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Robert Byrd dies at 92...after serving 57 years in Congress

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Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Isle of Man
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Robert Byrd, who rose from an impoverished childhood to become the longest-serving senator in U.S. history, died this morning at the aged of 92.

Byrd, a Democrat, held his seat for more than 50 years, including six years as Senate majority leader.

At the time of his death, he was third in line to the presidency.

yrd died peacefully at a hospital in a suburb outside Washington, according to family spokesman, Jesse Jacobs.

He had been there since last week, but had been in frail health for several years.

article-1290255-0A3DE781000005DC-113_468x344.jpg Record breaker: Senator Byrd speaks in Washington in 2005. Just a year later he would be elected to his ninth term in the Senate

Byrd's politics evolved over his career. As a young man, we was a member of the racist Ku Klux Klan for a brief period, and he fought against landmark civil rights legislation in 1964.

He later apologised for both actions, saying intolerance has no place in America.

He was an early supporter of the Vietnam War, yet was one of the Senate's strongest voices against the Iraq war at a time that many Democrats backed it.

He felt gratified when public opinion swung behind him.

'The people are becoming more and more aware that we were hoodwinked, that the leaders of this country misrepresented or exaggerated the necessity for invading Iraq,' Byrd said.

Byrd's death followed less than a year after the passing of Edward M. Kennedy, another leading Democrat who had served in the Senate for decades.

It comes as the Senate deals with two of President Barack Obama's top priorities: completing passage of financial overhaul legislation and confirming his nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court, Elena Kagan.

article-1290255-0A3DE8A0000005DC-3_468x286.jpg The flag at the U.S. Capitol building is flown at half staff in honor of Sen. Robert Byrd after his death

article-1290255-0A3D92BF000005DC-465_468x325.jpg The West Virginia senator is honoured at the White House where the American flag also flew at half mast

Neither is likely to be derailed by Byrd's death, though delays are possible.

West Virginia's Democratic governor, Joe Manchin, will appoint Byrd's replacement, so the party's strong majority should not be affected.

An election will be held to fill the rest of Byrd's term, which was to end in January 2013.

Byrd was a fiery orator versed in the classics and a hard-charging power broker who steered billions of federal dollars to the his home state.

In comportment and style, Byrd often seemed a Senate throwback to a courtlier 19th century. He could recite poetry, quote the Bible and detail the Peloponnesian Wars - and frequently did in Senate debates.

Senate Republican leader, Mitch McConnell said Byrd 'combined a devotion to the U.S. Constitution with a deep learning of history to defend the interests of his state and the traditions of the Senate'.

article-1290255-0A3D5658000005DC-895_468x323.jpg Senator Byrd embraces Hillary Clinton at a launch for his 2004 book Losing America: Confronting a Reckless and Arrogant Presidency

Byrd was a master of the Senate's bewildering rules and longtime chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee, which controls a third of the $3 trillion federal budget.

He was willing to use both to reward friends and punish those he viewed as having slighted him.

'Bob is a living encyclopedia, and legislative graveyards are filled with the bones of those who underestimated him,' former speaker of the House of Representatives, Democrat Jim Wright, once said in remarks Byrd later displayed in his office.

In 1971, Byrd ousted Kennedy as the Democrats' second in command.

He was elected majority leader in 1976 and held the post until Democrats lost control of the Senate four years later. He remained his party's leader through six years in the minority, then spent another two years as majority leader.

Byrd stepped aside as majority leader in 1989 when Democrats sought a more contemporary television spokesman. His consolation price was the chairmanship of the Appropriations Committee.

article-1290255-0A3B5545000005DC-355_468x337.jpg Senator Byrd sits in a wheelchair as he is brought to the Senate floor to vote on judge Sonia Sotomayor's Supreme Court nomination

Within two years, he surpassed his announced five-year goal of making sure more than $1 billion in federal funds was sent back to West Virginia, money used to build highways, bridges, buildings and other facilities, some named after him.

Entire government bureaus opened there. Even the Coast Guard had a facility in the landlocked state.

Critics portrayed him as the personification of Congress' thirst for wasteful 'pork' spending projects.

In 2006 and with 64 per cent of the vote, Byrd won an unprecedented ninth term in the Senate just months after surpassing Republican Strom Thurmond's record as its longest-serving member.

His more than 18,500 roll call votes were another record.

But Byrd also seemed to slow after the death of Erma, his wife of almost 69 years, in 2006.

Frail and at times wistful, he used two canes to walk haltingly and needed help from aides to make his way about the Senate.

