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A vice president (British English - government: vice-president; business: director) is an officer in government or business who is below a president (managing director) in rank. The name comes from the Latin vice meaning 'in place of'.[1] In some countries, the vice president is called the deputy president. A common colloquial term for the office is vee-pee, deriving from a phonetic interpretation of the abbreviation VP.
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In government, a vice president is a person whose primary responsibility is to replace the president on the event of his or her death, resignation or incapacity. Vice presidents are either elected jointly with the president as his or her running mate, elected separately, or appointed independently after the president's election.
Most, but not all, governments with vice presidents have only one person in this role at any time. If the president is not present, dies, resigns, or is otherwise unable to fulfill his or her duties, the vice president will generally serve as president. In many presidential systems, the vice president does not wield much day-to-day political power, but is still considered an important member of the cabinet. Several vice presidents in the Americas held the position of President of the Senate; this is the case, for example, in Argentina, the United States, and Uruguay. The vice president sometimes assumes some of the ceremonial duties of the president, such as attending functions and events that the actual president may be too busy to attend; the Vice President of the United States, for example, often attends funerals of world leaders on behalf of the President. In this capacity, the vice president may thus assume the role of a de facto symbolic head of state, a position which is lacking in a system of government where the powers of head of state and government are fused.
In business, "vice president" refers to a rank in management. A trade union may also elect a vice president. Most companies that use this title generally have large numbers of people with the title of vice president with different categories (e.g. vice president for finance, or vice president in charge of hiring); their closest analogy within the US federal government structure is therefore not the Vice President as such, but a Cabinet Secretary. A vice president in business usually reports directly to the President or CEO of the company. When there are several vice presidents in a company they are sometimes ranked by naming the highest ranking Senior Executive Vice President which is next to President, the second highest ranking Executive Vice President, then Senior Vice President and the remainder of the management team just VP. The title of Assistant Vice President or Associate Vice President or Assistant President or Associate President is typically used in large organizations as a subordinate rank to Vice President.
In large brokerage firms and investment banks, there are usually several Vice Presidents in each local branch office, the title being more of a marketing approach for customers, than denoting an actual managerial position within the company.
A corporate vice president is rarely "second in line" to succeed the corporate president following death, dismissal, or resignation, though in the event of a sudden vacancy one or sometimes two of the vice presidents may act as president. New presidents are usually appointed by the board of directors.
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For example,
Rank | U.S. Executive Officer | U.K. Executive Officer |
---|---|---|
1 | President | Managing Director |
2 | Deputy President or SEVP or EVP | Managing Director |
3 | EVP or SVP | Deputy Managing Director |
4 | SVP or CVP | Executive Director |
5 | CVP or VP (old type company) | VP |
In most clubs as well as other organizations, one or multiple Vice Presidents are elected by the members of the organization. When multiple vice presidents are elected, the positions are usually numbered to prevent confusion as to who may preside or succeed to the office of president upon vacancy of that office (for example: 1st Vice President, 2nd Vice President, and so on). In some cases vice presidents are given titles due to their specific responsibilities, for example: Vice President of Operations, Finance, etc.
The primary responsibility of the Vice President of a club or organization is to be prepared to assume the powers and duties of the office of the President in the case of a vacancy in that office. If the office of President becomes vacant, the Vice President (or in clubs with multiple Vice Presidents, the VP that occupies the highest ranking office), will assume the office of President, with the lower Vice Presidents to fill in the remaining Vice Presidencies, leaving the lowest Vice Presidency to be filled by either election or appointment. If the bylaws of a club specifically provide of the Officer title of President-Elect, that officer would assume the powers and duties of the President upon vacancy of that office.
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This article is part of a series on Joe Biden |
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Joseph Robinette "Joe" Biden, Jr. (pronunciation: /ˈdʒoʊsɨf rɒbɨˈnɛt ˈbaɪdən/; born November 20, 1942) is the 47th and current Vice President of the United States, serving under President Barack Obama. A Democrat, he was a United States Senator from Delaware from January 3, 1973 until his resignation on January 15, 2009, following his election to the Vice Presidency.
Biden was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania and lived there for ten years before moving to Delaware. He became an attorney in 1969, and was elected to a county council in 1970. Biden was first elected to the Senate in 1972 and became the sixth-youngest senator in U.S. history. He was re-elected to the Senate six times, was the fourth most senior senator at the time of his resignation, and is the 15th-longest serving Senator in history. Biden was a long-time member and former chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee. His strong advocacy helped bring about U.S. military assistance and intervention during the Bosnian War. He opposed the Gulf War in 1991. He voted in favor of the Iraq War Resolution in 2002, but later proposed resolutions to alter U.S. strategy there. He has also served as chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, dealing with issues related to drug policy, crime prevention, and civil liberties, and led creation of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act and Violence Against Women Act. He chaired the Judiciary Committee during the contentious U.S. Supreme Court nominations of Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas.
Biden unsuccessfully sought the Democratic presidential nomination in 1988 and 2008, both times dropping out early in the race. Barack Obama selected Biden to be the Democratic Party nominee for Vice President in the 2008 U.S. presidential election. Biden is the first Roman Catholic and the first Delawarean to become Vice President of the United States. As Vice President, Biden has been heavily involved in Obama's decision-making process and held the oversight role for infrastructure spending from the Obama stimulus package aimed at counteracting the late-2000s recession. His ability to negotiate with Congressional Republicans played a key role in bringing about the bipartisan deals that resulted in the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010 that resolved a taxation deadlock and the Budget Control Act of 2011 that resolved the United States debt ceiling crisis.
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Biden was born in Scranton, Pennsylvania,[1] the son of Joseph Robinette Biden, Sr. (1915–2002)[2] and Catherine Eugenia "Jean" (née Finnegan; 1917–2010).[3] He was the first of four siblings[1] in a Catholic family. His mother was of Irish descent, with roots in County Londonderry.[4][5][6] His paternal grandparents, Mary Elizabeth (Robinette) and Joseph H. Biden, an oil businessman from Baltimore, had English, Irish, and French ancestry.[7] He has two brothers, James Brian Biden and Francis W. Biden, and a sister, Valerie (Biden) Owens.[8] His maternal great-grandfather, Edward F. Blewitt, was a member of the Pennsylvania State Senate.[9]
Biden's father had been very well-off earlier in his life, but had suffered several business reverses by the time Biden was born,[10] and for several years the family had to live with Biden's maternal grandparents, the Finnegans.[10] When the Scranton area went into economic decline during the 1950s, Biden's father could not find enough work.[11] In 1953, the Biden family moved to an apartment in Claymont, Delaware, where they lived for a few years before moving to a house in Wilmington, Delaware.[10] Joe Biden Sr. then did better as a used car salesman, and the family's circumstances were middle class.[10][11][12]
Biden attended the Archmere Academy in Claymont,[13] where he was a standout halfback/wide receiver on the high school football team; he helped lead a perennially losing team to an undefeated season in his senior year.[10][14] He played on the baseball team as well.[10] During these years, he participated in an anti-segregation sit-in at a Wilmington theatre.[15] Academically, Biden was undistinguished,[10] but he was a natural leader among the students.[16] He graduated in 1961.[13]
Biden attended the University of Delaware in Newark, where he was more interested in sports and socializing than in studying,[10] although his classmates were impressed by his cramming abilities.[15] He played halfback with the Blue Hens freshman football team,[14] but he dropped a junior year plan to play for the varsity team as a defensive back, enabling him to spend more time with his out-of-state girlfriend.[14][17] He double majored in history and political science and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1965,[1] ranking 506th of 688 in his class.[18]
He went on to receive his Juris Doctor from Syracuse University's College of Law in 1968,[19] where by his own description he found it to be "the biggest bore in the world" and pulled many all-nighters to get by.[15][20] During his first year there, he was accused of having plagiarized 5 of 15 pages of a law review article. Biden said it was inadvertent due to his not knowing the proper rules of citation, and he was permitted to retake the course after receiving a grade of F, which was subsequently dropped from his record.[20] He was admitted to the Delaware Bar in 1969.[19]
Biden received five student draft deferments during this period, with the first coming in late 1963 and the last in early 1968, at the peak of the Vietnam War.[21] In April 1968, he was reclassified by the Selective Service System as not available for service due to having had asthma as a teenager.[21][22] Biden was not a part of the anti-Vietnam War movement; he would later say that at the time he was preoccupied with marriage and law school, and that he "wore sports coats ... not tie-dyed".[23]
Negative impressions of drinking alcohol in the Biden and Finnegan families and in the neighborhood led to Joe Biden becoming a teetotaler.[10][24] Biden suffered from stuttering through much of his childhood and into his twenties;[25] he overcame it via long hours spent reciting poetry in front of a mirror.[16]
On August 27, 1966, Biden, then a law student, married Neilia Hunter, who was from an affluent background in Skaneateles, New York and had attended Syracuse University.[1][10][26] They had met in 1964 while on spring break in the Bahamas, and he had overcome her parents' initial reluctance for her to be dating a Roman Catholic.[27] They had three children, Joseph R. "Beau" Biden III (born 1969), Robert Hunter (born 1970), and Naomi Christina (born 1971).[1]
In 1969, Biden began practicing law in Wilmington, Delaware, first as a public defender and then with his own firm, Biden and Walsh.[15] Corporate law, however, did not appeal to him and criminal law did not pay well.[10] He supplemented his income by managing properties.[28] He ran as a Democrat for the New Castle County Council on a liberal platform that included support for public housing in the suburban area.[15] He won by a solid margin in the usually Republican district,[15] and served from 1970 to 1972[19] while continuing his private law practice as well.[29]
His entry into the 1972 U.S. Senate election in Delaware presented Biden with a unique circumstance. Longtime Delaware political figure and Republican incumbent Senator J. Caleb Boggs was considering retirement, which would likely have left U.S. Representative Pete du Pont and Wilmington Mayor Harry G. Haskell, Jr. in a divisive primary fight. To avoid that, U.S. President Richard M. Nixon helped convince Boggs to run again with full party support.[30] No other Democrat wanted to run against Boggs.[15] Biden's campaign had virtually no money and was given no chance of winning.[10] It was managed by his sister Valerie Biden Owens (who would go on to manage his future campaigns as well) and staffed by other members of his family, and relied upon handed-out newsprint position papers and meeting voters face-to-face;[31] the small size of the state and lack of a major media market made the approach feasible.[28] Biden did receive some assistance from the AFL-CIO and Democratic pollster Patrick Caddell.[15] Biden's campaign issues focused on withdrawal from Vietnam, the environment, civil rights, mass transit, more equitable taxation, health care, the public's dissatisfaction with politics-as-usual, and "change".[15][31] During the summer Biden trailed by almost 30 percentage points,[15] but his energy level, his attractive young family, and his ability to connect with voters' emotions gave the surging Biden an advantage over the ready-to-retire Boggs.[12] Biden won the November 7, 1972 election in an upset by a margin of 3,162 votes.[31]
On December 18, 1972, a few weeks after the election, Biden's wife and one-year-old daughter were killed in an automobile accident while Christmas shopping in Hockessin, Delaware.[1] Neilia Biden's station wagon was hit by a tractor-trailer as she pulled out from an intersection; the truck driver was cleared of any wrongdoing.[32] Biden's two sons, Beau and Hunter, were critically injured in the accident, but both eventually made full recoveries.[1] Biden considered resigning to care for them;[12] he was persuaded not to by Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield and others and was sworn into office from one of their bedsides.[33] The accident left Biden filled with both anger and religious doubt: "I liked to [walk around seedy neighborhoods] at night when I thought there was a better chance of finding a fight ... I had not known I was capable of such rage ... I felt God had played a horrible trick on me."[34]
To be at home every day for his young sons,[35] Biden began the practice of commuting every day by Amtrak train for 1½ hours each way from his home in the Wilmington suburbs to Washington, D.C., which he continued to do throughout his Senate career.[12] In the aftermath of the accident, he had trouble focusing on work, and appeared to just go through the motions of being a senator. In his memoirs, Biden notes that staffers were taking bets on how long he would last.[26][36] A single father for five years, Biden left standing orders that he be interrupted in the Senate at any time if his sons called.[33] In remembrance of his wife and daughter, Biden does not work on December 18, the anniversary of the accident.[37] Biden's elder son, Beau, later became Delaware Attorney General and an Army Judge Advocate serving in Iraq;[38] his younger son, Hunter, became a Washington attorney and lobbyist.[39]
In 1975, Biden met Jill Tracy Jacobs, who grew up in Willow Grove, Pennsylvania, and would become a teacher in Delaware.[40] They had met on a blind date with the help of Biden's brother, although it turned out that Biden had already noticed her in a local advertisement.[40] Biden would credit her with renewing his interest in both politics and life.[41] On June 17, 1977, Biden and Jacobs married.[1] They have one daughter, Ashley Blazer (born 1981),[1] who later became a social worker.[39] The Bidens are Roman Catholics and regularly attend Mass at St. Joseph on the Brandywine in Greenville, Delaware.[42]
When Biden took office on January 3, 1973, at age 30 (the minimum age to become a U.S. Senator), he became the sixth-youngest senator in U.S. history.[44] In 1974, freshman Senator Biden was named one of the 200 Faces for the Future by Time magazine.[45]
Biden was subsequently elected to six additional terms, in the elections of 1978, 1984, 1990, 1996, 2002, and 2008, usually getting about 60 percent of the vote.[46] He did not face strong opposition; Governor Pierre S. du Pont, IV chose not to run against him in 1984.[47] Biden spent 28 years as a junior senator due to the two-year seniority of his Republican colleague William V. Roth, Jr.. After Roth was defeated for re-election by Tom Carper in 2000, Biden became Delaware's senior senator. He then became the longest-serving senator in Delaware history.[48] In May 1999, Biden set the mark for youngest senator to cast 10,000 votes.[49]
In February 1988, after suffering from several episodes of increasingly severe neck pain, Biden was taken by long-distance ambulance to Walter Reed Army Medical Center and given lifesaving surgery to correct an intracranial berry aneurysm that had begun leaking;[50][51] the situation was serious enough that a priest had administered last rites at the hospital.[52] While recuperating, he suffered a pulmonary embolism, which represented a major complication.[51] Another operation to repair a second aneurysm, which had caused no symptoms but was also at risk from bursting, was performed in May 1988.[51][53] The hospitalization and recovery kept Biden from his duties in the U.S. Senate for seven months.[37] Biden has had no recurrences or effects from the aneurysms since then.[51]
Biden was a long-time member of the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary, which he chaired from 1987 until 1995 and on which he served as ranking minority member from 1981 until 1987 and again from 1995 until 1997. In this capacity, he dealt with issues related to drug policy, crime prevention, and civil liberties.
