Upon his defeat to
Jimmy Carter for the Democratic
Presidential candidacy in 1980,
Senator Ted Kennedy (1931 - 2009)
spoke these words:
For
me, a few hours ago, this
campaign came to an end. For all
those whose cares have been our
concern,
the work goes on, the cause
endures, the hope still lives,
and the dream shall never
die.
Moving words,
especially considering he passed
up running in 1972 and 1976,
despite fervent appeals from
supporters. He went back to work
in the Senate, and continued to
fight for the rights of the
underprivileged and the working
class, as he had since his
election in November 1962.
The
Constitution does not just
protect those whose views we
share;
it also protects those with whose
views we disagree.
Named by Time
Magazine as one of "America's 10
Best Senators," Senator Kennedy
worked tirelessly - and many
times alongside his Republican
counterparts - to craft and pass
legislation that has advanced the
rights of Americans from every
walk of life, including
strengthening laws that banned
job discrimination, the Americans
with Disabilities Act, the Family
and Medical Leave Act, and
numerous educational
programs.
Integrity
is the lifeblood of democracy.
Deceit is a poison in its
veins.
He was a harsh
critic of the invasion and
occupation of Iraq, and spoke out
about it passionately:
150,000
American troops are bogged down
in a quagmire in Iraq because the
Bush administration
misrepresented and distorted the
intelligence to justify a war
that America never should have
fought.
Senator Kennedy succumbed to a
brain tumor on Tuesday, August
25, 2009. Public and private
citizens of all political
persuasions mourned the loss of
the "The Lion of the Senate."