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Positively American
Senator Chuck
Schumer


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Senator Chuck Schumer
Charles Ellis "Chuck" Schumer (born November 23, 1950)
is currently the senior U.S. Senator from the state of New York,
serving since 1999. A Democrat, in 2005, he became chairman of the
Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee. In November 2006, he was
elected to the new post of Vice Chairman of the Senate Democratic
Caucus. In this position, he is the third-ranking Democrat in the
Senate, behind Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Senate Majority
Whip Richard Durbin.
In January 2007, he published a book called Positively American
about how Democrats could reclaim middle-class voters.
Schumer was born in Brooklyn to a Jewish family. His parents were
Selma Rosen and Abraham Schumer. He attended public schools in Brooklyn,
scoring a 1600 on the SAT, and graduated as the valedictorian from
James Madison High School in 1967. Schumer competed for Madison
on the It's Academic television quiz show.
Receiving a high draft lottery number that was never reached,
Schumer did not serve in the military during the Vietnam War despite
his professed desire for public service. He attended Harvard College,
where he became interested in politics and campaigned for Eugene
McCarthy in 1968. After completing his undergraduate degree, he
continued to Harvard Law School, earning his Juris Doctor (J.D.)
in 1974. Schumer passed the New York State Bar Exam in early 1975
but never practiced law, entering politics instead.
Schumer and his wife, Iris Weinshall, were married September 21,
1980. The ceremony took place at Windows on the World at the top
of the north tower of the World Trade Center. Weinshall is the New
York City Commissioner of Transportation. The Schumers have two
daughters, Jessica and Alison. They live on Prospect Park West in
Park Slope, Brooklyn.
While Congress is in session, Senator Schumer lives in a rented
house with fellow Democratic politicians George Miller, Dick Durbin,
and Bill Delahunt.
The same year he graduated from Harvard Law, 1974, he ran for and
was elected to the New York State Assembly, becoming at age 23 the
youngest member of the New York legislature since Theodore Roosevelt.
He served three terms.[10] He has never lost an election, and has
never held a job outside of politics.
In 1980, 16th District Congresswoman Elizabeth Holtzman won the
Democratic nomination for the Senate seat of Republican Jacob Javits.
Schumer ran for Holtzman's vacated House seat and won.
He was reelected eight times from the Brooklyn and Queens-based
district, which changed numbers twice in his tenure (it was numbered
the 16th from 1981 to 1983, the 10th from 1983 to 1993 and the 9th
from 1993). The 9th is one of the most Democratic districts in New
York City, and Schumer never faced a serious or well-funded Republican
opponent during this period.
In 1998, he won the Democratic Senate primary with 51% of the votes
against Geraldine Ferraro (21%) and Mark Green (19%). He then received
55% of the vote in the general election[11], defeating three-term
incumbent Republican Al D'Amato (44%). In 2004, Schumer handily
won re-election against Republican Assemblyman Howard Mills of Middletown
and Conservative Marilyn O'Grady. Schumer defeated Mills, the second-place
finisher, by 2.8 million votes and won reelection with 71% of the
vote, the most lopsided margin ever for a statewide election in
New York. Schumer won every county in the state except one, Hamilton
County in the Adirondacks, the least populated and most Republican
county in the state. Mills conceded defeat minutes after the polls
closed, before returns had come in.
Schumer is Chairman of the Joint Economic Committee.
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