Olympia Snowe
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Olympia Snowe | |
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| Incumbent | |
| Assumed office January 4, 1995 Serving with Susan Collins |
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| Preceded by | George J. Mitchell |
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| Succeeded by | Incumbent (2013) |
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| In office January 3, 1979 – January 3, 1995 |
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| Preceded by | William Cohen |
| Succeeded by | John Baldacci |
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| Born | February 21, 1947 Augusta, Maine |
| Political party | Republican |
| Spouse | (1) Peter Snowe (deceased) (2) John R. McKernan, Jr. |
| Alma mater | University of Maine |
| Religion | Greek Orthodox |
Olympia Jean Bouchles Snowe (born February 21, 1947) is a Republican politician and the senior United States Senator from Maine.
A moderate Republican, Snowe has become widely known for her ability to influence close votes and Senatorial filibusters, making her among the most influential of U.S. Senators. She is considered a centrist Republican in the senate.[1]
In 2006, she was named one of "America's Top Ten Senators" by Time Magazine.[2] Congressional Quarterly noted that her presence at the negotiating table in the 107th Congress was "nearly a necessity." Her political popularity in her home state is the highest of any current U.S. Senator; as of November 22, 2006, she enjoyed a 79 percent approval rating in her home state of Maine.[3]
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Snowe was born Olympia Jean Bouchles in Augusta, Maine, the daughter of Georgia Goranites and George John Bouchles. Her father emigrated to the United States from Sparta, Greece.[4] She is a member of the Greek Orthodox Church.[5][6]
Snowe's early life contained much tragedy; her mother died of breast cancer when she was eight, and her father died of heart disease barely a year later. Orphaned, she was moved to Auburn, Maine, to be raised by her aunt and uncle, a barber and a textile mill worker respectively, along with their five other children. Her brother John was raised separately, by other family members. Within a few years, illness would also claim her uncle's life.
Following her mother's death, Snowe was sent to St. Basil's Academy in Garrison, New York, where she remained from the third grade to the ninth. Returning to Auburn, she attended Edward Little High School, before entering the University of Maine in Orono, Maine in 1969, where she earned a degree in political science. Snowe later received an honorary degree from Bates College in 1998. Shortly after graduation, Bouchles married her fiancé, Republican state legislator Peter Snowe.
Snowe entered politics and rose quickly, winning a seat on the Board of Voter Registration and working for Congressman (later U.S. Senator and U.S. Secretary of Defense) William Cohen. Tragedy struck Snowe again in 1973, when her husband was killed in an automobile accident. At the urging of family, friends, neighbors and local leaders, Snowe ran for Cohen's Auburn-based seat in the Maine House of Representatives at the age of 26 and won. She was re-elected to the House in 1974, and, in 1976, won election to the Maine Senate, representing Androscoggin County. That same year, she was a delegate to both the state and national Republican conventions.
Snowe was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1978, and represented Maine's 2nd Congressional District from 1979 to 1995. The district includes Bangor and her hometown of Auburn. She served as a member of the Budget and International Relations Committees.
Snowe married John McKernan then-Governor of Maine, in February 1989. Snowe and McKernan had served together in the United States House of Representatives from 1983 to 1986. Snowe was First Lady of Maine from 1989 to 1995, while also a U.S. Representative.
In 1994, when Senate Majority Leader George J. Mitchell declined to run for reelection, Snowe immediately declared her candidacy for the seat. The Democratic nominee was her House colleague, 1st District Congressman Tom Andrews. Snowe defeated Andrews 60%-36%, carrying every county in the state. Snowe was part of the Republican sweeping elections of 1994, where the Republican party would capture the House and Senate for the first time since 1954. Snowe was easily reelected in 2000 over State Senate President Mark Lawrence, increasing her winning margin to 69%-31%.
