New York Post

‘INDY’ POL PASSES

Conn. ex-Sen. Lieberman dead at 82

- By SAMUEL CHAMBERLAI­N

Former Connecticu­t Sen. Joe Lieberman, who represente­d the Nutmeg State in Washington for 24 years and was the Democratic Party’s 2000 vice presidenti­al nominee, has died. He was 82.

“Connecticu­t is shocked by Senator Lieberman’s sudden passing,” Sen. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), Lieberman’s successor, said in a statement. “In an era of political carbon copies, Joe Lieberman was a singularit­y. One of one. He fought and won for what he believed was right and for the state he adored.”

A statement from Lieberman’s family said he passed away Wednesday in New York after suffering complicati­ons from a fall. The former senator’s death was first reported by Punchbowl News.

“Senator Lieberman’s love of God, his family, and America endured throughout his life of service in the public interest,” the family statement read.

Lieberman, a former Connecticu­t state senator and attorney general, was elected to the Senate in 1988 and developed a reputation as a moderate Democrat with a prominent voice on foreign policy and a staunch supporter of Israel.

In an oddity that would repeat itself decades later, Lieberman was boosted in his first Senate election by the backing of a prominent conservati­ve — National Review founder and Connecticu­t resident William F. Buckley Jr., who endorsed Lieberman in the influentia­l magazine’s pages while dubbing his liberal Republican opponent, Lowell Weicker, “the Number One Horse’s Ass in the Senate.”

Historic choice

In September 1998, Lieberman became the first national Democrat to publicly criticize President Bill Clinton for his extramarit­al affair with White House intern Monica Lewinsky, calling Clinton’s behavior “not only inappropri­ate” but “immoral” and “harmful” in scathing remarks from the Senate floor.

The following year, Lieberman voted to acquit the 42nd president on articles of impeachmen­t accusing Clinton of perjury and obstructio­n of justice in connection with the Lewinsky liaison.

In 2000, Lieberman made history when Clinton’s vice president, Al Gore, selected the senator as his running mate — making Lieberman the first Jewish candidate on a major party’s presidenti­al ticket.

Lieberman would have been the first Jewish vice president but for Gore’s narrow Electoral College defeat, which was settled by 537 votes in Florida following a weekslong recount battle.

Four years later, Lieberman sought the Democratic presidenti­al nomination, but dropped out following a series of disappoint­ing primary finishes.

That year, Lieberman lost his Senate primary to future Connecticu­t Gov. Ned Lamont, but won reelection as a third-party candidate under the Connecticu­t for Lieberman banner.

With the endorsemen­t of prominent Republican­s and conservati­ves — including ex-New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, author and commentato­r Ann Coulter, and Buckley again — Lieberman beat Lamont in the general election by 10 percentage points.

The actual Republican nominee, former Derby Mayor Alan Schlesinge­r, failed to crack 10% of the vote. To date, Lieberman’s 2006 victory is the last time a third-party candidate won a Senate seat.

Upon his return to Washington, Lieberman described himself as an “Independen­t Democrat” and endorsed his longtime friend, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), for president in 2008 — even speaking on his behalf at that year’s Republican National Convention and laying into the Democratic nominee, Barack Obama.

“In the Senate, during the 3 ½ years that Sen. Obama has been a member, he has not reached across party lines to . . . accomplish anything significan­t, nor has he been willing to take on powerful interest groups in the Democratic Party to get something done,” Lieberman said. “Eloquence is no substitute for a record.”

Rumors were widespread that McCain was considerin­g tapping Lieberman to be his running mate. However, the Arizonan ultimately opted for then-Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, one of the most-discussed running mate choices in recent presidenti­al politics.

With polls showing Lieberman to be increasing­ly unpopular in Connecticu­t, he opted against seeking a fifth term and retired from the Senate in January 2013.

 ?? ?? NEAR MISS: Joe Lieberman (right), with presidenti­al running mate Al Gore in 2000, would have been the first Jewish vice president.
NEAR MISS: Joe Lieberman (right), with presidenti­al running mate Al Gore in 2000, would have been the first Jewish vice president.

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