While chairman, Biden presided over the two most contentious U.S. Supreme Court confirmation hearings in history, those for Robert Bork in 1987 and Clarence Thomas in 1991.[12] In the Bork hearings, Biden stated his opposition to Bork soon after the nomination, reversing an approval in an interview of a hypothetical Bork nomination he had made the previous year and angering conservatives who thought he could not conduct the hearings dispassionately.[54] At the close, Biden won praise for conducting the proceedings fairly and with good humor and courage, as his 1988 presidential campaign collapsed in the middle of the hearings.[54][55] Rejecting some of the less intellectually honest arguments that other Bork opponents were making,[12] Biden framed his discussion around the belief that the U.S. Constitution provides rights to liberty and privacy that extend beyond those explicitly enumerated in the text, and that Bork's strong originalism was ideologically incompatible with that view.[55] Bork's nomination was rejected in the committee by a 9–5 vote,[55] and then rejected in the full Senate by a 58–42 margin.
In the Thomas hearings, Biden's questions on constitutional issues were often long and convoluted, sometimes such that Thomas forgot the question being asked.[56] Thomas later wrote that despite earlier private assurances from the senator, Biden's questions had been akin to a beanball.[57] The nomination came out of the committee without a recommendation, with Biden opposed.[12] In part due to his own bad experiences in 1987 with his presidential campaign, Biden was reluctant to let personal matters enter into the hearings.[56] Biden initially shared with committee, but not the public, Anita Hill's sexual harassment charges, on the grounds she was not yet willing to testify.[12] After she did, Biden did not permit other witnesses to testify further on her behalf, such as Angela Wright (who made a similar charge) and experts on harassment.[58] Biden said he was striving to preserve Thomas's right to privacy and the decency of the hearings.[56][58] The nomination was approved by a 52–48 vote in the full Senate, with Biden again opposed.[12] During and afterwards, Biden was strongly criticized by liberal legal groups and women's groups for having mishandled the hearings and having not done enough to support Hill.[58] Biden subsequently sought out women to serve on the Judiciary Committee and emphasized women's issues in the committee's legislative agenda.[12]
Biden was involved in crafting many federal crime laws. In 1984, he was Democratic floor manager for the successful passage of the Comprehensive Crime Control Act; civil libertarians praised him for modifying some of the Act's provisions, and it was his most important legislative accomplishment at that point in time.[47] He later spearheaded the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994, also known as the Biden Crime Law, and the landmark Violence Against Women Act of 1994 (VAWA), which contains a broad array of measures to combat domestic violence and provides billions of dollars in federal funds to address gender-based crimes. In 2000, the Supreme Court ruled in United States v. Morrison that the section of VAWA allowing a federal civil remedy for victims of gender-motivated violence exceeded Congress's authority and therefore was unconstitutional.[59] Congress reauthorized VAWA in 2000 and 2005.[60] Biden has said, "I consider the Violence Against Women Act the single most significant legislation that I’ve crafted during my 35-year tenure in the Senate."[61] In 2004 and 2005, Biden enlisted major American technology companies in diagnosing the problems of the Austin, Texas-based National Domestic Violence Hotline, and to donate equipment and expertise to it in a successful effort to improve its services.[62][63]
Biden was critical of the actions of Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr during the 1990s Whitewater controversy and Lewinsky scandal investigations, and said "it's going to be a cold day in hell" before another Independent Counsel is granted the same powers.[64] Biden voted to acquit on both charges during the impeachment of President Clinton.
As chairman of the International Narcotics Control Caucus, Biden wrote the laws that created the U.S. "Drug Czar", who oversees and coordinates national drug control policy. In April 2003, he introduced the controversial Reducing Americans' Vulnerability to Ecstasy Act, also known as the RAVE Act. He continued to work to stop the spread of "date rape drugs" such as flunitrazepam, and drugs such as Ecstasy and Ketamine. In 2004, he worked to pass a bill outlawing steroids like androstenedione, the drug used by many baseball players.[12]
Biden's legislation to promote college aid and loan programs allows families to deduct on their annual income tax returns up to $10,000 per year in higher education expenses. His "Kids 2000" legislation established a public/private partnership to provide computer centers, teachers, Internet access, and technical training to young people, particularly to low-income and at-risk youth.[65]
Biden was also a long-time member of the U.S. Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. In 1997, he became the ranking minority member and chaired the committee in January 2001 and from June 2001 through 2003. When Democrats re-took control of the Senate following the 2006 elections, Biden again assumed the top spot on the committee in 2007.[66] Biden was generally a liberal internationalist in foreign policy.[67][68] He collaborated effectively with important Republican Senate figures such as Richard Lugar and Jesse Helms and sometimes went against elements of his own party.[66][67] Biden was also co-chair of the NATO Observer Group in the Senate.[69] A partial list covering this time showed Biden meeting with some 150 leaders from nearly 60 countries and international organizations.[70] Biden held frequent hearings as chair of the committee, as well as holding many subcommittee hearings during the three times he chaired the Subcommittee on European Affairs.[68]
During his first decade in the Senate, Biden focused on arms control issues.[68][71] In response to the refusal of the U.S. Congress to ratify the SALT II Treaty signed in 1979 by Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev and President Jimmy Carter, Biden took the initiative to meet the Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, educated him about American concerns and interests, and secured several changes to address objections of the Foreign Relations Committee.[72] When the Reagan administration wanted to interpret the 1972 SALT I Treaty loosely in order to allow the Strategic Defense Initiative to proceed, Biden argued for strict adherence to the treaty's terms.[68] Biden clashed again with the Reagan administration in 1986 over economic sanctions against South Africa, leading to a heated exchange between the senator and Secretary of State George P. Shultz.[71]
Biden became interested in the Yugoslav Wars after hearing about Serbian abuses during the Croatian War of Independence in 1991.[68] Once the Bosnian War broke out, Biden was among the first to call for the "lift and strike" policy of lifting the arms embargo, training Bosnian Muslims and supporting them with NATO air strikes, and investigating war crimes.[66][68] Both the George H. W. Bush administration and Clinton administration were reluctant to implement the policy, fearing Balkan entanglement.[67][68] In April 2003, Biden spent a week in the Balkans and held a tense three-hour meeting with Serbian leader Slobodan Milošević.[73] Biden related that he told Milošević, "I think you're a damn war criminal and you should be tried as one."[73] Biden wrote an amendment in 1992 to compel the Bush administration to arm the Bosnians, but deferred in 1994 to a somewhat softer stance preferred by the Clinton administration, before signing on the following year to a stronger measure sponsored by Bob Dole and Joe Lieberman.[73] The 1995 NATO bombing campaign in Bosnia and Herzegovina then led to the Dayton Agreement and a successful NATO peacekeeping effort.[68] Biden has called his role in affecting Balkans policy in the mid-1990s his "proudest moment in public life" that related to foreign policy.[67] In 1999, during the Kosovo War, Biden supported the NATO bombing campaign against Serbia and Montenegro,[68] and co-sponsored with his friend John McCain the McCain-Biden Kosovo Resolution, which called on President Clinton to use all necessary force, including ground troops, to confront Milosevic over Serbian actions in Kosovo.[67][74] In 1998, Congressional Quarterly named Biden one of "Twelve Who Made a Difference" for playing a lead role in several foreign policy matters, including NATO enlargement and the successful passage of bills to streamline foreign affairs agencies and punish religious persecution overseas.[49]
Biden had voted against authorization for the Gulf War in 1991,[67] siding with 45 of the 55 Democratic senators; he said the U.S. was bearing almost all the burden in the anti-Iraq coalition.[75] Biden was a strong supporter of the 2001 war in Afghanistan, saying "Whatever it takes, we should do it."[76] Regarding Iraq, Biden stated in 2002 that Saddam Hussein was a threat to national security, and that there was no option but to eliminate that threat.[77] The Bush administration rejected an effort Biden undertook with Senator Richard Lugar to pass a resolution authorizing military action only after the exhaustion of diplomatic efforts. In October 2002, Biden voted in favor of the Authorization for Use of Military Force Against Iraq, justifying the Iraq War.[67] While he soon became a critic of the war and viewed his vote as a "mistake", he did not push to require a U.S. withdrawal.[67][73] He supported the appropriations to pay for the occupation, but argued repeatedly that the war should be internationalized, that more soldiers were needed, and that the Bush administration should "level with the American people" about the cost and length of the conflict.[66][74]
By late 2006, Biden's stance had shifted, and he opposed the troop surge of 2007,[67][73] saying General David Petraeus was "dead, flat wrong" in believing the surge could work.[76] Biden was instead a leading advocate for dividing Iraq into a loose federation of three ethnic states.[78] In November 2006, Biden and Leslie H. Gelb, President Emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations, released a comprehensive strategy to end sectarian violence in Iraq.[79] Rather than continuing the present approach or withdrawing, the plan called for "a third way": federalizing Iraq and giving Kurds, Shiites, and Sunnis "breathing room" in their own regions.[80] In September 2007, a non-binding resolution passed the Senate endorsing such a scheme.[79] However, the idea was unfamiliar, had no political constituency, and failed to gain traction.[76] Iraq’s political leadership united in denouncing the resolution as a de facto partitioning of the country, and the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad issued a statement distancing itself.[79]
In March 2004, Biden secured the brief release of Libyan democracy activist and political prisoner Fathi Eljahmi, after meeting with leader Muammar Gaddafi in Tripoli.[81][82] In May 2008, Biden sharply criticized President George W. Bush for his speech to Israel's Knesset in which he suggested that some Democrats were acting in the same way some Western leaders did when they appeased Hitler in the runup to World War II. Biden stated: "This is bullshit. This is malarkey. This is outrageous. Outrageous for the president of the United States to go to a foreign country, sit in the Knesset ... and make this kind of ridiculous statement." Biden later apologized for using the expletive. Biden further stated, "Since when does this administration think that if you sit down, you have to eliminate the word 'no' from your vocabulary?"[83]
Biden was a familiar figure to his Delaware constituency, by virtue of his daily train commuting from there,[12] and generally sought to attend to state needs.[46] Biden was a strong supporter of increased Amtrak funding and rail security;[46] he hosted barbecues and an annual Christmas dinner for the Amtrak crews, and they would sometimes hold the last train of the night a few minutes so he could catch it.[28][46] (He earned the nickname "Amtrak Joe" as a result, and in 2011, Amtrak's Wilmington Station was named the Joseph R. Biden, Jr. Railroad Station, in honor of the over 7,000 trips he made from there.[84][85]) He was an advocate for Delaware military installations, including Dover Air Force Base and New Castle Air National Guard Base.[86]
In 1975, Biden broke from liberal orthodoxy when he took legislative action to limit desegregation busing.[47] In doing so, he said busing was a "bankrupt idea [that violated] the cardinal rule of common sense," and that his opposition would make it easier for other liberals to follow suit.[47] Three years later, Wilmington's federally-mandated cross-district busing plan generated much turmoil, and in trying to legislate a compromise solution Biden found himself alienating both black and white voters for a while.[87]
Since 1991, Biden has served as an adjunct professor at the Widener University School of Law, Delaware's only law school, where he has taught a seminar on constitutional law.[88][89] The seminar has been one of Widener's most popular, often with a waiting list for enrollment.[89] Biden has typically co-taught the course with another professor, taking on at least half the course minutes and sometimes flying back from overseas to make one of the classes.[90][91]
Biden was a sponsor of bankruptcy legislation during the 2000s, which was sought by MBNA, one of Delaware's largest companies, and other credit card issuers.[12] Biden fought for certain amendments to the bill that would indirectly protect homeowners and forbid anti-abortion felons from using bankruptcy to discharge fines; the overall bill was vetoed by Bill Clinton in 2000 but then finally passed as the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and Consumer Protection Act in 2005, with Biden supporting.[12] The downstate Sussex County region is the nation's top chicken-producing area, and Biden held up trade agreements with Russia when that country stopped importing U.S. chickens.[46]
In 2007, Biden requested and gained $67 million worth of projects for his constituents through congressional earmarks.[92]
Biden sits on the board of advisors of the Close Up Foundation, which brings high school students to Washington for interaction with legislators on Capitol Hill.[93]
With a net worth between $59,000 and $366,000, and almost no outside income or investment income, he was consistently ranked as one of the least wealthy members of the Senate.[94][95][96] Biden stated that he was listed as the second poorest member in Congress, a distinction that he was not proud of, but attributed to being elected early in his career.[97] Biden realized early in his senatorial career how vulnerable poorer public officials are to offers of financial contributions in exchange for policy support, and he pushed campaign finance reform measures during his first term.[47]
During his years as a senator, Biden amassed a reputation for loquaciousness,[98][99][100] with his questions and remarks during Senate hearings being especially known for being long-winded.[101][102] He has been a strong speaker and debater and a frequent and effective guest on the Sunday morning talk shows.[102] In public appearances, he is known to deviate from prepared remarks at will.[103] According to political analyst Mark Halperin, he has shown "a persistent tendency to say silly, offensive, and off-putting things";[102] The New York Times writes that Biden's "weak filters make him capable of blurting out pretty much anything".[100] Nor is Biden known for modesty; journalist James Traub has written that "Biden’s vanity and his regard for his own gifts seem considerable even by the rarefied standards of the U.S. Senate."[76]
Political writer Howard Fineman has said that, "Biden is not an academic, he’s not a theoretical thinker, he’s a great street pol. He comes from a long line of working people in Scranton—auto salesmen, car dealers, people who know how to make a sale. He has that great Irish gift."[28] Political columnist David S. Broder has viewed Biden as having grown since he came to Washington and since his failed 1988 presidential bid: "He responds to real people—that’s been consistent throughout. And his ability to understand himself and deal with other politicians has gotten much much better."[28] Traub concludes that "Biden is the kind of fundamentally happy person who can be as generous toward others as he is to himself."[76]
After ending his second presidential bid in January 2008, Biden focused instead on running for a seventh Senate term against Republican Christine O'Donnell. In late August 2008, he was picked by Obama to be his running mate. Biden nevertheless continued to run for Senate re-election as well as Vice President,[104] as permitted by Delaware state law.[46] On November 4, 2008, Biden was re-elected as senator, in addition to winning the vice presidency.[105]
Having won both races, Biden made a point of holding off his resignation from the Senate so that he could be sworn in for his seventh term on January 6, 2009.[106] He became the youngest senator ever to be sworn in for a seventh full term, and said, "In all my life, the greatest honor bestowed upon me has been serving the people of Delaware as their United States senator."[106] Biden cast his last Senate vote on January 15, supporting the release of the second $350 billion for the Troubled Asset Relief Program.[107] Biden resigned from the Senate later that day; in emotional farewell remarks on the Senate floor, where he had spent most of his adult life, Biden said, "Every good thing I have seen happen here, every bold step taken in the 36-plus years I have been here, came not from the application of pressure by interest groups, but through the maturation of personal relationships."[108]
Delaware's Democratic governor, Ruth Ann Minner, announced on November 24, 2008, that she would appoint Biden's longtime senior adviser Ted Kaufman to succeed Biden in the Senate.[109] Kaufman said he would only serve two years, until Delaware's special senate election in 2010.[109] Biden's son Beau ruled himself out of the 2008 selection process due to his impending tour in Iraq with the Delaware Army National Guard.[110] He was a possible candidate for the 2010 special election, but in early 2010 said he would not run for the seat.[111]
A method that political scientists use for gauging ideology is to compare the annual ratings by the Americans for Democratic Action (ADA) with the ratings by the American Conservative Union (ACU).[112] Biden has a lifetime liberal 72 percent score from the ADA through 2004, while the ACU awarded Biden a lifetime conservative rating of 13 percent through 2008.[113] Using another metric, Biden has a lifetime average liberal score of 77.5 percent, according to a National Journal analysis that places him ideologically among the center of Senate Democrats.[114] The Almanac of American Politics rates congressional votes as liberal or conservative on the political spectrum, in three policy areas: economic, social, and foreign. For 2005–2006, Biden's average ratings were as follows: the economic rating was 80 percent liberal and 13 percent conservative, the social rating was 78 percent liberal and 18 percent conservative, and the foreign rating was 71 percent liberal and 25 percent conservative.[115] This has not changed much over time; his liberal ratings in the mid-1980s were also in the 70–80 percent range.[47]
Various advocacy groups have given Biden scores or grades as to how well his votes align with the positions of each group. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) gives him an 86 percent lifetime score, with a 91 percent score for the 110th Congress.[116] Biden received a 91 percent voting record from the National Education Association (NEA) showing a pro-teacher union voting record.[117] Biden opposes drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and supports governmental funding to find new energy sources.[118] Biden believes action must be taken on global warming. He co-sponsored the Sense of the Senate resolution calling on the United States to be a part of the United Nations climate negotiations and the Boxer-Sanders Global Warming Pollution Reduction Act, the most stringent climate bill in the United States Senate.[119] Biden cites high health care and energy costs as two major threats to the prosperity of American businesses, and believes that addressing these issues will improve American economic competitiveness. Biden was given a 100 percent approval rating from AFL-CIO indicating a heavily pro-union voting record. Biden is opposed to the privatization of Social Security and was given an 89 percent approval rating from the Alliance for Retired Americans (ARA), an organization of retired union members.
