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Biography
Born in Montpelier, raised across the street from the Statehouse, and
educated in Montpelier and Colchester, Patrick Leahy has spent most of
his adult life working for Vermonters. After graduating from Saint
Michael's College in 1961, he earned his Juris Doctor from Georgetown
University Law Center in 1964. He then returned to Vermont to the
private practice of law and then, for the next eight years, served as
the State's Attorney in Chittenden County, where he gained a national
reputation for his law enforcement work.
In 1974, Pat Leahy became the first Democrat who Vermonters have ever
elected to the United States Senate, where he now ranks eighth in
seniority. He serves as Ranking Member of the Judiciary Committee and
of the Foreign Operations Subcommittee. He also serves on the
Agriculture, Nutrition, and Forestry Committee and on the
Appropriations Committee, where he is a member of the Defense,
Interior, Homeland Security, VA-HUD, and Commerce-Justice-State
sub-committees.
As a senior member of the Agriculture Committee, Senator Leahy played
instrumental roles in creating the Farmland Protection Program and the
Milk Income Loss Compensation (MILC) program, and in extending the
Conservation Reserve Program. He has been a long-time supporter of the
organic movement and is often called the "father of organics." He
helped Vermont 's and the nation's organic industry grow from near
obscurity when he wrote and passed the Organic Foods Production Act in
1990. The Leahy charter for organic agriculture has helped it grow into
an $11 billion-a-year sector of the American economy.
As the Ranking Member of the Agriculture Committee's Subcommittee on
Research, Nutrition, and General Legislation, Senator Leahy champions
effective child nutrition programs. He has developed bipartisan support
for addressing the nation's obesity crisis and led efforts to implement
hands-on nutrition education programs in our schools. He also reached
across the aisle to coauthor legislation that would enable the
Secretary of Agriculture to more efficiently control the sale of junk
food and soft drinks in schools that participate in the federal School
Lunch Program.
Pat Leahy prides himself on his Green Mountain heritage, and he is one
of the Senate's leading advocates of good environmental stewardship. He
opposed Republican efforts to open the pristine Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge in Alaska to oil drilling, as well as efforts to drill
in the Missisquoi Wildlife Refuge in Vermont. He has worked to enlarge
the Green Mountain National Forest, which has expanded by more than
100,000 acres as a result of his efforts, he led efforts to tackle the
health dangers of mercury pollution and has taken the Administration to
task for failing to adequately address the mercury problem. Leahy has
fought hard for Lake Champlain and has secured vital federal funding to
clean up this great lake.
Pat Leahy has always sought to infuse Vermont values into U.S. foreign
policy and has been a champion of international human rights. He has
long been a leader in the U.S. and international campaign to ban
anti-personnel landmines and, in 1992, he wrote the world's first law
to ban the export of these deplorable weapons. As Chairman and Ranking
Member of the Foreign Operations Subcommittee for 13 years, he has led
congressional efforts to create a special fund in the foreign aid
budget to help landmine victims, known as the Leahy War Victims Fund.
This fund now provides up to $12 million a year to humanitarian
anti-landmine efforts.
As the Ranking Member of the Judiciary Committee, Pat Leahy has
authored, advocated and enacted a wide range of anti-crime and
anti-drug initiatives. He wrote the charter for the current federal
grant program for the nation's first-responders, and Pat Leahy's
all-state minimum for the program's formula has brought millions of
federal equipment dollars to Vermont 's police, fire, and EMS units. In
his Judiciary Committee role, Senator Leahy also gives Vermonters a
leading voice in confirming nominations to the federal courts. The
Framers of the U.S. Constitution gave the Senate an important role to
play in ensuring that the federal bench would not simply be an arm of
the Executive Branch, and Senator Leahy has consistently fought to keep
the courts from becoming an extension of either political party. He
points out that our independent federal judiciary is the envy of the
world, and he fights to keep it independent.
A longtime leader in efforts to reform the death penalty, Senator Leahy
is the chief sponsor of the Innocence Protection Act, bipartisan
legislation to reform use of the death penalty by providing defendants
with access to competent legal counsel and by allowing post-conviction
DNA testing to reduce the possibility of executing innocent individuals.
Pat Leahy is the co-chair of the Senate's 85-member National Guard
Caucus. He has fought to improve access to health care, education and
retirement benefits for Vermont's citizen-soldiers and to make sure
that they are treated equally with the active forces. In recognition of
his service to our men and women in uniform, Senator Leahy has been
awarded the George Washington Freedom Award from the Adjutants General
of the U.S. Association, the Eagle Award from the Enlisted National
Guard Association, and the Harry S. Truman Award for "sustained
contributions of exceptional and far-reaching magnitude to the defense
and security of the United States in a manner worthy of recognition at
the national level."
Sometimes referred to as the "cyber senator," Leahy was the second
senator to post an official homepage on the internet. Since its
creation in 1995, the Leahy Senate website has often won awards as one
of the Senate's best. His interest in technology also led him to
co-found the Congressional Internet Caucus, which he co-chairs, and to
spearhead efforts to expand broadband access to Vermont. Mindful of new
hazards presented by the internet, he is also a leader in the effort to
protect intellectual property rights and privacy.
Senator Leahy lives on a tree farm in Middlesex with Marcelle Pomerleau
Leahy, his wife of over 40 years. Marcelle is a Registered Nurse who
has worked in Vermont, Virginia and the District of Columbia. Most
recently, she worked as a staff nurse in the Medical-Surgical Unit of
Arlington Hospital in northern Virginia. She is now a member of the
Advisory Board of the University of Vermont College of Nursing and
Health Sciences. Marcelle Leahy is also the honorary chair of the
Vermont National Guard Family Support Program, which helps ensure that
the families of the state's citizen-soldiers receive the assistance and
care they need during lengthy deployments of their loved ones. The
Leahys have two sons, a daughter, two daughters-in-law, a son-in-law,
and three grandchildren.
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