Class News
Lieberman '64 Announces Plan to Retire from Senate in 2012
Press release
January 19, 2011
STAMFORD, CT — Senator Joe Lieberman (I-CT) today announced his plan to
retire from the United States Senate at the end of his fourth term.
Senator Lieberman was joined by his wife, Hadassah, their children and
grandchildren, and other family members as he shared his decision with
friends and supporters at an event in Stamford, Connecticut.
In his remarks, the Senator explained his decision:
"The reason I have decided not to run for re-election in
2012 is best expressed in the wise words from Ecclesiastes: ‘To
everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under Heaven.'
"At the end of this term, I will have served 24 years in the U.S. Senate
and 40 years in elective office. For me, it is time for another season
and another purpose under Heaven."
"I go forward with a tremendous sense of gratitude for the opportunities
I have had to make a difference."
He spoke of his career in public service:
"Along the way, I have not always fit comfortably into
conventional political boxes — Democrat or Republican, liberal or
conservative. I have always thought that my first responsibility is not
to serve a political party but to serve my constituents, my state, and
my country, and then to work across party lines to make sure good things
get done for them. Whatever the partisan or policy differences that
divide us, they are much less important than the shared values and
dreams that unite us and that require us to work together to make
progress for all. To me, that is what public service and leadership is
all about.
"My interest in public service was inspired by President John F.
Kennedy, who — coincidentally 50 years ago tomorrow in his Inaugural
Address — asked us to ask ourselves what we could do for our country and
challenged us to bear any burden to assure the survival and success of
liberty. The politics of President Kennedy — service to country, support
of civil rights and social justice, pro-growth economic and tax
policies, and a strong national defense — are still my politics, and
they don't fit neatly into today's partisan political boxes any more
either."
He also spoke of his future:
"I do not intend today to be the end of my career in
public service. Having made this decision not to run enables me to spend
the next two years in the Senate devoting the full measure of my energy
and attention to getting things done for Connecticut and for our
country.
"I will keep doing everything in my power to build strong bridges across
party lines — to keep our country safe, to win the wars we are in, and
to make sure America's leadership on the world stage is principled and
strong. I will keep doing everything I can to keep our economy growing
and get our national debt under control, to combat climate change, to
end our dependency on foreign oil, and to reform our immigration laws.
"And when my Senate chapter draws to a close in 2013, I look forward to
new opportunities that will allow me to continue to serve our country —
and to stay engaged and involved in the causes that I have spent my
career working on, and that I care so much about."
The full text of Senator Lieberman's speech as
prepared for delivery is below:
Twenty three years ago, in February 1988, on a wintry day in Hartford, I
announced that I would be a candidate for the U.S. Senate. Standing with
me as I began that long-shot campaign were Hadassah, who was pregnant,
and our three children — Matt, Becca, and Ethan. Today, Matt, Becca, and
Ethan are here again, this time I am happy to say with their spouses,
Elizabeth, Jacob, and Ariela. These three couples are now the proud
parents of their own children — ten children — six of whom, in order of
age — Tennessee, Eden, Yitz, Maddy, Yoav, and Camilla — are able to be
here today. Our youngest child, Hani, who was born a month after I
announced for the Senate in March 1988 is also here, with her husband,
Daniel, and — as you can see — Hani is now pregnant. Next month, with
God's help, she will give birth to their first child, our eleventh
grandchild. Talk about the circle of life.
I am a very lucky guy — privileged since 1988 to be a United States
Senator and blessed since 1988, along with Hadassah, to have this
miraculously growing family. I thank my wife and each of our children
and grandchildren for the love, support, and inspiration they bring to
every day of my life, including this special day.
There is a personal reason why I wanted to make this announcement at
this hotel, and it too involves a life circle. During the first eight
years of my life, my father, mother, sister and I lived in a cold water
flat on the second floor of my grandmother's house at 42 Hawthorne
Street here in Stamford. That house was demolished in the early 1960s as
part of redevelopment, but it was located right about where this hotel
is today. As I think about the journey I have traveled from my childhood
home to this day, I can't help but also think about my four grandparents
and the journey they traveled more than a century ago, as immigrants to
this country. They came to America seeking freedom and they found it.
They came to America hoping for opportunity and they got it. But even
they could not have dreamed that their grandson would end up as a U.S.