Biden has twice run for the Democratic nomination for President, first in 1988, and again in 2008. He first considered running in 1984, after he gained notice for giving speeches to party audiences that simultaneously scolded and encouraged Democrats.[120] He chose not to run in 1992 in part because he had voted against the resolution authorizing the Gulf War.[46] He considered joining the Democratic field of candidates for the 2004 presidential race but in August 2003 decided otherwise, saying he did not have enough time and any attempt would be too much of a long shot.[121] In May 2004, Biden urged Republican Senator John McCain to run as vice president with presumptive Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry, saying the cross-party ticket would help heal the "vicious rift" in U.S. politics.[122] During this time, Biden was also widely discussed as a possible Secretary of State in a Democratic administration.[123]
In 1987, Biden ran as a Democratic presidential candidate, formally declaring his candidacy at the Wilmington train station on June 9, 1987.[124] When the campaign began, Biden was considered a potentially strong candidate because of his moderate image, his speaking ability on the stump, his appeal to Baby Boomers, his high profile position as chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee at the upcoming Robert Bork Supreme Court nomination hearings, and his fundraising appeal.[125][126] He raised $1.7 million in the first quarter of 1987, more than any other candidate.[125][126] Biden received considerable attention in the summer of 1986 when he excoriated Secretary of State George P. Shultz at a Senate hearing because of the Reagan administration's support of South Africa, which continued to practice the apartheid system.[127]
By August 1987, Biden's campaign, whose messaging was confused due to staff rivalries,[128] had begun to lag behind those of Michael Dukakis and Dick Gephardt,[125] although he had still raised more funds than all candidates but Dukakis, and was seeing an upturn in Iowa polls.[126][129] In September 1987, the campaign ran into trouble when he was accused of plagiarizing a speech that had been made by Neil Kinnock, leader of the British Labour Party.[130] Kinnock’s speech included the lines:
"Why am I the first Kinnock in a thousand generations to be able to get to university? [Then pointing to his wife in the audience] Why is Glenys the first woman in her family in a thousand generations to be able to get to university? Was it because all our predecessors were thick?"
While Biden’s speech included the lines:
"I started thinking as I was coming over here, why is it that Joe Biden is the first in his family ever to go to a university? [Then pointing to his wife in the audience] Why is it that my wife who is sitting out there in the audience is the first in her family to ever go to college? Is it because our fathers and mothers were not bright? Is it because I'm the first Biden in a thousand generations to get a college and a graduate degree that I was smarter than the rest?"
Though Biden had cited Kinnock as the source for the formulation many times before, he made no reference to the original source at the August 23 Iowa State Fair debate in question or in another appearance.[131][132] While political speeches often appropriate ideas and language from each other, Biden's use came under more scrutiny because he somewhat distorted his own family's background to match Kinnock's.[12][132]
A few days later, Biden's plagiarism incident in law school came to public light.[20] It was also revealed that when earlier questioned by a New Hampshire resident about his grades in law school, Biden had falsely stated that he had graduated in the "top half" of his class, that he had attended law school on a full scholarship, and that he had received three degrees in college. He had in fact earned a single B.A. with a double major in history and political science, had received a half scholarship to law school based on financial need with some additional assistance based in part upon academics, and had graduated 76th of 85 in his law school class.[133]
The Kinnock and school revelations were magnified by the limited amount of other news about the nomination race at the time,[134] when most of the public were not yet paying attention to any of the campaigns; Biden thus fell into what The Washington Post writer Paul Taylor described as that year's trend, a "trial by media ordeal".[135] Biden lacked a strong demographic or political group of support to help him survive the crisis.[129][136] He withdrew from the nomination race on September 23, 1987, saying his candidacy had been overrun by "the exaggerated shadow" of his past mistakes.[137] After Biden withdrew from the race, it was revealed that the Dukakis campaign had secretly made a video highlighting the Biden–Kinnock comparison and distributed it to news outlets.[138] Also later in 1987, the Delaware Supreme Court's Board of Professional Responsibility cleared Biden of the law school plagiarism charges regarding his standing as a lawyer, saying Biden had "not violated any rules".[139]
Biden declared his candidacy for president on January 31, 2007, although he had discussed running for months prior,[140] and first made a formal announcement to Tim Russert on Meet the Press on January 7, stating he would "be the best Biden I can be."[141] In January 2006, Delaware newspaper columnist Harry F. Themal wrote that Biden "occupies the sensible center of the Democratic Party."[142] Themal concludes that this is the position Biden desires, and that in a campaign "he plans to stress the dangers to the security of the average American, not just from the terrorist threat, but from the lack of health assistance, crime, and energy dependence on unstable parts of the world."[142]
During his campaign, Biden focused on the war in Iraq and his support for the implementation of the Biden-Gelb plan to achieve political success. He touted his record in the Senate as the head of major congressional committees and his experience on foreign policy. Despite speculation to the contrary,[143] Biden rejected the notion of accepting the position of Secretary of State, focusing only on the presidency. At a 2007 campaign event, Biden said, "I know a lot of my opponents out there say I'd be a great Secretary of State. Seriously, every one of them. Do you watch any of the debates? 'Joe's right, Joe's right, Joe's right.'"[144] Other candidates' comments that "Joe is right" in the Democratic debates were converted into a Biden campaign theme and ad.[145] In mid-2007, Biden stressed his foreign policy expertise compared to Obama's, saying of the latter, "I think he can be ready, but right now I don't believe he is. The presidency is not something that lends itself to on-the-job training."[146] Biden also said that Obama was copying some of his foreign policy ideas.[76] Biden was noted for his one-liners on the campaign trail, saying of Republican then-frontrunner Rudy Giuliani at the October 30, 2007, debate in Philadelphia, "There's only three things he mentions in a sentence: a noun, and a verb and 9/11."[147] Overall, Biden's debate performances were an effective mixture of humor and sharp and surprisingly disciplined comments.[148]
Biden made remarks during the campaign that attracted controversy. On the day of his January 2007 announcement, he spoke of fellow Democratic candidate and Senator Barack Obama: "I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy, I mean, that's a storybook, man."[149] This comment undermined his campaign as soon as it began and significantly damaged his fund-raising capabilities;[148] it later took second place on Time magazine's list of Top 10 Campaign Gaffes for 2007.[150] Biden had earlier been criticized in July 2006 for a remark he made about his support among Indian Americans: "I've had a great relationship. In Delaware, the largest growth in population is Indian-Americans moving from India. You cannot go to a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin' Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent. I'm not joking."[151] Biden later said the remark was not intended to be derogatory.[151][152]
Overall, Biden had difficulty raising funds, struggled to draw people to his rallies, and failed to gain traction against the high-profile candidacies of Obama and Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton;[153] he never rose above single digits in the national polls of the Democratic candidates. In the initial contest on January 3, 2008, Biden placed fifth in the Iowa caucuses, garnering slightly less than one percent of the state delegates.[154] Biden withdrew from the race that evening, saying "There is nothing sad about tonight.... I feel no regret."[155]
Despite the lack of success, Biden's stature in the political world rose as the result of his campaign.[148] In particular, it changed the relationship between Biden and Obama. Although the two had served together on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, they had not been close, with Biden having resented Obama's quick rise to political stardom[76][156] and Obama having viewed Biden as garrulous and patronizing.[157] Now, having gotten to know each other during 2007, Obama appreciated Biden's campaigning style and appeal to working class voters, and Biden was convinced that Obama was "the real deal".[156][157]
Since shortly following Biden's withdrawal from the presidential race, Obama had been privately telling Biden that he was interested in finding an important place for him in a possible Obama administration.[158] Biden declined Obama's first request to vet him for the vice presidential slot, fearing the vice presidency would represent a loss in status and voice from his senate position, but subsequently changed his mind.[76][159] In a June 22, 2008, interview on NBC's Meet the Press, Biden confirmed that, although he was not actively seeking a spot on the ticket, he would accept the vice presidential nomination if offered.[160] In early August, Obama and Biden met in secret to discuss a possible vice-presidential relationship,[158] and the two hit it off well personally.[156] On August 22, 2008, Barack Obama announced that Biden would be his running mate.[161][162] The New York Times reported that the strategy behind the choice reflected a desire to fill out the ticket with someone who has foreign policy and national security experience—and not to help the ticket win a swing state or to emphasize Obama's "change" message.[163] Other observers pointed out Biden's appeal to middle class and blue-collar voters, as well as his willingness to aggressively challenge Republican nominee John McCain in a way that Obama seemed uncomfortable doing at times.[164][165] In accepting Obama's offer, Biden ruled out to him the possibility of running for president again in 2016[158] (although comments by Biden in subsequent years seemed to back off that stance, with Biden not wanting to diminish his political power by appearing uninterested in advancement).[166][167][168]
After his selection as a vice presidential candidate, Biden was criticized by his own Roman Catholic Diocese of Wilmington Bishop Michael Saltarelli over his stance on abortion, which goes against the church's pro-life beliefs and teachings.[169] The diocese confirmed that even if elected vice president, Biden would not be allowed to speak at Catholic schools.[170] Biden was soon barred from receiving Holy Communion by the bishop of his original hometown of Scranton, Pennsylvania, because of his support for abortion rights;[171] however, Biden did continue to receive Communion at his local Delaware parish.[170] Scranton became a flash point in the competition for swing state Catholic voters between the Democratic campaign and liberal Catholic groups, who stressed that other social issues should be considered as much or more than abortion, and many bishops and conservative Catholics, who maintained abortion was paramount.[172] Biden said he believed that life began at conception but that he would not impose his personal religious views on others.[173] Bishop Saltarelli had previously stated regarding stances similar to Biden's: "No one today would accept this statement from any public servant: ‘I am personally opposed to human slavery and racism but will not impose my personal conviction in the legislative arena.’ Likewise, none of us should accept this statement from any public servant: ‘I am personally opposed to abortion but will not impose my personal conviction in the legislative arena.'"[170]
Biden's vice presidential campaigning gained little media visibility, as far greater press attention was focused on the Republican running mate, Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin.[100][174] During one week in September 2008, for instance, the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism found that Biden was only included in five percent of the news coverage of the race, far less than for the other three candidates on the tickets.[175] Biden nevertheless focused on campaigning in economically challenged areas of swing states and trying to win over blue-collar Democrats, especially those who had supported Hillary Rodham Clinton.[76][100] Biden attacked McCain heavily, despite a long-standing personal friendship; he would say, "That guy I used to know, he’s gone. It literally saddens me."[100] As the financial crisis of 2007–2010 reached a peak with the liquidity crisis of September 2008 and the proposed bailout of United States financial system became a major factor in the campaign, Biden voted in favor of the $700 billion Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008, which passed the Senate 74–25.[176]
On October 2, 2008, Biden participated in the campaign's one vice presidential debate with Palin. Polling from CNN, Fox and CBS found that while Palin exceeded many voters' expectations, Biden had won the debate overall.[177][178][179] On October 5, Biden suspended campaign events for a few days after the death of his mother-in-law.[180] During the final days of the campaign, Biden focused on less-populated, older, less well-off areas of battleground states, especially in Florida, Ohio, and Pennsylvania, where polling indicated he was popular and where Obama had not campaigned or performed well in the Democratic primaries.[181][182][183] He also campaigned in some normally Republican states, as well as in areas with large Catholic populations.[183]
Under instructions from the Obama campaign, Biden kept his speeches succinct and tried to avoid off-hand remarks, such as one about Obama being tested by a foreign power soon after taking office, which had attracted negative attention.[181][182] Privately, Obama was frustrated by Biden's remarks, saying "How many times is Biden gonna say something stupid?"[184] Obama campaign staffers referred to Biden blunders as "Joe bombs" and kept Biden uninformed about strategy discussions, which in turn irked Biden.[168] Relations between the two campaigns became strained for a month, until Biden apologized on a call to Obama and the two built a stronger partnership.[184] Publicly, Obama strategist David Axelrod said that any unexpected comments had been outweighed by Biden's high popularity ratings.[185] Nationally, Biden had a 60 percent favorability rating in a Pew Research Center poll, compared to Palin's 44 percent.[181]
On November 4, 2008, Obama was elected President and Biden Vice President of the United States.[186] The Obama-Biden ticket won 365 Electoral College votes to McCain-Palin's 173,[187] and had a 53–46 percent edge in the nationwide popular vote.[188]
Biden became the 47th Vice President of the United States on January 20, 2009, when he was inaugurated alongside President Barack Obama. He succeeded Dick Cheney. Biden is the first United States Vice President from Delaware[189] and the first Roman Catholic to attain that office.[190] Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens administered the oath of office to Biden.[191]
As Biden headed to Delaware's Return Day tradition following the November 2008 election, and the transition process to an Obama administration began, Biden said he was in daily meetings with Obama and that McCain was still his friend.[192] The U.S. Secret Service codename given to Biden is "Celtic", referencing his Irish roots.[193]
