Orlando Sentinel

Oldest member of Congress, top Dem on House rules panel

- By Alan Fram

WASHINGTON — Veteran U.S. Rep. Louise Slaughter, a Kentucky blacksmith’s daughter who went on to chair one of Congress’ most important committees, died Friday at a Washington hospital where she was being treated after falling in her home, her top aide said.

She was 88 and the oldest sitting member of Congress.

The New York Democrat died at George Washington University Hospital a week after a fall in which Slaughter had sustained a concussion, said Liam Fitzsimmon­s, her chief of staff.

Slaughter had been the first woman to chair the House Rules Committee and was her party’s top member on the panel when she died.

Slaughter was serving her 16th term in the House, and her 31 years in the chamber made her its third longest-serving woman, according to the official House website.

She chaired the rules committee from 2007 through 2010. A special election will be held to elect someone to serve the rest of Slaughter’s term, which expires Dec. 31.

Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo will set the date for the special election in the 25th Congressio­nal District, which includes the city of Rochester.

Slaughter had a degree in microbiolo­gy and was originally from Harlan County, Ky., and her soft, twangy accent always seemed out of place for someone representi­ng a western New York district.

But she was repeatedly re-elected, including a narrow victory in 2014, and was the longest-serving member of Congress from New York when she died.

“Louise never forgot her roots as the daughter of a Kentucky blacksmith,” House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said in a statement.

“She brought the grace and grit of her Southern background to her leadership in the Congress, building bridges and breaking down barriers all with her beautiful accent. Louise could be fiercely debating on the floor in the morning, and singing in harmony with her colleagues across the aisle in the evening.”

House Speaker Paul Ryan called Slaughter “a giant in the people’s House” and said she was “unrelentin­g” in working for her ideals and constituen­ts. “Louise did not need a gavel to make a dent in history,” the Republican speaker said.

Slaughter was the chief force behind a 2012 law to ban insider stock trading based on congressio­nal knowledge and require disclosure of market activities by lawmakers.

She also helped write the Violence Against Women Act and a 2008 law designed to protect people with genetic predisposi­tions to health conditions from facing discrimina­tion from their employers or health insurance companies.

Her death creates a vacancy at the top of the Democratic side of the Rules panel, which sets the terms of House floor debates. It’s likely to be filled by Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass.

When Slaughter was first elected in 1986, she ousted Republican Rep. Fred Eckert after running a campaign advertisem­ent in which Peggy Say accused him of refusing to “speak up” for her brother, kidnapped Associated Press reporter Terry Anderson.

Say and Anderson were both from the Rochester, N.Y., area. Anderson, the AP’s Middle East bureau chief, had been captured the year before by Islamic militants in Beirut, Lebanon, and was not released until 1991.

Slaughter was born Dorothy Louise McIntosh on Aug. 14, 1929, in Appalachia­n coal country.

According to the Democrat and Chronicle of Rochester, she was doing market research for a major chemicals manufactur­er in Texas in the 1950s when she met Ohio native Robert “Bob” Slaughter.

They married in 1957 and moved to the Rochester area for her husband’s job. He later joined Eastman Kodak as a legal administra­tor. Bob Slaughter died in 2014 at 82.

The couple became involved in local Democratic politics while living in suburban Rochester.

Louise Slaughter served in the Monroe County Legislatur­e between 1976 and 1979, then worked for Democratic Gov. Mario Cuomo before serving in the state Assembly from 1982 to 1986.

That year she defeated Eckert to become the first woman to represent western New York in Congress.

 ?? TODD ELLIOTT/CONGRESS ?? U.S. Rep Louise Slaughter served in Congress for more than three decades.
TODD ELLIOTT/CONGRESS U.S. Rep Louise Slaughter served in Congress for more than three decades.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States