Snowe was an important voice during the Senate's 1999 impeachment trial of then-President Bill Clinton. She and fellow Maine Senator Susan Collins sponsored a motion that would have allowed the Senate to vote separately on the charges and the remedy — a "finding of fact" resolution. When the motion failed, Snowe and Collins voted to acquit, arguing that Clinton's perjury did not warrant his removal from office.
Her moderate views have drawn attacks from conservative Republicans; the Club for Growth and Concerned Women for America label her a "Republican in Name Only" ("RINO").[citation needed]
U.S. President George W. Bush has given Snowe the nickname "The Big O".[7]
In February 2006, TheWhiteHouseProject.org named Olympia Snowe one of its "8 in '08", a group of eight female politicians who could possibly run and/or be elected president in 2008.[8]
In April 2006, Snowe was selected by Time as one of "America's 10 Best Senators."[9] She was the only woman so recognized. Time praised Snowe for her sensitivity to her constituents, also noting that: "Because of her centrist views and eagerness to get beyond partisan point scoring, Maine Republican Olympia Snowe is in the center of every policy debate in Washington."
Snowe is the fourth woman to serve on the Senate Armed Services Committee and the first to chair its seapower subcommittee, which oversees the Navy and Marine Corps. In 2001, Snowe became the first Republican woman to secure a full-term seat on the Senate Finance Committee.
Snowe was the youngest Republican woman ever elected to the United States House of Representatives; she is also the first woman to have served in both houses of a state legislature and both houses of the U.S. Congress as well as the first Greek-American congresswoman. With her 1989 marriage to Maine Governor John McKernan, she became the first person to simultaneously be a member of Congress and First Lady of a state. She has never lost an election, and in the 2006 midterm senatorial elections, Snowe won with a reported 73.99% of votes. Seven months ahead of the election, she had already raised $2.1 million.[10] A grassroots campaign has emerged to convince Snowe to seek the Republican nomination for the Presidency in the 2008 Presidential election.
| This article does not cite any references or sources. (October 2006) Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. |
Snowe is a self-described political moderate, whose independence in the Senate often marks her for complaints from more conservative groups, especially over her support for legalized abortion and gay rights. She takes more moderate views on the death penalty and guns. On other social issues like drug policy, travel to Cuba, and censorship issues like government regulation of the media and prohibiting flag-burning, Snowe is quite conservative.
In fiscal matters and on defense, Snowe is also generally moderate to conservative. She has been long-regarded as a hawk on foreign affairs, supporting both President Clinton's involvement in Kosovo and President George W. Bush's interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq, however she recently has criticized the administration's involvement in Iraq. On fiscal matters, she worked with Democrats to reduce the scale of the Bush tax cuts but supported the broad principle of cutting taxes as economic stimulus. She ultimately joined fellow Republicans, Sen. Lincoln Chafee and Sen. John McCain in voting against the tax cut bill of 2003. In 1992 she was the only Republican in Congress to vote for Tax Fairness and Economic Growth Act which provided for some tax refunds to average taxpayers while also increasing non-corporate capital gains tax rates among other provisions. It was vetoed by President Bush. Snowe voted against NAFTA, CAFTA, and most free trade measures. She is a strong supporter of environmental protections. Both Snowe and fellow Maine Senator Susan Collins were reluctant converts to limited gun control following the Columbine High School shooting in 1999.
Snowe lists her top legislative priorities as assisting the growth of small business, prescription drug coverage, and student loan and child care funding.
In the 109th Congress, Snowe worked to ensure passage of a genetic non-discrimination act, which she had previously worked to pass for nearly eight years; opposed cutting loans through the Small Business Administration; offered legislation aimed at reducing the price of prescription drugs and insurance costs for small businesses; and became a leading voice among Congressional Republicans expressing concerns over President Bush's plans for the privatization of Social Security.
Snowe is a member of The Republican Main Street Partnership and supports stem cell research. She is also a member of Republicans for Environmental Protection, the Republican Majority for Choice, Republicans for Choice and The Wish List (Women In the Senate and House), a group of Pro-Choice Republican Women.