Biden chose veteran Democratic lawyer and aide Ron Klain to be his vice-presidential chief of staff,[194] and Time Washington bureau chief Jay Carney to be his director of communications.[195] Biden intended to eliminate some of the explicit roles assumed by the vice presidency of Cheney,[196] who had established himself as an autonomous power center.[76] Otherwise, Biden said he would not model his vice presidency on any of the ones before him, but instead would seek to provide advice and counsel on every critical decision Obama would make.[197] Biden said he had been closely involved in all the cabinet appointments that were made during the transition.[197] Biden was also named to head the new White House Task Force on Working Families, an initiative aimed at improving the economic well being of the middle class.[198] As his last act as Chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, Biden went on a trip to Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan during the second week of January 2009, meeting with the leadership of those countries.[199]
In the early months of the Obama administration, Biden assumed the role of an important behind-the-scenes counselor.[200] One role was to adjudicate disputes between Obama's "team of rivals".[76] The president compared Biden's efforts to a basketball player "who does a bunch of things that don’t show up in the stat sheet."[200] Biden played a key role in gaining Senate support for several major pieces of Obama legislation, and was a main factor in convincing Senator Arlen Specter to switch from the Republican to Democratic party.[159] Biden lost an internal debate to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton regarding his opposition to sending 21,000 new troops to the war in Afghanistan.[201][202] His skeptical voice was still considered valuable within the administration,[159] however, and later in 2009 Biden's views achieved more prominence within the White House as Obama reconsidered his Afghanistan strategy.[203] Biden made visits to Iraq about once every two months,[76] including trips to Baghdad in August and September 2009 to listen to Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and reiterate U.S. stances on Iraq's future;[204] by this time he had become the administration's point man in delivering messages to Iraqi leadership about expected progress in the country.[159] Biden's January 2010 visit to Iraq in the midst of turmoil over banned candidates from the upcoming Iraqi parliamentary election resulted in 59 of the several hundred candidates being reinstated by the Iraqi government two days later.[205] Biden was in charge of the oversight role for infrastructure spending from the Obama stimulus package intended to help counteract the ongoing recession, and stressed that only worthy projects should get funding.[206] During this period, Biden was satisfied that no major instances of waste or corruption had occurred[159] (and when he gave up the role in February 2011, he said that the number of fraud incidents with stimulus monies had been less than one percent).[207]
It took some time for the cautious Obama and the blunt, rambling Biden to work out ways of dealing with each other.[168] In late April 2009, Biden's off-message response to a question during the beginning of the swine flu outbreak, that he would advise family members against travelling on airplanes or subways, led to a swift retraction from the White House.[208] The remark revived Biden's reputation for gaffes,[209] and led to a spate of late-night television jokes themed on him being a loose-talking buffoon.[203][210][211] In the face of persistently rising unemployment through July 2009, Biden acknowledged that the administration had "misread how bad the economy was" but maintained confidence that the stimulus package would create many more jobs once the pace of expenditures picked up.[212] The same month, Secretary of State Clinton quickly disavowed Biden's remarks disparaging Russia as a power, but despite any missteps, Biden still retained Obama's confidence and was increasingly influential within the administration.[213] On March 23, 2010, a microphone picked up Biden telling the president that his signing of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act was "a big fucking deal" during live national news telecasts. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs replied via Twitter "And yes Mr. Vice President, you're right..."[214] Senior Obama advisor Valerie Jarrett said that Biden's loose talk "[is] part of what makes the vice president so endearing ... We wouldn't change him one bit."[213] Former Senate colleague Lindsey Graham said, "If there were no gaffes, there'd be no Joe. He's someone you can't help but like."[203] Despite their different personalities, Obama and Biden formed something of a friendship, partly based around an Obama daughter and a Biden granddaughter attending Sidwell Friends School together.[168]
Biden's most important role within the administration has been to question assumptions and playing a contrarian role.[76][203] Obama said that, "The best thing about Joe is that when we get everybody together, he really forces people to think and defend their positions, to look at things from every angle, and that is very valuable for me."[159] Another senior Obama advisor said Biden "is always prepared to be the skunk at the family picnic to make sure we are as intellectually honest as possible."[159] On June 11, 2010, Biden represented the United States at the opening ceremony of the World Cup, attended the England v. U.S. game which was tied 1–1, and visited Egypt, Kenya, and South Africa.[216] Throughout, Joe and Jill Biden maintained a relaxed atmosphere at their official residence in Washington, often entertaining some of their grandchildren, and regularly returned to their home in Delaware.[217]
Biden campaigned heavily for Democrats in the 2010 midterm elections, maintaining an attitude of optimism in the face of general predictions of large-scale losses for the party.[218] In October 2010, Biden stated that Obama had asked him to remain as his running mate for the 2012 presidential election.[218] Following large-scale Republican gains in the elections and the departure of White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, Biden's past relationships with Republicans in Congress became more important.[219][220] He led the successful administration effort to gain Senate approval for the New START treaty.[219][220] In December 2010, Biden's advocacy within the White House for a middle ground, followed by his direct negotiations with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, were instrumental in producing the administration's compromise tax package that revolved around a temporary extension of the Bush tax cuts.[220][221] Biden then took the lead in trying to sell the agreement to a reluctant Democratic caucus in Congress,[220][222] which was passed as the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010.
In March 2011, Obama detailed Biden to lead negotiations between both houses of Congress and the White House in resolving federal spending levels for the rest of the year and avoid a government shutdown.[224] By May 2011, a "Biden panel" with six congressional members was trying to reach a bipartisan deal on raising the U.S. debt ceiling as part of an overall deficit reduction plan.[225][226] The U.S. debt ceiling crisis developed over the next couple of months, but it was again Biden's relationship with McConnell that proved to be a key factor in breaking a deadlock and finally bringing about a bipartisan deal to resolve it, in the form of the Budget Control Act of 2011, signed on August 2, 2011, the same day that an unprecedented U.S. default had loomed.[223][227][228] Biden had spent the most time bargaining with Congress on the debt question of anyone in the administration,[227] and one Republican staffer said, "Biden’s the only guy with real negotiating authority, and [McConnell] knows that his word is good. He was a key to the deal."[223]
Biden's May 2012 statement that he was "absolutely comfortable" with same-sex marriage gained considerable public attention in comparison to President Obama's position, which had been described as "evolving".[229] Biden made his statement without administration consent, and Obama aides were irked.[230][168] Gay rights advocates seized upon the Biden stance,[230] and within days, Obama announced that he too supported same-sex marriage, an action in part forced by Biden's unexpected remarks.[231] Biden privately apologized to Obama for having spoken out, while Obama acknowledged it had been done from the heart.[230] The incident showed that Biden still struggled at times with message discipline.[168]
Biden has received honorary degrees from the University of Scranton (1976),[232] Saint Joseph's University (1981),[233] Widener University School of Law (2000),[89] Emerson College (2003),[234] his alma mater the University of Delaware (2004),[235] Suffolk University Law School (2005),[236] and his other alma mater Syracuse University (2009).[237]
Biden received the Chancellor Medal from his alma mater, Syracuse University, in 1980.[238] In 2005, he received the George Arents Pioneer Medal—Syracuse's highest alumni award[238]—"for excellence in public affairs."[239]
In 2008, Biden received the Best of Congress Award, for "improving the American quality of life through family-friendly work policies," from Working Mother magazine.[240] Also in 2008, Biden shared with fellow Senator Richard Lugar the Hilal-i-Pakistan award from the Government of Pakistan, "in recognition of their consistent support for Pakistan."[241] In 2009, Biden received The Golden Medal of Freedom award from Kosovo, that region's highest award, for his vocal support for their independence in the late 1990s.[242]
Biden is an inductee of the Delaware Volunteer Firemen's Association Hall of Fame.[243] He was named to the Little League Hall of Excellence in 2009.[244]
U.S. Senators are popularly elected and take office January 3 for a six year term (except when appointed to fill existing vacancies).
Public offices | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Office | Type | Location | Began office | Ended office | notes | |
County Council | Legislature | Wilmington | January 4, 1971 | January 3, 1973 | New Castle County | |
U.S. Senator | Legislature | Washington, D.C. | January 3, 1973 | January 3, 1979 | ||
U.S. Senator | Legislature | Washington, D.C. | January 3, 1979 | January 3, 1985 | ||
U.S. Senator | Legislature | Washington, D.C. | January 3, 1985 | January 3, 1991 | ||
U.S. Senator | Legislature | Washington, D.C. | January 3, 1991 | January 3, 1997 | ||
U.S. Senator | Legislature | Washington, D.C. | January 3, 1997 | January 3, 2003 | ||
U.S. Senator | Legislature | Washington, D.C. | January 3, 2003 | January 3, 2009 | ||
U.S. Senator | Legislature | Washington, D.C. | January 3, 2009 | January 15, 2009 | resigned to be sworn in as Vice President | |
Vice President | Executive | Washington, D.C. | January 20, 2009 | – | — |
United States Congressional service | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dates | Congress | Majority | President | Committees | Class/District | |
1973–1975 | 93rd | Democratic | Richard M. Nixon Gerald R. Ford |
Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
1975–1977 | 94th | Democratic | Gerald R. Ford | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
1977–1979 | 95th | Democratic | Jimmy Carter | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
1979–1981 | 96th | Democratic | Jimmy Carter | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
1981–1983 | 97th | Republican | Ronald W. Reagan | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
1983–1985 | 98th | Republican | Ronald W. Reagan | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
1985–1987 | 99th | Republican | Ronald W. Reagan | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
1987–1989 | 100th | Democratic | Ronald W. Reagan | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
1989–1991 | 101st | Democratic | George H. W. Bush | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
1991–1993 | 102nd | Democratic | George H. W. Bush | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
1993–1995 | 103rd | Democratic | William J. Clinton | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
1995–1997 | 104th | Republican | William J. Clinton | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
1997–1999 | 105th | Republican | William J. Clinton | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
1999–2001 | 106th | Republican | William J. Clinton | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
2001–2003 | 107th | Republican Democratic |
George W. Bush | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
2003–2005 | 108th | Republican | George W. Bush | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
2005–2007 | 109th | Republican | George W. Bush | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
2007–2009 | 110th | Democratic | George W. Bush | Judiciary, Foreign Relations | class 2 | |
2009a | 111th | Democratic | George W. Bushb | class 2 |
Election results | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Year | Office | Election | Votes for Biden | % | Opponent | Party | Votes | % | |||
1970 | County Councilman | General | 10,573 | 55% | Lawrence T. Messick | Republican | 8,192 | 43% | |||
1972 | U.S. Senator | General | 116,006 | 50% | J. Caleb Boggs | Republican | 112,844 | 49% | |||
1978 | U.S. Senator | General | 93,930 | 58% | James H. Baxter, Jr. | Republican | 66,479 | 41% | |||
1984 | U.S. Senator | General | 147,831 | 60% | John M. Burris | Republican | 98,101 | 40% | |||
1990 | U.S. Senator | General | 112,918 | 63% | M. Jane Brady | Republican | 64,554 | 36% | |||
1996 | U.S. Senator | General | 165,465 | 60% | Raymond J. Clatworthy | Republican | 105,088 | 38% | |||
2002 | U.S. Senator | General | 135,253 | 58% | Raymond J. Clatworthy | Republican | 94,793 | 41% | |||
2008 | U.S. Senator | General | 257,484 | 65% | Christine O'Donnell | Republican | 140,584 | 35% | |||
2008 | Vice President | General | 69,456,897 | 53% | Sarah Palin | Republican | 59,934,786 | 46% |
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Persondata | |
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Name | Biden, Joe |
Alternative names | |
Short description | Politician |
Date of birth | November 20, 1942 |
Place of birth | Scranton, Pennsylvania |
Date of death | |
Place of death |
Paul Ryan | |
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Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Wisconsin's 1st district |
|
Incumbent | |
Assumed office January 3, 1999 |
|
Preceded by | Mark Neumann |
Chairman of the House Committee on the Budget | |
Incumbent | |
Assumed office January 3, 2011 |
|
Preceded by | John Spratt |
Personal details | |
Born | Paul Davis Ryan (1970-01-29) January 29, 1970 (age 42) Janesville, Wisconsin |
Political party | Republican |
Spouse(s) | Janna Ryan |
Children | Elizabeth, Charles, and Samuel |
Residence | Janesville, Wisconsin |
Alma mater | Miami University (B.A.) |
Religion | Roman Catholic |
Website | U.S. Congressman Paul Ryan |
Paul Davis Ryan[1] (born January 29, 1970) is the U.S. Representative for Wisconsin's 1st congressional district, serving since 1999. He is a member of the Republican Party, and has been ranked among the party's most influential voices on economic policy.[2][3][4]
Born and raised in Janesville, Wisconsin, Ryan graduated from Miami University in Ohio and later worked as a marketing consultant for Ryan Incorporated Central, run by a branch of his family. In the mid to late 1990s, he worked as an aide to United States Senator Bob Kasten, as legislative director for Senator Sam Brownback of Kansas, and as a speechwriter for former U.S. Representative and 1996 Republican vice presidential nominee Jack Kemp of New York. In 1998, Ryan won election to the United States House of Representatives, succeeding the two-term incumbent, fellow Republican Mark Neumann.
