy Dies of Brain Cancer at Age 77

    Ted Kennedy Dies of Brain Cancer at Age 77
    'Liberal Lion' of the Senate Led Storied Political Family After Deaths of President John F. Kennedy, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy

    Aug. 26, 2009—


    Sen. Ted Kennedy died shortly before midnight Tuesday at his home in Hyannis Port, Mass., at age 77.

    The man known as the "liberal lion of the Senate" had fought a more than year-long battle with brain cancer, and according to his son had lived longer with the disease than his doctors expected him to.

    "We've lost the irreplaceable center of our family and joyous light in our lives, but the inspiration of his faith, optimism, and perseverance will live on in our hearts forever," the Kennedy family said in a statement. "He loved this country and devoted his life to serving it."

    Sen. Edward Moore Kennedy, the youngest Kennedy brother who was left to head the family's political dynasty after his brothers President John F. Kennedy and Sen. Robert F. Kennedy were assassinated.

    Kennedy championed health care reform, working wages and equal rights in his storied career. In August, he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom -- the nation's highest civilian honor -- by President Obama. His daughter, Kara Kennedy, accepted the award on his behalf.

    Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, known as Ted or Teddy, was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor in May 2008 and underwent a successful brain surgery soon after that. But his health continued to deteriorate, and Kennedy suffered a seizure while attending the luncheon following President Barack Obama's inauguration.

    For Kennedy, the ascension of Obama was an important step toward realizing his goal of health care reform.

    At the Democratic National Convention in August 2008, the Massachusetts Democrat promised, "I pledge to you that I will be there next January on the floor of the United States Senate when we begin the great test."

    Sen. Kennedy made good on that pledge, but ultimately lost his battle with cancer.

    Kennedy was first elected to the Senate in 1962, at the age of 30, and his tenure there would span four decades.

    A hardworking, well-liked politician who became the standard-bearer of his brothers' liberal causes, his career was clouded by allegations of personal immorality and accusations that his family's clout helped him avoid the consequences of an accident that left a young woman dead.

    But for the younger members of the Kennedy clan, from his own three children to those of his brothers JFK and RFK, Ted Kennedy -- once seen as the youngest and least talented in a family of glamorous overachievers -- was both a surrogate father and the center of the family.

    And certainly it was Ted Kennedy who bore many of the tragedies of the family -- the violent deaths of four of his siblings, his son's battle with cancer, and the death of his nephew John F. Kennedy Jr. in a plane crash.


    Kennedy, Youngest Kennedy Brother, Led Political Dynasty in Wake of Tragedy

    Edward Moore Kennedy was born in Brookline, Mass., on Feb. 22, 1932, the ninth and youngest child of Joseph P. Kennedy and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy.

    His father, a third-generation Irish-American who became a multimillionaire businessman and served for a time as a U.S. ambassador to Britain, had risen high and was determined that his sons would rise higher still.

    Overshadowed by his elder siblings, Teddy, as he was known to family and friends, grew up mostly in the New York City suburb of Bronxville, N.Y., and attended private boarding schools. He was expelled from Harvard during his freshman year after he asked a friend to take an exam for him.

    After a two-year stint in the Army, Kennedy returned to earn degrees at Harvard and then the University of Virginia law school. He married Virginia Joan Bennett, known by her middle name, in 1958. The couple would have three children, Kara, Teddy Jr. and Patrick.

    By the time he reached adulthood, tragedy had already claimed some of his siblings: eldest brother Joe Jr. was killed in World War II, sister Kathleen died in a plane crash, and another sister, Rosemary, who was mildly retarded, had to be institutionalized following a botched lobotomy.

    But then the family hit its pinnacle in 1960, when John F. Kennedy became president.

    His brother's ascension created a political opportunity, and Joe Kennedy decided he should take over JFK's Senate seat. Ted Kennedy was only 28 at the time -- two years short of the required age -- so a family friend was found to hold the temporary appointment.

    In 1962, Ted Kennedy -- backed by his family money and the enthusiasm his name generated among Massachusetts' Catholics, was elected to the Senate.

    The Only One Left

    In 1963, President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas. His brother Robert became the focus of the family's -- and much of the country's -- dreams.

    Following the tragedy in Dallas, Robert and Ted Kennedy became closer than they had ever been as children.

