Ted Kennedy

Edward Moore "Ted" Kennedy was a member of the United States Democratic Party and at the time of his death the senior Senator from Massachusetts. He was the youngest Kennedy brother, after Joseph Kennedy Jr., John F. Kennedy and Robert F. Kennedy, and had done extensive political work since the 1960s, taking staunch liberal stances on a variety of topics and endorsing several Democratic presidential hopefuls.

Political career
Kennedy was first elected to the Senate in 1964 and due to his popularity was re-elected in every subsequent Senate election to 2006. He served on several committees during his career, including the Committee on Armed Services, the Committee on the Judiciary and the Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, of which he was chairman. Though a popular Senator, Kennedy did not run for president until the 1980 Presidential Race, where he ran against then-president Jimmy Carter. He took 10 states during the primaries, but ultimately lost. He never ran for President again, but endorsed several Democratic candidates in subsequent elections. Kennedy's bid against incumbent president Carter is considered one of the factors causing the President to lose re-election, as a result of a divide in the party.

Influence within the party
Kennedy was one of the most popular senators at the time of his death, being then, the second-longest serving senator (behind Robert Byrd) within the U.S. Senate and having been placed on Time Magazine's list of "America's 10 Best Senators" in April 2006. Such was his influence and popularity, that Democratic candidates for the presidency considered his endorsement to be extremely valuable. The list of Senator Kennedy's endorsed candidates from the 1988 Presidential Election are as follows:


 * 1980: Himself (lost to Jimmy Carter at the convention)
 * 1988: Michael Dukakis (lost to Bush)
 * 1992: Paul Tsongas (lost primary race to victor Clinton)
 * 2000: Al Gore ( victor lost to Bush)
 * 2004: John Kerry (lost to Bush)
 * 2008: Barack Obama (victor)

Stands on issues
Kennedy was one of the loudest liberal voices in the U.S. Senate. He was an advocate for abortion rights, disability rights, gay marriage, Single-Payer Healthcare, and tighter gun control, and a critic of the Iraq War, George W. Bush's domestic spying programs and the troop escalation surge in Iraq in 2007. In 1987 Kennedy helped to "Bork" ultra-right wing judge Robert Bork. He delivered these memorable lines during the hearings:

Scandal
On July 18, 1969, Kennedy was driving a former RFK campaign worker, Mary Jo Kopechne, back to her hotel from a party on Chappaquiddick Island off the coast of Massachusetts. A wrong turn caused Kennedy to turn onto a railguard-less bridge and swerve into a pond. Kennedy survived but Kopechne died, and the event continued to haunt him (and caused him to lose in the 1980 presidential primary — oh and the Kopechne family was somewhat affected too, albeit not politically) as the "Chappaquiddick Incident". Much of the scandal revolved around Kennedy's delay in reporting the event to the police until the next morning when he was caught.

Health
Unlike his older brothers Joseph, John, and Robert, who met the Reaper before their times, Ted survived being at Death's door on many occasions. In 1964, he survived a plane crash with severe back injury, broken ribs, a punctured lung and internal bleeding. This incident was the cause of the senator's health problems late in life, as he has suffered from chronic pain ever since then.

In October 2007 Kennedy had surgery to unclog a blocked carotid artery.

On May 17, 2008, he was taken to Cape Cod Hospital and then Massachusetts General via helicopter after complaining about feeling ill, where it was found that the senator had symptoms of a stroke, after he had suffered two seizures earlier.

On May 20, 2008, he was diagnosed with a malignant glioma (a type of cancerous brain tumor). Yet he felt good and was even better when the tumor was removed on June 2. He underwent radiation treatment and chemotherapy before being released on June 9. He returned to good health at the time.

On January 20, 2009, Kennedy was taken ill during the Inaugural Lunch, which seemed reminiscent of his stroke episode. It was determined to be due to fatigue, however.

Kennedy passed away on August 25, 2009 as a result of the aforementioned brain tumors. He was laid to rest in Arlington Cemetery near the graves of his brothers John and Robert.