On May 23, 2005, Snowe was one of fourteen moderate senators, known as the Gang of 14, to forge a compromise on the Democrats' use of the filibuster on judicial nominees. This action both curtailed the Republican leadership's attempt to implement the so-called "nuclear option", and broke Democratic opposition to three nominees brought to the Senate floor. The compromise precludes further filibusters and the implementation of the nuclear option for as long as the Gang of 14 holds together.
Under the agreement, the Democrats retain the power to filibuster a Bush judicial nominee only in an "extraordinary circumstance", and the three most conservative Bush appellate court nominees, (Janice Rogers Brown, Priscilla Owen and William Pryor), receive an up-or-down simple majority vote by the full Senate.
This deal has been strongly criticized by both Democratic and Republican partisans, but the compromise did shift the center of gravity in the Senate at the time towards moderates like Snowe.[citation needed] The Gang played an important role in the confirmation of Chief Justice John Roberts and Associate Justice Samuel Alito, as they asserted that neither met the 'extraordinary circumstances' provision outlined in their agreement. Snowe ultimately voted for both Roberts and Alito.
In the 110th Congress, Sen. Snowe is the ranking member of the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Committee. During the 109th Congress, she held the position of Chair, and was the first woman to do so. She also serves on the Committee on Finance; Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation and the Select Committee On Intelligence.[11] Snowe is up for reelection in 2012.
Snowe was re-elected to a third term in 2006. In the November 2006 election, Senator Snowe was faced by Democratic candidate Jean Hay Bright, and Independent candidate Bill Slavick. In August 2006 she was polling at 68% vs 20% for Bright;[12] in the election she won by an even wider margin. Snowe, garnering 74% of the votes, won by the second-largest margin (after Richard Lugar of Indiana, who didn't have a Democratic opponent) of any U.S. Senate candidate in the country.
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| Year | Candidate | Party | Votes | Pct | Change | Opponent | Party | Votes | Pct | ||
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| 1994 | Olympia Snowe | Republican | 308,244 | 60% | +41%1 | Tom Andrews | Democrat | 186,042 | 36% | ||
| 2000 | Olympia Snowe (inc.) | Republican | 437,689 | 69% | +9% | Mark W. Lawrence | Democrat | 197,183 | 31% | ||
| 2006 | Olympia Snowe (inc.) | Republican | 390,056 | 74% | +5% | Jean Hay Bright | Democrat | 107,961 | 21% | ||
1 Change from 1988 Republican candidate Jasper S. Wyman, who was challenging George Mitchell
- ^ "The Centrists", National Journal, 2007-03-03, pp. 33. Retrieved on 2007-04-06.
- ^ "Olympia J. Snowe: The Caretaker", Time, 2006-04-14. Retrieved on 2007-04-07.
- ^ Approval Ratings for all 100 U.S. Senators. Survey USA (2006-11-22). Retrieved on 2007-04-07.
- ^ Battle, Robert. Ancestries of United States Senators: Olympia Snowe. self-published. Retrieved on 2007-04-07.
- ^ Broder, David S.. "A Real Woman's Issue", Washington Post, 1997-06-08. Retrieved on 2007-04-07.
- ^ Archbishop Demetrios and Other Religious Leaders Testify on Capitol Hill. Hellenic News (2005-03-16). Retrieved on 2007-04-07.
- ^ "If Dubya dubs ya, don't genuflect", Sarasota Herald-Tribune, 2001-04-09.
- ^ The White House Project (2006-02-16). "for ’08". Press release. Retrieved on 2007-04-07.
- ^ Calabresi, Massimo; Perry Bacon Jr.. "America's 10 Best Senators", Time, 2006-04-16. Retrieved on 2007-04-07.
- ^ Bell, Tom. "Snowe aims for GOP road less taken", Portland Press Herald, 2006-04-14, pp. B1. Retrieved on 2007-04-07.