Senator and a barrier-breaking candidate for Vice President.
But that is America!
For the extraordinary opportunities to serve our state and country that
I've had, I'm personally grateful to the voters of Connecticut whom I
can never thank enough. But I have tried to thank them — to thank you —
by working hard, to get good things done for you, our state and our
country.
Some of the most satisfying moments of service I've had are the ones
that usually don't get public attention, when my staff and I have been
able to provide support to one of you, a constituent in a moment of
need, whether it was protecting a family from losing their home to
foreclosure, helping the parents of a sick child get the health care
they needed, or ensuring that a World War II veteran finally received
the medals and recognition he was due for his service decades before.
I'm also grateful for what I've had the opportunity to accomplish in the
Senate itself: what I've been able to do, for instance, to protect our
environment — leading the fight against air and water pollution and
climate change, cleaning up Long Island Sound, protecting the
Connecticut River, and creating Connecticut's first and only National
Park site, Weir Farm.
I'm also proud of what I've been able to do for Connecticut businesses —
helping them to keep and add jobs in our state, particularly in our
defense industries, and to save Submarine Base New London.
And I'm proud of what I've been able to do to keep our country and
people safe in a dangerous world — as a member of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, supporting our troops and providing them with the
best equipment possible — and in the years since the terrorist attack of
9/11/01, as Chairman or Ranking Member of the Senate's new Homeland
Security Committee, I've been at the center of Congressional efforts to
strengthen our homeland defenses, including the creation of the
Department of Homeland Security and the enactment of the recommendations
of the bipartisan 9-11 Commission, which together are the most sweeping
reforms of our national security institutions since the start of the
Cold War.
I'm also proud of my work across party lines in support of the strong,
bipartisan American foreign and defense policies carried out by the four
Presidents under whom I've been privileged to serve — Presidents Bush,
Clinton, Bush, and Obama — policies which ousted the invading Iraqi
military from Kuwait, ended the genocide of Muslims in the Balkans, and
liberated Iraq, Afghanistan, and the world from brutally repressive,
anti-American dictatorships.
And I'm proud of the work I've done to make the promise of equal
opportunity and justice under the law more real for all Americans
including, particularly in my time of service, African-Americans, women,
and gay and lesbian Americans.
Along the way, I have not always fit comfortably into conventional
political boxes — Democrat or Republican, liberal or conservative. I
have always thought that my first responsibility is not to serve a
political party but to serve my constituents, my state, and my country,
and then to work across party lines to make sure good things get done
for them. Whatever the partisan or policy differences that divide us,
they are much less important than the shared values and dreams that
unite us and that require us to work together to make progress for all.
To me, that is what public service and leadership is all about.
My interest in public service was inspired by President John F. Kennedy,
who — coincidentally 50 years ago tomorrow in his Inaugural Address —
asked us to ask ourselves what we could do for our country and
challenged us to bear any burden to assure the survival and success of
liberty. The politics of President Kennedy — service to country, support
of civil rights and social justice, pro-growth economic and tax
policies, and a strong national defense — are still my politics, and
they don't fit neatly into today's partisan political boxes any more
either.
One thing that has not changed over the years is my love for America. We
are a unique nation with a unique mission — to secure the rights to
life, liberty, and happiness that are God's endowment to every person.
To a remarkable degree, succeeding generations of Americans have
advanced that mission at home and abroad. The truth is that no other
nation in history can match our ideals or our accomplishments. I know
that we have gone through tough times recently, but I could not be more
confident about our future. So don't let anyone convince you that
America's best days are over. Believe with me that America's best days
are ahead of us. The fact is that we the American people have repeatedly
come together and done what others said we could not do. And we will do
so again and again in the future.
Now I want to talk to you about my future. In two years, I will complete
my fourth term in the U.S. Senate, and as you know, I have been thinking
a lot and talking with family and friends about whether I should seek a
fifth term.
Let me tell you first what I have decided and then why.
I have decided it is time to turn the page to a new chapter, and so I
will not be a candidate for re-election to a fifth term in the U.S.
Senate in 2012. This was not an easy decision for me to make because I
have loved serving in the Senate and I feel good about what I have
accomplished. But I know it is the right decision and, I must say, I am
excited about beginning a new chapter of life with new opportunities.