    "When I was working for Robert Kennedy, there was hardly a day in which the two of them didn't physically get together, I would say at least three or four times," said Frank Mankiewicz, who served as an aide to Robert Kennedy. "I mean, if, if Sen. Robert Kennedy wasn't in his office, and nobody knew where he was, chances are he was seeing Ted about something."

    Five years later, while pursuing the Democratic presidential nomination in 1968 against Lyndon Johnson, Sen. Bobby Kennedy was shot and killed. That left Ted as the only surviving Kennedy son.

    "He seriously contemplated getting out of politics after Robert's death," said Kennedy biographer Adam Clymer. "He thought, you know, it might just be too much. He might be too obviously the next target and all of that. But he decided to stick it out and as he said on more than one occasion, pick up a fallen standard."

    Kennedy was seen by many as his brothers' heir, and perhaps he could have won the White House had he stepped into the presidential race then. But he didn't. And the very next year there occurred a tragedy that would forever block Ted Kennedy's presidential ambitions.

    In July 1969, following a party on Martha's Vineyard, Kennedy drove off a bridge on the tiny Massachusetts island of Chappaquiddick. The car plunged into the water. Kennedy escaped, but his passenger did not.

    Kennedy later said he dived into the water repeatedly in a vain attempt to save Mary Jo Kopechne, one of the "boiler room girls" who had worked on Bobby Kennedy's campaign. But Kopechne, 28, drowned, still trapped in the car.

    Questions arose about how Kennedy had known Kopechne -- he denied any "private relationship," and Kopechne's parents also insisted there was no relationship -- and why he failed to report the accident for about nine hours.

    Kennedy pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of leaving the scene of an accident. He received a two-month suspended sentence and lost his driver's license for a year, but the political price was higher.

    Kennedy was re-elected to the Senate in 1970, but the accident at Chappaquiddick effectively squashed his presidential hopes.

    He ran unsuccessfully for the Democratic nomination in 1979 against incumbent President Jimmy Carter.

    Once when his daughter Kara, then 19, was passing out campaign leaflets, a man took one and said to her, "You know your father killed a young woman about your age, don't you?"


    Kennedy Curse: Political Power, Personal Tragedy

    Sen. Ted Kennedy was not done confronting personal tragedy.

    In 1973, 12-year-old Teddy Jr. was diagnosed with bone cancer, and he had to have a leg amputated. Kennedy's marriage to Joan deteriorated. Some blamed her drinking, others cited his alleged womanizing. The couple divorced in 1981.

    In contrast, Kennedy's career in the Senate continued to flourish.

    He supported teachers' unions, women's and abortion rights, and health care reform. He sponsored the Family and Medical Leave Act. And he was seen as a stalwart of the Democratic Party, delivering several rousing speeches at conventions.

    Former Boston Glober reporter Tom Oliphant, who covered Kennedy's career in Washington, observed, "It's not all back slapping and, and personal relationships. I think one of the things that sets Kennedy's politics apart is his, what I call his dirty little secret. He works like a dog."

    Political analyst Mark Shields said Kennedy's "concerns were national concerns, but his forum for achieving his ends and changing policy, became the Senate. And he mastered it like nobody else I've ever seen."

    But another family incident exposed Kennedy's vulnerabilities and held him up to public censure.

    A nephew, William Kennedy Smith, was accused of raping a woman at the family's estate in Palm Beach, Fla. The case generated lurid headlines around the world. Kennedy was at the estate at the time of the alleged attack and had been at the bar where Smith met his accuser.

    Eyebrows were raised even further when a young woman who had been with Kennedy's son Patrick that night revealed that she had seen the senator roaming around the house at night, wearing an oxford shirt but no trousers.

    Smith was acquitted following a highly sensational trial, but the incident definitely left a dent in Kennedy's armor. His alleged heavy drinking and womanizing were widely lampooned, and in October 1991 he thought it prudent to be low-key in his opposition to Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas, who had been accused of sexually harassing a former subordinate.

    Kennedy's life, both professional and personal, took a turn for the better in 1992.

    He married Victoria Reggie, a divorced attorney with two children from a previous marriage, Curran and Caroline. That year Kennedy also supported Bill Clinton, an open admirer of the Kennedy clan.

