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John
Kerry was born on December 11, 1943 at Fitzsimmons
Military Hospital in Denver, Colorado, where his father,
Richard, who had volunteered to fly DC-3's in the
Army Air Corps in World War II, was recovering from
a bout with tuberculosis. Not long after Sen. Kerry's
birth, his family returned home to Massachusetts.
A
graduate of Yale University, John Kerry entered the
Navy after graduation, becoming a Swift Boat officer,
serving on a gunboat in the Mekong Delta in Vietnam.
He received a Silver Star, Bronze Star with Combat
V, and three awards of the Purple Heart for his service
in combat.
By
the time Senator Kerry returned home from Vietnam,
he felt compelled to question decisions he believed
were being made to protect those in positions of authority
in Washington at the expense of the soldiers carrying
on the fighting in Vietnam. Kerry was a co-founder
of the Vietnam Veterans of America and became a spokesperson
for the Vietnam Veterans Against the War -- Morley
Safer would describe him as "a veteran whose
articulate call to reason rather than anarchy seemed
to bridge the gap between the Abbie Hoffmans of the
world and Mr. Agnew's so-called 'Silent Majority.'"
In April, 1971, in testifying before the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, he asked the question of his
fellow citizens, "How do you ask a man to be
the last man to die for a mistake?" Sen. Claiborne
Pell, (D-R.I.) thanked Kerry, then 27, for testifying
before the committee, expressing his hope that Kerry
"might one day be a colleague of ours in this
body."
Fourteen
years later, John Kerry would have the opportunity
to fulfill those hopes - serving side by side with
Sen. Pell as a Member of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee. But in the intervening years, he found
different ways to fight for those things in which
he believed. Time and again, Kerry fought to hold
the political system accountable and to do what he
believed was right. As a top prosecutor in Middlesex
County, Kerry took on organized crime and put the
Number Two mob boss in New England behind bars. He
modernized the District Attorney's office, creating
an innovative rape crisis crime unit, and as a lawyer
in private practice he worked long and hard to prove
the innocence of a man wrongly given a life sentence
for a murder he did not commit.
In
1984, afer winning election as Lieutenant Governor
in 1982, Kerry ran and was elected to serve in the
United States Senate, running the nation's first successful
PAC-free Senate race and defeating a well-heeled Republican
opponent buoyed by Ronald Reagan's reelection coattails.
Like his predecessor, the irreplaceable Paul Tsongas,
Kerry came to the Senate with a reputation for independence
-- and reinforced it by making tough choices on difficult
issues: breaking with many in his own Party to support
Gramm-Rudman Deficit Reduction; taking on corporate
welfare and government waste; pushing for campaign
finance reform; holding Oliver North accountable and
exposing the fraud and abuse at the heart of the BCCI
scandal; working with John McCain in the search for
the truth about Vietnam veterans declared POW/MIA;
and insisting on accountability, investment, and excellence
in public education.
Sen.
Kerry was re-elected in 1990, and again in 1996, defeating
the popular Republican Governor William Weld in the
most closely watched Senate race in the country. Now
serving his third term, Kerry has worked to reform
public education, address childrens' issues, strengthen
the economy and encourage the growth of the high tech
New Economy, protect the environment, and advance
America's foreign policy interests around the globe.
John
Kerry is married to Teresa Heinz. He has two daughters,
Alexandra and Vanessa. Teresa Heinz has three sons,
John, Andre, and Christopher. Senator Kerry lives
in Boston.
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