Ryan currently chairs the House Budget Committee, where he has played a prominent public role in drafting and promoting the Republican Party's long-term budget proposal. He introduced a plan, The Path to Prosperity, in April 2011 as an alternative to the budget proposal of President Barack Obama, and helped introduce The Path to Prosperity: A Blueprint for American Renewal in March 2012, in response to Obama's 2013 budget.[5] Ryan is one of the three co-founders of the Young Guns Program, an electoral recruitment and campaign effort by House Republicans. He endorsed Republican presidential candidate and former Governor of Massachusetts Mitt Romney for the 2012 United States presidential election.[6] Ryan has been considered as a possible running mate for Romney.[7]
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Ryan was born and raised in Janesville, Wisconsin, the youngest child of Elizabeth A. "Betty" (née Hutter) and Paul Murray Ryan, a lawyer.[8][9][10] He is of Irish and German ancestry,[11] and is a fifth-generation Janesville native. Ryan's great-grandfather is Patrick William Ryan, who founded the Ryan Incorporated Central construction business in 1884.[12] Ryan's mother is an outdoors enthusiast who led her husband and four children (Ryan's sister Janet and two brothers, Tobin and Stan) on regular hiking and skiing trips in the Colorado Rocky Mountains.[9][13] As a boy, Ryan attended Camp Manito-wish YMCA, a wilderness canoe tripping camp located in Boulder Junction, Wisconsin; while in college, he returned there to work as a staff member and counselor during summer vacation.
Ryan attended Joseph A. Craig High School in Janesville. In college, he briefly worked for Oscar Mayer as a Wienermobile driver.[14] Ryan went on to graduate from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, with a BA in economics and political science in 1992. He also studied at the Washington Semester program at American University and was a member of the Delta Tau Delta social fraternity. Following his studies, Ryan returned to Wisconsin and worked as a marketing consultant for an earth-moving company run by a branch of his family.[13][15]
Ryan was 16 years old when he found his father in bed, dead from a heart attack at age 55. As a result, he received Social Security survivor's benefits until he turned 18. Ryan's grandfather and great-grandfather had also died from heart attacks, at ages 57 and 59 respectively.[16]
In 2005, Ryan said, "The reason I got involved in public service, by and large, if I had to credit one thinker, one person, it would be Ayn Rand".[17] New York magazine has claimed that Ryan requires his staff to read Atlas Shrugged.[18] In 2012, however, he said that while as a young man he became interested in economics because of her novels, "It’s a big stretch to suggest that a person is therefore an Objectivist... I reject her philosophy. It's an atheist philosophy. It reduces human interactions down to mere contracts and it is antithetical to my worldview. If somebody is going to try to paste a person's view on epistemology to me, then give me Thomas Aquinas. Don't give me Ayn Rand."[19]
During his junior year at Miami University, Ryan worked as an intern opening mail for the foreign affairs advisor assigned to Senator Bob Kasten of Wisconsin.[20] Concerned that her son "...was destined to become a ski bum", Betty Ryan reportedly nudged him to accept another congressional position as a staff economist attached to Kasten's office.[20][21] In his early years working in D.C., Ryan moonlighted on Capitol Hill as a waiter at the Tortilla Coast restaurant and as a fitness trainer at Washington Sport and Health Club, among various other side jobs.[22]
After Kasten was defeated by Democrat Russ Feingold in 1992, Ryan became a speechwriter and a volunteer economic analyst with Empower America, an advocacy group formed by Jack Kemp, former education secretary Bill Bennett, the late diplomat Jeane Kirkpatrick, and former Representative Vin Weber of Minnesota.[16][23]
Ryan worked as a speechwriter for Kemp, the Republican vice presidential candidate in the 1996 United States presidential election, and later worked as legislative director for US Senator Sam Brownback of Kansas. Ryan then returned to Wisconsin, where he worked as a consultant to an earth-moving company.[citation needed] In 1998, he ran for Congress.
Following his first election to the US House of Representatives in 1998, one of Ryan's priorities as a new congressman was to convert a truck into a rolling district office. This allowed him to keep regular congressional office hours with his constituents at various locations across Wisconsin's 1st congressional district.[24][1]
In 2002, Ryan voted in favor of the Iraq War resolution, authorizing President George W. Bush to use military force in Iraq.[25] In 2003 he voted in favor of the Medicare Part D prescription drug expansion.[26]
In 2005, Ryan spoke at a Celebration of Ayn Rand event hosted by The Atlas Society. During the event, Ryan spoke about the influence of Atlas Shrugged on his life.[27]
He is one of the three founding members of the House GOP Young Guns Program.
In 2008, Ryan voted for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, the Wall Street bailout that precipitated the Tea Party movement, and the bailout of GM and Chrysler.[28]
In 2010, The Daily Telegraph ranked Ryan the ninth most influential US conservative.[2] In 2011, he was selected to deliver the Republican response to the State of the Union address.[29]
In 2012, Ryan accused the nation's top military leaders of using "smoke and mirrors" to remain under budget limits passed by Congress.[30] Ryan later said that he misspoke on the issue and called General Martin Dempsey to apologize for his comments.[31]
At the end of March 2012, the House of Representatives passed a newer version of Ryan's budget plan along partisan lines 228 yeas to 191 nays; ten Republicans voted against bill, along with all the House Democrats.[32] Ryan's budget would reduce all discretionary spending in the budget from 12.5% of GDP in 2011 to 3.75% of GDP in 2050. This goal has been criticized as unrealistic since it includes spending on defense, which has never fallen below 3% of GDP.[33] Congressman Justin Amash, a Republican from Michigan criticized Ryan's budget for insufficient cuts, its continuation of deficit spending through 2022 and beyond, and its exemption of military spending from reductions. [34] His budget has also been criticized because it would not balance the budget until 2035. Marc Goldwein, the policy directory for the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget stated "We may never, as a country, have a balanced budget again, And you know what? We don't have to." Ryan saw this as evidence of the severity of the deficit crisis.[35]
The 2012 Ryan budget also received criticism from elements of the Catholic Church, specifically from the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops and from faculty and administrators of Georgetown University. In its letter to Rep. Ryan, the group of Georgetown faculty and administrators criticized the Ryan budget as trying to "to dismantle government programs and abandon the poor to their own devices," going on to say that Catholic teaching "demands that higher levels of government provide help—"subsidium"—when communities and local governments face problems beyond their means to address such as economic crises, high unemployment, endemic poverty and hunger." The letter also criticizes Ryan for his attempts at "gutting government programs" and states that Ryan is "profoundly misreading Church teaching."[36] A statement issued by the US Conference of Catholic Bishops criticized the Ryan budget in similar terms.[37] Ryan rejects the bishops' criticism that his budget plans would disproportionately cut programs that "serve poor and vulnerable people."[38] Ryan's difficulties with the Catholic Church worsened when videos of Ryan praising and endorsing the "morality" of Ayn Rand's hyper-individualist philosophy were published on Youtube in 2012. [39]
In May of 2012, Ryan voted for H.R. 4310 which would increase spending on defense, Afghanistan and various weapon systems to the level of $642 billion - $8 billion more than what was agreed to by President Obama and the Congress in the summer of 2011. [40]
On May 21, 2008, Ryan introduced H.R. 6110, titled "Roadmap for America's Future Act of 2008."[41] This proposed legislation outlined a plan to deal with entitlement spending.[42] Its stated objectives were: to ensure universal access to health insurance; to strengthen Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security; to lift debt from future generations; and to promote economic growth and job creation in America.[43] Despite significant press coverage, it did not move past committee.[44]
On April 1, 2009, Ryan introduced his alternative to the 2010 United States federal budget. This alternative budget would have eliminated the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, lowered the top tax rate to 25%, introduced an 8.5% value-added consumption tax, and imposed a five-year spending freeze on all discretionary spending.[45] It would also have replaced Medicare.[46] Instead, it proposed that starting in 2021, the federal government would pay part of the cost of private medical insurance for individuals turning 65.[46] Ryan's proposed budget would also have allowed taxpayers to opt out of the federal income taxation system with itemized deductions, and instead pay a flat 10 percent of adjusted gross income up to $100,000 and 25 percent on any remaining income.[47] Ryan's proposed budget was heavily criticized by opponents for the lack of concrete numbers.[48] It was ultimately rejected in the house by a vote of 293-137, with 38 Republicans in opposition.[49]
In late January 2010, Ryan released a new version of his Roadmap.[50] The modified plan would: give across the board tax cuts by reducing income tax rates; eliminate income taxes on capital gains, dividends, and interest; and abolish the corporate income tax, estate tax, and alternative minimum tax. The plan would privatize a portion of Social Security,[51][52] eliminate the tax exclusion for employer-sponsored health insurance,[52] and privatize Medicare.[51][52]
On April 15, 2011, the House passed the Ryan Plan by a vote of 235-193. Four Republicans joined all House Democrats in voting against it.[53] A month later, the bill died in the Senate by a vote of 57-40, with five Republicans and most Democrats in opposition.[54]
Economist and New York Times columnist Paul Krugman criticized the contention that Ryan's plan would reduce the deficit, alleging that it only considered proposed spending cuts and failed to take into account tax changes. According to Krugman, Ryan's plan "would raise taxes for 95 percent of the population" and produce a $4 trillion revenue loss over ten years from tax cuts for the rich. Krugman went on to label the proposed spending cuts a "sham" because they depended on making a severe cut in domestic discretionary spending without specifying the programs to be cut, and on "dismantling Medicare as we know it," which is politically unrealistic.[55]
In response to Krugman, economist and former American Enterprise Institute scholar Ted Gayer wrote a more positive assessment of the Ryan plan. Gayer agreed that, as written, the plan would cause a $4 trillion revenue shortfall over 10 years. He noted, however, that Ryan had expressed a willingness to consider raising rates in his tax plan.[clarification needed] Gayer concluded that "Ryan’s vision of broad-based tax reform, which essentially would shift us toward a consumption tax... makes a useful contribution to this debate."[56]
Journalist Ramesh Ponnuru, writing in National Review, argued that the revenue loss to which Krugman refers is based on a comparison between Ryan's plan and current law, which "includes middle-class tax increases... cuts in payment to Medicare providers... [and] the expansion of the Alternative Minimum Tax."[57] He added that "current law automatically raises the tax rates to pre-Bush levels in 2013... so if you're comparing the tax level with current law, Ryan's plan represents a tax cut" and "the CBO's actual projections for the Ryan plan show a debt level in 2021 that is $4.7 trillion lower than its projections for Obama's budgets."[57]
Rick Foster, the chief actuary of Medicare, endorsed Ryan's plan for reducing Medicare costs: "If you can put that pressure on the research and development community, you might have a fighting chance of changing the nature of new medical technology in a way that makes lower costs like this possible and more sustainable. I would say that the Roadmap has that potential. There is some potential for the Affordable Care Act price reductions, although I’m a little less confident about that."[58]
In December 2011, it was revealed that Ryan would begin a new push for changes in Medicare in 2012 by working with Democratic Senator Ron Wyden of Oregon to modify Ryan's previous Medicare proposal. His most recent approach for semi-privatization of Medicare would keep traditional Medicare as an option for senior citizens, but would also introduce private insurance into an exchange market to compete with traditional Medicare. Seniors would still be given a voucher to purchase care if they so desired, as in his previous proposal. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney has supported a similar plan in his campaign.[59]
On January 9, 2012, four months after the introduction of Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA), Ryan pledged his opposition to the bill, saying, "The internet is one of the most magnificent expressions of freedom and free enterprise in history. It should stay that way. While H.R. 3261, the Stop Online Piracy Act, attempts to address legitimate problems, I believe it creates the precedent and possibility for undue regulation, censorship and legal abuse. I do not support H.R. 3261 in its current form and will oppose the legislation should it come before the full House."[60]
Ryan was first elected to the House in 1998, when two-term incumbent Mark Neumann retired from his seat in order to make an unsuccessful bid for the Senate. Ryan won both a Republican primary over 29-year-old pianist Michael J. Logan of Twin Lakes and the general election against Democratic opponent Lydia Spottswood.[61] Ryan successfully defended his seat against Democratic challenger Jeffrey C. Thomas in 2000, 2002, 2004, and 2006.[62] In 2002, Ryan had also faced Libertarian candidate George Meyers.
Ryan defeated Democratic nominee Marge Krupp by a wide margin in the 2008 general election.[62]
Ryan defeated both Democratic nominee John Heckenlively and Libertarian nominee Joseph Kexel by a wide margin in the 2010 general election.
Year | Office | District | Democrat | Republican | Other | |||
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1998 | U.S. House of Representatives | Wisconsin 1st District | Lydia Spottswood | 43% | Paul Ryan | 57% | ||
2000 | U.S. House of Representatives | Wisconsin 1st District | Jeffrey Thomas | 33% | Paul Ryan | 67% | ||
2002 | U.S. House of Representatives | Wisconsin 1st District | Jeffrey Thomas | 31% | Paul Ryan | 67% | George Meyers (L) | 2% |
2004 | U.S. House of Representatives | Wisconsin 1st District | Jeffrey Thomas | 33% | Paul Ryan | 65% | ||
2006 | U.S. House of Representatives | Wisconsin 1st District | Jeffrey Thomas | 37% | Paul Ryan | 63% | ||
2008 | U.S. House of Representatives | Wisconsin 1st District | Marge Krupp | 35% | Paul Ryan | 64% | Joseph Kexel (L) | 1% |
2010 | U.S. House of Representatives | Wisconsin 1st District | John Heckenlively | 30% | Paul Ryan | 68% | Joseph Kexel (L) | 2% |
Ryan married Janna Little, a tax attorney,[1] in December 2000.[8] The Ryans live in Janesville with their three children Elizabeth Anne, Charles Wilson, and Samuel Lowery.[63]
Ryan is a Catholic and is a member of St. John Vianney's Church.[64]
Ryan is a fitness enthusiast and promotes fitness as a daily routine for young people. In 2009, his exercise program was based on the P90x fitness program.[22]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: U.S. Rep. Paul Ryan |
United States House of Representatives | ||
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Preceded by Mark Neumann |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Wisconsin's 1st congressional district 1999–present |
Incumbent |
Political offices | ||
Preceded by John M. Spratt, Jr. South Carolina |
Chairman of House Budget Committee 2011–present |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
United States order of precedence | ||
Preceded by Grace Napolitano D-California |
United States Representatives by seniority 156th |
Succeeded by Jan Schakowsky D-Illinois |
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Representatives to the 106th–112th United States Congresses from Wisconsin (ordered by seniority) | ||
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106th | Senate: H. Kohl | R. Feingold | House: D. Obey | J. Sensenbrenner | T. Petri | J. Kleczka | T. Barrett | R. Kind | T. Baldwin | M. Green | P. Ryan |
107th | Senate: H. Kohl | R. Feingold | House: D. Obey | J. Sensenbrenner | T. Petri | J. Kleczka | T. Barrett | R. Kind | T. Baldwin | M. Green | P. Ryan |
108th | Senate: H. Kohl | R. Feingold | House: D. Obey | J. Sensenbrenner | T. Petri | J. Kleczka | R. Kind | T. Baldwin | M. Green | P. Ryan |
109th | Senate: H. Kohl | R. Feingold | House: D. Obey | J. Sensenbrenner | T. Petri | R. Kind | T. Baldwin | M. Green | P. Ryan | G. Moore |
110th | Senate: H. Kohl | R. Feingold | House: D. Obey | J. Sensenbrenner | T. Petri | R. Kind | T. Baldwin | P. Ryan | G. Moore | S. Kagen |
111th | Senate: H. Kohl | R. Feingold | House: D. Obey | J. Sensenbrenner | T. Petri | R. Kind | T. Baldwin | P. Ryan | G. Moore | S. Kagen |
112th | Senate: H. Kohl | R. Johnson | House: J. Sensenbrenner | T. Petri | R. Kind | T. Baldwin | P. Ryan | G. Moore | S. Duffy | R. Ribble |
Persondata | |
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Name | Ryan, Paul |
Alternative names | |
Short description | American politician |
Date of birth | January 29, 1970 |
Place of birth | Janesville, Wisconsin |
Date of death | |
Place of death |
William Ruto | |
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Minister for Higher Education | |
In office 21 April 2010 – 19 October 2010 |
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President | Mwai Kibaki |
Preceded by | Sally Kosgei |
Minister of Agriculture | |
In office 17 April 2008 – 21 April 2010 |
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President | Mwai Kibaki |
Succeeded by | Sally Kosgei |
Member of Parliament for Eldoret North Constituency |
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Incumbent | |
Assumed office 29 December 1997 |
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Personal details | |
Born | (1966-12-21) 21 December 1966 (age 45) Kamagut, Uasin Gishu, Kenya |
Political party | Kenya African National Union, Orange Democratic Movement |
William Kipchirchir Samoei arap Ruto (born 21 December 1966 in Kamagut, Uasin Gishu) is a Kenyan politician who was Minister in the Kenyan government and currently an accused suspect, by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for committing crimes against humanity. On the 19th of October 2010, he was suspended by the government on corruption charges .He had previously served in the Ministry of Agriculture since April 2008. Ruto was elected Director of Elections on 18 March 2002, when the National Development Party led by Raila Odinga merged with the Kenya African National Union (KANU). He was Secretary General of KANU, the former ruling political party, and he has been MP for Eldoret North Constituency since the 1997 Kenyan election a seat he won after trouncing the former M.P. The Late Hon. Rueben Chesire. He became an Assistant Minister in the Office of the President and was appointed Minister in charge of Home Affairs in August 2002 but lost the post after the December 2002 election, in which Kenya African National Union lost to the National Rainbow Coalition coalition. He also previously served as the Chairman of the Parliamentary Select Committee on Constitutional Reform in the 9th Parliament.