    "Well, sometime during our courtship, I realized that I didn't want to live the rest of my life without Vicky," Kennedy said about his wife of nearly 30 years. "And since we have been together, it's made my life a lot more fulfilling. I think more serene, kind of emotional stability."

    Elected in 1992, President Bill Clinton appointed Kennedy's sister, Jean Kennedy Smith, ambassador to Ireland. And in 1994, Kennedy had the satisfaction of seeing his son Patrick elected to the House of Representatives from Rhode Island.

    But tragedy returned that year.

    In May 1994, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis died of cancer. Kennedy had remained close to his sister-in-law, who once quit her job at a publisher's after it came out with an unflattering biography of Ted.


    Kennedy's Battle With Cancer Lost

    Kennedy had served as a surrogate father for many of his nephews and nieces, but he may have been closest to Jackie's children, Caroline and John F. Kennedy Jr.

    He was horrified when in July 1999, five years after Jackie's death, John Jr. and his bride of two years, Carolyn Bessette Kennedy, along with her sister Lauren Bessette, were killed when the small plane John was piloting crashed off the Massachusetts island of Martha's Vineyard.

    Sen. Kennedy led the family during the harrowing wait for information as Coast Guard crews searched for the missing plane.

    When the bodies were retrieved from the ocean, Kennedy and his two sons went to identify the remains. The senator's eulogy for his nephew who "had every gift but length of years" and "the wife who became his perfect soul mate" touched grief-stricken Americans.

    It was an all-too-familiar sight for those who remember Ted Kennedy mourning the deaths of his brothers John and Robert, and helping the family bear up after the deaths of Robert's sons David and Michael.

    For decades, it was Ted Kennedy who carried the burden and led the way as the patriarch of a family seen as America's answer to royalty.


    Copyright © 2009 ABC News Internet Ventures

    http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/TedKenne ... id=6692022
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  2. #2
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    Massachusetts Leaders Weigh Giving Governor Appointment Powe

    They are already considering the replacement and how to manipulate the laws to do it quick.

    Massachusetts Leaders Weigh Giving Governor Appointment Power to Replace Kennedy

    After Sen. Edward Kennedy made the request in a poignant letter last week sent to Gov. Deval Patrick and the state's Senate president, Therese Murray, and House Speaker Robert DeLeo, only three senators have publicly signaled support.


    FOXNews.com

    Tuesday, August 25, 2009

    Despite an uproar earlier this year over the gubernatorial appointment of Roland Burris to the U.S. Senate, Democrats in Massachusetts are considering the political windfall of giving Gov. Deval Patrick authority to appoint a replacement for Sen. Edward Kennedy.

    A state senator told the Boston Globe Tuesday that Senate President Therese Murray is now open to the idea of giving Patrick the power to appoint a temporary successor to Kennedy.

    "She is listening to the members and keeping an open mind," state Sen. Robert O'Leary, a Democrat, told the newspaper. "I am full steam ahead and she understands that is fine with it."

    O'Leary is one of three senators urging Patrick, Murray and House Speaker Robert DeLeo to heed a request by the cancer-stricken Kennedy to change state law, which currently requires the governor to call an election within 145 to 160 days of receiving a resignation letter from a departing senator.

    Kennedy penned a poignant letter last week urging the leaders to change the law requiring a special election. In a joint statement last week to The Boston Globe, which first reported news of Kennedy's letter, both Murray and DeLeo were noncommittal.

    A legislative committee co-chairman overseeing a bill that would enact the change admitted to the Boston Herald Monday that the move is aimed at keeping a Democrat in the seat.

    "I want to make sure that as a Democrat we have a Democratic voice in there for the five months that it might be vacant," said Rep. Michael J. Moran, who chairs the legislative Election Laws Committee, told the newspaper.

    Asked whether he would support the change if Republican Mitt Romney were still governor, Moran laughed and said, "Of course there's a political side to this."

    Deliberation over the plan comes as Congress considers an overhaul of the nation's health care system, a life cause of Kennedy's. While Democrats hold a potentially filibuster-proof margin in Congress, the outcome of a health care reform bill could hinge on a single vote and some moderate Democrats have been wavering.

    The 77-year-old Kennedy has been convalescing at his homes in Washington and in Hyannis Port, as well as a rental property in Florida, but his absence from this month's funeral on Cape Cod for his sister, Eunice Kennedy Shriver, prompted a flurry of questions about his own health.

