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Daniel Ken Inouye (born September 7 1924) is a recipient of the Medal of Honor and currently serves as the senior United States Senator from Hawaii. He has been a senator for over forty years (since 1963), a distinction which few senators have achieved, and is currently the third most senior member, after fellow Democrats Robert Byrd and Ted Kennedy. He was Hawaii's first Representative after it became a state. He was also the first American of Japanese descent to serve in the United States House of Representatives and later the first in the Senate. He is a member of the Democratic Party and has continuously represented Hawaii in the United States Congress since it achieved statehood in 1959.
Biography
In 1962 he was elected to the United States Senate, succeeding fellow Democratic Sen. Oren E. Long. He has been re-elected every six years since then, most recently in 2004. He delivered the keynote address to the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, noted at the time as the first person of Japanese ancestry to do so.[2] He gained national attention for his service on the Senate Watergate Committee. He was chairman of the Select Committee on Intelligence from 1975 until 1979, and chairman of the Committee on Indian Affairs from 1987 until 1995 and from 2001 until 2003. Inouye was also involved in the Iran Contra investigations of the 1980s, chairing a special committee from 1987 until 1989. He was a candidate for reelection to the Senate in 2004 and easily defeated his Republican opponent, Campbell Cavasso. His wife of fifty-seven years, Maggie, died on March 13, 2006. "The Gang of 14"On May 23, 2005, Inouye was one of fourteen moderate senators to forge a compromise on the Democrats' use of the judicial filibuster, thus blocking the Republican leadership's attempt to implement the "nuclear option". Under the agreement, the Democrats would 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) would receive a vote by the full Senate. TriviaDaniel Inouye appeared as himself in The Next Karate Kid (1994).
Coincidentally, the other Senator from Hawaii is Daniel Akaka. The two Daniels were born four days apart. Daniel Inouye met Bob Dole while they were both in Percy Jones Army Hospital, recovering from wounds suffered in World War II. Dole mentioned to Inouye while in the hospital that after the war he planned to go to Congress. Inouye beat him there by a few years. Despite being members of different political parties, the two lawmakers remain life-long friends. Percy Jones Army Hospital, later became a Federal Center and, in 2003, was renamed the Hart-Dole-Inouye Federal Center in honor of the two men and another senator who had stayed in the hospital, Philip Hart. Since 1969, Inouye has been the only original member of any state delegation still in Congress. He was elected Hawaii's first Representative ten years before. Inouye was the subject of an epithet during the Watergate hearings in 1973. At the time, lawyer John Wilson represented President Nixon’s closest advisers, H. R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman. During a hearing recess, Wilson referred to Inouye as "that little Jap" in a private conversation. The conversation leaked out as Mr. Wilson forgot the microphone was still on.[3] [4] The following remark, appearing in the introduction of the Disclosure Project Briefing Document[1], is attributed to Senator Daniel K. Inouye: "There exists a shadowy Government with its own Air Force, its own Navy, its own fundraising mechanism, and the ability to pursue its own ideas of the national interest, free from all checks and balances, and free from the law itself." Senator Inouye is currently the third longest continuosly serving Congressman in U.S. history with a total House and Senate tenure of 48 Years (4 in the House, 44 in the Senate). He is second only to Carl Hayden and Robert Byrd. See also
Footnotes
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