Ruto has been implicated in orchestrating the 2007/2008 post election violence in Kenya.[1] On November 3, 2010, Ruto flew to the International Criminal Court at the Hague to discuss an evidence deal with the prosecutor. On 15 December 2010, Ruto was named in a summons by the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Luis Moreno-Ocampo, in relation to his role in violence which followed from the 2007 elections
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Ruto was born 21 December 1966 in Kamagut, Uasin Gishu to the late Mzee Daniel Cheruiyot and Mama Sarah Cheruiyot. He attended Kerotet Primary School for his primary school education then joined Wareng Secondary School for his Ordinary Levels education before proceeding to Kapsabet Boys, Nandi for his Advanced Levels. He then went on to receive a BSc(Botany and Zoology) from the University of Nairobi, graduating in 1990. He then enrolled for a MSC degree. During an appearance on the comedy show Churchill Live in June 2011, he said he intends to complete the masters degree soon
Ruto was Organising Secretary of Youth for Kanu '92 (YK92), a group that was formed to drum up support for President Daniel arap Moi in the 1992 election.[2]
In January 2006, Ruto declared publicly that he would stand for the presidency in the next general election, scheduled for December 2007. His statement was condemned by some of his KANU colleagues, including former president Daniel arap Moi. Ruto sought the nomination of the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) as its presidential candidate, but in the party's vote on 1 September 2007, he placed third with 368 votes, behind the winner, Raila Odinga (with 2,656 votes) and Musalia Mudavadi (with 391).[3] Ruto expressed his support for Odinga after the vote.[4] He resigned from his post as KANU secretary general on 6 October 2007.[5]
The presidential election of December 2007 ended in an impasse. The Kenya's electoral commission declared Kibaki the winner while exit polls had clearly placed Raila Odinga in front. Raila and ODM claimed victory. In a scene that has been replicated all over Africa, Mwai Kibaki was hurriedly sworn in as the president December 2007 presidential election. Following the election and dispute over the result Kenya was engulfed by a violent political crisis. Kibaki and Odinga agreed to form a power-sharing government.[6][7] In the grand coalition Cabinet named on 13 April 2008[7] and sworn in on 17 April,[6] Ruto was appointed as Minister for Agriculture.[7]
On 21 April 2010, President Mwai Kibaki and his Prime Minister Raila Odinga removed Ruto from the agriculture ministry, and transferred him to the higher education ministry, swapping posts with Sally Kosgei.[8] On 24 August 2011, William Ruto was relieved of his ministerial duties and he remains just a member of parliament
In December 2010, the prosecutor of the International Criminal Court announced that he was seeking summonses of six people, including Ruto over their involvement in the 2007-8 electoral violence.[9] The ICC's Pre-Trial Chamber subsequently issued a summons for Ruto at the prosecutor's request.[10] Ruto is accused of planning and organising crimes against supporters of President Kibaki's Party of National Unity. He is charged with three counts of crimes against humanity, one of each of murder, forcible transfer of population and persecution. On 23 January 2012, the ICC confirmed the charges against Ruto and Joshua Sang, in a case that also involved Uhuru Kenyatta Francis Muthaura Henry Kosgey and Major General Mohammed Hussein Ali.
He told the American government that the Kiambaa church fire on 1 January 2008 after the 2007 Kenyan general election was accidental.[11]
The Waki Commission report stated in 2009 that "the incident which captured the attention of both Kenyans and the world was the deliberate burning alive of mostly Kikuyu women and children huddled together in a church" in Kiambaa on 1 January 2008.
The death toll was 17 burned alive in the church, 11 dying in or on the way to hospital, and 54 others injured who were treated and discharged.
William Ruto was on trial charged with defrauding the Kenya Pipeline Company of huge amounts of money through dubious land deals, but he has been out on bond. The Constitutional Court suspended further hearing of the case due to complaints by Ruto that the prosecution was politically engineered. However, the High Court cleared the path for criminal charges against the Higher Education minister over the alleged sale of a piece of land in Ngong’ forest to Kenya Pipeline Company Ltd.[12][13] He was however acquitted of the allegations after a court declared him innocent.[14]
In early 2009 after parliamentary debate on a maize scandal, Ruto was accused of illegally selling maize by Ikolomani MP Bonny Khalwale (Public Accounts Committee Chairman). All the documents bearing the National Cereals and Produce Board seal that linked Mr Ruto to the illegal sale of maize were accepted by Parliament’s deputy speaker.[15]
Managers of the board stated maize was allocated to some individuals allegedly on the strength of a call by Mr Ruto.[1] Tables showed that the cereals board had in store 2.6 million bags of maize in June 2008 and had allocated maize to companies and individuals described as undeserving. Mr Ruto had informed the House that the maize in the stores at the time was 1.6 million bags. William Ruto attributed the maize scandal allegations and claims of his involvement in corruption to the work of his “political enemies”.[15]
While Ruto and Odinga are both from the Orange Democratic Movement of the power-sharing government, they disagree on the issue of the proposed constitution draft with Ruto calling for rejection of the draft in the upcoming constitutional referendum, arguing that some of its clauses are unsuitable while Odinga and Kibaki campaignined for the constitution which won with a majority
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Persondata | |
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Name | Ruto, William |
Alternative names | |
Short description | |
Date of birth | 21 December 1966 |
Place of birth | Kamagut, Uasin Gishu, Kenya |
Date of death | |
Place of death |
Country | India |
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Residence | Kolkata, Mumbai |
Born | (1973-06-17) 17 June 1973 (age 39) Calcutta (Kolkata) |
Height | 1.78 m (5 ft 10 in) |
Weight | 78 kg (170 lb; 12.3 st) |
Turned pro | 1991 |
Plays | Right-handed (one-handed backhand) |
Career prize money | $6,826,643 (singles & doubles combined) (as of 2 April 2012) |
Singles | |
Career record | 99–98 |
Career titles | 1 |
Highest ranking | No. 73 (24 August 1998) |
Grand Slam Singles results | |
Australian Open | 3 RD (1997, 2000) |
French Open | 2 RD (1997) |
Wimbledon | 2 RD (2001) |
US Open | 3 RD (1997) |
Other tournaments | |
Olympic Games | Bronze (1996) |
Doubles | |
Career record | 606–313 |
Career titles | 50 |
Highest ranking | No. 1 (21 June 1999) |
Current ranking | No. 7 (as of 2 April 2012) |
Grand Slam Doubles results | |
Australian Open | W (2012) |
French Open | W (1999, 2001, 2009) |
Wimbledon | W (1999) |
US Open | W (2006, 2009) |
Other Doubles tournaments | |
Tour Finals | F (1997, 1999, 2000, 2005) |
Olympic Games | Fourth place (2004) |
Mixed Doubles | |
Career titles | 6 |
Grand Slam Mixed Doubles results | |
Australian Open | W (2003, 2010) |
French Open | F (2005) |
Wimbledon | W (1999, 2003, 2010) |
US Open | W (2008) |
Last updated on: 30 January 2012 150px Signature of Leander Paes. |
Medal record | ||
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Competitor for India | ||
Men's Tennis | ||
Olympic Games | ||
Bronze | 1996 Atlanta | Singles |
Commonwealth Games | ||
Bronze | 2010 Delhi | Men's Doubles |
Asian Games | ||
Gold | 2002 Busan | Men's Doubles |
Gold | 2006 Doha | Men's Doubles |
Gold | 2006 Doha | Mixed Doubles |
Bronze | 1994 Hiroshima | Men's Singles |
Bronze | 2002 Busan | Mixed Doubles |
Leander Adrian Paes (Bengali: লিয়েন্ডার পেজ; born 17 June 1973) is an Indian professional tennis player who currently features in the doubles events in the ATP tour and the Davis Cup tournament. He is the sports ambassador of Haryana. Paes completed the career grand slam in men's doubles after winning the Australian Open in 2012. Having won seven doubles and six mixed doubles Grand Slam titles and finishing as runner up in numerous other Grand Slam finals, he is considered to be one of the greatest and most respected contemporary doubles and mixed doubles players in the world. He is among the most successful professional Indian tennis players and is also the former captain of the Indian Davis Cup team. He is the recipient of India's highest sporting honour, the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna award, in 1996–1997; the Arjuna Award in 1990; and the Padma Shri award in 2001 for his outstanding contribution to tennis in India. Paes is the great-grandson of the Bengali poet Michael Madhusudan Dutt.
Apart from his thirteen Grand Slam victories in doubles and mixed doubles events, he is famous for his several memorable Davis Cup performances playing for India and also for winning a bronze medal for India in the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games. He also achieved the rare men's doubles/mixed doubles double in the 1999 Wimbledon. His consecutive Olympic appearances from 1992 to 2008[1] make him the third Indian, after shooters Karni Singh and Randhir Singh, to compete at five Olympic Games. After winning the mixed doubles Wimbledon title in 2010, Paes became only the second man (after Rod Laver) to win Wimbledon titles in three different decades.[2] In 2010, he joined the Board of Directors of Olympic Gold Quest,[3] a foundation co-founded by Geet Sethi and Prakash Padukone to support talented athletes from India in winning Olympic medals.[4] Apart from the ATP circuit, he also plays in the World TeamTennis competition for Washington Kastles, the team which won the 2009 and 2011 season contest, the latter of which being the first team to complete an undefeated season at 16–0. He was named as MVP of the tournament for the years 2009 and 2011.[5]
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Leander was born in Goa, India on 17 June 1973. He was born to Vece Paes and Jennifer Paes and was raised in Kolkata. He was educated at La Martiniere Calcutta, Madras Christian College Hr Sec School, Chennai, and the Loyola College, Chennai of the University of Madras. His parents were both sportspersons. His father Vece Paes was a midfielder in the bronze medal-winning Indian field hockey team at the 1972 Munich Olympics.[6] His mother captained the Indian basketball team in the 1980 Asian basketball championship. Paes enrolled with the Britannia Amritraj Tennis Academy in Madras (Chennai) in 1985, where he was coached by Dave O'Meara.[7] The academy played a key role in his early development. Leander shot into international fame when he won the 1990 Wimbledon Junior title and rose to no. 1 in the junior world rankings.
Even from a very young age, Leander was a very coordinated child. Hence, his parents put him to whatever sports they wanted. His sporting abilities were observed right from the beginning by his parents, allowed them to scientifically groom it and develop till such time Leander was enough old to take care of himself.
Lee's mother Jennifer remembers those early days with the same fondness. "His appetite for sports was so much that he could not concrete on anything else. He was quite naughty too," says Jennifer.
Stories of Leander's naughtiness and an impish sense of humour abound, as this one from his mother would show. "I used to take the three children then to Kolkata School of Music for piano lessons. The teacher there would give homework to do, and once she checked Leander's excercise book to find that he hasn't done his work", Jennifer stopped at this for a dramatic pause. The next few lines of conversation went somewhat like this:
Teacher: Where is your homework? Leander: I have done it Madam. Teacher: (pauses, checks the book again) But why can't I find it? Leander: No Madam, I did it, but my ayah rubbed it off.
Thus life went on for Leander – school, alternating between one sport to another and teasing and tormenting his elder sisters. He would often accompany his father to the Mohun Bagan ground and try his hand at hockey with an oversized stick or visit the basketball tent and cheer lustily from the sidelines as his mother strode the courts.
It was tennis where the eight year old Leander took his first steps at the Calcutta (Kolkata) South Club courts under Anwar Ali, brother of former Davis Cupper and national coach Akhtar Ali. As he grew up with everybody, including Akhtar, Jaidip Mukherjee and even Akhtar's son Zeeshan, a few seniors to him who later went to play the Davis Cup.
However, Kolkata did not have any proper coaching system then where the Paes couple could enroll their Lee or Leander. And that is when the BAT (Britannia Amritraj Tennis Academy) happened!