    Boston Globe columnist Jeff Jacoby is calling for Kennedy to resign, arguing that if the "absentee senator" truly believes the state should have two voices, then he should retire and allow the political process to move forward.

    Kennedy's letter acknowledged the state changed its succession law in 2004 to require a special election within five months to fill any vacancy. At the time, state legislative Democrats -- with a wide majority in both chambers -- were concerned because then-Gov. Romney had the power to directly fill a vacancy that may have been created by the departure of Democratic Sen. John Kerry, who was running for president.

    "It is vital for this commonwealth to have two voices speaking for the needs of its citizens and two votes in the Senate during the approximately five months between a vacancy and an election," Kennedy wrote to the state leaders.

    Kennedy suggested in the letter that the governor ensure the fairness of any appointment to replace him by seeking an "explicit personal commitment" his appointee will not seek the position on a permanent basis.

    Patrick kept his hand close to the vest in a statement last week.

    "It's typical of Ted Kennedy to be thinking ahead and about the people of Massachusetts when the rest of us are thinking about him," he said.

    Patrick was the top civil rights official in the Clinton administration, and he has argued about the importance of the public vote. But last fall he noted more than 40 other states fill congressional vacancies by gubernatorial appointment. He also cited the state's deteriorating fiscal condition as one argument to skip a special election and empower the governor to fill vacancies.

    "These are always sensitive calls, but there are sensitive calls and decisions that governors have to make," he said in December.

    The appointment of Burris by former Gov. Rod Blagojevich to the seat vacated by President Obama raised concerns last winter about gubernatorial appointments to the U.S. Senate. Blagojevich is facing felony charges related to pay-for-play schemes. Burris testified in an affidavit to a grand jury that he had offered to help Blagojevich's re-election in exchange for the appointment before rescinding the offer, realizing it would not be legal or ethical.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/08 ... t-quickly/
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  3. #3
    Senior Member azwreath's Avatar
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    Kennedy "penned a poignant letter" did he?

    With cancer eroding his brain which would kill him less than a week later?

    I've never met anyone that far along with brain cancer who would've been considered to be of sound mind..........or does that not apply to Kennedys?

    It's not my habit to ever wish ill upon anyone, or find any joy in a death, but I just hope that without his "influence" this country has some chance of finally turning around. The man spent his entire political career destroying it.
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    Senior Member agrneydgrl's Avatar
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    I feel the same AZ. I feel that he thought he was doing the right thing, but I think he was helping to ruinthis country with his liberal ideas. It seemed like he was still trying to manipulate the system to the end, asking to change a law that he fought hard to implement just to benefit his party, not the country.

  5. #5
    Senior Member judyweller's Avatar
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    He did do much to ruin this country -- I can't say that I am sorry he is dead.

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    Yea, the wicked witch is dead..!! ;)

    He did do much to ruin this country -- I can't say that I am sorry he is dead.
    I hear ya LOUD and clear..!!

    [size=150]NOTHING about “Drunken Chappaquiddickâ€
    No need for ‘mass roundups’, simply ENFORCE EXISTING law*& MANDATE the worker ID, ..but SEVEN amnesties? Hmm, WHO cried wolf?!

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by judyweller
    He did do much to ruin this country -- I can't say that I am sorry he is dead.
    im reading posts on dallas and houston paper and alot of people are saying the same thing.
    and talking about chappaquiddick and how he is partly to blame for the immigration mess we are in today

  8. #8
    Senior Member ReggieMay's Avatar
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    Rest in peace, Mary Jo.
    "A Nation of sheep will beget a government of Wolves" -Edward R. Murrow

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  9. #9
    Senior Member Reciprocity's Avatar
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    Guys! Guys! Yes he was our adversary but to revel and celebrate his death is just plain wrong, he was still a US Senator who served his country and he still needs to be respected. May he rest in peace, and deepest regards to the Kennedy family.
    “In questions of power…let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution.” –Thomas Jefferson

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Reciprocity
    Guys! Guys! Yes he was our adversary but to revel and celebrate his death is just plain wrong, he was still a US Senator who served his country and he still needs to be respected. May he rest in peace, and deepest regards to the Kennedy family.
    he was also a drunk..
    he was also an adulter
    he was also a murderer
    he was also a crooked politician

    i can say i feel sorry for the family, but not for him

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