- ^ Committee Assignments for the 110th Congress. US Senate. Retrieved on 2007-04-07.
- ^ "Maine Senate: Snowe Holding On to Massive Lead", opinion poll, Rasmussen Reports, 2006-08-21. Retrieved on 2007-04-07.
Nine & Counting: The Women of the Senate, Boxer, Collins, Snowe et al, ISBN 0-06-095706-9.
- Olympia Snowe's biography at the Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
- Olympia Snowe's voting record maintained by The Washington Post
- Olympia Snowe's campaign finance reports and data at the Federal Election Commission
- Olympia Snowe's campaign contributions at OpenSecrets.org
- Olympia Snowe's biography, voting record, and interest group ratings at Project Vote Smart
- Olympia Snowe's issue positions and quotes at On The Issues
- U.S. Senator Olympia Snowe campaign finance reports and data at Federal Election Commission.
- U.S. Senator Olympia Snowe collected news and commentary at New York Times site.
- U.S. Senator Olympia Snowe voting record at "On the Issues".
- U.S. Senator Olympia Snowe profile at SourceWatch Congresspedia.
- U.S. Senator Olympia Snowe video clips from the Senate Republican Conference.
- U.S. Senator Olympia Snowe audio clips from the Senate Republican Conference.
- U.S. Senator Olympia Snowe Official Campaign Site.
| United States House of Representatives | ||
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| Preceded by William Cohen |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Maine's 2nd congressional district 1979 – 1995 |
Succeeded by John Baldacci |
| United States Senate | ||
| Preceded by George J. Mitchell |
United States Senator (Class 1) from Maine 1995 – present Served alongside: William Cohen, Susan Collins |
Incumbent |
| Political offices | ||
| Preceded by John Kerry |
Chairman of the Senate Small Business Committee 2003 – 2007 |
Succeeded by John Kerry |
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| Class 1: Holmes • Parris • Holmes • Shepley • Dana • Williams • Fairfield • Moor • Hamlin • Nourse • Hamlin • Morrill • Hamlin • E. Hale • Johnson • F. Hale • Brewster • Payne • Muskie • Mitchell • Snowe Class 2: Chandler • Sprague • Ruggles • Evans • Bradbury • Fessenden • Farwell • Fessenden • Morrill • Blaine • Frye • Gardner • Burleigh • Fernald • Gould • White • Smith • Hathaway • Cohen • Collins |
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| Maine's current delegation to the United States Congress | |
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| Senators | Olympia Snowe (R), Susan Collins (R) |
| Representative(s) | Tom Allen (D), Mike Michaud (D) |
| All delegations | Alabama • Alaska • Arizona • Arkansas • California • Colorado • Connecticut • Delaware • Florida • Georgia • Hawaii • Idaho • Illinois • Indiana • Iowa • Kansas • Kentucky • Louisiana • Maine • Maryland • Massachusetts • Michigan • Minnesota • Mississippi • Missouri • Montana • Nebraska • Nevada • New Hampshire • New Jersey • New Mexico • New York • North Carolina • North Dakota • Ohio • Oklahoma • Oregon • Pennsylvania • Rhode Island • South Carolina • South Dakota • Tennessee • Texas • Utah • Vermont • Virginia • Washington • West Virginia • Wisconsin • Wyoming — American Samoa • District of Columbia • Guam • Puerto Rico • U.S. Virgin Islands |
Categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since July 2007 | Articles lacking sources from October 2006 | All articles lacking sources | 1947 births | Living people | Greek Orthodox Christians | Greek American politicians | Maine State Senators | Republican Party (United States) politicians | Members of the Maine House of Representatives | Members of the United States House of Representatives from Maine | People from Augusta, Maine | People from Falmouth, Maine | Spouses of U.S. State Governors | United States Senators from Maine | American women in politics | University of Maine alumni | Bates College alumni