Paes showed promise early in his career by winning titles at the Junior US Open and the Junior Wimbledon. He turned professional in 1991.[8] He rose to the number 1 in the world in the junior rankings.[9] In 1992, he reached the quarter finals of the doubles event in the 1992 Barcelona Olympics with Ramesh Krishnan.[10]
He went one better at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics, where he beat Fernando Meligeni to win the bronze medal, thus becoming the first Indian to win an individual medal since KD Jadhav won bronze at the 1952 Helsinki Olympics more than four decades earlier.[11] Paes cited the match as one of his greatest performances on the court, in part because his wrist was severely injured.[12] He was awarded the highest sporting honour by the government of India, the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna in 1996.[13] His first successful year in the ATP circuit came in 1993, when he partnered Sébastien Lareau to reach the US Open doubles semifinal. After having a moderate season in 1994, he reached the quarterfinals of the 1995 Australian Open doubles with Kevin Ullyett. From 1996, he partnered with fellow-Indian Mahesh Bhupathi, which would prove to be a winning combination. Their first year was not a very successful one, especially in the Grand Slams, with a round of 32 finish at Wimbledon being the best. 1997 proved a much better year for the team of Paes and Bhupathi, with the semifinals of the US Open their best Grand Slam result. Paes climbed the doubles ranking from no. 89 at the beginning of the year to no. 14 at the end of the year.[14]
The doubles team of Paes and Bhupathi grew stronger in 1998, reaching the semifinals of three Grand Slams, the Australian Open, the French Open, and the US Open. In the same year, Paes had two of his biggest singles results in the ATP tour. The first one came by winning an ATP singles title at Newport, and the second was beating Pete Sampras, 6–3, 6–4, at the New Haven ATP tournament.[15][16][17][18] In 1999, the duo reached the finals of all four Grand Slams, winning Wimbledon and the French Open, thus becoming the first Indian pair to win a doubles event at a Grand Slam. Paes also teamed up with Lisa Raymond to win the mixed doubles event at Wimbledon. The year also marked his ascent to the no. 1 ranking in doubles.[19] The following year, Paes partnered with Sébastien Lareau for the Australian Open and Jan Siemerink for the French Open, losing in the first round on both occasions. Paes teamed up again with Bhupathi for the US Open, but lost in the first round again. The duo had a disappointing second -ound exit to Australian duo of Todd Woodbridge and Mark Woodforde at the Sydney Olympics, despite high hopes.[20] Paes was given the honour of carrying the Indian Flag at the opening ceremony of the Sydney Olympics.[21] In spite of a winning the French Open in 2001, the team of Bhupathi and Paes had first-round exits in the other three Grand Slams. Paes was awarded the Padmashri by the Government of India in 2001.[22] The duo of Paes and Bhupathi won the gold medal at the 2002 Asian Games in Busan.[23] In 2002, Leander paired up with Michael Hill for a number of tournaments, with moderate success.
Between 2003 and the present, Paes has increasingly focused on his doubles and mixed doubles game. Leander won the mixed doubles events at the Australian Open and Wimbledon with Martina Navaratilova, both in 2003. Weeks after the win at Wimbledon, Paes was admitted to the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center Orlando for a suspected brain tumor that was later found to be neurocysticercosis, a parasitic brain infection. While being treated, he had to miss the US Open, but he recovered by the end of that year.[24] In the 2004 Athens Olympic Games, he paired up with Bhupathi, failing again at the semifinals stage. His next Grand Slam success was in the US Open doubles event in 2006 with Martin Damm. Paes led the Indian tennis team at the Doha Asian Games in 2006 and won two golds in the men's doubles (partnering Bhupathi) and mixed doubles (partnering Sania Mirza).[25][26] Paes has maintained his doubles ranking in the top 20 in the world between 2005 and 2007.[27][28] With wins in the Rotterdam and Indian Wells, Paes took his doubles tally to 38.[29][30][31] Paes and Bhupathi took part in the men's doubles at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. They were eliminated in the quarterfinals by Roger Federer and Stanislas Wawrinka,[32] who went on to win the men's doubles gold medal.[33] Later in 2008, with Cara Black, he won the 2008 US Open mixed doubles title. In 2009, he won the French Open and US Open Men's doubles titles with Lukáš Dlouhý and was the runner-up in mixed doubles at the US Open. He began the 2010 season in good form, again winning the Australian Open mixed doubles title with Cara Black. This was the pair's third consecutive Grand Slam final and the fourth overall. The 2010 Wimbledon win with Black made Paes India's leading Grand Slam winner, ahead of his ex-doubles partner Mahesh Bhupathi, with a total of 12 grand slam titles.
Leander Paes started his Davis Cup career in 1990 at the young age of 16, when he partnered Zeeshan Ali in doubles to beat the Japanese team in a gruelling five-set encounter. He is considered one of the top Davis cup players for his country, with a record of 86–31 overall, as of January 2012.[34][35] He played an important role in the Indian Davis cup team that reached the World Group from 1991–1998. He was part of the Indian Davis Cup team that reached the semifinals of the 1993 Davis Cup with wins against Switzerland and France, eventually losing to Australia. In singles, his major wins came against French duo of Arnaud Boetsch and Henri Leconte in Frejus, France in 1993, Wayne Ferreira in 1994, and Goran Ivanišević in 1995 when India defeated Croatia, Jan Siemerink in 1995 to defeat Netherlands, and Jiří Novák in 1997.[36][37] He teamed up with Bhupathi to beat Hirszon and Ivanisevic of Croatia in 1995, Martin Damm and Petr Korda of the Czech Republic in 1997, Nicolás Massú and Marcelo Ríos of Chile in 1997, Broad and Tim Henman in 1998, and Simon Aspelin and Jonas Björkman of Sweden in 2005. In 2007, Leander has three wins (two doubles and one singles) and no losses in the Davis Cup.
Paes appeared with Bhupathi in six season finales.
In 2011, they appeared, for the first time since 2002, after securing qualification in mid-October. They were eliminated in the semifinals.
Paes played at the year-end championships with Bhupathi from 1997–2000 and in 2002, reaching three finals. In 1997, they lost the final to Rick Leach and Jonathan Stark. They lost the 1999 final to Sébastien Lareau and Alex O’Brien. In 2000, they lost the final to Donald Johnson and Pieter Norval.
Legend (Singles) |
---|
Grand Slam (0) |
Tennis Masters Cup (0) |
ATP Masters Series (0) |
ATP Tour (1) |
No. | Date | Tournament | Surface | Opponent | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | 6 July 1998 | Newport, Rhode Island, U.S. | Grass | Neville Godwin | 6–3, 6–2 |
Legend (Doubles) |
---|
Grand Slam (7) |
ATP World Tour Finals (0) |
ATP World Tour Masters 1000 (12) |
ATP World Tour 500 Series (6) |
ATP World Tour 250 Series (25) |
No. | Date | Tournament | Surface | Partner | Opponent | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | 7 April 1997 | Chennai, India | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Oleg Ogorodov Eyal Ran |
7–6, 7–5 |
2. | 28 April 1997 | Prague, Czech Republic | Clay | Mahesh Bhupathi | Petr Luxa David Škoch |
6–1, 6–1 |
3. | 28 July 1997 | Montreal, Canada | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Sébastien Lareau Alex O'Brien |
7–6, 6–3 |
4. | 11 August 1997 | New Haven, Connecticut, U.S. | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Sébastien Lareau Alex O'Brien |
6–4, 6–7, 6–2 |
5. | 29 September 1997 | Beijing, China | Hard (i) | Mahesh Bhupathi | Alex O'Brien Jim Courier |
7–5, 7–6 |
6. | 6 October 1997 | Singapore | Carpet (i) | Mahesh Bhupathi | Rick Leach Jonathan Stark |
6–4, 6–4 |
7. | 5 January 1998 | Doha, Qatar | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Olivier Delaître Fabrice Santoro |
6–4, 3–6, 6–4 |
8. | 9 February 1998 | Dubai, United Arab Emirates | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Donald Johnson Francisco Montana |
6–2, 7–5 |
9. | 6 April 1998 | Chennai, India (2) | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Olivier Delaître Max Mirnyi |
6–7, 6–3, 6–2 |
10. | 11 May 1998 | Rome, Italy | Clay | Mahesh Bhupathi | Ellis Ferreira Rick Leach |
6–4, 4–6, 7–6 |
11. | 5 October 1998 | Shanghai, China | Carpet (i) | Mahesh Bhupathi | Todd Woodbridge Mark Woodforde |
6–4, 6–7, 7–6 |
12. | 2 November 1998 | Paris, France | Carpet (i) | Mahesh Bhupathi | Jacco Eltingh Paul Haarhuis |
6–4, 6–2 |
13. | 5 April 1999 | Chennai, India (3) | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Wayne Black Neville Godwin |
4–6, 7–5, 6–4 |
14. | 24 May 1999 | French Open, France | Clay | Mahesh Bhupathi | Goran Ivanišević Jeff Tarango |
6–2, 7–5 |
15. | 14 June 1999 | 's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands | Grass | Jan Siemerink | Ellis Ferreira David Rikl |
Walkover |
16. | 21 June 1999 | Wimbledon, United Kingdom | Grass | Mahesh Bhupathi | Paul Haarhuis Jared Palmer |
6–7, 6–3, 6–4, 7–6 |
17. | 5 July 1999 | Newport, Rhode Island, U.S. | Grass | Wayne Arthurs | Sargis Sargsian Chris Woodruff |
6–7, 7–6, 6–3 |
18. | 1 May 2000 | Orlando, Florida, U.S. | Clay | Jan Siemerink | Justin Gimelstob Sébastien Lareau |
6–3, 6–4 |
19. | 9 October 2000 | Tokyo, Japan | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Michael Hill Jeff Tarango |
6–4, 6–7, 6–3 |
20. | 23 April 2001 | Atlanta, U.S. | Clay | Mahesh Bhupathi | Rick Leach David Macpherson |
6–3, 7–6 |
21. | 30 April 2001 | Houston, Texas, U.S. (2) | Clay | Mahesh Bhupathi | Kevin Kim Jim Thomas |
7–6, 6–2 |
22. | 28 May 2001 | French Open, France (2) | Clay | Mahesh Bhupathi | Petr Pála Pavel Vízner |
7–6, 6–3 |
23. | 6 August 2001 | Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S. | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Martin Damm David Prinosil |
7–6, 6–3 |
24. | 31 December 2001 | Chennai, India (4) | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Tomáš Cibulec Ota Fukárek |
5–7, 6–2, 7–5 |
25. | 29 April 2002 | Majorca, Spain | Clay | Mahesh Bhupathi | Julian Knowle Michael Kohlmann |
6–2, 6–4 |
26. | 24 February 2003 | Dubai, United Arab Emirates (2) | Hard | David Rikl | Wayne Black Kevin Ullyett |
6–3, 6–0 |
27. | 3 March 2003 | Delray Beach, Florida, U.S. | Hard | Nenad Zimonjić | Raemon Sluiter Martin Verkerk |
7–5, 3–6, 7–5 |
28. | 7 July 2003 | Gstaad, Switzerland | Clay | David Rikl | František Čermák Leoš Friedl |
6–3, 6–3 |
29. | 7 June 2004 | Halle, Germany | Grass | David Rikl | Tomáš Cibulec Petr Pála |
6–2, 7–5 |
30. | 5 July 2004 | Gstaad, Switzerland (2) | Clay | David Rikl | Marc Rosset Stanislas Wawrinka |
6–4, 6–2 |
31. | 26 July 2004 | Toronto, Canada (2) | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Jonas Björkman Max Mirnyi |
6–4, 6–2 |
32. | 13 September 2004 | Delray Beach, Florida, U.S. (2) | Hard | Radek Štěpánek | Gastón Etlis Martín Rodríguez |
6–0, 6–3 |
33. | 11 April 2005 | Monte Carlo, Monaco | Clay | Nenad Zimonjić | Bob Bryan Mike Bryan |
Walkover |
34. | 18 April 2005 | Barcelona, Spain | Clay | Nenad Zimonjić | Feliciano López Rafael Nadal |
6–3, 6–3 |
35. | 26 September 2005 | Bangkok, Thailand | Hard (i) | Paul Hanley | Jonathan Erlich Andy Ram |
6–7, 6–1, 6–2 |
36. | 19 June 2006 | 's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands (2) | Grass | Martin Damm | Arnaud Clément Chris Haggard |
6–1, 7–6 |
37. | 28 August 2006 | US Open, U.S. | Hard | Martin Damm | Jonas Björkman Max Mirnyi |
6–7, 6–4, 6–3 |
38. | 19 February 2007 | Rotterdam, Netherlands | Hard (i) | Martin Damm | Andrei Pavel Alexander Waske |
6–3, 6–7, [10–7] |
39. | 5 March 2007 | Indian Wells, California, U.S. | Hard | Martin Damm | Jonathan Erlich Andy Ram |
6–4, 6–4 |
40. | 21 September 2008 | Bangkok, Thailand (2) | Hard (i) | Lukáš Dlouhý | Scott Lipsky David Martin |
6–4, 7–6(7–4) |
41. | 6 June 2009 | French Open, France (3) | Clay | Lukáš Dlouhý | Wesley Moodie Dick Norman |
3–6, 6–3, 6–2 |
42. | 13 September 2009 | US Open, U.S. (2) | Hard | Lukáš Dlouhý | Mahesh Bhupathi Mark Knowles |
3–6, 6–3, 6–2 |
43. | 3 April 2010 | Miami, Florida, U.S. | Hard | Lukáš Dlouhý | Mahesh Bhupathi Max Mirnyi |
6–2, 7–5 |
44. | 17 October 2010 | Shanghai, China | Hard | Jürgen Melzer | Mariusz Fyrstenberg Marcin Matkowski |
7–5, 4–6, [10–5] |
45. | 9 January 2011 | Chennai, India (5) | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Robin Haase David Martin |
6–2, 6–7(3–7), [10–7] |
46. | 2 April 2011 | Miami, Florida, U.S. (2) | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Max Mirnyi Daniel Nestor |
6–7(5–7), 6–2, [10–5] |
47. | 21 August 2011 | Cincinnati, U.S. | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Michaël Llodra Nenad Zimonjić |
7–6(7–4), 7–6(7–2) |
48. | 8 January 2012 | Chennai, India (6) | Hard | Janko Tipsarevic | Andy Ram Jonathan Erlich |
6–4, 6–4 |
49. | 28 January 2012 | Australian Open, Australia | Hard | Radek Štěpánek | Bob Bryan Mike Bryan |
7–6(7–1), 6–2 |
50. | 31 March 2012 | Miami, Florida, U.S. (3) | Hard | Radek Štěpánek | Max Mirnyi Daniel Nestor |
3–6, 6–1, [10–8] |
By winning the 2012 Australian Open title, Paes achieved the career Grand Slam.