He often hesitated at unscripted moments.

article-1290255-0A3D511B000005DC-471_468x478.jpg In this 1977 image, Senator Byrd plays a tune on his fiddle, as he appeared on ABC-TV's Good Morning America show in Washington

By 2009, aides were bringing him to and from the Senate floor in a wheelchair.

Though his hands trembled in later years, Byrd only recently lost his grip on power.

Last November he surrendered his chairmanship of the Appropriations Committee.

Byrd's lodestar was protecting the Constitution. He frequently pulled out a dog-eared copy of it from a pocket in one of his trademark three-piece suits.

He also defended the Senate in its age-old rivalry with the executive branch, no matter which party held the White House.

Byrd briefly sought the Democratic presidential nomination in 1976 and later told associates he had once been approached by President Richard M. Nixon, a Republican, about accepting an appointment to the Supreme Court.

But he was a creature - and defender - of Congress across a career in Washington that began in 1952 with his election to the House. He served three terms there before winning his Senate seat in 1958, when Dwight D. Eisenhower was in the White House.

In a measure of his tenacity, Byrd took a decade of night courses to earn a law degree in 1963, and completed his long-delayed bachelor's degree at West Virginia's Marshall University in 1994 with correspondence classes.

Robert Carlyle Byrd was born November 20, 1917, in North Carolina, as Cornelius Calvin Sale Jr, the youngest of five children.

Before he was one, his mother died and his father sent him to live with an aunt and uncle, Vlurma and Titus Byrd, who renamed him and moved to the coal-mining town of Stotesbury, West Virginia.

He didn't learn his original name until he was 16 and his real birthday until he was 54.

Byrd's foster father was a miner who frequently changed jobs, and Byrd recalled that the family's house was 'without electricity, ...no running water, no telephone, a little wooden outhouse.'

He graduated from high school but could not afford college.

article-1290255-0A3DBED1000005DC-107_468x352.jpg Senator Robert Byrd pictured in 1967, when he was nearing the height of his powers in the U.S. Senate

Married in 1936 to high school sweetheart Erma Ora James - with whom he had two daughters - he pumped gas, cut meat and during World War II was a shipyard welder.

Returning to meat cutting in West Virginia, he became popular for his fundamentalist Bible lectures. A leader of the Ku Klux Klan suggested he run for office.

He won his first race - for the state legislature - in 1946, distinguishing himself from 12 rivals by singing and fiddling mountain tunes.

His fiddle became a fixture; he later played it on television and recorded an album. He abandoned it only after a grandson's traumatic death in 1982 and when his shaky hands left him unable to play.

After six years in the West Virginia legislature, Byrd was elected to the U.S. House in 1952 in a race in which his brief Klan membership became an issue. He said he joined because of its anti-communism.

Byrd entered Congress as one of its most conservative Democrats. His views gradually moderated, particularly on economic issues, but he always sided with his state's coal interests in confrontations with environmentalists.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1290255/Robert-Byrd-dies-aged-92.html#ixzz0sG0Crtwb

India, gun buyback and steamroll.

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Posted

Since he was once a Grand Dragon of the KKK will there be a cross burning at his memorial?

"I shall never fight in the armed forces with a Negro by my side ... Rather I should die a thousand times, and see Old Glory trampled in the dirt never to rise again, than to see this beloved land of ours become degraded by race mongrels, a throwback to the blackest specimen from the wilds.

— Robert C. Byrd, in a letter to Sen. Theodore Bilbo

"The fact that we are here today to debate raising America’s debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. It is a sign that the U.S. Government can’t pay its own bills. It is a sign that we now depend on ongoing financial assistance from foreign countries to finance our Government’s reckless fiscal policies."

Senator Barack Obama
Senate Floor Speech on Public Debt
March 16, 2006



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Filed: Lift. Cond. (apr) Country: Egypt
Timeline
Posted
He was an early supporter of the Vietnam War, yet was one of the Senate's strongest voices against the Iraq war at a time that many Democrats backed it.

:wacko: :wacko: :wacko: :wacko: :wacko: :wacko: :wacko:

Don't just open your mouth and prove yourself a fool....put it in writing.

It gets harder the more you know. Because the more you find out, the uglier everything seems.

kodasmall3.jpg

Posted
Since he was once a Grand Dragon of the KKK will there be a cross burning at his memorial?

"I shall never fight in the armed forces with a Negro by my side ... Rather I should die a thousand times, and see Old Glory trampled in the dirt never to rise again, than to see this beloved land of ours become degraded by race mongrels, a throwback to the blackest specimen from the wilds.

— Robert C. Byrd, in a letter to Sen. Theodore Bilbo

Good question LS.

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