I know that some people have said that if I ran for reelection, it would
be a difficult campaign for me. But what else is new? It probably would
be. I have run many difficult campaigns before — from my first one in
1970 against the incumbent Democratic State Senate Majority Leader, to
my 1988 campaign against the incumbent Republican U.S. Senator, to my
campaign for re-election to the Senate in 2006 at the height of the
controversy over the Iraq war. In all three of those elections most
observers and pollsters thought I would not win. But with a lot of help
from Independents, Democrats and Republicans — including many of you
here today — in each case I did win.
I've never shied from a good fight and I never will.
The reason I have decided not to run for re-election in 2012 is best
expressed in the wise words from Ecclesiastes: "To everything there is a
season, and a time to every purpose under Heaven." At the end of this
term, I will have served 24 years in the U.S. Senate and 40 years in
elective office. By my count, I have run at least 15 full-fledged
political campaigns in Connecticut.
For me, it is time for another season and another purpose under Heaven.
I do not intend today to be the end of my career in public service.
Having made this decision not to run enables me to spend the next two
years in the Senate devoting the full measure of my energy and attention
to getting things done for Connecticut and for our country. I will keep
doing everything in my power to build strong bridges across party lines
— to keep our country safe, to win the wars we are in, and to make sure
America's leadership on the world stage is principled and strong. I will
keep doing everything I can to keep our economy growing and get our
national debt under control, to combat climate change, to end our
dependency on foreign oil, and to reform our immigration laws. And when
my Senate chapter draws to a close in 2013, I look forward to new
opportunities that will allow me to continue to serve our country — and
to stay engaged and involved in the causes that I have spent my career
working on, and that I care so much about.
I go forward with a tremendous sense of gratitude for the opportunities
I have had to make a difference. As it says in Psalm 13: "I will sing to
the Lord, because He has treated me so kindly." And I will also sing to
everyone who has supported and sustained me over the years — beginning
with my family, my parents of blessed memory, Henry and Marcia
Lieberman, my wife Hadassah who has been such a steadfast soul-mate and
life partner, our children, grandchildren, siblings, and extended
family, all the people who volunteered in my campaigns and all the
voters — first in New Haven and West Haven and then throughout the state
who elected me to 5 terms as a State Senator, 2 terms as Attorney
General, and 4 terms as a U.S. Senator; all the able and honorable
public servants I have worked with, and the gifted and devoted people
who have served with me as staff and who are exemplified here today by
my chief of staff and valued counselor Clarine Nardi Riddle, who began
work with me in 1978, and my state director and undefeated campaign
manager Sherry Brown, who started in 1980. Thank you all.
One of my favorite metaphors for America's spirit and history comes from
the great American novel written right here in Connecticut by Mark
Twain, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. In it, Huck and Jim
ride the raft along the big river, that to me represents American
history. In one sense, Huck and Jim could not be more different, but in
another deeper sense, they are both Americans, unified by a common
humanity and shared destiny as they travel down the river. So every time
Huck and Jim come to a bend in the river, though they do not know and
cannot see what lies beyond the bend, they are never fearful or
pessimistic. They are always excited, confident, and optimistic.
That is the spirit that I believe has always inspired us Americans and
propelled us forward together. It is the spirit I saw as a young man in
the early 1960s in the civil rights movement in Mississippi — where
white and black heroes refused to accept the injustice of racial
segregation. It is the spirit I have seen in our men and women in
uniform — heroes who are serving in Afghanistan and Iraq today for a
cause greater than themselves — protecting and advancing freedom — and
in the wounded heroes I have visited at Walter Reed who want nothing
more than to rejoin their brothers and sisters in arms. It is the spirit
that every day inspires all our heroes — our first responders and
educators, our entrepreneurs and innovators, our citizen activists and
religious leaders. And it is the spirit that inspires hundreds of
millions of seemingly ordinary Americans — the unsung heroes — who work
hard and play by the rules every day — driven by a dream, inspired to
imagine a tomorrow that is better than today, for themselves, their
children, our country, and our world.
That is the spirit that has defined the American people for 235 years now and that I know will continue to make us the greatest nation in the world.
And that is the spirit that fills me today.
Thank you. God bless you. God bless America.