Outcome | Year | Championship | Surface | Partner | Opponents | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Runner-up | 1999 | Australian Open | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Jonas Björkman Patrick Rafter |
6–3, 4–6, 6–4, 6–7(10–12), 6–4 |
Winner | 1999 | French Open | Clay | Mahesh Bhupathi | Goran Ivanišević Jeff Tarango |
6–2, 7–5 |
Winner | 1999 | Wimbledon | Grass | Mahesh Bhupathi | Paul Haarhuis Jared Palmer |
6–7(10–12), 6–3, 6–4, 7–6(7–4) |
Runner-up | 1999 | US Open | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Sébastien Lareau Alex O'Brien |
7–6, 6–4 |
Winner | 2001 | French Open (2) | Clay | Mahesh Bhupathi | Petr Pála Pavel Vízner |
7–6, 6–3 |
Runner-up | 2004 | US Open | Hard | David Rikl | Mark Knowles Daniel Nestor |
6–3, 6–3 |
Runner-up | 2006 | Australian Open | Hard | Martin Damm | Bob Bryan Mike Bryan |
4–6, 6–3, 6–4 |
Winner | 2006 | US Open | Hard | Martin Damm | Jonas Björkman Max Mirnyi |
6–7(5–7), 6–4, 6–3 |
Runner-up | 2008 | US Open | Hard | Lukáš Dlouhý | Bob Bryan Mike Bryan |
7–6(7–5), 7–6(12–10) |
Winner | 2009 | French Open (3) | Clay | Lukáš Dlouhý | Wesley Moodie Dick Norman |
3–6, 6–3, 6–2 |
Winner | 2009 | US Open (2) | Hard | Lukáš Dlouhý | Mahesh Bhupathi Mark Knowles |
3–6, 6–3, 6–2 |
Runner-up | 2010 | French Open | Clay | Lukáš Dlouhý | Nenad Zimonjić Daniel Nestor |
7–5, 6–2 |
Runner-up | 2011 | Australian Open | Hard | Mahesh Bhupathi | Bob Bryan Mike Bryan |
3–6, 4–6 |
Winner | 2012 | Australian Open | Hard | Radek Štěpánek | Bob Bryan Mike Bryan |
7–6(7–1), 6–2 |
Outcome | Year | Championship | Surface | Partner | Opponents | Score |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Winner | 1999 | Wimbledon | Grass | Lisa Raymond | Anna Kournikova Jonas Björkman |
6–4, 3–6, 6–3 |
Runner-up | 2001 | US Open | Hard | Lisa Raymond | Rennae Stubbs Todd Woodbridge |
6–4, 5–7, [11–9] |
Winner | 2003 | Australian Open | Hard | Martina Navrátilová | Eleni Daniilidou Todd Woodbridge |
6–4, 7–5 |
Winner | 2003 | Wimbledon (2) | Grass | Martina Navrátilová | Anastassia Rodionova Andy Ram |
6–3, 6–3 |
Runner-up | 2004 | Australian Open | Hard | Martina Navrátilová | Elena Bovina Nenad Zimonjić |
6–1, 7–6 |
Runner-up | 2005 | French Open | Clay | Martina Navrátilová | Daniela Hantuchová Fabrice Santoro |
3–6, 6–3, 6–2 |
Runner-up | 2007 | US Open | Hard | Meghann Shaughnessy | Victoria Azarenka Max Mirnyi |
6–4, 7–6(8–6) |
Winner | 2008 | US Open | Hard | Cara Black | Liezel Huber Jamie Murray |
7–6, 6–4 |
Runner-up | 2009 | Wimbledon | Grass | Cara Black | Anna-Lena Grönefeld Mark Knowles |
7–5, 6–3 |
Runner-up | 2009 | US Open | Hard | Cara Black | Carly Gullickson Travis Parrot |
6–2, 6–4 |
Winner | 2010 | Australian Open (2) | Hard | Cara Black | Ekaterina Makarova Jaroslav Levinský |
7–5, 6–3 |
Winner | 2010 | Wimbledon (3) | Grass | Cara Black | Lisa Raymond Wesley Moodie |
6–4, 7–6 |
Runner-up | 2012 | Australian Open | Hard | Elena Vesnina | Bethanie Mattek-Sands Horia Tecău |
3–6, 7–5, [3–10] |
Tournament | 1991 | 1992 | 1993 | 1994 | 1995 | 1996 | 1997 | 1998 | 1999 | 2000 | 2001 | 2002 | 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | SR | W–L |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Grand Slams | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Australian Open | A | A | A | 2R | QF | A | 1R | SF | F | 1R | 1R | 2R | QF | 1R | A | F | 3R | 2R | SF | QF | F | W | 1 / 17 | 43–16 |
French Open | A | A | A | A | A | A | 2R | SF | W | 1R | W | SF | SF | 2R | QF | 1R | 2R | 3R | W | F | 2R | 3 / 15 | 44–12 | |
Wimbledon | A | A | 1R | 3R | A | 2R | 1R | 2R | W | A | 1R | 1R | SF | 2R | QF | SF | QF | SF | 1R | 2R | 2R | 1 / 17 | 31–16 | |
US Open | A | A | SF | 2R | 1R | A | SF | SF | F | 1R | 1R | 2R | A | F | 1R | W | 1R | F | W | 1R | QF | 2 / 17 | 44–15 | |
Win–Loss | 0–0 | 0–0 | 4–2 | 4–3 | 3–2 | 0–1 | 5–4 | 13–4 | 22–2 | 0–3 | 6–3 | 6–4 | 11–3 | 7–4 | 6–3 | 15–3 | 6–4 | 16–4 | 16–2 | 9–4 | 10–4 | 6–0 | 7 / 66 | 162–59 |
Year End Championships | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tennis Masters Cup | A | A | A | A | A | A | F | RR | F | F | RR | NH | A | A | F | SF | SF | RR | RR | RR | SF | 0 / 12 | 19–27 | |
Summer Olympics | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Summer Olympics | NH | QF | Not Held | 2R | Not Held | 2R | Not Held | SF | Not Held | QF | Not Held | 0 / 5 | 9–6 | |||||||||||
Masters Series | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Indian Wells | A | A | A | A | A | 1R | 1R | A | SF | 2R | 1R | 1R | SF | 1R | QF | 2R | W | QF | 2R | 1R | 2R | QF | 1 / 16 | 19–15 |
Miami | A | A | A | 2R | 1R | 2R | 2R | 2R | 2R | 2R | A | 2R | F | QF | 1R | A | F | QF | 2R | W | W | W | 3 / 17 | 32–14 |
Monte Carlo | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | SF | 2R | A | SF | 1R | 2R | A | W | 2R | A | 2R | SF | 2R | A | 1 / 10 | 11–9 | |
Rome | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | W | A | A | 1R | 1R | 2R | 2R | QF | 2R | SF | 2R | QF | QF | 2R | 1 / 12 | 10–11 | |
Madrid (Stuttgart) | A | A | A | A | A | A | QF | F | A | A | QF | 2R | A | 1R | F | 1R | 2R | 2R | A | SF | A | 0 / 10 | 10–10 | |
Canada | A | A | A | A | A | A | W | SF | QF | A | 1R | QF | QF | W | 2R | SF | QF | SF | A | 2R | 2R | 2 / 13 | 19–11 | |
Cincinnati | A | A | 1R | A | A | A | QF | A | 2R | A | W | 1R | 2R | QF | QF | SF | SF | QF | 2R | 2R | W | 2 / 14 | 17–12 | |
Shanghai | Not Held | A | W | SF | 1 / 2 | 6–1 | ||||||||||||||||||
Paris | A | A | A | A | A | A | 2R | W | A | A | F | 2R | 1R | 1R | A | 1R | 2R | A | 2R | QF | 2R | 1 / 11 | 9–10 | |
Hamburg | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | A | 2R | A | 1R | 2R | SF | SF | SF | A | A | SF | NM1 | 0 / 7 | 11–6 | |||
Win–Loss | 0–0 | 0–0 | 0–1 | 1–1 | 0–1 | 1–2 | 9–5 | 16–4 | 3–5 | 1–2 | 12–7 | 5–9 | 9–7 | 11–7 | 12–8 | 6–6 | 12–6 | 11–9 | 5–6 | 12–7 | 11–5 | 11 / 110 | 137–98 | |
Ranking | 481 | 179 | 93 | 142 | 76 | 89 | 14 | 4 | 1 | 84 | 9 | 33 | 13 | 13 | 12 | 12 | 12 | 10 | 8 | 5 | 8 |
Leander Paes is known for changing partnerships and experimenting with it. Alexander Peya will be the 87th men's doubles partner of Paes' career when the two men team up at the 2012 French Open. Paes has also teamed with 19 players in Mixed Doubles. Martina Navratilova, Cara Black, Lisa Raymond are few to name. He's currently playing with Elena Vesnina in Mixed Doubles.
"I would especially like to thank Leander Paes ... he doesn't play for money, but for the sheer love of game."
No. | Partner | Years Played With |
---|---|---|
1 | Charlton Eagle | 1991 |
2 | Juan Rios | 1991 |
3 | Ramesh Krishnan | 1991, 1992, 1993 |
4 | Zeeshan Ali | 1991 |
5 | Andrew Sznajder | 1992 |
6 | Bertrand Madsen | 1992 |
7 | Donald Johnson | 1992, 1993, 1994, 1996, 2003 |
8 | Gilad Bloom | 1992, 1994 |
9 | Kevin Ullyett | 1992, 1997 |
10 | Nicklas Utgren | 1992 |
11 | Nicola Bruno | 1992 |
12 | Todd Nelson | 1992, 1993 |
13 | Arne Thoms | 1993 |
14 | Byron Black | 1993, 2000 |
15 | Ellis Ferreira | 1993 |
16 | Fernon Wibier | 1993 |
17 | Jean-Philippe Fleurian | 1993 |
18 | Johan De Beer | 1993 |
19 | Laurence Tieleman | 1993, 1995 |
20 | Oliver Fernandez | 1993 |
21 | Sebastien Lareau | 1993, 1994, 2000 |
22 | Shuzo Matsuoka | 1993 |
23 | Stefan Kruger | 1993 |
24 | Tommy Ho | 1993 |
25 | Vladimir Gabrichidze | 1993 |
26 | Wayne Arthurs | 1993, 1999, 2000 |
27 | Adam Malik | 1994 |
28 | Albert Chang | 1994 |
29 | Daniel Nestor | 1994 |
30 | Gaurav Natekar | 1994, 1995 |
31 | Mahesh Bhupathi | 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 |
32 | Marius Barnard | 1994 |
33 | Mark Kaplan | 1994 |
34 | Mark Knowles | 1994 |
35 | Marten Renstrom | 1994 |
36 | Richard Matuszewski | 1994 |
37 | Stephen Noteboom | 1994 |
38 | Clinton Ferreira | 1995 |
39 | David Adams | 1995 |
40 | Eyal Ran | 1995 |
41 | Kent Kinnear | 1995 |
42 | Lars-Anders Wahlgren | 1995 |
43 | Matt Lucena | 1995 |
44 | Maurice Ruah | 1995 |
45 | Nicolas Pereira | 1995, 1996 |
46 | Oscar Ortiz | 1995 |
47 | Wayne Black | 1995, 1996 |
48 | Chris Haggard | 1996, 2000 |
49 | David Dilucia | 1996 |
50 | Devin Bowen | 1996 |
51 | Jeff Belloli | 1996 |
52 | Neville Godwin | 1996 |
53 | Marcos Ondruska | 1997 |
54 | Mark Keil | 1997 |
55 | Nitten Kirrtane | 1997 |
56 | Roger Smith | 1997 |
57 | Peter Tramacchi | 1998 |
58 | Piet Norval | 1998 |
59 | Jan Siemerink | 1999, 2000 |
60 | Jared Palmer | 1999 |
61 | Jonas Bjorkman | 1999, 2004 |
62 | Olivier Delaitre | 1999 |
63 | Fazaluddin Syed | 2000 |
64 | Nicolas Lapentti | 2000 |
65 | Vishal Uppal | 2000, 2002 |
66 | Mustafa Ghouse | 2001 |
67 | David Rikl | 2002, 2003, 2004 |
68 | John-Laffnie de Jager | 2002 |
69 | Justin Gimelstob | 2002 |
70 | Michael Hill | 2002 |
71 | Michael Llodra | 2002 |
72 | Stephen Huss | 2002 |
73 | Tomas Cibulec | 2002, 2004 |
74 | Nenad Zimonjić | 2003, 2005 |
75 | Jonathan Erlich | 2004 |
76 | Radek Štěpánek | 2004, 2006, 2012 |
77 | Paul Hanley | 2005, 2007, 2008 |
78 | Aisam-Ul-Haq Qureshi | 2006 |
79 | Martin Damm | 2006, 2007 |
80 | Rohan Bopanna | 2007, 2012 |
81 | Sunil-Kumar Sipaeya | 2007 |
82 | Lukáš Dlouhý | 2008, 2009, 2010 |
83 | Tommy Robredo | 2008 |
84 | Scott Lipsky | 2009 |
85 | Jürgen Melzer | 2010 |
86 | Janko Tipsarević | 2012 |
87 | Alexander Peya | 2012 |
Paes is the great-grandson of the Bengali poet Michael Madhusudan Dutt. Previously having dated Bollywood actress Mahima Chaudhary, he is now married to Rhea Pillai (ex-wife of Bollywood actor Sanjay Dutt) and has a daughter Aiyana.
The duo of Leander Paes and Mahesh Bhupathi were nicknamed as "Indian Express". Leander Paes' off-and-on partnership with Bhupathi draws constant media attention in his home country, India.[40][41][42] In the 2006 Asian Games, a loss to the Chinese Taipei team in the team event led Leander to question Bhupathi's commitment to Team India.[43] He once stated in an interview that although he and Bhupathi are friends, he did not consider pairing with his former team-mate.[44] However, for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, they decided to play together for their country,[45] and lost in the quarterfinals to the eventual champions Roger Federer and Stanislas Wawrinka.[46]
In 2011, the "Indian Express" pair won the doubles title at Chennai Open. They reunited to play in a Grand Slam Tournament after nine years and claimed runners-up in the 2011 Australian Open and reached the semifinals in the year-end championships.[47]
The Indian Duo has a 303–103 career record together. They have higher success rate against various top teams.[48] They have a Davis Cup record of longest winning streak in doubles, with 23 straight wins.[49]
It has been announced that Bhupathi will team with Rohan Bopanna for the 2012 season. Paes will partner Czech Radek Štěpánek.[50]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Leander Paes |
Preceded by Karnam Malleswari |
Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna 1996/1997 Joint with Nameirakpam Kunjarani |
Succeeded by Sachin Tendulkar |
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Name | Paes, Leander |
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Short description | |
Date of birth | 17 June 1973 |
Place of birth | Calcutta (Kolkata) |
Date of death | |
Place of death |