Jim Jeffords, Who Altered Power in Senate, Dies at 80
He was not on the list.
Jim Jeffords, the former senator from Vermont who
single-handedly redrew the national political map in 2001 when, after a
quarter-century as a moderate Republican lawmaker, he declared himself an
independent, shifting control of the Senate to the Democrats, died on Monday in
Washington. He was 80.
The cause was complications of pneumonia, his son, Leonard,
said.
Vermont’s lone congressman from 1975 until his election to
the Senate in 1988, Mr. Jeffords was a solid Republican on military issues. But
as early as 1981, when he voted against President Ronald Reagan’s package of
tax and budget cuts — the only House Republican to do so — he showed a
disinclination to be bound by his party’s conservative orthodoxy.
A supporter of abortion rights, gay rights and the National
Endowment for the Arts — left-leaning stances perhaps befitting an elected
representative of a state that had become one of the nation’s bluest — he was
in favor of the health care plan proposed by President Bill Clinton and opposed
Mr. Clinton’s impeachment. He backed legislation promoting environmental
protection, funding for education and aid for the disabled. He voted against
President George Bush’s nomination of Clarence Thomas to the Supreme Court.
But many of his Republican colleagues were shocked when,
after the election of George W. Bush in 2000, his displeasure with the further
rightward shift of the party caused him to abandon it and to caucus with the
Democrats as an independent.
As chairman of the Education and Labor Committee (in 1999,
under his watch, the name was changed to the Committee on Health, Education,
Labor and Pensions), he had become frustrated by what he viewed as Republican
parsimony. He was especially unhappy with a tax-cutting bill backed by
President Bush that diminished funding for public education and that did not
provide full support for a program that would bring special education students
into the mainstream.
“Increasingly, I find myself in disagreement with my party,”
Senator Jeffords said in announcing his decision on May 24, 2001. “I understand
that many people are more conservative than I am, and they form the Republican
Party. Given the changing nature of the national party, it has become a
struggle for our leaders to deal with me and for me to deal with them.”
The move came at a sensitive political moment: The Senate
was split between 50 Republicans and 50 Democrats, but the Republicans held the
tiebreaking vote in Vice President Dick Cheney. After Mr. Jeffords’s defection,
the Democrats, with their slim advantage, made Mr. Jeffords chairman of the
Committee on Environment and Public Works and replaced him on the health and
education committee with Senator Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts.
The Democrats’ plurality in the Senate lasted only 18
months, however — until the midterm elections of 2002, when Republicans took
back control. Mr. Jeffords, voting mostly with the Democrats from then on,
retired in 2007. He was succeeded by an even more left-leaning independent,
Bernie Sanders.
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“Jim was one of the
most popular elected officials in the modern history of the state,” Senator
Sanders said in statement on his website Monday, adding, “He was an effective
champion of education, disability rights, the environment and the arts — and
millions of Americans have benefited from his efforts.”
President Obama said in a statement: “Whatever the issue —
whether it was protecting the environment, supporting Americans with
disabilities or whether to authorize the war in Iraq — Jim voted his
principles, even if it sometimes meant taking a lonely or unpopular stance.”
James Merrill Jeffords was born on May 11, 1934, in Rutland,
Vt., where he attended public schools. His family was prominent in Republican
circles. His father, Olin M. Jeffords, was chief justice of the Vermont Supreme
Court.
James graduated from Yale and served as a gunnery officer on
the Navy destroyer McNair, participating in the reopening of the Suez Canal in
1957. He earned a law degree from Harvard and worked in private practice before
entering politics in the 1960s.
Mr. Jeffords was elected to the State Senate in 1967 and
served as Vermont’s attorney general from 1969 to 1973. He is the author of two
memoirs: “My Declaration of Independence” (2001), focused on his leaving the
Republican Party, and “An Independent Man: Adventures of a Public Servant”
(2003).
Mr. Jeffords married Elizabeth Daley twice, first in 1961
and, after their divorce in 1978, again in 1986. She died in 2007. In addition
to his son, he is survived by a daughter, Laura, and two grandchildren.
Though Mr. Jeffords clashed with fellow Republicans on many
policy issues, he found harmony with them in another endeavor. In the 1990s, along
with Trent Lott of Mississippi, Larry Craig of Idaho and John Ashcroft of
Missouri, later the United States attorney general, he was a member of The
Singing Senators, a barbershop quartet.
“He thought he could sing, but he was horrible,” Leonard
Jeffords recalled. “The dogs would start howling. Lott could really belt it
out; Larry Craig had a nice voice. John Ashcroft was pretty good. My dad, I
think, was just there.”
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